Wanamaker v. Whitemarsh Township

23 Pa. D. & C.2d 544, 1960 Pa. Dist. & Cnty. Dec. LEXIS 230
CourtMontgomery County Court of Quarter Sessions
DecidedJuly 19, 1960
Docketno. 62
StatusPublished

This text of 23 Pa. D. & C.2d 544 (Wanamaker v. Whitemarsh Township) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Montgomery County Court of Quarter Sessions primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Wanamaker v. Whitemarsh Township, 23 Pa. D. & C.2d 544, 1960 Pa. Dist. & Cnty. Dec. LEXIS 230 (Pa. Super. Ct. 1960).

Opinion

The facts appear from the following excerpts from the opinion of:

GROSHENS, J.,

This is an appeal from the disapproval of the supervisors of Whitemarsh [545]*545Township to a proposed subdivision of a tract of land containing approximately 63 acres. On November 4, 1959, the land was sold by the Disstons to the Costellos. The buyers proposed to subdivide the tract into lots that are 25,000 square feet and to erect homes valued between $35,000 and $55,000. In pursuance of this objective, the buyers obtained the services of a registered engineer to prepare a plan. This plan was submitted to the supervisors of Whitemarsh Township on December 10,1959, and a check in the required amount of $200 sent to them as a filing fee. The planning commission on December 14, 1959, reported to the supervisors that the plan did not conflict with existing Zoning and recommended minor adjustments. This report was not made known to the Disstons or the Costellos. The Costellos and their agent requested repeatedly that the supervisors advise them of their suggestions with regard to the plan, but no communication was received by them. During this time the Costellos engaged engineers to take percolation tests of the site and expended other sums of money in anticipation of the approval of this plan.

In the interim, swift action by the supervisors was taking place to prevent this subdivision under the proposed plan. Subsequent' to the purchase of this property and the submission of the plan, the supervisors requested that their solicitor draft an amendatory zoning ordinance. The first public advertisement of a proposed change in zoning, which would affect the tract to be subdivided, appeared three weeks after the plan had been submitted. No notice of this proposed enactment was given to the Costellos. A public hearing on this amendment was held on January 14,1960, and the amendment provided that where there was approved public water available, or an approved public sewer system available, but not both, that a minimum lot size of one acre would be required. The avowed purpose [546]*546of the amendment is to protect health by requiring larger lot areas, under the above circumstances. Until this time the supervisors had ordered no percolation tests to determine the necessity of such an ordinance. Their own experts testify that lot area is not a decisive factor in determining the suitability of on-lot sewage disposal. The ordinance was adopted on April 14,1960.

On March 17, 1960, plaintiffs were informed by the township solicitor that their plan could not be approved due to the pending ordinance. On April 28,1960, written reasons for the disapproval were given by the supervisors. During all of this time there was no attempt by the supervisors to give plaintiffs notice of any defects in their plans or to give them opportunity to cure such defects and comply with all reasonable requirements. This appeal followed a few days after the notice that the plan would not be approved.

This appeal is brought by the legal owners and by the equitable owners of the land to be subdivided. There is a valid agreement of sale between these sets of appellants which requires the buyers of the tract to submit a subdivision plan in conformity with the existing ordinance. All of these appellants are proper parties to appeal from the decision of the supervisors disapproving the plan. The sellers of the ground have a very definite, immediate, direct and pecuniary interest in the outcome of this case. See Lansdowne Borough Board of Adjustment’s Appeal, 313 Pa. 523, 524. The seller was a “person aggrieved” in In re Application for Certificate of Occupancy, for Kitchen Property: 25 Northamp. 167. The buyers are manifestly the persons aggrieved since they are the sub-dividers and they submitted the plan: Kelly v. Whitemarsh Township Board of Supervisors 3 D. & C. 2d 197, 200 (1954).

The fact that this appeal was filed prior to the written disapproval of the supervisors does not affect [547]*547the decision in this case. It is clear the decision of the supervisors to disapprove the plan was made prior to the date of the appeal. The solicitor for the township in a letter to petitioners’ attorney advised them of this fact. The requirement of a written disapproval and the reasons therefor was fully complied with prior to the hearings held by the court in this matter and removed that objection. The court has held three hearings, heard arguments of counsel and received their briefs of the law, the issues have been fully presented and argued, and it is too late to raise the technical objection that the appeal was taken prior to the written disapproval of the supervisors.

The township seeks to support the disapproval of this subdivision plan by the reason that it does not ■conform to the amendatory ordinance passed four months after the submission of the plan, and the recognition by the planning commission that the plan conformed to the then existing regulations. The township freely admitted that action on the plan was not taken because of the proposed ordinance. In a recent case ■of the Supreme Court of Pennsylvania this argument was most pointedly rejected.

“This argument is without merit. An unpassed bill in City Council, as one in the State Legislature, has no more governmental authority than a scribbled note ■on the back of an envelope in the pocket of a legislator”: Yocum v. Power, 398 Pa. 223, 226 (1960).

At page 227 the court recognizes one of the basic .rules of fair play by saying:

“As nothing can be more unjust in criminal law than an ex post facto law, so nothing is more frowned •on in civil law than a procedure which has the effect ■of making illegal what the law has already recognized .as legal. No lover of American sports would approve [548]*548of changing ground rules to favor one side or the other after the game had begun.”

There is no dispute concerning the conformity of the plan to the zoning law in effect when submitted. It is only by a change in the rules that the proposed plan is defeated. If the simple expediency of an amended ordinance could alter the right of appellants in this case, then it can be done in any case and the known certainty of the law which is the safety of all will be cast away. However desirable the proposed amendment, it has come too late to defeat appellants’ rights under the law upon which they relied and had a right to rely.

The supervisors contend that petitioners had no vested rights and therefore the cases of Yocum v. Power, supra, and the authority cited therein are distinguishable because in those cases a building permit had issued and they then had a vested right. They, in effect, argue that by withholding action deliberately they escape the plain mandate of the law. The statement carries its own answer. The mere refusal to do what they ought to do can not place them outside of the well-reasoned rule of law found in Yocum v. Power, supra. The rights of appellants in this case rest on their reliance upon existing law. This court’s power to hear and decide this appeal cannot be taken away by the enactment of an ordinance a number of months after submission of the plan. Whether we call this a vested right or not, it is clear that the plan could not be defeated because of the amendatory ordinance.

Supervisors of a second class township are vested with specific executive and legislative powers for local government.

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Related

Yocum v. Power
157 A.2d 368 (Supreme Court of Pennsylvania, 1960)
Harrisburg v. Pass
93 A.2d 447 (Supreme Court of Pennsylvania, 1953)
Shapiro v. Zoning Board of Adjustment
105 A.2d 299 (Supreme Court of Pennsylvania, 1954)
Lansdowne Borough Board of Adjustment's Appeal
170 A. 867 (Supreme Court of Pennsylvania, 1934)
A. N. "Ab" Young Co. Zoning Case
61 A.2d 839 (Supreme Court of Pennsylvania, 1948)

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Bluebook (online)
23 Pa. D. & C.2d 544, 1960 Pa. Dist. & Cnty. Dec. LEXIS 230, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/wanamaker-v-whitemarsh-township-paqtrsessmontgo-1960.