Sweetwater Hamilton Twp., PA, LLC v. Hamilton Twp. ZHB & Hamilton Twp.

CourtCommonwealth Court of Pennsylvania
DecidedOctober 19, 2022
Docket1302 C.D. 2021
StatusUnpublished

This text of Sweetwater Hamilton Twp., PA, LLC v. Hamilton Twp. ZHB & Hamilton Twp. (Sweetwater Hamilton Twp., PA, LLC v. Hamilton Twp. ZHB & Hamilton 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
Sweetwater Hamilton Twp., PA, LLC v. Hamilton Twp. ZHB & Hamilton Twp., (Pa. Ct. App. 2022).

Opinion

IN THE COMMONWEALTH COURT OF PENNSYLVANIA

Sweetwater Hamilton Township, PA, LLC, : Appellant : : v. : No. 1302 C.D. 2021 : Submitted: September 15, 2022 Hamilton Township Zoning Hearing Board : and Hamilton Township :

BEFORE: HONORABLE ANNE E. COVEY, Judge HONORABLE ELLEN CEISLER, Judge HONORABLE STACY WALLACE, Judge

OPINION NOT REPORTED

MEMORANDUM OPINION BY JUDGE WALLACE FILED: October 19, 2022

Sweetwater Hamilton Township, PA, LLC (Sweetwater) appeals from the October 12, 2021 order of the Court of Common Pleas of Monroe County (Common Pleas) denying Sweetwater’s appeal of the Hamilton Township Zoning Hearing Board’s (ZHB) March 2, 2021 order, which denied Sweetwater’s appeal of the Hamilton Township Zoning Officer’s (Zoning Officer) August 4, 2020 enforcement notice (Enforcement Notice) citing Sweetwater for several violations of Hamilton Township’s Zoning Ordinance (Zoning Ordinance).1 Upon review, we affirm. I. Background Sweetwater is the owner of an approximately 30-acre tract of land in Hamilton Township, Monroe County, Pennsylvania (the Property) that is zoned residential

1 Hamilton Twp., Pa. Zoning Ordinance (1976), as amended. under the Zoning Ordinance. Original Record (O.R.), Item No. 13, Exhibit A, Transcript of ZHB Hearing, 11/10/20 (T.1) at 28. Thomas Blanchet (Blanchet), who lives and operates a recycling center in Freehold, New Jersey, solely owns Sweetwater. O.R., Item No. 13, Exhibit B, Transcript of ZHB Hearing, 1/12/21 (T.2) at 152; T.1 at 77. When Sweetwater purchased the Property in 2012, Blanchet thought the Property was a commercial property and “a former scrapyard.” T.2 at 157 (emphasis added). He reached this conclusion because of “the evidence of scrapyard activities by the foundation for a scale.” Id. at 166. After purchasing the Property, Blanchet permitted Joseph Kennedy (Kennedy), who owns an adjoining property with an active scrapyard, to utilize the Property and retain any proceeds that he realized from operations on the Property. T.2 at 170-72. In exchange, Kennedy was cleaning the Property, by removing buried metal and tires, at no cost to Sweetwater. Id. at 172. Blanchet and Kennedy’s agreement was only an oral agreement. Id. at 171. Blanchet, who only visited the Property six times during the eight and one-half years of his ownership, admitted that the equipment (excavators, etc.) and trailers on the Property belonged to Kennedy, and that he was not aware of Kennedy’s day-to-day operations. Id. at 171- 76. Kennedy explained that when Sweetwater purchased the Property, it had a lot of junk buried on it (metal and tires), such that it appeared to be an “abandoned junk yard.” T.1 at 68 (emphasis added). Kennedy claimed that his operations on the Property were limited to cleaning up metal and tires that were already on the Property at the time of Sweetwater’s purchase. See id. at 67-68, 73; T.2 at 101. Kennedy explained that he took those materials to his property where he had an “operating scale,” which was a necessary piece of equipment to process material in

2 a scrapyard. Id. at 125. Kennedy also explained that his intentions were to finish cleaning the Property and then use it as a scrapyard or a recycling yard. T.1 at 73. Despite these claims, Kennedy admitted he “may store some stuff” on the Property “while we bring it across the street to process it,” and “I guess you could say” we brought some junk materials onto the Property. T.2 at 101, 102. In addition, Kennedy admitted that he (a) parked trailers, which he used in the operation of his junk yard across the street, on the Property; (b) loaded trailers with metal, which he used in the operation of his junk yard across the street, on the Property; (c) stored a steel building, which he was “building to be erected at some point in time,” on an unlicensed trailer on the Property for the past “four or five years[;]” and (d) placed an inoperable front-end loader on the Property, which had been there for the past year or two. Id. at 103, 108, 114, 115-17. Brian Potcher (Potcher), who lives approximately 1,000 feet from where Kennedy was conducting operations on the Property, stated that he observed a lot more activity on the Property than Kennedy admitted. T.2 at 180. Potcher stated that over the past two years, he observed “an incredible amount of activity” on the Property, including “[e]xcavators, loaders, [and] some sort of conveyor that’s processing something.” Id. at 181-82. Potcher said that the activity was loud, and that it was occurring on a daily basis, from approximately 6:00 a.m. or 7:00 a.m. until dark. Id. at 183. He also testified that the activity decreased in August of 2020. Id. at 182. In early August 2020, Zoning Officer observed what he believed to be a junk yard on the Property. T.1 at 27-28. On August 4, 2020, Zoning Officer issued Enforcement Notice to Sweetwater, wherein, he alleged that Sweetwater was storing building materials, used machinery, vehicles, and trailers on the Property, which are

3 uses that the Zoning Ordinance permits in industrial zones, not residential zones. O.R., Item No. 13, Exhibit A-1 at 6-7. Sweetwater appealed the Enforcement Notice to the ZHB. In its appeal, Sweetwater asserted that “[t]he property was/is a prior non-conforming use that was not abandoned. Owner has invested substantial resources into property cleanup to conduct junk yard responsibly.” O.R., Item No. 13, Exhibit A-1 at 2. The ZHB held hearings on Sweetwater’s appeal on November 10, 2020 and January 12, 2021. In addition to the testimony outlined above, the ZHB received evidence of the historical uses of the Property. Dale Chan (Chan), who has been a tow truck driver in Monroe County for approximately the past 30 years, testified that he began living in a trailer that he placed on the Property in 1986. T.1 at 52-53. Chan, who was working for the owner while he lived on the Property, testified that he used the Property as an automotive scrapyard and that the prior owner had been operating it as a junk yard. Id. at 53-54. When Chan started, there was not an operational scale on the Property, as the owner added that while he worked there. Id. at 52. Chan continued to live and work on the Property into the early 1990s. Id. at 54. Andrew Phillips, who was formerly an automobile salvager, testified that he took scrap metal to the Property between approximately 1983 and 1994. T.1 at 60- 62. During this time, the owner was operating the Property as a scrapyard and there was a large scale on the Property that the owner used to weigh vehicles to process scrap metal. Id. at 62-63. Cindy Treible (Mrs. Treible), who owned the Property from 2003 to 2012, testified that she and her now-deceased husband (Mr. Treible) purchased the Property at a tax sale in 2003. T.1 at 36-38, 42. At the time of their purchase, Mr. Treible, who repossessed vehicles for a living, intended to use the Property as a yard

4 for vehicles that he repossessed. Id. at 39-40. Shortly after they bought the Property, however, Zoning Officer informed Mr. and Mrs. Treible (the Treibles) that they could not use the Property in this manner. Id. The Treibles did not apply for a variance, nor did they utilize the Property as they originally intended. Id. Instead, Mr. Treible “sold the scale that you drive across” that was on the Property. Id. at 40. Thereafter, Mr. Treible became ill, and Mrs. Treible used the 48′ by 60′ steel building on the Property to store Mr. Treible’s business equipment. Id. at 40-41. During their roughly nine years of owning the Property, the Treibles did not operate the Property as a junk yard or scrapyard. Id. at 43. Zoning Officer, who has held his position since 2001, testified that he reviewed Hamilton Township’s historical records related to the Property. T.1 at 11.

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Bluebook (online)
Sweetwater Hamilton Twp., PA, LLC v. Hamilton Twp. ZHB & Hamilton Twp., Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/sweetwater-hamilton-twp-pa-llc-v-hamilton-twp-zhb-hamilton-twp-pacommwct-2022.