Latrobe Speedway, Inc. v. Zoning Hearing Board of Unity Township

720 A.2d 127, 553 Pa. 583, 1998 Pa. LEXIS 2509
CourtSupreme Court of Pennsylvania
DecidedNovember 23, 1998
Docket90 W.D. Appeal Docket 1997
StatusPublished
Cited by24 cases

This text of 720 A.2d 127 (Latrobe Speedway, Inc. v. Zoning Hearing Board of Unity Township) 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
Latrobe Speedway, Inc. v. Zoning Hearing Board of Unity Township, 720 A.2d 127, 553 Pa. 583, 1998 Pa. LEXIS 2509 (Pa. 1998).

Opinion

*585 OPINION

ZAPPALA, Justice.

The Unity Township Zoning Hearing Board appeals from the decision and order of the Commonwealth Court reversing the order of the Westmoreland County Common Pleas Court, which denied Appellees’ application for an occupancy permit to operate an automobile racetrack on property owned by Latrobe Speedway, as a prior nonconforming use. The Commonwealth Court remanded to the Unity Township Zoning Hearing Board with direction that the requested occupancy permit be granted. We affirm.

Latrobe owns a 35-acre tract of land near Pleasant Unity, Pennsylvania, which was used as a stock-car speedway from 1977 to 1982. Between 1982 and 1994, no racing or other activity was conducted on the premises. The physical components of the racetrack, the track, grandstands, fence, light stands and out-buildings, remain on the property; however, these structures have deteriorated over the years to the extent that they are not usable for any purpose.

On December 7, 1994, Latrobe leased the property to Appellee, Chester Aretta. Aretta sought to use the premises for stock car racing and applied for a development occupancy permit for nonconforming use to operate the existing racetrack. 1 Unity Township had enacted a zoning ordinance in 1991 that designated for agricultural use the area that included the racetrack. Unity Township’s zoning officer denied the permit on the grounds that the use of the property as a racetrack had been abandoned. The officer therefore concluded that Aretta’s use of the property as a racetrack would violate Section 118-42(C) of the 1991 ordinance, which provides:

In the event that a nonconforming use, conducted in a structure or otherwise, ceases, for whatever reason, for a period of one (1) year or is abandoned for any period, such nonconforming use shall not be resumed.

*586 Aretta appealed the zoning officer’s denial to the Board. At the March 28, 1995 hearing before the Board, Latrobe’s sole stockholder testified that he never intended to abandon the use of the property as a racetrack. As evidence of his intent, he noted that he faithfully paid property taxes based on the property’s assessment as a racetrack. He also testified that he attempted more than 23 times to lease or sell the site as a racetrack before he finally entered into the lease agreement with Aretta.

The Board unanimously concluded, however, that because no racing activity had been conducted on the property for nearly 14 years, both before and after the zoning ordinance had been enacted, Latrobe had abandoned the previously permitted use of the property as a racetrack facility. Accordingly, the Board affirmed the zoning officer’s decision.

Appellees appealed to the common pleas court, which, for different reasons, affirmed. The court found that no abandonment analysis was necessary because Latrobe failed to satisfy the threshold requirement of showing that the property had nonconforming use status, i.e., by demonstrating that the property was being used for a nonconforming purpose at the time the 1991 zoning ordinance was enacted.

The Commonwealth Court reversed, noting first that the issue addressed by the common pleas court was subsumed by the proper issue, namely, whether the nonconforming racetrack use had been abandoned by Latrobe within the meaning of Section 118-42(C) of the Township ordinance. The court pointed out that “[i]f the nonconforming use was abandoned, it would not have been in existence at the time of the enactment of the ordinance; if the nonconforming use was not abandoned, it was in existence at this time.” Latrobe Speedway v. Zoning Hearing Board of Unity Township, 686 A.2d 888, 890 (Pa.Cmwlth.1996). The court then concluded that the Board erred as a matter of law in shifting the burden of proof to Appellees to disprove abandonment.

We granted allowance of appeal to address the following two issues:

*587 1. Whether the Commonwealth Court erred in reversing the court of common pleas’ determination that before considering a question of abandonment, the threshold issue was whether the landowner established that the property had nonconforming use status at the time the relevant zoning ordinance took effect.
2. Whether the Commonwealth Court, in finding that the Board improperly placed the burden of proof on Appellees, itself improperly placed both the burden of proof and the burden of persuasion on Appellant in reversing the Board’s decision.

Turning to the first issue, we agree with the Commonwealth Court that the issue addressed by the common pleas court is dependent upon a determination of the second issue. Accordingly, the Commonwealth Court correctly held that the common pleas court addressed the wrong issue as a threshold matter.

The common pleas court relied on the Commonwealth Court’s decisions in Ralph & Joanne’s, Inc. v. Neshannock Township Zoning Hearing Board, 121 Pa.Cmwlth. 83, 550 A.2d 586 (Pa.Cmwlth.1988), and Heyman v. Zoning Hearing Board of Abington Township, 144 Pa.Cmwlth. 167, 601 A.2d 414 (Pa.Cmwlth.1991), as support for its assertion that a use has the status of a legal nonconforming use only if it existed on land when the zoning ordinance took effect. While this principle is correct, neither Ralph & Joanne’s nor Heyman involved, as here, a determination of whether an undisputed prior use of the subject property had been abandoned at the time the zoning ordinance took effect. In Ralph & Joanne’s, the landowner’s proposed use of the property, a banquet facility, undisputedly did not pre-date the ordinance. In Hey-man, there was no dispute that the subject land, a four acre parcel of the landowner’s 169 acre parcel, was undeveloped and not used for any purpose prior to the development sought by the landowner therein. Accordingly, in those cases, it was clear that the uses at issue did not exist at the time the subject ordinances were enacted.

*588 Here, unlike Ralph & Joanne’s and Heyman, the property was used for racing before the ordinance was enacted. Therefore, the significant question is whether this use was abandoned prior to the time the ordinance was enacted. If the use was abandoned, our inquiry ends since the use, unquestionably, would not have been in existence at the time the ordinance was enacted. If, however, the use was not abandoned, then it existed at the time the ordinance was enacted. Section 118-42(B)(1) of the Township’s zoning ordinance specifically permits the continuation of prior lawful uses existing at the time of its enactment. This section states:

Continuation.

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Bluebook (online)
720 A.2d 127, 553 Pa. 583, 1998 Pa. LEXIS 2509, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/latrobe-speedway-inc-v-zoning-hearing-board-of-unity-township-pa-1998.