Pegasus Tower Co., Ltd, and Open Range Communications, Inc. v. Upper Yoder Twp. ZHB

CourtCommonwealth Court of Pennsylvania
DecidedJanuary 23, 2018
Docket192 C.D. 2017
StatusUnpublished

This text of Pegasus Tower Co., Ltd, and Open Range Communications, Inc. v. Upper Yoder Twp. ZHB (Pegasus Tower Co., Ltd, and Open Range Communications, Inc. v. Upper Yoder Twp. ZHB) 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
Pegasus Tower Co., Ltd, and Open Range Communications, Inc. v. Upper Yoder Twp. ZHB, (Pa. Ct. App. 2018).

Opinion

IN THE COMMONWEALTH COURT OF PENNSYLVANIA

Pegasus Tower Co., Ltd., and Open : Range Communications, Inc. : : No. 192 C.D. 2017 v. : : Argued: November 14, 2017 Upper Yoder Township Zoning : Hearing Board and Harry Pote and : Marjorie Pote, William and Carol : Ann Pruchnic, George and Rani Frem : and Samuel and Francine Glass : : Pegasus Tower Co., Ltd., and Open : Range Communications, Inc. : : v. : : Upper Yoder Township Zoning : Hearing Board : : Appeal of: Harry and Marjorie : Pote, William and Carol Ann : Pruchnic, George and Rani Frem, : and Samuel and Francine Glass :

BEFORE: HONORABLE ROBERT SIMPSON, Judge HONORABLE PATRICIA A. McCULLOUGH, Judge HONORABLE DAN PELLEGRINI, Senior Judge

OPINION NOT REPORTED

MEMORANDUM OPINION BY JUDGE McCULLOUGH FILED: January 23, 2018

In what may be considered to be a companion case to Pote v. Pegasus Tower Co., Ltd., (Pa. Cmwlth., No. 1186 C.D. 2013, filed March 27, 2014) (unreported), Harry and Marjorie Pote, William and Carol Ann Pruchnic, George and Rani Frem, and Samuel and Francine Glass (collectively, Objectors) appeal the January 20, 2017 order of the Court of Common Pleas of Cambria County (trial court) granting Pegasus Tower Co., Ltd. and Open Range Communications, Inc. (collectively, Pegasus) “site-specific” relief and the authority to construct a 195 foot cellular communications tower, with related antennas and equipment, at its originally proposed site in an S Conservancy District. In a prior opinion and order dated October 13, 2015, the trial court reversed the decision of the Zoning Hearing Board of Upper Yoder Township (ZHB), concluded that the Zoning Ordinance (Ordinance) was de jure exclusionary as to cellular towers and wireless communication facilities, and determined that Pegasus was entitled to build its tower “somewhere” in the municipality. We reverse.

Background After landowners leased part of their real property to Pegasus for the right to construct a communications tower, Pegasus filed a conditional use application on April 8, 2011. In its application, Pegasus also contended that the Ordinance was de jure exclusionary. On June 8, 2011, the ZHB held a hearing on Pegasus’ challenge to the substantive validity of the Ordinance and denied the challenge. However, in the conditional use proceedings, the Upper Yoder Township Board of Supervisors (Board) failed to hold a hearing to determine whether Pegasus was entitled to a conditional use under the generally applicable standards in the Ordinance regarding the proposed tower’s impact to the health, safety, and welfare of the community.1

1 Apparently, there is some confusion amongst the parties as to which entity, the ZHB or the Board, should have decided the merits of the conditional use application. As we noted in Pote, the

2 Pegasus appealed to the trial court, asserting that: (1) its conditional use application was deemed approved by operation of law because the Board did not hold a hearing within sixty days of the application, and (2) the ZHB failed to issue a written decision that contained the necessary findings of fact and conclusions of law. On July 17, 2012, the trial court, sitting en banc, concluded that the conditional use was deemed approved under the Municipalities Planning Code (MPC)2 and ordered Upper Yoder Township (Township) to issue official notice that the application has been approved (Conditional Use Case). The en banc trial court also remanded the de jure exclusionary challenge to the ZHB to issue a written decision containing findings of fact and conclusions of law (Exclusionary Case). After the Township issued the notice of approval, Objectors appealed to the trial court in the Conditional Use Case. Meanwhile, on August 22, 2012, the ZHB issued its remand decision and again denied Pegasus’ claim that the Ordinance was invalid because it constituted de jure exclusionary zoning. Relying on the testimony of the Township’s Zoning Officer and Engineer, the ZHB found as fact that:

c). [A] wireless communication facility such as proposed by [Pegasus] could be provided in zoning districts in the Township by right, special exception, or by conditional use.

* * *

e). [Pegasus] could have applied for its use in other districts within the Township, specifically three different commercial zoning districts and one manufacturing district. [Pegasus] did not apply for its use in any of those areas and/or districts.

Board believed that it lacked jurisdiction to decide the application because it did not possess the authority to grant a conditional use in an S Conservancy District. Pote, slip op. at 1, n.1.

2 Act of July 31, 1968, P.L. 805, as amended, 53 P.S. §§ 10101-11202.

3 f). [T]here actually existed other towers in the existing zones within the Township. Specifically, there are TV antenna towers within a residential zone.

g). [The Zoning Officer/Engineer] provided alternate sites for the proposed use to [Pegasus]. (ZHB’s Findings of Fact No. 12 (c), (e)-(g)). In its conclusions of law, the ZHB held:

3. The request to erect a 195 foot cell tower is clearly commercial in nature and as such is prohibited in the conservancy district. The ordinance is not de jure exclusionary regarding this type of monopole cell tower.

8. The zoning ordinance may permit communication towers and wireless communication facilities by special exception under sections 601, 602, 603, and 701 of the zoning ordinance, which address commercial and manufacturing districts.

9. The 195 foot monopole cell tower may be permitted in at least three out of the four existing commercial and manufacturing districts if a variance were granted regarding height. The Township Zoning Officer provided these alternatives to [Pegasus]. [Pegasus] never applied for a permit in any of these zones, nor ha[s] [Pegasus] applied for a height variance.

10. The ordinance does incorporate terms such as towers and structures. There are several similar towers of varying use currently in existence in the Township.

14. . . . The ordinance is not exclusionary as this use may be permitted in its commercial and manufacturing districts.

15. Moreover, [Pegasus] [is] requesting to place the 195 foot monopole cell tower, which is commercial in nature, in

4 a conservancy district. The conservancy district is intended to preserve the scenic and ecological values of the Township’s steep hillside, lands, waterways, environmentally sensitive forest land and soil types through the prohibition and restriction of commercial, industrial, and most residential development. This district is the most conservative district outlined in the ordinance. To place a 195 foot commercial tower in that district would not be proper under the ordinance and in fact, since this ordinance is not exclusionary regarding [Pegasus’] proposed use, would be improper. (ZHB’s Conclusions of Law Nos. 3, 8-10, 14-15.) As such, the ZHB concluded that the Ordinance was not de jure exclusionary and cited Cellco Partnership v. North Annville Township Zoning Hearing Board, 939 A.2d 430, 434 (Pa. Cmwlth. 2007), for support. Pegasus appealed. In due course, the Conditional Use Case and the Exclusionary Case were both pending before the trial court, and the parties agreed to hold the Exclusionary Case in abeyance until the Conditional Use Case was decided. In their appeal to the trial court in the Conditional Use Case, Objectors contended, among other things, that Pegasus is not entitled to a conditional use because the proposed site of the tower is located in an S Conservancy District and the applicable provisions of the Ordinance would only allow Pegasus to construct a communications tower by special exception in commercial or manufacturing districts.

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Bluebook (online)
Pegasus Tower Co., Ltd, and Open Range Communications, Inc. v. Upper Yoder Twp. ZHB, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/pegasus-tower-co-ltd-and-open-range-communications-inc-v-upper-yoder-pacommwct-2018.