Renziehausen v. Township of Robinson

611 A.2d 706, 531 Pa. 154, 1992 Pa. LEXIS 411
CourtSupreme Court of Pennsylvania
DecidedJune 17, 1992
Docket31 W.D. Appeal Docket 1990
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 611 A.2d 706 (Renziehausen v. Township of Robinson) 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
Renziehausen v. Township of Robinson, 611 A.2d 706, 531 Pa. 154, 1992 Pa. LEXIS 411 (Pa. 1992).

Opinion

OPINION OF THE COURT

ZAPPALA, Justice.

The question in this appeal is whether Commonwealth Court erred when it reversed an order of the Court of Common Pleas of Allegheny County and remanded for entry of a mandamus directing the Robinson Township Zoning Officer to issue a building permit subject to certain conditions. 130 Pa.Commw. 662, 567 A.2d 353.

Daniel and Patricia Renziehausen operate a garbage hauling business. In April of 1986, they filed a site plan for property they own in Robinson Township, proposing to construct a fifty-by-fifty foot building to store, maintain, and repair garbage trucks used in their business. The Board of Township Commissioners, on the advice of the Planning Commission, denied approval and the zoning officer denied a building permit on the grounds that the use was not a permitted one.

*156 Under the township zoning ordinance, the property is located in a Light Industrial District II. On appeal, in July of 1986 the Zoning Hearing Board determined that the proposed use is a compatible use similar to those listed as being permitted in the district and approved it subject to several “conditions”. On further appeal by neighbors, who argued that the use was not permitted, and by the Renziehausens, who argued against the “conditions”, the common pleas court affirmed in April of 1988, as did Commonwealth Court in November of the same year. 121 Pa.Commw. 346, 550 A.2d 863. In rejecting the Renziehausens’ argument, Commonwealth Court observed that the “conditions” were not requirements in addition to those stated by the ordinance, but were no more than statements of circumstances under which the use would meet the ordinance’s definition of a “light industrial use”. This Court denied the Renziehausens’ Petition for Allowance of Appeal.

While that matter was pending, specifically while the Zoning Hearing Board’s decision was on appeal to the common pleas court, the Renziehausens filed a second site plan for the property, again proposing a building for storage and maintenance of garbage trucks, this one fifty-by-seventy feet. This site plan was approved by the Board of Township Commissioners in November of 1987. In August of 1988, the Renziehausens applied for a building permit, which the zoning officer denied for two reasons. First, he found that the application, which was dated April 25, 1986, was untimely. Second, he noted that the Renziehausens’ appeal as to the “conditions” imposed on the proposed use, which arose from his denial of a building permit for the same site, was still pending in Commonwealth Court. No appeal was taken from this denial.

In September of 1988, however, the Renziehausens filed a complaint in mandamus which initiated the matter now before the Court. 1 In this complaint, the Renziehausens, without *157 differentiating between the two applications, recited the procedural history of their first application for a building permit through the common pleas court’s decision, after which they asserted that the Planning Commission and the Board of Commissioners had approved their second site plan. On this basis, they asserted that since it had been established that the use was a permitted one and the Planning Commission and Township Commissioners had approved their plan, all requirements of the ordinance had been met and there was no discretion to deny the building permit, but rather a legal duty to issue one. The Renziehausens also claimed damages “in excess of $10,000 as a result of delays causing increases in construction costs, increases in financing costs with increase in debt service over the term of the financing as well as incurring substantial expenses for rental property to conduct the activity which would otherwise lawfully be conducted on the Plaintiffs property,” along with costs and expenses involved in litigation.

On December 9, 1988, the court of common pleas sustained preliminary objections and dismissed the complaint in mandamus. In its opinion filed March 2, 1989, the court highlighted the importance of a fact the Renziehausens had neglected to include in their complaint, that the common pleas order affirming the finding that the proposed use was a permitted one was on appeal, both at the time the complaint in mandamus was filed and at the time the court ruled on it. The court observed, “[t]he plaintiff can not get a permit on the strength of an (sic) 1987 site plan approval when he is refusing, via the appeal, to abide by the conditions of that revised plan.” Opinion at 3. Indeed, as the court pointed out, this was one of the reasons cited by the zoning officer in his letter advising of the refusal to issue the permit. The court also made passing mention of the two other reasons given by the zoning officer for his action (the incorrect statement of the date and the necessity of review by the new township engineer) and of the fact that the size of the proposed garage had changed from *158 the first to the second site plan. These factual discrepancies, said the court, demonstrated that there was no clear right to the issuance of the permit.

In January of 1989, the Renziehausens filed a timely appeal to Commonwealth Court from the dismissal of their complaint in mandamus, and the case was argued in October of 1989. In the meantime, in May of 1989, this Court, as previously mentioned, had denied allocatur with respect to the first case, thus finalizing the determination that the use was permitted subject to the “conditions” described by the Board. Based on this fact, Commonwealth Court determined that there no longer was any valid basis for refusing to issue a building permit, and remanded for entry of mandamus directing that such a permit issue subject to the aforementioned “conditions”.

In this appeal, the Township argues first that the Commonwealth Court erred in neglecting the standard of review applicable to an appeal of a denial of mandamus. The Township argues that instead of applying the “abuse of discretion” standard, the Commonwealth Court gave plenary review, deciding for itself whether mandamus was appropriate.

This argument fails because it is based on a mistaken view of the procedural posture of the case. The common pleas court did not rule on the merits in dismissing the mandamus complaint, it granted preliminary objections in the nature of a demurrer. Although there is very little practical distinction between the analysis the court used and that which it would have applied to reach a decision on the merits, the procedural posture of the case has a bearing on the appropriate standard of appellate review. A decision to deny mandamus is indeed subject to reversal only for abuse of discretion. Malone v. West Marlborough Township Board of Supervisors, 131 Pa. Commw. 347, 570 A.2d 147 (1990). A decision that a plaintiff has failed to state a cause of action (in mandamus), however, is subject to plenary review, inasmuch as the common pleas court has decided that the complaint, as a matter of law, does not make out a claim for relief.

*159

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Bluebook (online)
611 A.2d 706, 531 Pa. 154, 1992 Pa. LEXIS 411, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/renziehausen-v-township-of-robinson-pa-1992.