South Whitford Associates, Inc. v. Zoning Hearing Board

630 A.2d 903, 157 Pa. Commw. 387, 1993 Pa. Commw. LEXIS 469
CourtCommonwealth Court of Pennsylvania
DecidedJuly 29, 1993
Docket1350-1352 C.D. 1992
StatusPublished
Cited by8 cases

This text of 630 A.2d 903 (South Whitford Associates, Inc. v. Zoning Hearing Board) 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
South Whitford Associates, Inc. v. Zoning Hearing Board, 630 A.2d 903, 157 Pa. Commw. 387, 1993 Pa. Commw. LEXIS 469 (Pa. Ct. App. 1993).

Opinion

CRAIG, President Judge.

South Whitford Associates, Inc., and Blair & Sons, Inc., (hereinafter referred to individually as “Whitford” and “Blair” respectively, and jointly as “the developers”), appeal from an order of the Court of Common Pleas of Chester County affirming the decisions of the Zoning Hearing Board of West Whiteland Township (board) and the Board of Supervisors of West Whiteland Township (“supervisors” or “board of supervisors”) denying the developers’ substantive attack on the con *391 stitutionality of the West Whiteland Township Zoning Ordinance (ordinance) and rejecting their land development application for a public use heliport and nine buildings for office and warehouse uses. We affirm in part and reverse in part.

The facts as found by the trial court are as follows. Whit-ford and Blair, as corporations, are under common ownership. Whitford owns a tract of land in the 1-1 Limited Industrial District (1-1 district) of West Whiteland Township. On February 25,1988, Blair filed a preliminary land development plan for improvements on Whitford’s lot.

According to the plan, Blair hoped to construct nine buildings, aggregating 159,000 square feet of floor space, for commercial office and warehouse use, together with a 2,500 square-foot helicopter pad and service area to be used as a public heliport. The proposed facilities would be available for use by the public for leasing, servicing and fueling helicopters, as well as for landings and take-offs. The supervisors denied approval of the plan, however, and the developers appealed to the trial court at docket No. 88-06383.

In addition, the developers then filed a challenge to the substantive validity of the ordinance before the board. The board rejected the challenge and the developers appealed that decision to the trial court at docket No. 88-08931.

At the same time, the developers discontinued their original appeal at docket No. 88-06383 and Blair submitted two revised land development plans to the supervisors. Both plans included nine commercial office and warehouse buildings, but only one of the plans also included a public use heliport. The supervisors rejected both plans on January 3, 1989, and the developers filed appeals in the trial court at docket Nos. 89-00735 and 89-00736.

The trial court consolidated the three appeals on the stipulations of the parties and determined that neither the supervisors nor the board committed either an error of law or an abuse of discretion in denying the plan and constitutiorial challenge. Therefore, the trial court affirmed the decisions *392 and orders of the supervisors and the board, and now the developers seek relief before this corat.

SUPPLEMENTING THE RECORD

Initially, we will address the developers’ contention that the trial court erred in refusing to supplement the record in this case with the records of the two proceedings before the supervisors that were presented by the developers in their original appeal at Docket No. 88-06383, the one which the developers later withdrew. They argue that the record filed in the original appeal contains information involving allegedly inconsistent actions of the supervisors in first granting the developers a conditional use to build on areas of “precautionary slope,” 1 and the supervisors’ later actions in rejecting the land development application, in part, because the construction previously approved for the conditional use was then held to be improper. The alleged inconsistency, the developers suggest, is both an error of law and an abuse of discretion on the part of the supervisors. Refusing to supplement the record, they argue, is reversible error on the part of the trial court.

Our review of the record reveals that, in two opinions, the trial court offered different reasons for refusing to supplement the record. One trial judge issued the original decision dated May 27, 1992, and docketed on May 28. The developers filed a notice of appeal and the Court of Common Pleas for Chester County filed two per curiam praecipes transferring the case to two trial judges for clarification. Ultimately the case ended up before a second judge, who filed a supplemental opinion on August 13, 1992.

In the May 27 decision, the trial court stated that the issue of supplementing the record had been decided earlier. “This Court previously ordered that the record of Appellant’s discontinued appeal docketed at No. 88-06383 would not be included in the record of the present appeals.”

*393 However, we cannot find any evidence of the trial court’s previous order. The docket for this case, in pertinent part, shows the following entries:

8. December 29, 1987MEMORANDUM BY APPELLANTS MOTION TO CONSOLIDATE & SUPPLEMENT THE RECORD BY APPELLANT PRAE-CIPE FOR DETERMINATION BY APPELLANTS CERT/SVC.
ANSWER TO MOTION TO CONSOLIDATE AND SUPPLEMENT THE RECORD BY APPELLEE CERT. OF SERVICE 9. January 16, 1990:
MEMORANDUM BY APPELLEE C/S 9a. January 16, 1990:
BRIEF BY APPELLEE — INTF/R-VENOR WEST WHITE LAND TWP. C/S 10. March 2, 1990:
OPINION AND ORDER OF 5/27/92 BY JOYNER, J. COPIES SENT 11. May 28, 1992:

Before the May 28,1992 docket entry, there is no entry for an order responsive to the appellants’ December 29, 1987 motion. Therefore, the trial court’s statement that the question had been previously addressed is not supported by the record.

In a supplemental opinion dated August 13, 1992, the trial court clarified the May 27 opinion with the following explanation:

With respect to Appellant’s Motion to Supplement the record, that motion was filed on December 29, 1989. On January 16, 1990, Appellees filed their memorandum contra to that motion. Argument was held on March 2, 1990. Until Appellant filed their statement of matters complained of on appeal on July 31, 1992, nothing further was done by either party or this Court in reference to the request to supplement the record. Once the total record was before the Court for argument without a decision made on supplementing the record, this Court treated that motion as waived.

Again, there is nothing in the record to suggest that the parties intended to waive the question of supplementing the *394 record. Therefore, this explanation by the trial court is also unsupported by the record.

Nonetheless, we agree that the trial court acted properly in not supplementing the record. The fact that the supervisors had previously granted conditional use approval to the developers does not enable the trial court or this court to take judicial notice of the record from that proceeding in reviewing the record of a different proceeding regarding a land development application. In deciding whether the supervisors erred in rejecting the developers’ land development plans, the trial court is limited to reviewing the materials that were before the supervisors in the land development proceeding. Therefore, the developers should have asked the supervisors

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630 A.2d 903, 157 Pa. Commw. 387, 1993 Pa. Commw. LEXIS 469, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/south-whitford-associates-inc-v-zoning-hearing-board-pacommwct-1993.