Parisi v. Philadelphia Zoning Board of Adjustment

393 Pa. 458
CourtSupreme Court of Pennsylvania
DecidedJune 30, 1958
DocketAppeal, No. 239
StatusPublished
Cited by28 cases

This text of 393 Pa. 458 (Parisi v. Philadelphia 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
Parisi v. Philadelphia Zoning Board of Adjustment, 393 Pa. 458 (Pa. 1958).

Opinion

Opinion by

Mr. Chief Justice Jones,

The plaintiff is the owner of a lot in Philadelphia located in a district zoned “A” Commercial. He applied to the zoning administrator under the provisions of Chapter 14-303, Section (2), of the Philadelphia Zoning Code for a use permit which would allow him to construct a car washing establishment on his property. The administrator refused the application. The plaintiff thereupon appealed the matter to the Board of Adjustment. The Board denied the application assigning as the reason that the Zoning Code does not permit the use of a proposed structure in an “A” Com[460]*460mercial district for a car washing business. On the owner’s appeal from the Board’s action, the court below dismissed the appeal without prejudice to an application by the appellant to the Zoning Board for a variance. This appeal then followed, it being the plaintiff’s position that the proposed use of his lot did not present a case for a variance with which we agree.

In Novello v. Zoning Board of Adjustment, 384 Pa. 294, 297, 121 A. 2d 91, we held that a car wash was a permitted use under Section 16 of the Philadelphia Zoning Ordinance of August 10,1933, in an area zoned “A” Commercial. This conclusion was based upon our interpretation of the language of subdivisions 32, 36 and 37 of Section 16 of the 1933 Ordinance. “The sole question” in the Novello case, as we there stated it, “. . . was whether a car wash fell within the purview of numbers 32, 36 and 37 of section 16 of the Ordinance, and whether the grant of a certificate for such use would be in general harmony with the standards set forth in section 3 of the enabling Act of May 6, 1929, P. L. 1551.” We specifically answered both aspects of the question in the affirmative. Mr. Chief Justice Stern, who spoke for the court, said in respect of quoted language of provisions 32, 36 and 37, that, “. . . the washing of cars is a use ‘customarily accessory and incidental to’ the operation of ‘a public or commercial garage or repair shop, gas and oil service stations,’ — indeed a normal, routine feature of such operation — and therefore that such a use is ‘of the same general character’ as that ordinarily conducted in those establishments.”

By Ordinance of October 11, 1956, which was six months after the decision in the Novello case, supra, the City Council of Philadelphia adopted a Zoning Code which, in part, effected some changes in existing law. However, Chapter 14-303 of the Zoning Code carried forward, without change whatsoeverf what had been [461]*461Section 16 of the Zoning Ordinance of 1933 which, as already stated, we had construed in the Novello case, supra; and the criteria for a certification of a permitted use, as prescribed by the enabling Act of May 6, 1929, P. L. 1551 (53 PS §14754), by which the application in the Novello case was tested, are identical with the requirements specified in Chapter 14-1802, Section (3) of the Zoning Code.

But, the amended form of the “Use Restrictions” for property in a “B” Commercial area, as contained in Chapter 14-304 of the Zoning Code of 1956, was made to include, inter alia, “(e) Car washing establishments, using mechanical equipment for the purpose of washing, and/or polishing automobiles and other vehicles, provided a Zoning Board of Adjustment certificate, as herein provided, is obtained. Such Zoning Board of Adjustment certificate may only be issued where such use will have on the-premises: (1) a waiting area for incoming cars accessible to the entrance end of the washing equipment, of at least 4000 square feet, and (2) an area beyond the exit end of the washing equipment, of at least 400 square feet, so situated as to be usable for the hand finishing of the washing process.”

“B” Commercial is a less restricted classification than “A” Commercial and embraces, inter alia, all “The uses permitted in ‘A’ Commercial District . . . .” Since the Zoning Code expressly included a “Car washing establishment”, as above quoted, among the permitted uses in a “B” Commercial district, the Zoning Board contends that the Code amendment in such regard worked an implied repeal of the car washing use which we found to be a permitted use in an “A” Commercial district under the provisions of Section 16 of the 1933 Ordinance and now contained in Chapter 14-303 of the Zoning Code of 1956. The contention is manifestly untenable.

[462]*462When we construed the language of Section 16 of the Ordinance of 1933 as intended to mean that a car washing establishment was a permitted use (once certified) in an “A” Commercial district, the situation was the same as if such use had been set out in plain and explicit terms in Section 16 as enacted. Thenceforth, the indicated use in an “A” Commercial district, as so adjudicated by us, could be nullified only by an express or necessarily implied legislative repeal. Admittedly, the Zoning Code of 1956 contains no express repeal of Section 16 of the 1933 Zoning Ordinance. On the contrary, as heretofore observed, Section 16 of the Ordinance of 1933 was carried into the Zoning Code of 1956 as Chapter 14-303, ipsissimis verbis. That action of itself was presumptively tantamount to legislative approval of our earlier construction of the identical language: Bogdan v. School District of Coal Township, 369 Pa. 147, 152, 85 A. 2d 139.

Thus, the Board’s contention comes face to face at the outset with the familiar and long established rule of statutory construction that when, in a later legislative enactment, the same language is used as in a prior cognate statute, which has been construed by us, the presumption is that the language thus repeated is to be interpreted in the same way it previously had been when we passed upon the earlier enactment: Buhl’s Estate, 300 Pa. 29, 32, 150 A. 86. See, also, Bell v. Bell, 287 Pa. 269, 273, 135 A. 219, and Spangler’s Estate, 281 Pa. 118, 123, 126 A. 252. As recognized in Lower Nazareth Township Supervisors’ Appeal, 341 Pa. 171, 175, 19 A. 2d 92, the foregoing rule has been codified as subsection (4) of Section 52 of the Statutory Construction Act of May 28, 1937, P. L. 1019, 46 PS §552(4).

The Board’s contention is confronted by the further barrier that implied repeals are not favored by the law: Scott v. Bell, 344 Pa. 243, 246, 25. A. 2d 308, and H. C. [463]*463Frick Coke Company Appeal, 352 Pa. 269, 274, 42 A. 2d 532. Of course, that does not mean that the additional obstacle cited is insurmountable in all instances. There may, indeed, be an implied repeal of a legislative enactment. But it can arise only where the language used in the later statute necessarily discloses an irreconcilable repugnancy between its provisions and those of the earlier statute so inconsistent as not to admit of any fair consonant construction of the two. In Scott v. Bell,

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393 Pa. 458, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/parisi-v-philadelphia-zoning-board-of-adjustment-pa-1958.