Roosevelt Holding, LP v. R. Sampere, Zoning Officer of W. Manchester Twp.

CourtCommonwealth Court of Pennsylvania
DecidedJanuary 4, 2022
Docket410 C.D. 2021
StatusUnpublished

This text of Roosevelt Holding, LP v. R. Sampere, Zoning Officer of W. Manchester Twp. (Roosevelt Holding, LP v. R. Sampere, Zoning Officer of W. Manchester Twp.) 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
Roosevelt Holding, LP v. R. Sampere, Zoning Officer of W. Manchester Twp., (Pa. Ct. App. 2022).

Opinion

IN THE COMMONWEALTH COURT OF PENNSYLVANIA

Roosevelt Holding, LP, : Appellant : : v. : No. 410 C.D. 2021 : ARGUED: December 13, 2021 Rachelle Sampere, Zoning Officer : of West Manchester Township :

BEFORE: HONORABLE ANNE E. COVEY, Judge HONORABLE MICHAEL H. WOJCIK, Judge HONORABLE ELLEN CEISLER, Judge

OPINION NOT REPORTED

MEMORANDUM OPINION BY JUDGE CEISLER FILED: January 4, 2022

Currently before us is Appellant Roosevelt Holding, LP’s (Roosevelt) appeal of two orders issued by the Court of Common Pleas of York County (Common Pleas), both relating to Roosevelt’s mandamus action against Rachelle Sampere, Zoning Officer of West Manchester Township (Sampere), through which Roosevelt sought to compel Sampere to issue a permit to Roosevelt. The first of these orders, which was docketed on January 19, 2021, denied Roosevelt’s motion for summary judgment, while the second of these orders, which was docketed on March 18, 2021, granted Sampere’s motion for summary judgment. Upon review, we vacate Common Pleas’ orders and remand this matter to the lower tribunal, with instructions that it dismiss Roosevelt’s lawsuit due to mootness, on account of Roosevelt having secured the relief it expressly sought through its Complaint.

I. Background Roosevelt owns an 18.9-acre, industrially zoned parcel of land that is located in West Manchester Township (Township) at 413 Zarfoss Road (Property). Reproduced Record (R.R.) at 8a-9a; Compl. ¶¶3-4. On August 27, 2017, Roosevelt submitted an application to the Township for an access drive permit, through which Roosevelt sought approval to build “two separate access driveways—one at the south end of Zarfoss [Road]—no curb cut and one at the north end of Zarfoss [Road] with a 100[-foot] curb cut.” R.R. at 136a-38a; Compl. ¶¶6-8. This application related to Roosevelt’s land development plan, which had previously been approved by the Township and which authorized Roosevelt to construct “an outdoor trailer storage facility” on the Property. Compl. ¶5. Monica Love, Sampere’s predecessor as the Township’s Zoning and Codes Enforcement Officer, responded on August 30, 2017, and informed Roosevelt that the permit had been approved, albeit with a consequent fee of $22,045.90; according to Love’s email, the vast majority of this fee, $21,960.90, was for stormwater management and had been calculated based upon the square footage on the Property that was either paved or covered with stone. R.R. at 140a-41a. Roosevelt then asked the Township to identify the legal authority under which it had assessed this fee. Id. at 133a. At first, the Township claimed that the fee was authorized under its Floodplain Ordinance, even though the Property is not in a floodplain, after which it pivoted to stating that the fee had been charged because what Roosevelt had sought was actually a building permit, rather than an access drive permit. Id. at 29a-30a, 32a-34a; Compl. ¶¶13-17. On February 2, 2018, Roosevelt attempted to pay the Township $85 for the zoning permit, representing the total permit cost minus the stormwater management assessment, and thereafter began constructing the access drives on the Property. Id. at 171a; Compl. ¶10. Roosevelt then filed a mandamus action in Common Pleas on February 2, 2018; therein, Roosevelt argued that the Township had no legal basis for

2 levying a stormwater management fee in this situation and, as such, that Sampere had a nondiscretionary, ministerial duty to issue an access drive permit upon Roosevelt’s payment of $85. See Compl. ¶¶13-25. Accordingly, Roosevelt sought a judgment against Sampere that would compel her to issue the permit and to pay Roosevelt’s legal costs. Id., Wherefore Clause. On February 12, 2018, Sampere issued a stop work order, which commanded Roosevelt to cease all construction activities until it had paid all of the assessed fee and had obtained its desired permit. R.R. at 52a. Roosevelt responded by paying the fee in full, albeit under protest, and was consequently granted its desired permit. Id. at 171a; Roosevelt’s Br. at 16. Despite this change in circumstances, Roosevelt neither withdrew its then-pending mandamus action, nor filed an amended complaint with additional averments of fact, legal arguments, or requests for relief. Both parties subsequently filed respective motions for summary judgment. On September 16, 2020, Roosevelt filed its motion, in which it argued that it was entitled to judgment in its favor as a matter of law on three bases: first, no Township ordinance authorized the levying of a stormwater management fee against Roosevelt, regardless of whether Roosevelt’s desired permit was deemed to be an access drive permit or a building permit; second, though the Township had established a stormwater management fee schedule via resolution, nothing in that resolution conditioned the issuance of access drive permits or building permits upon payment of such a fee; and third, even in the absence of these legal deficiencies, it remained that the stormwater management fee was improper, because the assessed amount bore no relationship to the cost borne by the Township for issuing the permit. R.R. at 128a-31a, 165a-69a. Accordingly, Roosevelt requested that Common Pleas’ judgment take the form of a writ of mandamus compelling Sampere to reimburse the

3 $21,960.90 stormwater management fee Roosevelt had paid for its permit, plus interest. Id. at 131a-32a. Separately, on January 15, 2021, Sampere filed her motion, in which she argued that Roosevelt’s action had been rendered moot by its payment of the assessed fees coupled with her issuance of the permit and, assuming that the case was not now moot, the assessed stormwater management fee was legally authorized and, in addition, was reasonable in light of the parameters of Roosevelt’s proposed development. Id. at 247a-50a, 252a-56a. Common Pleas denied Roosevelt’s motion on January 19, 2021. In its attached memorandum opinion, Common Pleas explained that Roosevelt was not entitled to summary judgment for several reasons: first, as a matter of law, the construction work Roosevelt proposed to do on the Property required both an access drive permit and a building permit; second, the Township was authorized via ordinance and resolution to levy stormwater management fees against applicants for such permits; and third, the assessed fee bore a sufficient relationship not just to the Township’s costs for issuing these permits, but also to the Township’s costs for dealing with the additional stormwater runoff that would be caused by development of the Property. Common Pleas Op., 1/19/21, at 3-8. Roosevelt moved for reconsideration of this decision, but Common Pleas denied this request via an order docketed on February 5, 2021. R.R. at 280a. By contrast, Common Pleas granted Sampere’s motion on March 18, 2021. In doing so, Common Pleas agreed with both of Sampere’s aforementioned arguments. Common Pleas Op., 3/18/21, at 3-5. Additionally, Common Pleas held that Roosevelt was barred by both collateral estoppel and res judicata from challenging Common Pleas’ rulings regarding the legality of the assessed stormwater

4 management fee, due to Roosevelt’s failure to appeal Common Pleas’ denial of Roosevelt’s motion for reconsideration. Id. at 5. This appeal, which pertains to Common Pleas’ rulings regarding both motions for summary judgment, followed shortly thereafter. II. Discussion While Roosevelt raises a number of issues for our consideration,1 we need only address the question of whether Roosevelt’s action has been rendered moot in order to dispose of its appeal. “It is well settled that the courts do not render decisions in the abstract or offer purely advisory opinions [and, as such, j]udicial intervention is appropriate only where the underlying controversy is real and concrete, rather than abstract.” Harris v.

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Bluebook (online)
Roosevelt Holding, LP v. R. Sampere, Zoning Officer of W. Manchester Twp., Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/roosevelt-holding-lp-v-r-sampere-zoning-officer-of-w-manchester-twp-pacommwct-2022.