Pietropaolo v. Zoning Hearing Board

979 A.2d 969, 2009 Pa. Commw. LEXIS 1115, 2009 WL 2517055
CourtCommonwealth Court of Pennsylvania
DecidedAugust 19, 2009
Docket2173 C.D. 2008
StatusPublished
Cited by24 cases

This text of 979 A.2d 969 (Pietropaolo 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
Pietropaolo v. Zoning Hearing Board, 979 A.2d 969, 2009 Pa. Commw. LEXIS 1115, 2009 WL 2517055 (Pa. Ct. App. 2009).

Opinion

OPINION BY

Judge SIMPSON.

In this appeal, Joseph Pietropaolo, Sr., Rosa F. Pietropaolo and Joseph Pietropao-lo, Jr., Landscaping Contractor, Inc. (collectively, Applicants), ask whether the Zoning Hearing Board of Lower Merion Township (ZHB) erred in denying their appeal from an enforcement notice that required Applicants to cease using their residentially-zoned property for a landscape contractor business. Applicants argue the ZHB erred in denying their appeal where the use of a garage on the property and the operation of the landscaping business are a continuation of a lawful nonconforming use. Alternatively, they assert the ZHB erred in denying their variance by estoppel request where the Township acquiesced to their use and where the ZHB granted such relief to a similarly situated landowner. Discerning no error in the ZHB’s decision, we affirm.

Joseph Pietropaolo, Sr. and his wife Rosa own the property located at 355 East County Line Road in Ardmore, Lower Merion Township (subject property). The subject property is zoned R-6A Residential and is improved with a single family dwelling, a detached four-bay garage and a paved driveway. The Pietropaolo’s son, Joseph Pietropaolo, Jr., lives in a dwelling on the subject property with his wife. Pietropaolo, Jr. also uses the garage and paved driveway in connection with a landscaping business. It is that use, the extent of which is described more fully below, which is at issue here.

This matter originated by virtue of a letter dated September 14, 2007, from the Township Zoning Officer to Applicants, which indicated the use of the subject property for a landscaping business was not permitted in the R-6A district. The zoning officer sent the letter in response to a complaint by Applicants’ neighbor, Anna Sachs (Objector). 1

*973 In October 2007, Applicants appealed the zoning officer’s determination to the ZHB, claiming the activities relating to the landscaping business were entitled to continue as a nonconforming use. Alternatively, Applicants asserted they were entitled to a variance by estoppel because they openly conducted the landscaping business on the subject property for 38 years without Township interference. A hearing on Applicants’ appeal ensued before the ZHB.

After hearing, the ZHB denied Applicants’ appeal and their request for a variance by estoppel. In its opinion, the ZHB made the following findings.

Joseph Pietropaolo, Jr. testified he currently operates a residential landscape contracting business from the subject property for homes in the Eastern Main Line area. The landscaping operation lasts from mid-March to mid-December. During the winter, Pietropaolo, Jr. operates a smaller-scale snow-plowing operation.

The work day for Pietropaolo Jr.’s business begins and ends at the subject property, where the vehicles and equipment are stored and where the employees meet and prepare the equipment for the day’s work.

The equipment used for the business includes Pietropaolo Jr.’s pickup truck, his father’s truck, a dump truck, a trailer, hand-operated leaf blowers, push blowers, three walk-behind mowers, a rider mower, a leaf loader and a variety of hand tools and supplies. Including the Pietropaolos, the business is comprised of four full-time employees. During the spring and fall seasons, up to three additional employees may be added.

A typical workday on the subject property begins when Pietropaolo Sr. arrives in his truck at 6:30 a.m. to prepare the equipment for the day’s work. He opens the garage, retrieves the gas cans and leaves the subject property to fill them at a local gas station. The other employees arrive around 7:00 a.m. They connect the trailer to the pickup truck and load the riding mowers, push mowers and other equipment and tools required for the day’s work. They depart the subject property at approximately 7:30 a.m. The employees return to the subject property at approximately 3:30 p.m., unload the trailer and store the equipment, including the dump truck, inside the garage bays. Pietropao-lo, Jr. testified the loading of the mowers does not necessarily occur everyday. Depending on the weather, the mowers may remain “pre-loaded” on the trailer for several consecutive days. Reproduced Record (R.R.) at 79a. On bad weather days, the mowers may have to be unloaded and loaded from the trailer as they cannot remain outside.

The Pietropaolos perform maintenance and minor equipment servicing inside the garage. This includes lubricating and changing the oil in the machines, and sharpening and grinding the blades for the mowers, usually on the weekends. 2

Pietropaolo, Sr. testified Applicants’ operation has been conducted in the same basic manner and intensity since 1969, when he first purchased the subject property.

Arcolino Bianco testified on behalf of Applicants with regard to the use of the subject property prior to its purchase by Pietropaolo, Sr. Bianco was born in 1923 and lived in the neighborhood of the sub *974 ject property until 1950 (with the exception of a three-year stint in the armed services). After 1950, Bianco moved to Hav-ertown, but his family continued to live in a house in the immediate neighborhood of the subject property. Bianco has been a frequent visitor to that neighborhood since 1950. He testified the garage has been on the subject property since at least 1930, when it was the only structure on the site. The owners of the subject property at that time, the Finocchios, rented out the garage to two truckers and an individual with a car. One of the Finocchios also stored his car there. After Thomas Finocchio built a house on the subject property in 1948, the garage continued to be used for the storage of two trucks and two automobiles. The automobiles were owned by the Fi-nocchios. According to Bianco, it was not until the Pietropaolos purchased the subject property that a landscaping business began to operate from the property.

Objector testified in opposition to Applicant’s appeal. Since August 2001, Objector resided at the property adjacent to the subject property. Objector testified that when she first moved in, she spoke to Pietropaolo, Jr. about the landscaping business conducted on the subject property. According to Objector, Pietropaolo, Jr. stated the business had been there a long time and was grandfathered in by the Township. Objector did not question Piet-ropaolo, Jr.’s statement until recent disputes between the neighbors prompted her to ask the zoning officer to investigate.

Objector presented 22 photographs and testified regarding the impact of the landscaping business on the enjoyment of her property. She stated the pickup trucks come in and out of the subject property several times each day early in the morning. The dump truck is often parked outside the garage, and the business has spilled over to the garage on the property at 357 East County Line Road, which is also owned by Pietropaolo, Sr. The mowers must be started to move them onto the trailer, a very noisy operation according to Objector. Objector also testified the five employees (sometimes more) commonly engage in loud conversations and shouting in the morning. On the weekends, Pietro-paolo, Sr. sharpens the mower blades on a grinding stone for several hours, also a loud operation.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
979 A.2d 969, 2009 Pa. Commw. LEXIS 1115, 2009 WL 2517055, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/pietropaolo-v-zoning-hearing-board-pacommwct-2009.