Kline v. Harrisburg

68 A.2d 182, 362 Pa. 438, 1949 Pa. LEXIS 431
CourtSupreme Court of Pennsylvania
DecidedJune 24, 1949
StatusPublished
Cited by120 cases

This text of 68 A.2d 182 (Kline v. Harrisburg) 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
Kline v. Harrisburg, 68 A.2d 182, 362 Pa. 438, 1949 Pa. LEXIS 431 (Pa. 1949).

Opinion

The facts are stated in the opinion by WOODSIDE, J., of the court below, as follows:

The plaintiffs here are seeking to restrain the City of Harrisburg and certain of its officials from enforcing the provisions of what is sometimes called an "interim" zoning ordinance, and to direct the proper city official to issue a building permit to the plaintiffs authorizing the construction of five apartment buildings in the city.

It is admitted by the defendants that the application, drawing and specifications and statement on the basis of which the building permit was requested conform in all respects to the requirements of the Building Code of the City of Harrisburg, and that the permit was refused *Page 439 by the defendants because of the aforesaid ordinance.

The matter comes before us on bill, answer and stipulation. The action might have been mandamus brought to direct the proper official to issue the building permit. See Taylor v.Moore, 303 Pa. 469, 475 (1931). No issue is made of this by the parties.

The facts are set forth in the stipulation and we adopt them as our findings. We shall summarize them here, relating only such as are necessary for an understanding of this opinion.

One of the plaintiffs who owns a four acre tract of land in the City of Harrisburg entered into an agreement with the other two plaintiffs whereby a business corporation is to be formed and five garden-type apartment buildings are to be erected on said tract and financed in the manner provided by the National Housing Act.

The plaintiffs in order to make appropriate application for mortgage insurance under the provisions of said Act caused all necessary plans, drawings and specifications for the construction of said apartments to be prepared by a competent architect. The estimated cost of the construction of these buildings is $948,000. Pursuant to this agreement the plaintiffs, along with the Bryn Mawr Trust Company of Bryn Mawr, Pennsylvania, which has agreed to become mortgagee for said project, made application on February 25, 1949, to the Federal Housing Administration for a loan. Two months later the plaintiffs were notified by the Trust Company that the Federal Housing Administrator had advised it that a rental housing commitment under Section 608 of the National Housing Act had been made available. It has been represented to us at argument that this commitment expires if not accepted prior to July 1 of this year, and *Page 440 that therefore a final determination is desirable by June 30.1

On April 25, the plaintiffs applied to the Building Inspector of the City of Harrisburg, requesting the issuance of a building permit authorizing the construction of the apartment building, and as required by the Building Code a fee of $1300 was tendered.

On May 6, 1949, Ordinance No. 153 Session of 1948-49 was read and placed before the Council of the City of Harrisburg and was passed finally on May 10 and, if valid, became effective May 20.

The following preamble is in the Ordinance:

"WHEREAS, the City Planning Commission of the City of Harrisburg, has for several years been studying the details of a comprehensive zoning ordinance for the City, and

"WHEREAS, the various zoning districts together with the regulations and restrictions to be imposed therein, have in a large part been reduced to writing, but the work has not matured to the point where public hearings can be had, and,

"WHEREAS, in the opinion of City Council it will take additional time to work out the details of a zoning plan, and, further, that it will be destructive of the plan if before the date of its final completion the status quo of the residential districts as contemplated by the plan should not be preserved, and,

"WHEREAS, it is the desire of City Council in order to promote the general welfare of the community to preserve the status quo of the residential districts of the City until the final zoning ordinance can be completed and adopted."

The Ordinance then provides: "that the erection or construction within the residential districts of the City *Page 441 of Harrisburg as hereinafter defined, of any building or premises which shall be used for, or designed for other than a single family detached dwelling, together with its usual accessories, or the alteration within the said residential districts of any existing single family detached dwelling for any other purpose be and the same is hereby prohibited."

Nothing else is contained in the Ordinance except the description of the two residential districts referred to above; a penalty clause for violation of the above and a general repeal clause.

The land on which the plaintiffs propose to erect the apartments lies wholly within one of the two residential areas described in Ordinance No. 153.

The City Planning Commission, which has been in existence since 1923, recommended the employment of a zoning specialist, who was employed by the City on about May 15, 1945.

On July 12, 1945 the City Planning Commission directed the office of the City Engineer to which the zoning specialist was assigned, to make a complete study of the problems arising in the preparation of a zoning ordinance and to present a zoning plan. Such plan was submitted to the City Planning Commission in 1946 and contained two residential areas known as "R-1" areas, which are the same areas as set forth in Ordinance No. 153. These areas accommodate in the main, single family detached dwellings. The final details of the comprehensive zoning plan and the regulations and restrictions to be imposed in the various districts have not as yet been approved by the said City Planning Commission.

It is agreed that in connection with the passage of Ordinance No. 153,

"(a) There were not recommended to the City Council of Harrisburg the boundaries of districts and appropriate regulations and restrictions to be imposed *Page 442 by the City Planning Commission of Harrisburg duly created and existing according to law, or a committee of the Council, or any other commission or committee created by City Council for said purpose;

"(b) No tentative report was made and no public meetings thereon were held by the aforesaid City Planning Commission of Harrisburg, or a committee of Council of the City of Harrisburg, or any other commission or committee created by Council of the City of Harrisburg for said purpose;

"(c) No final report was submitted to the City Council of Harrisburg by the aforesaid City Planning Commission of Harrisburg, or a committee of Council of the City of Harrisburg, or any other commission or committee created by Council of the City of Harrisburg for said purpose;

"(d) No notice of hearing was published for ten consecutive days in a daily newspaper or newspapers of general circulation in the City of Harrisburg of a time and place at which the Council of the City of Harrisburg would afford persons affected an opportunity to be heard, and no such hearings were held; and

"(e) Council did not appoint a board of appeals and did not provide that any board of appeals may, in appropriate cases and subject to the appropriate conditions and safeguards, make special exceptions to the terms of the Ordinance, its supplements and amendments, in harmony with its general purpose and intent and in accordance with general or specific rules."

It has been stipulated, "for the purpose of this case only," that: "In order that the aforesaid questions may be determined on or before June 30, 1949,

"(a) the question of the reasonableness of Ordinance No.

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Bluebook (online)
68 A.2d 182, 362 Pa. 438, 1949 Pa. LEXIS 431, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/kline-v-harrisburg-pa-1949.