Williams Appeal

102 A.2d 186, 174 Pa. Super. 570, 1954 Pa. Super. LEXIS 264
CourtSuperior Court of Pennsylvania
DecidedJanuary 19, 1954
DocketAppeal, 120
StatusPublished
Cited by18 cases

This text of 102 A.2d 186 (Williams Appeal) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Superior Court of Pennsylvania primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Williams Appeal, 102 A.2d 186, 174 Pa. Super. 570, 1954 Pa. Super. LEXIS 264 (Pa. Ct. App. 1954).

Opinion

Opinion by

Boss,. J.,

On June 2, 1950, the Board of Adjustment of the City of Pittsburgh ■ granted an occupancy permit for a light machine shop to Oscar J. Glies' as owner, and Harry C. Williams as lessee, of a building known as 519-521-523 Foreland Street. On ■ August- 21, 1950, Marie- S: Ferraro protested the issuance of the permit, and on September 20, 1950, after hearings and an inspection -of the premises, the Board of Adjustment entered an order directing the Bureau' of Building Inspection to order cessation of the use of the premises as a machine shop. Further hearings were held on October 9, 1950 and on October 3, 1951, following which hearings on October 11, 1951, the Board, of Adjustment reversed its ¿arlier, decision and dismissed the Ferraro protest.

The County Court of Allegheny County sustained the appeal of Marié S. Ferraro and reversed the Board of Adjustment. From that judgment Harry C. Williams has appealed to this Court.

The basic zoning ordinance of the City of Pittsburgh became effective August 9, 1923. 519-523 Fore-land Street was, and is, located in a use district designated as “A” Residence District. When the zoning ordinance was adopted the land was- owned by Schus-ter Company, a wholesale grocery concern, whieh used it to garage and repair its own delivery trucks. The company’s grocery business was conducted and merchandise stored at another location, some distance away.

The uses permitted by the ordinance in “A” Residence District, did not include" that use to which the then-owner devoted the property 'when the ordinance was adopted. The grocery company was, however, entitled to., continue to. use its property as. a . place to store and repair its trucks under the non-conforming use provisions of the ordinance.

*573 The evidence relative to the character of the operations conducted by the Schuster Company on the property at the time of the adoption of the, zoning ordinance establishes that, in 1923 the owner' used the premises to store and repair “four or five” trucks which it used in connection with its business and that no other trucks were garaged or repaired on the. premises. Employed in the.repair of the trucks were an “air compressor and air hammer to knock -. tires off with”, a “crane to lift the motors out”, a “hydraulic press to press tires off”, a brake lining machine and electric drills, “hydraulic jacks, chain blocks, valve grinders”. The .company apparently operated “a fully mechanized shop for repairing trucks and cars”:

“Around 1925 or 1926” Oscar J. Glies became a tenant of the Schuster Company and so continued for a period of nine, or ten years, when the .latter failed and Glies purchased the property at sheriff’s ;sale. Glies testified, that from 1925 or 1926 until 1946 he “operated a repair shop, trucks, buses, cars or anything that came in”; further, that he “made more noise than my tenants [Williams] dared make”;, that in 1946 “I got my skull crushed and-1 sold- out my business to Madison”, who “continued the same business I had; also started to sell used cars there which I did not do”; that Madison continued in possession for a “couple of yeax*s” and then sold out to Clyde J. Bor-inger Corporation which “kept the same kind of business and also put in heavy electrical equipment”. The Boringer Corporation failed in 1948 and Glies, again at sheriff’s sale, purchased the premises, which, in July 1948, he leased to appellant.

Appellant testified with regard to the nature of . his operations-at the time of the hearings. He listed the various pieces of machinery installed and used by bim in the' operation of his “shop”. The machinex*y was not designed nor intended to be employed .in repairing *574 automobiles or trucks, but instead the premises were devoted to the operation of a machine shop where industrial machines and parts are built and repaired. He testified that he did “repair work for the Clark Candy Co.”, rebuilt a turret lathe for Mellon Institute and made “parts for Mesta Machine”, including “clamps for their cranes”.

The evidence indicates, and the Board of Adjustment found, after visiting the premises, that appellant’s operation was relatively free from noise and vibration which would be annoying to persons residing in the vicinity.

Appellant argues that there was always machinery in the building “whether for the use of repair of /trucks of the owner or for some one else”, that the Schuster Company operation was “machinery . . . used in connection with the garage”, hence “The present occupancy simply expanded the machinery part of the business and discontinued the garage” by introducing modem machinery, the use of which is “less objectionable, less. obnoxious and less noisy” than that of his predecessors.

The learned court below held that “the use by the successors of Schuster Co. was a 'new and different use’, and not an 'extension of the existing use’ which was the repair by Schuster Co. of its own trucks, at the time the ordinance was enacted.” In the course of an able opinion it emphasized that “. . . there is a distinction between a use which is incidental to the owner’s business, and a use which is the owner’s primary concern”. We agree, and the order will be affirmed.

There do hot appear to be any Pennsylvania appellate cases dealing with the precise fact situation here involved. There are, however, a number of persuasive cases from other jurisdictions. A very recent one, Feldman v. Hesch, 254 S.W. 2d 914, decided by the Court of Appeals of Kentucky, is closely analo *575 gous. In that case the owner and lessees of a "garage in the City of Newport sought to enjoin the municipal authorities from interfering with their use and continued occupancy of the building. When the city zoning ordinance was enacted the neighborhood was zoned residential. The ordinance contained the customary provision allowing the continuance of non-conforming uses. At that time the owner was engaged in the dairy business and used the garage building for storing and servicing some seven or eight delivery trucks. About two years after adoption of the ordinance he leased the building to used car dealers. The latter used the place to wash, paint, repair and otherwise recondition automobiles purchased for resale. The actual buying and selling of cars was conducted at a lot in another part of the city. The Kentucky Court affirmed a judgment denying injunctive relief, pointing out, at page 916, that the owner of the garage had used it “as a remote adjunct to a milk business”, while the lessees used it “as an integral part of a used car business”— a “changed use” in violation of the ordinance.

The Court cited with approval People v. Giorgi, 16 N.Y.S. 2d 923, wherein it was held that premises used by a building contractor for the purpose of manufacturing concrete blocks for use in his business could not be used by another person for the purpose of manufacturing concrete blocks for sale to the general public; and Lexington v. Bean, 272 Mass. 547, 172 N.E. 867. There a person engaged in the trucking business used a garage building as a place in which to repair his own trucks, occasionally permitting others to store and repair automobiles therein. Later the use of the building was changed to that of a public garage for the repairing of motor vehicles for hire.

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Bluebook (online)
102 A.2d 186, 174 Pa. Super. 570, 1954 Pa. Super. LEXIS 264, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/williams-appeal-pasuperct-1954.