R. Tebbenhoff v. Hawley Borough ZHB

CourtCommonwealth Court of Pennsylvania
DecidedJuly 8, 2024
Docket622 C.D. 2023
StatusUnpublished

This text of R. Tebbenhoff v. Hawley Borough ZHB (R. Tebbenhoff v. Hawley Borough 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
R. Tebbenhoff v. Hawley Borough ZHB, (Pa. Ct. App. 2024).

Opinion

IN THE COMMONWEALTH COURT OF PENNSYLVANIA

Robert Tebbenhoff, : Appellant : : v. : : Hawley Borough Zoning Hearing : No. 622 C.D. 2023 Board : Submitted: June 6, 2024

BEFORE: HONORABLE CHRISTINE FIZZANO CANNON, Judge HONORABLE LORI A. DUMAS, Judge HONORABLE STACY WALLACE, Judge

OPINION NOT REPORTED

MEMORANDUM OPINION BY JUDGE FIZZANO CANNON FILED: July 8, 2024

Robert Tebbenhoff (Tebbenhoff) appeals from an order of the Court of Common Pleas of Wayne County (trial court) affirming a decision of the Zoning Hearing Board (ZHB) of the Borough of Hawley (Borough) that upheld a Notice of Violation. Upon review, we affirm the trial court’s order.

I. Background In 2016, Tebbenhoff purchased real property located at 224 Cedar Street in the Borough (224 Cedar). Reproduced Record (RR), vol. 1, item 4 at 13;1 id., vol. 2, items 3-5. 224 Cedar was located in the R-1 Low Density Residential

1 Tebbenhoff failed to number the pages of the reproduced record as directed by Rule 2173 of the Pennsylvania Rules of Appellate Procedure. See Pa.R.A.P. 2173 (directing that “the pages of . . . the reproduced record . . . shall be numbered separately in Arabic figures . . . followed by a small a, thus 1a, 2a, 3a, etc. . . .” and that “[w]here the reproduced record is bound in more than one volume, there shall be one continuous paging, regardless of the division into volumes”). Instead, Tebbenhoff filed a three-volume reproduced record divided into separate items. We have cited the reproduced record here in accordance with the item numbers designated by Tebbenhoff. zoning district. ZHB Dec. at 3. It was improved with a single-family dwelling and a garage and was considered one parcel, but it actually consisted of four separate lots. Id. In the R-1 zoning district, a single-family dwelling is a permitted use, and a private garage is an accessory use. HAWLEY BOROUGH, PA., ZONING ORDINANCE (Final Draft 2013) (Zoning Ordinance), § 125-14; ZHB Dec. at 6. In 2017, Tebbenhoff obtained a permit from the Borough to use the garage as an accessory structure. RR, vol. 1, item 4 at 46. In 2021, Tebbenhoff decided to subdivide 224 Cedar. ZHB Dec. at 2. He submitted a plan to reconfigure the four existing parcels into three separate lots; one lot would be vacant, one lot would contain the dwelling, and one lot would contain the garage. Id. At Tebbenhoff’s direction, the plan, as approved by the Borough, expressly provided that the garage was to be converted into a single-family dwelling. Id. (quoting Tebbenhoff’s Statement of Intent, on the subdivision plan map that 220 Cedar “has an existing garage (to be converted to a single-family dwelling) . . .”) (emphasis added by ZHB) (additional quotation marks omitted); id. at 4; RR, vol. 1, item 4 at 65-66 & 77 (Tebbenhoff’s testimony that the Borough approved the subdivision map containing the Statement of Intent that the garage was “to be converted to a single[-]family dwelling”); RR, vol. 2, unnumbered item between items 10 and 11 (copy of subdivision plan including the Statement of Intent, with signed approvals by the Borough Planning Commission and Borough Council). As the ZHB explained, it was Tebbenhoff’s Statement of Intent on the subdivision plan to convert the garage to a dwelling that “created a condition by which the subdivision could be approved.” ZHB Dec. at 6. After receiving subdivision approval from the Borough, Tebbenhoff recorded the new deeds in June 2021. ZHB Dec. at 2. Thereafter, he sold the lot

2 containing the dwelling. RR, vol. 1, item 4 at 44 & 65. The lot containing the garage now has an address of 220 Cedar Avenue (220 Cedar). Id. at 63; ZHB Dec. at 3. In August 2021, Tebbenhoff applied for zoning and building permits for the planned conversion of the garage at 220 Cedar. ZHB Dec. at 3; RR, vol. 3, item 2. In September 2021, he submitted a proposed building plan. RR, vol. 2, item 6. However, he never obtained the required permits because he failed to submit “an Engineering Plan for the sewer and modified Engineering Plans for the structure of the building to hold up the kitchen, living room, and dining room ceiling.” ZHB Dec. at 3-4; see also RR, vol. 1, item 4 at 73. Instead, Tebbenhoff used the garage at 220 Cedar to store vehicles and household goods. ZHB Dec. at 3; RR, vol. 1, item 4 at 69-71, 76-77 & 83. In February 2022, Tebbenhoff informed the Borough’s Zoning Officer in an email that he was planning to delay completion of the garage conversion at 220 Cedar because he had decided to do another building project first, stating: “I have a change in plans and am planning on starting with the construction of the new house on [the] 412 Highland St, Hawley, PA Lot first. I can use the garage [at 220 Cedar] to store materials and supplies in without the fear of theft.” RR, vol. 2, item 9 at 2. In April 2022, the Zoning Officer issued a Notice of Violation indicating the following two separate zoning violations arising from Tebbenhoff’s continued use of the garage at 220 Cedar and his failure to effect the conversion of the garage to a dwelling: Specific Violations: Commencing no later than the date of this notice you have: 1. Changed the use of the subject property without first obtaining a Zoning Permit in violation [of Section] 125-51 of the . . . Zoning Ordinance [(governing Permits)]. You are storing vehicles in an accessory structure on the

3 property and have not obtained a Zoning Permit from the Zoning Official for this new and/or change in use on the property. 2. Occupied and/or used an accessory structure in violation of [Section] 125-54 of the . . . Zoning Ordinance [(governing Certificates of Use)]. The accessory structure on the subject property has been used/and or occupied without a Certificate of Use issued by the Zoning Official. Id., vol. 2, item 10 at 1-2; see also id., vol. 1, item 4 at 15-16. Tebbenhoff appealed to the ZHB from the Notice of Violation. RR, vol. 2, item 1. In August 2022, the ZHB held a public hearing, at the end of which the members of the ZHB voted unanimously to deny the appeal and uphold the Notice of Violation. Id., vol. 1, item 4 at 105. The ZHB sent a confirmatory letter to Tebbenhoff the next day, followed in November 2022 by a written decision containing findings of fact, conclusions of law, and the following discussion: Tebbenhoffer’s violations are rooted in his actions in seeking a subdivision of his property. Sadly, he does not seem to understand that he changed the lay of the land when he obtained a subdivision approval separating his house from his garage property.

Before he obtained the subdivision approval and recorded the deeds in accordance with that approval, he had a house in the R-1 Low Density Residential District. That is a Principal Permitted Use in such a district. He also had a garage on the same property. The garage was an Accessory Use at that time. Once he separated the garage property from the house property, he created a zoning violation. Since [] Tebbenhoff instructed Kiley Associates to put on the map/subdivision application that the garage would be changed or converted to a single-family residence, he created a condition by which the subdivision could be approved. Without that conversion, the zoning violations alleged by the Borough are clear. As the Zoning Officer said in her testimony, [] Tebbenhoff can remove the violations by obtaining a Zoning Permit and a Building

4 Permit for conversion to a single[-]family detached dwelling. (Notes of Testimony, Page 30, Lines 3-7[.])

Unfortunately, . . . Tebbenhoff has not obtained those Permits and the violations continue. His own testimony and exhibits prove the Borough’s case. Exhibit A-22 is a series of photographs demonstrating the violations. [RR, vol.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
R. Tebbenhoff v. Hawley Borough ZHB, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/r-tebbenhoff-v-hawley-borough-zhb-pacommwct-2024.