O. Herbert & M. Herbert v. W. Reading Borough ZHB & Borough of W. Reading ~ Appeal of: Borough of W. Reading

CourtCommonwealth Court of Pennsylvania
DecidedOctober 14, 2021
Docket1113 C.D. 2020
StatusUnpublished

This text of O. Herbert & M. Herbert v. W. Reading Borough ZHB & Borough of W. Reading ~ Appeal of: Borough of W. Reading (O. Herbert & M. Herbert v. W. Reading Borough ZHB & Borough of W. Reading ~ Appeal of: Borough of W. Reading) 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
O. Herbert & M. Herbert v. W. Reading Borough ZHB & Borough of W. Reading ~ Appeal of: Borough of W. Reading, (Pa. Ct. App. 2021).

Opinion

IN THE COMMONWEALTH COURT OF PENNSYLVANIA

Oswald Herbert and Mary Herbert : : v. : : : West Reading Borough Zoning : Hearing Board and Borough of : West Reading : : No. 1113 C.D. 2020 Appeal of: Borough of West Reading : Argued: September 20, 2021

BEFORE: HONORABLE P. KEVIN BROBSON, President Judge HONORABLE CHRISTINE FIZZANO CANNON, Judge (P) HONORABLE J. ANDREW CROMPTON, Judge

OPINION NOT REPORTED

MEMORANDUM OPINION BY JUDGE FIZZANO CANNON FILED: October 14, 2021

The Borough of West Reading (Borough) appeals from an order of the Court of Common Pleas of Berks County (trial court) reversing a decision and order of the Zoning Hearing Board of the Borough of West Reading (Board). The Board’s decision and order denied the appeal of Oswald Herbert and Mary Herbert (the Herberts) from an Enforcement Notice (Notice) advising the Herberts that a trailer parked on the grassed backyard of their property in the Borough violated a provision of the Borough’s Zoning Ordinance (Zoning Ordinance)1 prohibiting the parking of vehicles on grass or bare soil. Upon review, we reverse.

I. Factual & Procedural Background Systems Design Engineering (SDE) provides the Borough with code and zoning enforcement, property maintenance and inspections, and engineering services on a contract basis. Reproduced Record (R.R.) at 27a. Keith Yeager (Yeager), through his employment with SDE, serves as a state-certified and sworn code enforcement officer for the Borough. Id. at 27a-28a, 32a & 39a. Yeager’s official credentials do not identify him as a zoning officer, but he understands his job duties to include zoning enforcement as part of enforcing the Borough Code as a whole. Id. at 40a & 55a. Section 455-138 of the Zoning Ordinance explains that Article XXI, which includes Sections 455-138 to 455-143, regulates “accessory off street parking spaces . . . .”2 Section 455-33 of the Zoning Ordinance defines an “accessory use” as one “which is an accessory to the main use of a building or property, such as a retail sales area in a restaurant.” Section 455-139(D) of the Zoning Ordinance, which is applicable to the property at issue, states: “No vehicle parking on grass or bare soil shall be

1 The Zoning Ordinance is Chapter 455 of the Borough’s Code and was adopted by the Borough Council on December 18, 2012, by Ordinance No. 1017. Available at https://ecode360.com/30039266 (last visited on October 13, 2021). 2 We note that neither party has raised the issue of whether the subject ordinance is one that would permit preexisting nonconformity. Cf. Mitchell v. Zoning Hearing Bd. for Franklin Park (Pa. Cmwlth., No. 949 C.D. 2012, filed Dec. 20, 2012), 2012 Pa. Commw. Unpub. LEXIS 970 (unreported) (analyzing whether parking of tow truck on property in residential zone was a preexisting nonconforming use). We cite Mitchell as persuasive authority pursuant to Section 414(a) of this Court’s Internal Operating Procedures, 210 Pa. Code § 69.414(a). 2 permitted.” Zoning Ordinance § 455-139(D). Yeager explained that this kind of provision is common because having vehicles parked on grass can attract rodents, track soil from grassed areas into the roadways, create problems with gas and oil leaking into lawn areas, and present a safety hazard as an attractive nuisance to children. R.R. at 33a-34a. Prior to November 20, 2018, the Zoning Ordinance did not contain a definition of “vehicle,” but did contain a definition of “motor vehicle”: “A self- propelled device used to transport persons and/or goods over land surfaces.” R.R. at 210a (previous version of Zoning Ordinance § 455-33 (“Definitions”)). The November 20, 2018, amendment to the Zoning Ordinance removed the definition of “motor vehicle” and replaced it with a definition of “vehicle”: “Any means in or by which someone travels or something is carried or conveyed; a means of conveyance or transport. A conveyance moving on wheels, runners, tracks or the like, as a cart, sled, automobile, motorcycle or tractor.” Id. at 128a (current version of Zoning Ordinance § 455-33 (“Definitions”)). Yeager testified that he understood the new definition to be merely a clarification of the relevant Zoning Ordinance provisions. Id. at 48a-49a. On November 28, 2018, Yeager served the Notice on the Herberts after inspecting their property numerous times beginning in August 2018. R.R. at 30a & 37a. Yeager saw a backhoe and trailer parked on the Herberts’ grassed backyard, which he believed violated Section 455-139(D) of the Zoning Ordinance. Id. at 28a, 30a & 37a. Although the Notice itself did not specify the backhoe and trailer, Yeager spoke with Mr. Herbert at some point during the relevant time and did not believe there was any confusion on Mr. Herbert’s part about the nature of the violation. Id. at 41a.

3 The Notice gave the Herberts until December 6, 2018, to remove the backhoe and trailer from the grassed area, listed a penalty of up to $500 per day for noncompliance, and informed the Herberts they had 20 days to appeal before the violation would proceed to civil enforcement proceedings before a magisterial district judge. R.R. at 3a. When Yeager returned after December 6, 2018, the backhoe had been moved to a paved driveway, but the trailer was still on the grass, now propped up on blocks as its wheels had been removed.3 Id. at 31a & 36a-37a. The Herberts timely appealed to the Board, asserting that the Notice did not sufficiently specify the purported violation, that the definition of “vehicle” in the Zoning Ordinance was overly broad and vague, and that the presence of the trailer on their backyard grass was a preexisting legal use of their property. R.R. at 8a. The Board conducted a public hearing. Yeager testified that the trailer in the Herberts’ backyard was not motorized, but he believed it was a “vehicle” under the Zoning Ordinance’s definition of that term when he issued the Notice on November 28, 2018. R.R. at 42a-44a. He further averred that “a trailer is a vehicle” and remains a vehicle even if its wheels are removed, as Mr. Herbert did after receiving the Notice. Id. at 44a & 51a. Mr. Herbert testified that the trailer, which had a title and registration (currently expired), had been on and off his property over the past ten years and continuously on his backyard grass since August 2018; the wheels were off the trailer because he was lengthening it. R.R. at 72a & 77a-79a. He used a pickup truck to move the trailer on and off his backyard grass. Id. at 77a. When the trailer was not on his property, he used it to transport lawnmowers as part of a family

3 Since Mr. Herbert had moved the backhoe off of the grassed area of his backyard before the Notice’s deadline for compliance, it was no longer in dispute when the Board issued its decision and is not at issue in this appeal. 4 business. Id. at 76a & 82a. He claimed a previous zoning officer told him verbally that having the trailer on the backyard grass did not violate the Zoning Ordinance as it was then written. Id. at 73a & 83a. Mr. Herbert stated that when he received the Notice, he understood it referred to the trailer on his backyard grass. Id. at 75a. He did not think the Notice pertained to the backhoe. Id. A member of the Borough Council testified that Steve Moyer of SDE is the sworn zoning officer for the Borough and that Yeager is the sworn-in assistant code enforcement officer. Id. at 59a-60a. The Zoning Ordinance is a distinct section of the Borough’s Code; code and zoning enforcement are both contracted by the Borough to SDE. Id. at 61a, 63a-64a & 67a. On February 28, 2019, the Board issued a decision and order denying the Herberts’ appeal of the Notice. R.R. at 148a-55a. The Board found that Yeager validly issued the Notice in his capacity as an authorized employee of SDE, which had been contracted by the Borough to provide its zoning and code enforcement services. Id. at 152a & 154a-55a.

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O. Herbert & M. Herbert v. W. Reading Borough ZHB & Borough of W. Reading ~ Appeal of: Borough of W. Reading, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/o-herbert-m-herbert-v-w-reading-borough-zhb-borough-of-w-reading-pacommwct-2021.