J. Oliver v. Indian Lake Borough ZHB and Indian Lake Borough

CourtCommonwealth Court of Pennsylvania
DecidedMay 23, 2016
Docket1297 C.D. 2015
StatusUnpublished

This text of J. Oliver v. Indian Lake Borough ZHB and Indian Lake Borough (J. Oliver v. Indian Lake Borough ZHB and Indian Lake Borough) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Commonwealth Court of Pennsylvania primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
J. Oliver v. Indian Lake Borough ZHB and Indian Lake Borough, (Pa. Ct. App. 2016).

Opinion

IN THE COMMONWEALTH COURT OF PENNSYLVANIA

John Oliver : : No. 1297 C.D. 2015 v. : Argued: April 11, 2016 : Indian Lake Borough Zoning : Hearing Board and Indian Lake : Borough, : : Appellants :

BEFORE: HONORABLE PATRICIA A. McCULLOUGH, Judge HONORABLE MICHAEL H. WOJCIK, Judge HONORABLE ROCHELLE S. FRIEDMAN, Senior Judge

OPINION NOT REPORTED

MEMORANDUM OPINION BY JUDGE WOJCIK FILED: May 23, 2016

Indian Lake Borough Zoning Hearing Board (ZHB) and Indian Lake Borough (Borough) appeal from the June 22, 2015 order of the Somerset County Court of Common Pleas (trial court), which sustained two land use appeals filed by John Oliver (Landowner) and reversed the ZHB’s decision to uphold two violation notices relating to an outdoor wood furnace and a shed.

Facts/procedural history Landowner owns a single-family dwelling situated on two lots comprising approximately two acres in Indian Lake Borough, Somerset County, Pennsylvania. The property fronts Indian Lake, and the house is positioned at a higher elevation than the lake. The driveway to Landowner’s house is on a steep slope. According to Landowner, there are times in the winter when ice and snow cannot be plowed. Because it is sometimes impossible to drive a car up the driveway, Landowner planned to heat it by using an outdoor wood furnace. On June 14, 2007, Landowner submitted a permit application for an outdoor furnace, approximately 8’ x 7’ x 5’, and a site plan reflecting that the furnace would be located to the side of his garage. At the time, the Borough’s zoning ordinance, Ordinance No. 99, did not reference outdoor furnaces, and the zoning officer approved the application. Six days later the Borough enacted Ordinance No. 144, which expressly prohibits outdoor furnaces in the Borough. Landowner purchased the outdoor furnace and hired a contractor to install it. The contractor poured a concrete pad, installed the furnace on it, and connected it to tubing running to Landowner’s driveway, garage, and home. On May 15, 2008, Landowner applied for a permit to construct a 12’ x 14’ storage shed, or 168 square feet, which is the maximum size permitted by the Ordinance. However, Landowner purchased a pre-fabricated shed that was 192 square feet (12’ x 16’), a 14% increase over the allowed dimensions. By letter of November 10, 2008, a representative of St. Clair Resort Development complained to the zoning officer that Landowner’s permit for the outdoor furnace had expired, the work was not completed, and the furnace was located in a different place from the site approved in the permit. On November 12, 2008, the zoning officer issued Landowner a written Notice of Violations (Notice). The Notice informed Landowner that the permit for the outdoor wood furnace had expired on June 14, 2008, and no waterlines or electrical lines had been connected to it. Additionally, the outdoor furnace was not situated in the location identified in the site plan. The Notice explained that because Landowner failed to request an

2 extension of the permit, a new permit for the outdoor furnace would be required but could not be approved under Ordinance 144. The Notice also informed Landowner that, as he had previously been advised, the dimensions of his storage shed exceeded the size permitted under the Ordinance. Landowner was directed to remove the outdoor furnace from his property and remove or downsize the oversized shed within 30 days. Landowner appealed the Notice as to both violations, and the ZHB held a hearing on January 13, 2009. The ZHB first considered the outdoor furnace. Zoning Officer Dean Snyder testified that public hearings on Ordinance 144 were held from March through August 2007. Landowner submitted his permit application for the outdoor furnace on June 6, 2007, and permit No. 2342 was issued under Ordinance 99. Snyder subsequently inspected the site on five occasions. On June 25, 2008, he noted that the furnace was not plumbed in and that it was in the wrong location; instead of being on the lake side of Landowner’s garage, it was behind the garage toward the property line of St. Clair Properties. Reproduced Record (R.R.) at 531a-32a. Snyder identified photographs of the furnace taken on November 11, 2008, reflecting that no water or electric lines were connected. R.R. at 533a. Snyder stated that he received a complaint from a nearby property owner, checked the date of Landowner’s permit, and found that it had expired. During cross-examination, Landowner’s counsel suggested that a permit was not required for the outdoor furnace since the use had not been regulated by Ordinance 99. Snyder acknowledged that Ordinance 99 did not include any reference to outdoor furnaces. However, he stated that Ordinance 99 required a building permit for the construction of any building, structure, or sign.

3 Snyder understood the furnace to be a structure, a term that was not defined by the Ordinance. Snyder additionally noted that, under Ordinance 99, no land could “be put to use” without a permit. R.R. at 536a-37a. Snyder testified that current Ordinance 144 defines an outdoor furnace as “any device used to heat a dwelling or to produce heat for any reason . . . using . . . wood, oil, or coal . . . and which produces continuous smoke and which is designed to be installed outside of a building . . . .” R.R. at 535a. Snyder acknowledged that the outdoor furnace was currently located within the buildable area of the lot and stated that he would have approved a permit for the furnace in its current location. R.R. at 538a. Snyder testified that completion of the project, i.e., the water and electrical connection, would require installation of two-inch copper lines roughly three feet long from the furnace to the garage. He conceded that the change would not be a visible difference. Snyder testified that Ordinance 144 prohibits outdoor furnaces anywhere in the Borough but permits indoor wood burning stoves. He explained that the distinction was based on the fact that indoor wood burning stoves and fireplaces have chimneys 30 feet high that carry smoke away, whereas outdoor furnaces are only five or six feet high and keep smoke lower to the ground. He agreed that a property owner could place an exhaust pipe or chimney on an outdoor furnace to carry smoke away. R.R. at 540a. Terry St. Clair, the owner and developer of adjacent property, testified that an outdoor wood furnace is a prefabricated structure with a cylindrical chamber inside, and he believed that applicable building codes would require the structure to have an 18-foot chimney.1 St. Clair also opined that smoke from an

1 Landowner stipulated that he would increase the height of the chimney. R.R. at 543a.

4 outdoor furnace would create a major health hazard and adversely affect property values. Landowner testified that he spent about $35,000 on the outdoor furnace and submitted invoices and cancelled checks. He explained that the furnace itself was just one component of the project, which included costs for pipes, valves, copper fittings and tubing, a concrete pad, and interior plumbing. Landowner stated that heating his steep driveway was important because he intended to live in the house permanently. Landowner also testified that the electricity had been run from the house to the garage. He said that he believed that the furnace was completed because it could be used to burn things without further alteration. He stated that he changed the location of the furnace to please his wife and that he did not think he needed to get permission to do so. R.R. at 545a-46. Landowner argued that since Ordinance 99 did not address outdoor furnaces, the furnace was an unregulated device under Ordinance 99 for which no permit was ever required.

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Bluebook (online)
J. Oliver v. Indian Lake Borough ZHB and Indian Lake Borough, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/j-oliver-v-indian-lake-borough-zhb-and-indian-lake-borough-pacommwct-2016.