Rickert v. LATIMORE TP. BD. OF SUP'RS

869 A.2d 1086
CourtCommonwealth Court of Pennsylvania
DecidedMarch 7, 2005
StatusPublished

This text of 869 A.2d 1086 (Rickert v. LATIMORE TP. BD. OF SUP'RS) 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
Rickert v. LATIMORE TP. BD. OF SUP'RS, 869 A.2d 1086 (Pa. Ct. App. 2005).

Opinion

869 A.2d 1086 (2005)

Terry R. RICKERT, Robert L. Junkins, M. Everett Weiser and Olive L. Weiser
v.
LATIMORE TOWNSHIP BOARD OF SUPERVISORS, Appellant.

Commonwealth Court of Pennsylvania.

Argued March 29, 2004.
Decided March 7, 2005.

*1088 Ronald A. Turo, Carlisle, for appellant.

Charles M. Suhr, Harrisburg, for appellees.

BEFORE: COLINS, President Judge, and LEADBETTER, Judge, and KELLEY, Senior Judge.

OPINION BY Judge LEADBETTER.

The owners of several tracts of land along "old route 15" in Latimore Township challenged the procedure of the Township's Board of Supervisors (Supervisors) employed in enacting new zoning regulations that rezoned their tracts from Commercial-Industrial to Agricultural-Conservation and made various other text and map changes to the 1987 Ordinance. The Zoning Hearing Board (ZHB) upheld the new zoning regulations. Landowners, Terry R. Rickert, Robert L. Junkins, M. Everett Weiser and his wife Olive L. Weiser appealed to the Court of Common Pleas of Adams County (common pleas), which reversed the ZHB. The Township filed the present appeal. We affirm.

On March 4, 2002, the Supervisors enacted the 2002 Zoning Ordinance, which encompasses 105 pages and appears to be a complete ordinance that essentially replaces the prior 1987 Ordinance. At the same time, they also adopted a zoning map that decreased the size of the Commercial-Industrial District and added two new zoning districts.[1] These changes followed the adoption of a revised comprehensive plan in July of 2000, and a nearly two-year period during which the Planning Commission and the Supervisors considered and revised proposed changes to the 1987 Ordinance. For example, the record contains the transcript of a public hearing on October 16, 2000, at which the Supervisors took public comments on the draft of ordinance changes and, thereafter, referred the comments back to the Planning Commission in contemplation of draft revisions. Prior to enactment on March 4, 2002, the Planning Commission discussed the proposed changes at regularly scheduled public meetings on August 28 and September 25, 2001 and January 22 and February 26, 2002. In addition to review by the Township Planning Commission, the Supervisors submitted proposed revisions to the Adams County Planning Commission at various times during consideration and revision of drafts and received review letters on October 20, 2000, June 26, 2001 and March 4, 2002.

On January 24, 2002, the Supervisors published notice of a meeting scheduled for January 28 expressly to set a date to hear public comments on the proposed zoning ordinance and map. On February 15, the Supervisors published notice in the Gettysburg Times announcing the public hearing scheduled for March 4, "to consider a proposed amendment and the adoption thereof" and informing that a copy of *1089 the proposed ordinance was available at the Township building for examination without charge or that a copy could be obtained at cost upon request. On February 22, the Supervisors published two notices in the Gettysburg Times. One notice, in all capital letters, announced the time and place for the March 4, "special meeting for the purpose of considering and/or adopting a zoning ordinance amendment." The other, appearing just below the first, announced the same information, directed that the proposed ordinance could be examined in the Township building and listed as a "summary of the proposed amendments," a short general description of the subject matter of each article of the ordinance. In the same newspaper, on February 25, the Supervisors again published this notice containing the "summary." Notably, the summary does not describe or even hint at which sections or in what manner the 1987 Ordinance is amended by the contemplated new ordinance.

In addition to these published notices, the Township posted approximately 24 notices at various sites around the Township. In particular, the posted notices were placed where map changes were contemplated in the area of the Residential-Agricultural District in the western part of the Township, along the Route 15 corridor where changes were contemplated in the Commercial-Industrial District and in an area in the eastern part of the Township under consideration for rezoning to Agricultural-Conservation II. ZHB Hearing May 23, 2002, Appellant's Exh. 2. The Township did not post notices in the area where it proposed that a portion of the Residential-Agricultural District near Lake Meade be rezoned to the newly created Residential-Lake Meade District or near tracts in the northeast where minor changes were contemplated in the Residential-Agricultural and Residential-Suburban Districts.

Following the March 4 enactment, Landowners filed a timely procedural challenge to the ZHB. Landowners contended that the Supervisors adopted a new ordinance without strictly complying with the requirements in Section 607 and 608 of the Municipalities Planning Code (MPC),[2]as amended, 53 P.S. §§ 10607 and 10608.[3] In *1090 particular, the Landowners contended that the Supervisors rather than the Township Planning Commission prepared the text and map of the new ordinance and that published notice failed to announce the map changes. Alternatively, Landowners asserted that even if considered as an amendment to the 1987 Ordinance, the Supervisors failed to submit the amendments to the Planning Commissions of both the Township and the County and failed to publish and post notice as required under Section 609 of the MPC, as amended, 53 P.S. § 10609.[4] In particular, the Landowners contended that published notice did not announce the contemplated map changes and posted notices were inadequate in number and placement.[5]

*1091 Following a hearing, the ZHB found that the ordinance contained revisions to "no more than five percent of the [1987] Ordinance." Further, the ZHB noted that throughout the period of consideration and draft revisions Township officials and the County Planning Commission referred to the proposed ordinance as an amendment. Based on this and other evidence, characterized by the ZHB as "simply overwhelming," the ZHB concluded that the ordinance amended the 1987 Ordinance. The ZHB concluded that the notices, both published and posted, complied with the MPC requirements for the enactment of ordinance amendments. The ZHB further found that the Planning Commissions for both the Township and the County had reviewed and commented upon the amendments as required. Consequently, the ZHB upheld the ordinance.

Landowners appealed to common pleas, challenging the sufficiency of evidence supporting the finding that the Supervisors enacted an amendment rather than a new ordinance and raising all of the procedural errors earlier asserted. Without taking additional evidence, common pleas agreed that the evidence established that the Supervisors adopted a new ordinance rather than mere amendments. Common pleas explained that comparison of the 1987 Ordinance and the newly enacted ordinance revealed that the Supervisors changed or added 91 sections amounting to 52% of the prior ordinance, defined 7 zoning districts rather than the 5 established in 1987, added substantially to the definitional section, and amended the zoning map. Common pleas also pointed to the lack of italics and underscoring in the usual style utilized by the Township for prior amendments.

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Rickert v. Latimore Township Board of Supervisors
869 A.2d 1086 (Commonwealth Court of Pennsylvania, 2005)

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Bluebook (online)
869 A.2d 1086, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/rickert-v-latimore-tp-bd-of-suprs-pacommwct-2005.