W. Sowich & N. Sowich v. The ZHB of Brown Twp. & Edgewood Estates, Inc. v. The ZHB of Brown Twp. v. Brown Twp. ~ Appeal of: Edgewood Estates, Inc.

CourtCommonwealth Court of Pennsylvania
DecidedJanuary 26, 2021
Docket1555 C.D. 2019
StatusPublished

This text of W. Sowich & N. Sowich v. The ZHB of Brown Twp. & Edgewood Estates, Inc. v. The ZHB of Brown Twp. v. Brown Twp. ~ Appeal of: Edgewood Estates, Inc. (W. Sowich & N. Sowich v. The ZHB of Brown Twp. & Edgewood Estates, Inc. v. The ZHB of Brown Twp. v. Brown Twp. ~ Appeal of: Edgewood Estates, Inc.) 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
W. Sowich & N. Sowich v. The ZHB of Brown Twp. & Edgewood Estates, Inc. v. The ZHB of Brown Twp. v. Brown Twp. ~ Appeal of: Edgewood Estates, Inc., (Pa. Ct. App. 2021).

Opinion

IN THE COMMONWEATH COURT OF PENNSYLVANIA

William Sowich and Nancy Sowich : : v. : : The Zoning Hearing Board of Brown : Township and Edgewood Estates, Inc. : : v. : : The Zoning Hearing Board of Brown : Township : : v. : No. 1555 C.D. 2019 : Argued: December 7, 2020 Brown Township : : Appeal of: Edgewood Estates, Inc. :

BEFORE: HONORABLE MARY HANNAH LEAVITT, President Judge1 HONORABLE PATRICIA A. McCULLOUGH, Judge HONORABLE MICHAEL H. WOJCIK, Judge

OPINION BY PRESIDENT JUDGE LEAVITT FILED: January 26, 2021

Edgewood Estates, Inc. (Landowner) has appealed an order of the Court of Common Pleas of Mifflin County (trial court) following a remand from this Court. The issue before this Court is whether Landowner’s use of the property for crushing and grinding stone was a lawful nonconforming use that predated the restrictions in the Brown Township Zoning Ordinance (Zoning Ordinance).2 The trial court held

1 This case was assigned to the opinion writer before January 4, 2021, when Judge Leavitt completed her term as President Judge. 2 BROWN TOWNSHIP ZONING ORDINANCE (2011). that evidence of this use by Landowner’s predecessor did not entitle Landowner to continue this use. Concluding that the trial court erred, we reverse. Background The relevant facts and procedural history in this case are as follows. Since 2006, Landowner has owned a 23-acre property in Brown Township (Township). The Township’s 1979 Zoning Ordinance placed the northwestern part of Landowner’s property in the R-1 (Rural Residential) Zoning District and the southeastern part of the property in the C (Commercial) Zoning District. In February of 2011, the Township amended the Zoning Ordinance, placing the entire property in the R-1 Zoning District, with the exception of a 500-foot-wide strip abutting Route 322, which is zoned Commercial. On September 28, 2015, the Township’s zoning officer issued a notice of violation to Landowner for several activities conducted on the property including “[g]rinding [s]tone to make small stones from large stones[.]” Reproduced Record at 3a (R.R.__). The notice stated that grinding stone is not permitted under the 2011 Zoning Ordinance, which limits the “permitted by right” uses in the R-1 District to the following:

• Agriculture

• Cemetery

• Emergency Services

• Forestry

• House of Worship

• Municipal Building, Park or Playground

• Single Family Detached Dwelling

2 • Vacation Home

ZONING ORDINANCE §502(1); R.R. 595a. Landowner appealed to the Zoning Hearing Board (Zoning Board), asserting that its activities were lawful nonconforming uses that predated the 2011 amendment to the Zoning Ordinance. On November 23, 2015, the Zoning Board held a hearing, granting intervention to William and Nancy Sowich (Objectors), owners of an adjacent property. Michael Watson, president and owner of Landowner, testified that his company acquired the property from Trumbull Corporation on April 7, 2006. When Trumbull built a section of Route 322 in early 2000, it dumped the construction debris on the property. Accordingly, when Landowner took possession of the property, there was a 40-foot pile of fill consisting of “[c]oncrete, rock, topsoil, concrete pipe, broken concrete barriers, [and] concrete from highway[.]” Notes of Testimony (N.T.), 11/23/2015, at 34; R.R. 173a. This 40-foot-tall pile sat on top of another pile of aggregate. Watson testified that Landowner uses the property to “haul in fill, to take fill out, to store various construction material[s], as a stock yard.” Id. at 52; R.R. 191a. Watson testified that Landowner has crushed stone on the property three times since its acquisition in 2006: in the spring of 2015, sometime in 2013, and “[o]ne other time before that.” Id. at 60; R.R. 199a. The crushing was necessary to “break the rocks down to smaller rocks” for different uses in Landowner’s landscaping and construction business. Id. at 61; R.R. 200a. Before the Zoning Board, Landowner argued that the activities cited in the notice of violation, including stone crushing and grinding, were comparable to

3 those conducted at a sawmill or a planing mill, which use was expressly permitted in the R-1 District under the 1979 Zoning Ordinance. In support, Watson testified:

[Counsel]: And can [the property] be used as forestry uses?

[Watson]: Yes.

[Counsel]: In what manner?

[Watson]: You could put the same thing, you could grind mulch there, you could haul mulch in everyday, you could haul logs in. You can have a sawmill in there…. Because it does have a good base for that.

[Counsel]: To do those kind of uses would [] require putting some kind of heavy machinery in there?

[Counsel]: And require trucks coming in?

Id. at 67-68; R.R. 206a-07a. By decision of January 7, 2016, the Zoning Board concluded, inter alia, that Landowner’s use of the property for crushing and grinding stone was not a lawful nonconforming use because it had been abandoned, noting that Watson testified that Landowner had ground stone only three times since 2006. The Zoning Board concluded, however, that depositing and removing fill was a lawful nonconforming use. Landowner appealed to the trial court and argued, inter alia, that the Zoning Board erred in finding that crushing and grinding stone was a use different from depositing and removing fill. Landowner filed a motion to present additional

4 evidence on the question of whether stone crushing was a preexisting nonconforming use. The trial court granted Landowner’s motion and remanded the matter to the Zoning Board to take additional evidence, which it did on May 30, 2017. At the hearing, Watson testified that both Landowner and the prior owner, Trumbull, had deposited “large pieces of concrete,” “broken-up concrete,” “large rocks, small rocks, fill dirt, shelling material, topsoil, asphalt,” and “construction materials [such as] pipe, catch basins” on the property. N.T., 5/30/2017, at 11; R.R. 381a. Landowner sold these materials for the construction of houses, truck garages, roads, and log yards. The rocks cannot be removed, in many cases, or used without first grinding and crushing them. Id. at 26; R.R. 396a. Watson testified in pertinent part:

[Counsel]: Have you [crushed rocks] periodically since you purchased the property?

***

[Watson]: We have done that, like I said, I busted up stuff with my hammer on the hoe to get it smaller to get it out of there and we have crushed.

[Counsel]: Have other people also crushed for you?

[Counsel]: Or crushed there?

[Counsel]: [Y]ou seem to distinguish between grinding of stone into small stone and fill. What is the difference[?]

[Watson]: The fill we can use on the bottom, but we always need something to cover it, so you can grab on. The only reason I

5 haven’t grounded anything, is I still have some left from the last time I grinded there, so I don’t need any at this point.

Id. at 22, 40; R.R. 392a, 410a. Landowner submitted business invoices, two of which, dated May 7, 2013, and April 6, 2015, showed that Landowner contracted with Reiff Brothers Excavating for stone crushing. Numerous witnesses testified about their past business transactions with Landowner. Relevant here, the owner of Fultz Construction Hauling testified that he had been to the property “many times” since Landowner acquired the property, and he saw trucks “bringing in or removing materials” and “the crusher out there operating” “a couple [of] times.” N.T., 5/30/2017, at 75; R.R. 445a. The owner of a farm adjacent to Landowner’s property testified that he observed “a crusher sitting [on the property]” several times, with the first appearance taking place “[p]robably about 2010 or 2011[.]” Id. at 80; R.R. 450a.

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W. Sowich & N. Sowich v. The ZHB of Brown Twp. & Edgewood Estates, Inc. v. The ZHB of Brown Twp. v. Brown Twp. ~ Appeal of: Edgewood Estates, Inc., Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/w-sowich-n-sowich-v-the-zhb-of-brown-twp-edgewood-estates-inc-v-pacommwct-2021.