Lehigh Asphalt Paving & Construction Co. v. Board of Supervisors of East Penn Township

830 A.2d 1063, 2003 Pa. Commw. LEXIS 530
CourtCommonwealth Court of Pennsylvania
DecidedJuly 28, 2003
StatusPublished
Cited by22 cases

This text of 830 A.2d 1063 (Lehigh Asphalt Paving & Construction Co. v. Board of Supervisors of East Penn Township) 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
Lehigh Asphalt Paving & Construction Co. v. Board of Supervisors of East Penn Township, 830 A.2d 1063, 2003 Pa. Commw. LEXIS 530 (Pa. Ct. App. 2003).

Opinion

OPINION BY

Judge LEADBETTER.

Lehigh Asphalt Paving and Construction Company (Lehigh Asphalt) appeals from the orders of the Court of Common Pleas of Carbon County (common pleas), which sustained East Penn Township’s (Township) refusal to allow the proposed *1065 expansion of Lehigh Asphalt’s quarry operations. Specifically, common pleas dismissed Lehigh Asphalt’s action in mandamus to compel deemed approval of land development plans for the quarry expansion and affirmed the denial of Lehigh Asphalt’s application for a special exception. We vacate and remand.

Lehigh Asphalt is successor in interest to the rights acquired by Huss Contracting Company under a mineral lease to extract stone from a portion of the 114.45-acre parcel owned by Charles and Agnes Messi-na. 1 In addition, Lehigh Asphalt is the assignee to an option agreement granting it the right to purchase the entire 114.45-acres in fee simple from the Messinas. Lehigh Asphalt seeks to increase the quarry operation to involve, in actual excavation or as support area, the entire acreage subject to certain buffer areas along a stream and the property lines.

The Messina property is in a sparsely developed area in Carbon County. Hollow Road and an unnamed tributary of Lizzard Creek, which runs roughly parallel to the road, bisect the property into 64 acres on the west and 50 acres on the east. An approximately 5-acre quarry is located on the eastern side and the remainder of the Messinas’ property contains their residence and accessory buildings located near the road and creek, some cultivated land in the far southeast corner and far western side and a large undisturbed wooded area. The surrounding properties are residential, some on very large lots with large areas of unimproved woodland or pastureland.

In 1996, the Township enacted its first zoning ordinance, which zoned the Messina and surrounding land as R-Rural and RR-Rural Residential. The uses specifically permitted in these districts do not include quarry or mining operations. However, as enacted in 1996, Section 1019 in the “Supplementary Regulations” provided for “Mining and Reclamation,” as follows:

1019.02 Location where permitted. Mining and excavating operations shall be considered a temporary use of land and may be permitted as a Special Exception Use in all Zoning Districts in the Township. Such mining operations shall be permitted only for limited periods of time, as specified below, subject to appropriate conditions and safeguards.

In June of 1999, Lehigh Asphalt notified the Township that it intended to increase quarry operations on the Messina property. Lehigh notified the Zoning Officer by letter that expansion of the quarry was planned and the Zoning Officer, in a letter dated July 5,1999, replied that:

[I]t is evident that the activity is a permitted use under the pre-existing nonconforming definitions of the zoning code. However ... an updated land use plan needs to be submitted to the East Penn Board of Supervisors.... The land use plan will enable the township *1066 supervisors to also visualize the proposal, to determine the impact of the plan on East Penn Township residents and to monitor adherence to applicable SALDO [subdivision and land development ordinance] regulations.
Please complete the attached zoning application, return it with the fees indicated and with six copies of the land use plan for township discussion.

R.R. at 16a. Lehigh Asphalt completed the zoning application form by indicating that it sought to expand a non-conforming use and submitted it to the Zoning Officer, on July 14, along with application fees and 15 copies of its plan for additional quarry activities. Thereafter, the Township Supervisors acted extraordinarily fast. By letter dated August 13, the Township Secretary informed Lehigh Asphalt, in pertinent part, that: “The Board of Supervisors of East Penn Township, at their August 2, 1999 meeting rejected your Land Development Plan because it did not comply with the township’s Subdivision and Land Development Ordinance.” Based on the lack of specificity as to the reasons for rejecting the plan, as required .under Section 508 of the Municipalities Planning Code (MPC), Act of July 31, 1968, P.L. 805, as amended, 53 P.S. § 10508, Lehigh filed a complaint in mandamus on June 11, 2001, alleging deemed approval of the July 1999 plan.

Following the Supervisors’ rejection of the plan, the Zoning Officer, in a letter sent in September of 1999, suggested that Lehigh Asphalt request a special exception to expand the quarry as permitted under the Ordinance at that time but Lehigh declined to pursue this avenue. The Zoning Officer sent Lehigh Asphalt a form for a “variance/special exception” with a cover letter directing Lehigh to complete the form, pay more review fees, submit four copies of the land use plan and notify neighboring landowners at least two weeks prior to the Zoning Hearing Board (ZHB) meeting at which the application would be considered. On October 5, Lehigh Asphalt responded:

As you are aware, we currently have a mining permit for the property.... We have not requested a special exception as noted in your letter of September 28....
We would be willing to meet with you and the Supervisors whenever you wish to discuss our plans for the property. We await your response to schedule this meeting.

Apparently, the suggested meeting never occurred.

In December 1999, the Township Supervisors declared Section 1019 of the 1996 Ordinance invalid and announced their intent to prepare a curative amendment. Thereafter, in accordance with Section 609.2 of the MPC 2 , the Supervisors enacted, on May 22, 2000, an amendment to the ordinance that provided for quarrying, mining and reclamation as a conditional use only in the Industrial Commercial District. Two days before the enactment of this amendment, Lehigh Asphalt submitted an application for a special exception pursuant to the original version of Section 1019. Thereafter, Lehigh Asphalt, while it awaited a decision from The Department of Environmental Protection (DEP) on the application for a permit to quarry the additional acreage, requested and obtained a series of continuances on the ZHB hearing on this application. Eventually, having put off the hearing for more than a year and still without a decision from DEP on the permit, the ZHB convened a hearing on June 19, 2001. At the second and final hearing on October 16, 2001, the ZHB denied the application on the ground that *1067 absent the DEP permit the special exception application was incomplete. Lehigh Asphalt’s counsel objected to this on the ground that, having accepted the application and proceeded with the hearing without first having received the DEP permit, the ZHB waived any right to dismiss the application on this ground and by implication agreed to make receipt of the permit a condition of special exception approval. On November 5, 2001, the ZHB issued a written decision denying the application based on the lack of a DEP permit.

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Bluebook (online)
830 A.2d 1063, 2003 Pa. Commw. LEXIS 530, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/lehigh-asphalt-paving-construction-co-v-board-of-supervisors-of-east-pacommwct-2003.