Solebury Township Supervisors v. Department of Environmental Resources

18 Pa. D. & C.3d 696
CourtPennsylvania Environmental Hearing Board
DecidedApril 30, 1981
Docketno. 80-183-W
StatusPublished

This text of 18 Pa. D. & C.3d 696 (Solebury Township Supervisors v. Department of Environmental Resources) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Pennsylvania Environmental Hearing Board primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Solebury Township Supervisors v. Department of Environmental Resources, 18 Pa. D. & C.3d 696 (Pa. Super. Ct. 1981).

Opinion

WATERS, Chairman,

This matter comes before the board as an appeal from an order issued by DER pursuant to the Pennsylvania Sewage Facilities Act of January 24, 1966, P.L. (1965) 1535, as amended, 35P.S. §750.1etseq., and regulation 25 Pa. Code §71.17 granting a private request by Paul C. Bently et al., intervenors, to require appellant Solebury Township to amend its township sewage plan. Although a preliminary plan for the intervenor’s development had been approved by the township, the final subdivision plan was rejected. That decisionis presently on appeal to the common pleas court. It is the fact that the subdivision plan was not approved that serves as the basis for the township’s appeal from DER’s previously mentioned order.

FINDINGS OF FACT

1. Appellant is Solebury Township, a township of [698]*698the second class, located in Bucks County, with offices on Sugan Road, Solebury, Pa.

2. The appellee is the DER, the agency of the Commonwealth authorized to administer the provisions of the Pennsylvania Sewage Facilities Act of January 24, 1966, P.L. (1965) 1535, sec. letseq., as amended, 35 PS. §750.1, et seq.

3. The intervenors, owners of the tract on which the Highland Woods subdivision was proposed, were permitted to intervene in the township’s appeal.

4. On May 21, 1975 the Board of Supervisors of Solebury Township passed a resolution adopting the “Official Sewage Facilities Plan Revision Study,” dated April, 1975, as the Official Sewage Facilities Plan for the township.

5. On January 28, 1976 the Department of Environmental Resources approved the plan as the Official Sewage Facilities Plan for the township.

6. On October 4, 1978 the Board of Supervisors of appellant, by resolution, approved the preliminary subdivision plan submitted by the intervenors for a development to be known as Highland Woods, consisting of 61 lots on which single family residences were to be constructed. The aforementioned resolution provides in pertinent part:

“RESOLVED, that the Preliminary Plan of Highland Woods, being Plan A-240, be approved as being in accordance with the Solebury Township Zoning Subdivision Ordinance aproval, however, is conditioned in that Solebury Township reserves the right to question the proposed sewage disposal and, further, reserves the right not be amend its Official Sewage Facilities Plan as provided under the Pennsylvania Sewerage (sic) Facilities Act, known as Act 537.”

[699]*6997. On November 29, 1979 Highland Woods petitioned the DER pursuant to 25 Pa. Code § 71.17 and the Sewage Facilities Act to order the township to revise its Sewage Facilities Plan to provide for Highland Woods Development. The proposed method of sewage disposal was a community subsurface disposal system.

8. On or about April 11, 1980 the developers submitted final subdivision plans for the Highland Woods Subdivision to the Township of Solebury.

9. On September 2, 1980 the Board of Supervisors of the Township of Solebury adopted a resolution rejecting the final plans of Highland Woods. Said resolution lists 27 failures of the plan to comply with the township Subdivision and Land Development Ordinance. Six of the reasons for denying the final plan were sewage related, and 21 were non-sewage related.

10. On September 25, 1980 the DER issued an order directing the Township of Solebury to revise its Official Sewage Facilities Plan to provide for sewage facilities services for the Highland Woods subdivision.

11. Prior to September 25, 1980 the DER was aware of the fact that the Board of Supervisors of Solebury Township had denied final subdivision approval to the intervenors for the Highland Woods Subdivision.

12. On September 29, 1980 the developers perfected a timely appeal from the decision of the Board of Supervisors of Solebury Township, rejecting their proposed final plan for Highland Woods, which appeal is presently pending before the Court of Common Pleas of Bucks County.

13. The 21 non-sewage related reasons for denying the final plan of Highland Woods were all “engineering” reasons.

[700]*70014. The site in questionis currently afarm with a farmhouse that is served by an on-lot system that is presently adequate to serve that farmhouse.

DISCUSSION

The question that we are called upon to answer by this proceeding, simply stated, is whether DER may properly order an Act 537 plan amendment notwithstanding the fact that the final subdivision plan in question is in litigation. In Borough of Sayre v. DER, 1979 EHB Docket No. 78-063-W (issued January 21, 1979), we discussed a similar question. In that case it was a building permit that was in litigation, and DER ordered a revision to the Borough’s Official Sewage Facilities Plan. We there said at p. 7:

“In May of 1978, the borough revoked the building permit and the legality of that action is now before the Bradford County Court. Appellant would bootstrap its way in this matter by arguing that we should sustain the appeal because intervenors have no permit and the proposed construction would violate local zoning laws. We are urged to disregard the court order, as appellant has done, and ‘. . . not simply to take the Court Order at face value.’ We find this argument all the more incredible because appellant cites the Fox case5 for the proposition that the department is not to second guess the validity of local decisions properly made in the areas of planning and zoning. Yet, that is exactly what it asks us to do with regard to the Bradford County Court. We will not. When and if the local court enters a new order on the action now before it, we would expect the DER to act consistantly [sic] with it.6

[701]*701It was and is our view that local subdivision matters must be resolved by the county court and not this board. The real question has to do more with procedure than substance. It is a question of when and in what order the various legal issues should be addressed. A case perhaps even more to the point is Betz v. DER, EHB Docket No. 79-173-W (issued July 23, 1980). There, as in this case, the subdivision plan had been rejected by the township for a number of reasons, some of which were related to sewage disposal and others which were not. The subdivision issue was on appeal to the common pleas court as here. We decided in Betz that an appeal to this board is proper when some of the issues involved in the subdivision dispute, still in litigation, are sewage related problems.

In discussing this issue, we said at pp. 7, 8:

“[I]f the municipality’s refusal to approve Appellant’s subdivision plan is because of sewage disposal problems, then Appellant would be in the ‘Catch 22’ situation which Commonwealth Court deemed unconstitutional in Commonwealth of Pennsylvania, DER v. Trautner, 19 Pa. Commonwealth Court 116, 338 A. 2d 718 (1975). Thus, the first question addressed in this Adjudication is whether the Township’s controlling reason for refusing to approve Appellant’s subdivision plan was a sewage disposal problem.
“We believe the question raised does not lend itself to a categorical answer. In the first instance, it is the Township that is given the authority for land use planning, under the Municipalities Planning Code, 53 P.S. §10101 et seq.

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Related

Commonwealth v. Trautner
338 A.2d 718 (Commonwealth Court of Pennsylvania, 1975)
Community College v. Fox
342 A.2d 468 (Commonwealth Court of Pennsylvania, 1975)

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Bluebook (online)
18 Pa. D. & C.3d 696, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/solebury-township-supervisors-v-department-of-environmental-resources-paenvhrbd-1981.