Landis v. Zoning Board of Adjustment

198 A.2d 574, 414 Pa. 146, 1964 Pa. LEXIS 535
CourtSupreme Court of Pennsylvania
DecidedMarch 17, 1964
DocketAppeal, 27
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 198 A.2d 574 (Landis v. Zoning Board of Adjustment) 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
Landis v. Zoning Board of Adjustment, 198 A.2d 574, 414 Pa. 146, 1964 Pa. LEXIS 535 (Pa. 1964).

Opinion

Opinion by

Mr. Justice Musmanno,

The balata tree is a sap-bearing tree which flourishes in the Columbian and Brazilian jungles where *148 natives chop it down, strip it and guide its juices into containers which they carry to a central area. Here the sap is heated, poured into molds to form blocks which the natives carry on their heads to the nearest river where they are loaded into boats and barges which float down to the sea. At an appropriate seaport the blocks are placed aboard ships which transport them to various parts of the world where, after undergoing various treatments, they become important ingredients in the manufacture of golf balls which bounce from refreshing greenswards wherever men and women meet in friendship and competitive sports.

One of the factories engaged in the transformation of balata into golf balls is located in Hatfield Township, Montgomery County, and is owned by Hunting-don Industries, Inc., the intervening appellant in this case. Here the balata blocks, which have come from the equatorial regions are softened in warm water and the different species are intermixed so as to create a homogeneous compound. This is processed through a milling machine which reduces the mass into small pieces ¿nd they in turn are immersed in a hexane solvent which washes away all impurities. The final product is shipped to golf ball manufacturers.

In July, 1962, the Huntingdon Industries, Inc. applied to the zoning board of adjustment in Hatfield Township for a building or zoning permit to erect an industrial plant for processing balata. The area in which the plant was to be constructed was zoned Light Industrial. The board acted favorably on the application and the plant was erected. Persons, who, at the hearing before the board, protested against the granting of the building permit, appealed to the Court of Common Pleas of Montgomery County, which reversed the decision of the board; and Huntingdon Industries, as intervenor, appealed to this Court.

*149 The purpose of zoning regulations is to protect the health and safety as well as the moral and economic well-being of the community. Once these criteria are met, the legislative body may not impose unreasonable conditions on a landowner in the untrammelled use of his property. In Lord Appeal, 368 Pa. 121, Chief Justice Bell, quoting from the leading case of White’s Appeal, 287 Pa. 259, said: "'. . . all property is held in subordination to the right of its reasonable regulation by the government clearly necessary to preserve the health, safety or morals [or general welfare] of the people. . . . There is one matter that is quite certain, the power to thus regulate does not extend to an arbitrary, unnecessary or unreasonable intermeddling with the private ownership of property, even though such acts be labeled for the preservation of health, safety, and general welfare.’ ”

There is no evidence that the framers of the zoning ordinance here under consideration intended to go beyond the limitations announced above. On the contrary, there is every indication that they wished to improve the general well-being of Hatfield Township, consistent with health, safety and general welfare.

One of the primary concerns of any governing body of. any municipality, except those devoted exclusively to recreation and panoramic grandeur, is to make the community attractive to income-producing establishments as well as the esthetic-admiring eye. The owners of property have the right to use it for economic advantage, and those who may be employed on that property should not be deprived of needed remunerative work because of an exaggerated sense of fastidiousness on the part of others. The right of any people to earn their daily bread is of no less importance than that of factory neighbors to have their senses undisturbed by the appearance of a toiling establishment. The SAveat on a man’s brow, as he earns a livelihood for him *150 self and family, is more meaningful to society than the dust-besmeared dew on weeds flourishing on a bare plot of ground deteriorating with inactivity, neglect and abandonment.

The supervisors of Hatfield Township certainly intended that their municipality should be alive with industry and not stagnant with purposeless inactivity. The fact that they zoned an area light industrial shows, in itself, that they favored industrial activity. The permitted uses in that light industrial district reveal more forcefully than any argument the intent of the township fathers. They said in paragraph 2, §901 of their zoning ordinance that the following uses would be permitted in the Light Industrial District: “The manufacture, compounding, assembly or treatment of articles of merchandise from the following previously prepared materials: bone, cellophane, canvas, cloth, cork, rope, cord and twine, plastics, and natural and synthetic rubber, feathers, felt, fibre, fur, glass, hair, horn, leather, paper, plaster, metals, precious or semiprecious stones, shell, tobacco, textiles, wood (excluding planing mills), yarns.” (Emphasis supplied.)

The lower court apparently overlooked the whole significance of the ordinance and concluded that the procedure employed by Huntingdon Industries could not be classified as “manufacture, compounding assembly or treatment”; that Huntingdon did not work with “previously prepared materials”; that the balata imported from the equator cannot be classified as “natural and synthetic rubber”; and that what Huntingdon eventually shipped from its plant cannot be categorized as articles of “merchandise.”

In its consideration of the ordinance the lower court applied criteria which could not possibly have been intended by the framers of the ordinance. The lower court apparently got so close to the ordinance and analyzed each provision with such technical strict *151 ness as to lose sight of its overall intention. It laid down sneh rhetorical limitations, such pedantic boundaries, and such, what Sir Winston Churchill called, “terminological exactitude,” as to emasculate the whole purport and tenor of the ordinance.

. The president of Huntingdon Industries testified that the operation of transforming balata into golf ball covering was a “process.” The Court seized on the president’s use of the word “process” and stated that “processing” violated the ordinance because the ordinance allowed “treatment” of certain materials, and did not specify “processing.” The Statutory Construction Act states that “words and phrases should be construed according ... to their common and approved usage.” 1

What is “processing but treatment”? The latest edition of Webster’s Third International Dictionary (1961) defines “treatment” as: “subjection of something to the action of an agent or process.” It states that “to treat” means to “subject to some process to improve the appearance, taste, usefulness, or some other quality.” It defines “process" as “to put through a special process as . . . (2) to make usable by special treatment.” In its adjectival sense, “process”

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Bluebook (online)
198 A.2d 574, 414 Pa. 146, 1964 Pa. LEXIS 535, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/landis-v-zoning-board-of-adjustment-pa-1964.