Moyer's Landfill, Inc. v. Zoning Hearing Board

450 A.2d 273, 69 Pa. Commw. 47, 13 Envtl. L. Rep. (Envtl. Law Inst.) 20438, 1982 Pa. Commw. LEXIS 1565
CourtCommonwealth Court of Pennsylvania
DecidedSeptember 14, 1982
DocketAppeal, No. 1741 C.D. 1981
StatusPublished
Cited by15 cases

This text of 450 A.2d 273 (Moyer's Landfill, Inc. v. Zoning Hearing Board) 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
Moyer's Landfill, Inc. v. Zoning Hearing Board, 450 A.2d 273, 69 Pa. Commw. 47, 13 Envtl. L. Rep. (Envtl. Law Inst.) 20438, 1982 Pa. Commw. LEXIS 1565 (Pa. Ct. App. 1982).

Opinion

Opinion by

Judge Rogers,

Moyer’s Landfill, Inc. (Moyer), a landowner which seeks zoning approval to use its land in Lower Providence Township, lontgomery County, as a sanitary landfill, and the township1 have each appealed from an order of the Court of Common Pleas of Montgomery County. The order complained of reversed and the township zoning hearing board’s decision that Moyer was required to pay the fees of lawyers and an engineer employed by the township in opposing Moyer’s applications; but upheld the board’s decision that Moyer was not entitled to establish the proposed sanitary landfill.

The Township’s Appeal

Lower Providence Township’s appeal raises the question of the propriety of the trial court’s holding and order that the fees of the township’s and the zoning hearing board’s solicitors and the township’s consulting engineer for services in the zoning litigation, in a total amount in excess of $25,000, could not be [49]*49charged to Moyer. We affirm this aspect of the trial court’s order. Section 907 of the Pennsylvania Municipalities Planning Code, Act of July 31, 1968, P.L. 805, (MPC) 53 P.S. §10907 authorizes zoning hearing boards to employ legal counsel “[wjithin the limits of funds appropriated by the governing body.” The matter of the fees of a zoning hearing board’s counsel was the subject of Borough of Brookhaven v. BP Oil Company, 48 Pa. Commonwealth Ct. 128, 409 A.2d 494 (1979), where we held that Section 907 provided sufficient indication that the legislature did not intend that the fees of zoning hearing board solicitors should be charged to the persons who present causes for zoning hearing board decisions.

Section 618 of the MPC, 53 P.S. §10618, authorizes the governing body to appropriate money to support or oppose decisions of the zoning hearing board. The township solicitor’s participation in this, case was directed entirely to opposing Moyer’s applications for board and court approval of its project. His fees for thus representing the township were properly payable by the township and not properly chargeable to Moyer as a cost of the proceedings. The township engineer’s services were to the same purpose and he must also be paid by the township.

Moyer’s Appeal

In its appeals from the denial of its zoning applications first, to the zoning hearing board and then to the common pleas court, Moyer raised, among others, the questions of: (1) whether the township zoning ordinance at the time Moyer applied for the zoning permit was without effect because it unconstitutionally excluded from the township the legitimate use of land for the establishment and operation of a sanitary landfill and (2) whether Moyer was entitled to a special ex[50]*50ception to use its land for a sanitary landfill.2 These claims will be the principal subjects of this opinion.

In 1974, Moyer acquired a tract of land containing about 47 acres of land in Lower Providence Township on which it has since conducted a sanitary landfill. For many years before Moyer’s acquisition — before [51]*51there was any zoning in Lower Providence Township or any state regulation of dumping sites and activities — part of this tract was used by its then owners as a dump. After zoning was adopted in Lower Providence Township in 1955 the dumping enterprise continued as a nonconforming use. The zoning ordinance totally excluded the use of land for dumps or sanitary landfills, as they properly came to be called after the imposition of state regulations; further, only residential uses were permitted in the zoning district in which the site was placed.

When, in the late 196Q’s state regulation of sanitary landfills by statute and rules promulgated first, by the State Department of Health and later and presently by the Department of Environmental Resources (DER), improvements were made to the 47 acre dump and in the methods of its operation. These included the installation of drains, seepage pits and the daily covering of the waste with earth.

In 1971, the then owner of the existing 47 acre, now landfill,3 filed with DER a so-called Phase I module, the initial requirement for landfill licensing, with respect to the tract of land which is the subject of this litigation. This tract adjoins the existing landfill and contains 131 acres. It was, and remains, located in Lower Providence’s I-Industrial zoning district, in which until after the litigation commenced only “commonly known industrial manufacturing pursuits” were permitted uses.

In 1977, the 47 acre site had a remaining useful life as a sanitary landfill of only five to eight years. In that year, the appellant Moyer by agreement of purchase acquired equitable ownership of the 131 acre tract.

[52]*52Having been since 1974 the owner and operator of the 47 acre site and being now the equitable owner of the 131 acre tract, Moyer then formed the purpose of using the 47 acre site until its capacity was exhausted and of then moving to the 131 acre new site and using it for sanitary landfill purposes in parcels of four to five acres each, one at a time, for about five years each, until the capacity of the new tract for landfill purposes would be exhausted in about 45 years. It proposed that the parts of the 131 acre tract not actually devoted to waste disposal would be used to provide cover soil or for buffering the operation from neighbors. To these ends Moyer had engineers prepare and file with DER the more detailed Phase II module for the 131 acre tract. The construction and mode of operation proposed would conform with DER regulations and would include the provision of a liner beneath, and a covering of earth atop, each layer of waste spread upon the four or five acre tract being used for waste disposal and all other features required by DER.

Moyer applied to the zoning officer of Lower Providence Township for permission under the zoning ordinance to use the 131 acre tract for sanitary landfill purposes in early 1977. The application was refused. Moyer then filed with the zoning hearing board an appeal from the zoning officer’s action refusing the permit, challenges to the substantive validity of the zoning ordinance and other applications with which it is not necessary to burden the body of this opinion. The zoning hearing board conducted 25 hearings beginning in May, 1977 and ending in May, 1978.

In August, 1977, while the zoning board hearings were in progress, the Board of Supervisors of Lower Providence Township enacted an amendment to the zoning ordinance providing that “solid waste disposal facilities, sanitary landfills and incinerators” should [53]*53thereafter be permitted uses in the I-Industrial zoning district when authorized as a special exception. Moyer applied for and obtained from the zoning hearing board leave to amend its zoning case to add an application for a special exception.

The zoning hearing board rejected all of Moyer’s requests for relief. Moyer appealed this action to the common pleas court, which on application of the township heard additional evidence and by order filed on June 23, 1981 affirmed the zoning board’s action. This appeal followed, requiring us to review the record for error of law or abuse of discretion by the court. Rickman v. Zoning Board of Adjustment, 391 Pa.

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450 A.2d 273, 69 Pa. Commw. 47, 13 Envtl. L. Rep. (Envtl. Law Inst.) 20438, 1982 Pa. Commw. LEXIS 1565, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/moyers-landfill-inc-v-zoning-hearing-board-pacommwct-1982.