Kennedy v. Upper Milford Township Zoning Hearing Board

834 A.2d 1104, 575 Pa. 105, 2003 Pa. LEXIS 1966
CourtSupreme Court of Pennsylvania
DecidedOctober 27, 2003
StatusPublished
Cited by32 cases

This text of 834 A.2d 1104 (Kennedy v. Upper Milford Township Zoning Hearing Board) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Pennsylvania primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Kennedy v. Upper Milford Township Zoning Hearing Board, 834 A.2d 1104, 575 Pa. 105, 2003 Pa. LEXIS 1966 (Pa. 2003).

Opinions

OPINION

Justice LAMB.

We granted allowance of appeal in this case in order to clarify the relationship between the “open meeting” requirement of the Commonwealth’s Sunshine Act1 and [1106]*1106the quasi-judicial deliberative responsibilities of local zoning hearing boards.2 We hold that quasi-judicial deliberations are a proper subject of private executive sessions.

The Commonwealth of Pennsylvania Turnpike Commission (“Commission”) as the owner of a small parcel of land3 improved since the 1950’s with a radio communications tower and located on South Mountain in Upper Milford Township (“Township”), Lehigh County, applied to the Township Zoning Hearing Board (“Board” or “ZHB”) for relief needed to increase the height of the tower from the existing 120 feet to 210 feet as initially proposed and 200 feet as the application was subsequently amended. The 120-foot tower located on the property at the time of the instant application, was erected by the Commission in 1981 and has been continuously used since that time as a critical link in the analog radio communications that serve the Northeast Extension of the Pennsylvania Turnpike4 for such purposes as transmitting toll data, receiving signals from the emergency call boxes available to stranded motorists and located along the length of the highway at one mile intervals, and summoning the assistance of towing services and the state police.

In performing these functions, it is necessary for the Commission’s South Mountain tower to communicate with towers located in Valley Forge in Montgomery County to the south and Palmerton in Lackawanna County to the north. The nature of the microwave radio energy used in the system necessitates a clear line of sight between the towers. In the decades [1107]*1107since their erection, tree growth in the intervening lands between the South Mountain tower and that in Valley Forge5 has increasingly interfered with the signal. In order to ameliorate this problem and to facilitate the conversion of the system to the greater capacity permitted by digital technology, the Commission sought the increase in tower height here at issue. Evidence adduced by the Commission at the hearing before the Board on remand from the trial court established that a tower height of 175 feet and an antenna height of 180 feet would be sufficient for these purposes.

An initial hearing before the Board was conducted on May 12, 1997 and, by decision dated June 26, 1997, the requested relief was granted. Brian and Susan Kennedy (“the Kennedys”), as neighboring property owners opposed to the increase in tower height, were then permitted by the Court of Common Pleas of Lehigh County to appeal from the Board’s decision nunc pro tunc and, by order entered December 8, 1998 and amended on December 15, 1998, the court vacated the Board’s decision and remanded the matter to that tribunal for proceedings de novo.

Following the remand, the Board conducted an evidentiary hearing on January 11,1999, and at the close thereof, by a vote of three to one, granted special exception and variance relief to permit construction of a 180-foot high communications tower while requiring other aspects of the Commission’s proposal including the addition of an equipment storage structure, to be referred to the Township planning commission for additional review. In a written decision, the Board found and concluded inter alia that the Commission’s proposal included the removal of the existing 120-foot tower and construction at the same location of a tower 200 feet in height to be used by the Commission for radio communications along the Pennsylvania Turnpike’s Northeast Extension, by Omni-Point Communication Enterprises, L.L.P. (“Omni-Point”) as lessee for commercial cellular telephone service and, if the Commonwealth so elected, as a component of a state-wide emergency communication network; that the subject property is located in the South Mountain Conservation Zoning District as defined and regulated by the Township’s zoning ordinance in which a “radio/television transmitter or receptor”6 is a use of land permitted by special exception; that Township zoning ordinance § 812(E)(57)(b) requires that such “antenna or tower shall be set back a distance equivalent to the height of the antenna or tower from all property lines ... ”; that the proposed use fails to comply with this minimum setback requirement; but that the property’s physical characteristics, including its size and configuration, combine with the setback regulation and the dem[1108]*1108onstrated fact that a tower less than 175 feet in height at this location would not fimction as required to serve the needs of the Commission and motorists, to produce unnecessary hardship sufficient to justify the grant of variance relief from the setback regulation.

However, the Board further concluded that the tower height as proposed initially (210 feet) or as the application was subsequently amended by the Commission (200 feet) had not been demonstrated to be the minimum variance that would afford relief from the hardship proved as required by the zoning ordinance and by MPC § 910.2(a)(5), 53 P.S. § 10910.2(a)(5). Since the Commission’s evidence was that an antenna height of 180 feet would suffice, the Board granted the requested variance subject to the condition that the proposed tower be reduced in height to 180 feet.7

The Kennedys perfected a zoning appeal in the trial court and simultaneously commenced an action in declaratory judgment seeking a determination that the Board’s action approving a modified tower proposal violated the 1998 Sunshine Act and was, on that account, void. The Sunshine Act complaint centered factually on a recess taken by the Board during the course of the January 11, 1999 hearing following the conclusion of evidence and argument and immediately prior to the Board’s formal action. In its written decision, the Board describes this interregnum as “a lawful deliberation pursuant to Section 8 of the Sunshine [Act].” R.R. 176a.8

The trial court consolidated the Kenne-dys’ zoning appeal and declaratory judgment action and, by order of June 30, 2000, denied the appeal, affirmed the decision of the Board, and dismissed the Sunshine Act complaint. With respect to the latter, the trial court concluded that the Kennedys had failed to meet their burden to prove wrongdoing9 particularly in the absence of any attempt, by deposing Board members or commanding their presence at trial, for example, to establish the nature and substance of any conversations or action taken during the recess.

On the Kennedys’ further appeal, a panel of the Commonwealth Court reversed the order of the trial court insofar as it had dismissed the action in declaratory judgment seeking a determination of Sunshine Act violation on the part of the Board. Kennedy v. Upper Milford Tp. ZHB, 779 A.2d 1257 (Pa.Cmwlth.2001). The court emphasized the Board’s judicial admission that it had conducted “quasi-judicial deliberations” during the recess, and further reasoned:

Moreover, the ZHB chairman, after the recess, simply announced that “we’ll vote” not to approve the 200 foot tower but to approve a 180 foot tower. (R.R.

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Bluebook (online)
834 A.2d 1104, 575 Pa. 105, 2003 Pa. LEXIS 1966, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/kennedy-v-upper-milford-township-zoning-hearing-board-pa-2003.