State Col. Bor. Water Auth. v. Sup'rs

645 A.2d 394, 165 Pa. Commw. 405
CourtCommonwealth Court of Pennsylvania
DecidedJune 28, 1994
StatusPublished

This text of 645 A.2d 394 (State Col. Bor. Water Auth. v. 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
State Col. Bor. Water Auth. v. Sup'rs, 645 A.2d 394, 165 Pa. Commw. 405 (Pa. Ct. App. 1994).

Opinion

165 Pa. Commonwealth Ct. 405 (1994)
645 A.2d 394

STATE COLLEGE BOROUGH WATER AUTHORITY, Appellant,
v.
BOARD OF SUPERVISORS OF BENNER TOWNSHIP, CENTRE COUNTY, Pennsylvania.
Eric J. LEVIN, Christine F. Levin
v.
BOARD OF SUPERVISORS OF BENNER TOWNSHIP, CENTRE COUNTY, Pennsylvania and State College Borough Water Authority and Daniel E. Shawley, Karen S. Shawley, Bibles for the World, Inc.

Commonwealth Court of Pennsylvania.

Argued December 13, 1993.
Decided June 28, 1994.

*406 R. Timothy Weston, for appellant.

Ben Novak, for appellee Tp. of Benner.

David C. Keiter, for appellees Eric J. and Christine F. Levin.

Before COLINS and KELLEY, JJ., and SILVESTRI, Senior Judge.

SILVESTRI, Senior Judge.

This is a consolidated appeal by the State College Borough Water Authority (Authority) from the February 8, 1993 order of the Court of Common Pleas of Centre County (trial court). The trial court, on the appeal by Eric J. Levin and Christine F. Levin, intervenors, reversed the decision of the Board of Supervisors of Benner Township (Board) granting the Authority's conditional use application. This appeal by the Authority is docketed at 492 C.D.1993. The Board had imposed sixteen (16) conditions on the grant of the conditional use to the Authority; the Authority appealed the validity of six (6) of the sixteen (16) conditions to the trial court. The trial court by reason of its reversal of the decision of the Board did not address this appeal by the Authority. The Authority has appealed the validity of the six (6) conditions. This appeal is docketed at 491 C.D. 1993.

The facts and procedures giving rise to the within appeals are as follows. On May 10, 1990, the Authority filed an application for a conditional use of its property, being Lots W-101 *407 through W-105 (R.R. Vol. I, 8a), with the Board. The proposed use of the lots, as set forth in the application was

to erect service buildings for the pumping, treatment and distribution of well water. The water sources have currently been drilled, lined and capped.
(R.R. Vol. I, 6a.)

The lots are located in the Airport Commercial Zoning District (C-A District).[1]

The Board conducted several hearings spawning a period from September 4, 1990 through December 10, 1991. On December 17, 1991, it filed its findings of fact, conclusions of law and decision. As herein relevant, the Board made the following findings of fact.

2. The (Authority's) water service area includes most of State College Borough, and parts of College, Harris, Ferguson and Patton Townships.
. . . .
4. The average daily water demand of the (Authority's) system is 4.53 million gpd. . . .
. . . .
7. (Authority) filed a request for approval of a conditional use on the lots. The proposed use of the lots is to operate a well pumping field to pump water from 3 wells drilled on the lots, to treat the water, and to pump it through pipes to be laid along Airport Road and Foxhill Road, to a connection *408 with (Authority's) presently existing water distribution system. The proposed use contemplates drilling for subterranean or percolating water which is to be pumped to the surface and piped away from the property to supply the public water system of the (Authority).
8. . . . . The estimated top capacity of the wellfield is 4.6 million gpd.
. . . .
12. It was testified by experts that the proposed pumping operation could possibly have an affect upon water wells located on other properties in the Township. Most occupied properties in the Township are supplied by on-site well water.
. . . .
15. (Authority) offered and agreed that if any well within the recharge area (as defined in Paragraph 13 above), goes dry or is dewatered after operation of the wellfield commences, it shall be presumed to go dry by reason of the operation of the wellfield and (Authority) shall immediately supply temporary water service within 48 hours and shall extend water mains and all necessary connections to the property at no cost to the property owner. The residents after connection shall pay standard water rates as customers of the (Authority).
. . . .
19. The (Authority) intends to drill wells and pump water from the subterranean and percolating waters under the lands of (Authority), and to transfer the water away, off the lands, into the public water system of the (Authority) to be supplied to meet the water supply needs of the customers of the (Authority).
(R.R. Vol. III, 466a-470a.)

The Board, in its decision, imposed conditions on the grant of the Authority's conditional use. The Authority challenges the following six (6) imposed conditions.

1. Monitoring. (Authority) agrees to monitor all wells within one and one half (1½) miles of the well site for any *409 landowner who requests such monitoring. (Authority) shall advertise in a newspaper of general circulation in the Township its offer to install monitoring devices once each year for three successive years. (Authority) shall also send notice to every landowner within one and one half (1½) miles of the well site offering to install a monitoring device at the expense of (Authority). Such monitoring devices shall be installed upon consent of the landowner for a period of 18 months, and shall be renewable as of right for successive periods at the request of the landowner. Any landowner within the one and one half (1½) miles radius may request monitoring at any time. The Township and the property owner shall be supplied the results of the monitoring. All monitoring devices, installation costs, periodic monitoring, and reporting costs shall be at the expense of (Authority).
2. Reducing Draw. If the monitoring of wells pursuant to Condition # 1 above reveals a falling of the water table sufficient to adversely effect wells on neighboring lands (or the Benner Spring or other springs of the Pennsylvania Fish Commission in Centre County), then the (Authority) shall reduce the draw of water from the proposed wellfield so as to prevent or cease the adverse effect upon the wells and springs of residents or landowners and the springs of the Pennsylvania Fish Commission.
3. Well Failure Within One and One Half (1½) Miles from Well Site. If any landowner's well within one and one-half (1½) miles of the well site fails because of the drop in water level, (Authority) shall provide temporary water service (water buffalo) within at least 48 hours of notice thereof at the cost of the (Authority). (Authority) also agrees that, unless it can be clearly shown by (Authority) that the well did not go dry by reason of (Authority's) well pumping operation, (Authority) shall extend lines from its well site to the property and connect to the residence or structure to be served, at the cost of (Authority), within three months or as soon as can reasonably be done. Said residents, after connection, shall pay standard water rates for water service.
*410 4. Wells Beyond One and One-Half Miles from Well Site.

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645 A.2d 394, 165 Pa. Commw. 405, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-col-bor-water-auth-v-suprs-pacommwct-1994.