CGR Real Estate, LLC v. Borough Council of the Borough of Franklin Park v. G. and K. Woodworth ( 2017 )


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  •          IN THE COMMONWEALTH COURT OF PENNSYLVANIA
    CGR Real Estate, LLC, CGR RE              :
    Franklin Park, LP, and CGR Holdings, LLC, :
    :
    Appellants             :
    :
    v.                            : No. 780 C.D. 2016
    :
    Borough Council of The Borough of         :
    Franklin Park                             :
    :
    v.                            :
    :
    Gregory and Kathleen Woodworth,           :
    Helene Donch and Bernard M. Avon, Jr.     :
    CGR Holdings, LLC                        :
    :
    v.                            : No. 971 C.D. 2016
    :
    Borough Council of the Borough of        :
    Franklin Park                            :
    :
    v.                            :
    :
    Gregory and Kathleen Woodworth,          :
    Helene Donch and Bernard M. Avon, Jr.    :
    :
    Appeal of: CGR Real Estate,              :
    LLC and CGR Holdings, LLC                :
    CGR Real Esstate, LLC                    :
    :
    v.                            : No. 972 C.D. 2016
    : ARGUED: November 14, 2016
    Borough Council of the Borough of              :
    Franklin Park                                  :
    :
    v.                                :
    :
    Gregory and Kathleen Woodworth,                :
    Helene Donch and Bernard M. Avon Jr.           :
    :
    Appeal of: CGR Real Estate,                    :
    LLC and CGR Holdings, LLC                      :
    BEFORE:      HONORABLE PATRICIA A. McCULLOUGH, Judge
    HONORABLE MICHAEL H. WOJCIK, Judge
    HONORABLE BONNIE BRIGANCE LEADBETTER, Senior Judge
    OPINION NOT REPORTED
    MEMORANDUM OPINION BY
    SENIOR JUDGE LEADBETTER                                  FILED: January 26, 2017
    In these consolidated land use appeals, CGR Real Estate, LLC, CGR
    RE Franklin Park, LP, and CGR Holdings, LLC (collectively, Appellants) appeal
    from an order of the Court of Common Pleas of Allegheny County affirming two
    decisions of the Borough Council of the Borough of Franklin Park (Council) to
    deny their land development applications. Council and the neighboring residents
    have filed a joint brief. We affirm in part, and reverse in part.
    Appellants seek to construct three apartment buildings in the Borough
    of Franklin Park, with four stories and a total of 126 units, on approximately 5.21
    acres of vacant land (the Apartment Property). Located in a Medium-Intensity
    Mixed-Use Residential, Commercial and Light Industrial District (M-2 Zoning
    District), the Apartment Property is bounded by an office development to the
    2
    north, Interstate 79 to the east, and residential lots to the south and west. Although
    a multi-family apartment building is a permitted use, by right, in the M-2 Zoning
    District, the dispute in this matter arose from Appellants’ efforts to provide access
    to the Apartment Property from a public street located to the west of the property,
    Aldon Drive. In this regard, their two submissions to Council (the First Plan and
    the Second Plan), delineate their respective proposals to provide access from
    Aldon Drive to the Apartment Property and Council’s responses thereto.            On
    review, we conclude that Council was correct in denying the First Plan, but erred
    in denying the Second Plan.
    The First Plan
    In October 2014, Appellants submitted the First Plan consisting of a
    preliminary and final land development application and a minor subdivision
    application.     Pursuant to the First Plan, Lorrick Lane, part of which is
    perpendicular to Aldon Drive, was to provide access to the Apartment Property
    over contiguous property in the R-2 zoning district (the Driveway Property).
    Owned by Appellant CGR Holdings, LLC, the Driveway Property contains a
    vacant, single-family residence, has frontage on Aldon Drive, and has Lorrick
    Lane running along its southerly property line.         In their minor subdivision
    application, Appellants sought to subdivide the Driveway Property into two parcels
    so that the portion abutting the Apartment Property (subdivided Lot 17B) could be
    used to slightly widen Lorrick Lane, accommodate necessary grading, and install a
    sidewalk. The balance of the Driveway Property (subdivided Lot 17A) would be
    used for the existing residence. In February 2015, Council denied the First Plan,
    determining that Appellants did not meet three sections of the Franklin Park
    Borough Subdivision and Land Development Ordinance (SALDO).
    3
    The first SALDO provision, Section 184-905.A(7), prohibits dead-end
    streets unless designed as a cul-de-sac or as a stub street with a temporary
    turnaround for access exclusively to neighboring tracts, with no more than two lots
    taking access thereto. In determining that Appellants did not meet this section,
    Council characterized Lorrick Lane as a dead-end street that already serves five
    lots and is neither a cul-de-sac nor a stub street with a temporary turnaround.
    The second SALDO provision, Section 184-905.C(1).b.4, provides
    that properties depending on a private street for access have a guaranteed,
    irrevocable right to access under a right-of-way access easement or other legal
    covenant, which shall be clearly noted on the subdivision and/or land development
    plans creating a private street, included in all deeds for all properties with access
    rights, and recorded in the Office of Real Estate of Allegheny County. Council
    concluded that Appellants did not meet this section because Lorrick Lane was
    never dedicated for public use and they failed to note on their plans that there was
    a guarantee of access for all parcels utilizing it. In so concluding, Council rejected
    Appellants’ proffered documentation in their revised First Plan showing that the
    Apartment Property and subdivided Lot 17B from the Driveway Property had a
    right to use Lorrick Lane. Submitted in response to Council’s request that they
    provide proof that Lorrick Lane could serve as access to the Apartment Property,
    Appellants’ submission included a copy of the Nicholson Heights Plan of Lots.
    Pursuant to that July 1957 plan, the Driveway Property is identified as Lot 17 and
    there is an unnamed street in the same location as Lorrick Lane.1 Allegheny
    County Plan Book, Volume 63 at 15; Reproduced Record (R.R.) 152-53a.
    1
    In asserting that they had access to the Apartment Property via Lorrick Lane, Appellants
    asserted as follows:
    (Footnote continued on next page…)
    4
    The third SALDO provision, Section 184-910.B.(1).b, provides that
    for slopes of 15% to 25%, no more than 40% of such areas shall be developed
    and/or regraded or stripped of vegetation unless a soils engineer certifies the
    stability of the soils and slopes and that, when an engineer has so certified, the
    percentage of disturbance may be increased to 55%. Pursuant to this section, the
    Borough rejected Appellants’ request for modification of the percentage of
    disturbance requirement from 55% to 70%, determining that they failed to satisfy
    the relevant criteria.
    The Second Plan
    In April 2015, Appellants submitted the Second Plan consisting of a
    preliminary and final land development application and a minor subdivision
    application.     This time, Appellants proposed single-driveway access to the
    _____________________________
    (continued…)
    [W]hat is labeled “Lorrick Lane” on various plans and tax maps
    was depicted as an unnamed street on the Nicholson Heights Plan .
    . . . Surveys of the area and the tax maps confirm that while
    Lorrick Lane has never been opened as a full public street, a
    driveway exists within the area of Lorrick Lane that provides direct
    access between Aldon Drive, the [Apartment] Property and other
    lands to the south of the Property. This driveway has existed for
    well more than twenty one years, and I believe, dates back at least
    to the recording of the Nicholson Heights Plan. These facts would
    support a conclusion that the unnamed street shown on the
    Nicholson Heights Plan, now labeled Lorrick Lane, was intended
    to serve as an access way to the Property. In addition, given the
    passage of time, prescriptive easement rights would likely now
    accrue to the benefit of the Property.
    February 17, 2015, Opinion Letter from Counsel for Appellants at 1; R.R. at 243a. There is also
    a recorded right-of-way agreement, which references Lots 17 and 18 of the Nicholson Heights
    Plan. September 29, 1986, Right-of-Way Agreement at 1-2; R.R. at 498-99a. Lot 17 is the
    Driveway Property and Lot 18 is to its south. Both lots border Lorrick Lane and have frontage
    on Aldon Drive. February 5, 1987, Hoolahan Plan of Subdivision; R.R. at 513a.
    5
    Apartment Property by way of a new driveway to be constructed across the
    Driveway Property. The new driveway would traverse the area where the vacant
    residence now sits, roughly north of and parallel to Lorrick Lane. In denying the
    Second Plan, Council determined that Appellants failed to satisfy three different
    sections of the Borough’s SALDO.
    The first SALDO provision, Section 184-902, provides, in pertinent
    part, that where zoning requirements and subdivision requirements conflict, the
    zoning requirements shall govern. In addressing this section, Council determined
    that the proposal to use a driveway over property located in the R-2 zoning district
    to access apartments in an M-2 Zoning District would violate Section 212-401 of
    the Zoning Ordinance of the Borough of Franklin Park (Zoning Ordinance),
    providing that “no building, structure or land shall be used or occupied except for
    purposes permitted in §212-404 and for the zoning districts so indicated.” In other
    words, given the fact that apartments are not a permitted use in the R-2 district, the
    Borough concluded that they cannot be accessed via a driveway over property
    located in the R-2 zoning district.       In support, Council cited Mine Safety
    Appliances Co. v. Marshall Township Board of Supervisors, 
    551 A.2d 634
    , 635
    (Pa. Cmwlth. 1988), holding that an access driveway could not traverse a
    residentially-zoned lot to access an industrial use, and Atria, Inc. v. Board of
    Adjustment of Mount Lebanon Township, 
    264 A.2d 609
    , 611 (Pa. 1970), holding
    that an access driveway could not traverse a residentially-zoned lot to access a
    commercially-zoned lot with a combination beer parlor, grocery store, and
    restaurant.
    The second SALDO provision, Section 184-905(A)(13)(c), provides
    that plans with more than forty dwelling units shall have a minimum of two access
    6
    points to a public street.       In addressing this section, Council concluded that
    Appellants’ plan to consolidate the M-2 and R-2 parcels would result in a total of
    120 dwelling units with only one access point to a public street.
    The third SALDO provision, Section 184-401(A), provides that final
    plans submitted to the zoning officer shall include all applicable requirements
    specified in the section setting forth the final subdivision plan requirements as well
    as any further information deemed pertinent by the zoning officer or borough
    engineer.    In this regard, Council determined that, in addition to the two
    aforementioned defects, the minor subdivision final plan “does not show the
    zoning district boundary on the plan and label the zoning district, does not show
    the acreage of the existing residential lot, and does not note the intended future use
    of the existing residential single-family dwelling on the R-2 property.” Council’s
    September 17, 2015, Decision at 2; Appellants’ Brief, Appendix II at 2.
    Issues
    Common pleas affirmed Council’s denial of both the First and Second
    Plans and Appellants’ appeal to this Court followed.2 On appeal, we consider the
    following issues:      (1) whether Council erred in denying the First Plan by
    determining that Appellants failed to establish a right to use Lorrick Lane to access
    2
    Where, as here, common pleas did not take additional evidence, we are limited to
    reviewing whether the local governing body committed an error of law or if the governing
    body’s findings are not supported by substantial evidence. Whitehall Manor, Inc. v. Planning
    Comm’n of the City of Allentown, 
    79 A.3d 720
    , 724 (Pa. Cmwlth. 2013); Gerryville Materials,
    Inc. v. Planning Comm’n of Lower Milford Twp., 
    74 A.3d 322
    , 325 (Pa. Cmwlth. 2013), appeal
    denied, 
    87 A.3d 817
    (Pa. 2014). Substantial evidence is defined as such relevant evidence as a
    reasonable mind might find adequate to support a conclusion. Valley View Civic Ass’n v. Zoning
    Bd. of Adjustment, 
    462 A.2d 637
    , 640 (Pa. 1983).
    7
    the Apartment Property; (2) whether Council erred in denying the First Plan by
    determining that Appellants failed to satisfy the requisite conditions for their
    waiver request from the slope disturbance limitation pertaining to their proposed
    enhancement of Lorrick Lane; (3) whether Council erred in denying the Second
    Plan by determining that a driveway could not be constructed over the R-2
    Driveway Property in order to access the M-2 Apartment Property; and (4) whether
    Council’s remaining reasons for denial were tantamount to technical deficiencies
    such that it should have permitted Appellants to correct them as conditions of
    approval. We turn first to Council’s requirement that Appellants prove their right
    to access the Apartment Property via Lorrick Lane.
    I
    Although Council characterizes its request to Appellants to
    demonstrate their right to use Lorrick Lane as merely an effort to confirm their
    standing to apply for a development, it is clear from the record that it improperly
    delved into title issues concerning that road. Once an applicant has demonstrated
    an interest in land sufficient to afford him standing, his subdivision application
    may not be rejected because his title is disputed. See In re AMA/Am. Mktg. Ass’n,
    
    142 A.3d 923
    , 936 (Pa. Cmwlth. 2016)3 (holding that, [i]t is well settled that issues
    concerning property rights in instruments of title must be resolved in the courts
    rather than in zoning or land development proceedings.”); BR Assocs. v. Bd. of
    Comm’rs of Twp. of Upper St. Clair, 
    136 A.3d 548
    , 557 (Pa. Cmwlth. 2016)
    (holding that, the issue of whether an applicant had a legal right or permission
    under an easement to connect to stormwater facilities on an objector’s property “is
    3
    In August 2016, this Court denied AMA’s petition for reconsideration or rehearing en banc
    and the appellee’s petition for attorney’s fees.
    8
    a property rights issue that must be raised in a public court of record, not in a land
    use proceeding before a municipal body.”)4                Moreover, it also appears from
    Appellants’ proffered documents that Lorrick Lane was commonly used and
    already dedicated to public use.5 See Nicholson Heights Plan; Reproduced Record
    (R.R.) at 152a.
    In any event, we do not herein decide the legality of Appellants’ right
    to use Lorrick Lane. We do hold, however, that Council under the guise of
    standing improperly required them during the course of land development
    proceedings to establish definitively what was tantamount to a property right. We
    turn now to whether Council erred in denying their waiver request from the slope
    disturbance limitation.
    II
    Section 512.1(a) of the Pennsylvania Municipalities Planning Code
    (MPC),6 53 P.S. § 10512.1(a), provides that a modification from one or more
    provisions of a governing body’s SALDO may be granted “if the literal
    4
    
    See supra
    text accompanying note 1 regarding possible prescriptive easement and recorded
    right-of-way.
    5
    Even though Lorrick Lane was not formally accepted by ordinance, continuous use most
    likely constituted acceptance by the public. See Capozzi v. Cummins, 
    159 A.2d 536
    , 539 (Pa.
    Super. 1960) (holding that, where there has been substantial public use, with or without any
    actions on behalf of the municipal corporation, a paper street can become a public way); Bromley
    v. Borough of McDonald, 
    896 A.2d 1289
    , 1293 (Pa Cmwlth. 2006) (holding that, where a street
    has been continuously used by the public since its inception for ingress and egress, such evidence
    establishes the public nature of the street notwithstanding the lack of formal acceptance). In
    Bromley, we also noted that, where “a sale of lots references a map or plot which calls for certain
    alleys and streets, such constitutes a dedication of those roadways and the fact that a street may
    not be accepted by the municipality does not affect the continuing private contractual rights of
    property owners within the plan to use the streets.” 
    Id. at 1293
    n.5.
    6
    Act of July 31, 1968, P.L. 805, as amended, added by Section 40 of the Act of December
    21, 1988, P.L. 1329.
    9
    enforcement will exact undue hardship because of peculiar conditions pertaining to
    the land in question, provided that such modification will not be contrary to the
    public interest and that the purpose and intent of the ordinance is observed.” The
    grant of waivers from SALDO provisions, however, requires less vigorous proof
    than the proof required for the granting of a variance from zoning ordinance
    provisions. Telvil Constr. Corp. v. Zoning Hearing Bd. of E. Pikeland Twp., 
    896 A.2d 651
    , 656 (Pa. Cmwlth. 2006). At any rate, the decision to grant waivers is
    within the discretion of the governing body. Miravich v. Twp. of Exeter, 
    54 A.3d 106
    , 114 (Pa. Cmwlth. 2012) (Miravich II). A governing body may have abused
    its discretion in refusing to grant waivers where the denial is contrary to the
    recommendations of its experts or officials and literal enforcement of the SALDO
    requirements will frustrate the effect of the improvements designed to implement
    other requirements. Ruf v. Buckingham Twp., 
    765 A.2d 1166
    , 1169 (Pa. Cmwlth.
    2001). Ultimately, “[the governing body’s] duty is to actively oppose schemes of
    development unreasonably proposed and conceived, but likewise, [its] duty is to
    sanction well planned development.’” 
    Id. (citation omitted).
                In the present case, Appellants planned to enhance Lorrick Lane and
    “develop, regrade, or strip 70% of slopes on the site ranging from 15% to 25%.”
    Council’s February 19, 2015, Decision at 2; Appellants’ Brief, Appendix I at 2. To
    that end, they had to secure a waiver of the disturbance limitation for slopes of
    15% to 25%, which provides:
    No more than Forty percent (40%) of such areas shall be
    developed and/or regraded or stripped of vegetation
    unless a soils engineer certifies the stability of the soils
    and slopes. When a soils engineer has certified the
    stability of the soils and slopes, the percentage of
    disturbance may be increased to Fifty-Five percent
    (55%).
    10
    Section 184-910.B.(1).b of the SALDO; R.R. at 456a. Additionally, Appellants
    were subject to the general provision in the SALDO pertaining to waivers based on
    physical hardship, which provides:
    In any particular case where the applicant can show by
    plan and written statement that, by reason of exceptional
    topographic or other physical conditions, strict
    compliance with any requirement of this chapter would
    cause practical difficulty or exceptional and undue
    hardship, Borough Council may relax such requirements
    to the extent deemed just and equitable, so as to relieve
    such difficulty or hardship, provided that such relief, if
    granted, will not be a detriment to the public good and
    will not impair the intent and purpose of this chapter or
    the desirable development of the immediate
    neighborhood.
    Section 184-1201.B. of the SALDO; Supplement to the Certified Record (S.C.R.).
    In support of their waiver request, Appellants set forth the following
    justification:
    The property has only three slope categories (0%-8%,
    8%-15% & 15%-25%). There are no slopes of 25% or
    greater that were not man-made. Therefore, there are a
    disproportion [sic] percentage of slopes in the 15% and
    25% slopes.
    October 30, 2014, Modification Request; R.R. at 150a. In addition, they submitted
    the site plan for recording sheet C102,7 with the above-cited justification, as
    supporting evidence for their request.8 See also Slope Disturbance Map; R.R. at
    151a (indicating that a soils engineer certified the stability of the soils and slopes).
    At the subsequent Council meeting, at which time the solicitor
    expressed Council’s dislike for the requested slope modification and recited the
    7
    Site Plan for Recording, Sheet C102; R.R. at 207a.
    8
    October 30, 2014, Letter from Appellants to Zoning Officer addressing October 15, 2014,
    Staff Report, ¶ 21 at 4; R.R. at 157a.
    11
    requirements for granting waivers, Mr. Victor on behalf of Appellants asserted
    that, “to use the slope modification as the only criteria to reduce the amount of
    development seems unreasonable.”             November 18, 2014, Regular Meeting of
    Council at 3; R.R. at 175a.           Further, when a planning commission member
    commented that the developer could build two apartment buildings instead of the
    proposed three, Mr. Victor “agreed and stated that they could build two 8 story
    buildings which no one wants but is allowed under the ordinance.” 
    Id. In February
    2015, the Borough’s engineer advised the Zoning Officer
    that there was an outstanding modification request and that the engineer could not
    recommend approval unless it was granted or Appellants amended their plans to
    conform to the SALDO.9             At the subsequent meeting, Appellants offered to
    withdraw their request and amend the First Plan to comply with the slope
    requirements.      They also requested that Council table its vote.              In response,
    Council’s solicitor “indicated that a written decision would be provided and the
    applicant could take an appeal or file a new application that would be required to
    go through the Planning Commission review process.” February 18, 2015, Regular
    Meeting of Council at 2; R.R. at 247a.
    In denying the waiver request, Council acknowledged that it had
    received the required report but observed that, “[e]ven when a report is certified by
    a soils engineer, the percentage of disturbance may only be increased from 40% to
    55%.” Council’s February 19, 2015, Decision at 2; Appellants’ Brief, Appendix I
    at 2. In that regard, Council concluded that it “does not believe that it can increase
    the amount of disturbance beyond 55%.” 
    Id. In addition,
    it determined as follows:
    9
    February 12, 2015, Letter from Borough Engineer to Zoning Officer at 2; R.R. at 240a.
    12
    [T]he developer has not proven that literal enforcement
    of the [SALDO] will exact undue hardship and that
    granting the modification would not be contrary to the
    public interest and the purpose and intent of the
    ordinance[10] would be preserved, as required by Section
    512.1 of the [MPC] and by Section 184-1201 of the
    Borough’s [SALDO].
    
    Id. (footnote added).
                  In support of their position that Council erred in denying their slope
    modification request, Appellants point out that none of the reports issued by the
    zoning officer or the borough engineer raised substantive questions regarding their
    request.     In addition, they emphasize that, notwithstanding the Planning
    Commission’s January 2015 recommendation to approve the First Plan, subject to
    a couple of items which did not address the request,11 Council denied the waiver
    request without substantial discussion. Further, they note that Council denied their
    request to table the vote, thereby denying them an opportunity to provide the
    information that Council requested.          Accordingly, citing Ruf, 
    765 A.2d 1166
    ,
    Appellants maintain that Council erred in denying their request.
    In Ruf, this Court agreed with common pleas that the board of
    supervisors abused its discretion in refusing to grant the requested waivers of the
    subdivision ordinance at issue where, inter alia, the denial was contrary to the
    recommendations of the township’s civil engineer and public work director and
    literal enforcement of the requirements would frustrate the effect of the
    10
    In general, the purpose of the Borough’s SALDO “is the promotion of the health, safety,
    morals, convenience and general welfare of the present and future inhabitants of Franklin Park
    Borough[.]” Section 184-102 of the SALDO; S.C.R.
    11
    See January 14, 2015, Borough Engineer’s letter, R.R. at 505a; Zoning Officer’s January
    15, 2015, Staff Report, R.R. at 507a; Intervenor/Neighbor Greg Woodworth’s letter pertaining to
    an extension of the paved portion of Lorrick Lane and water line issues, R.R. at 196a.
    13
    improvements designed to implement other requirements. Further, we determined
    that the board also abused its discretion where the landowners established via
    overwhelming and undisputed evidence that, due to the unique topography of the
    property, they could not comply with the road widening and stormwater control
    requirements without violating the natural resource protection standards in the
    zoning ordinance such that literal enforcement would be unreasonable and cause
    undue 
    hardship. 765 A.2d at 1169
    . Accordingly, concluding that the landowners
    proved that granting the waivers would serve the purpose and intent of the
    ordinance and would not be contrary to the public interest, we held that the board
    abused its discretion in denying the modification where the request was modest,
    safe, and favorably recommended by township officials.           Ruf, however, is
    distinguishable from the present case.
    Besides reciting the slope categories, the nature of the slopes, and the
    percentage of each category, Appellants failed to establish by plan or written
    statement that, due to exceptional topographic or other physical conditions, strict
    compliance with the slope requirement would cause practical difficulty or
    exceptional and undue hardship. In addition, they did not show how denial of the
    modification would frustrate the effect of the improvements designed to implement
    other requirements of the SALDO.
    Moreover, besides the Planning Commission’s recommended
    approval of the First Plan, there is no indication that any officials specifically
    recommended approval of the waiver.           As previously noted, the Borough’s
    engineer indicated that she could not recommend approval of the First Plan absent
    a grant of the waiver or the withdrawal of the waiver request. Further, Appellants’
    subsequent withdrawal of their waiver request and ability to revise their plan
    14
    support Council’s conclusion that literal enforcement would not exact undue
    hardship due to peculiar conditions of the land in question.12 In that regard,
    notwithstanding the fact that the proof required for a waiver from a SALDO
    requirement is less rigorous than that required for granting a variance from zoning
    ordinance provisions, Telvil, Appellants still bore the burden of establishing the
    necessary criteria for the waiver. Accordingly, we conclude that Council did not
    abuse its discretion in refusing to waive the ordinance slope disturbance limitation
    of 40-55% to allow a disturbance of 70% and, therefore, did not err in denying the
    First Plan. We turn now to addressing whether Council erred in denying the
    Second Plan by concluding that a driveway could not be constructed over the R-2
    Driveway Property in order to access the M-2 Apartment Property.
    III
    In support of its determination that Appellants cannot use their R-2 lot
    in order to access their M-2 lot, Council cited Mine Safety and Atria. In Mine
    Safety, 
    551 A.2d 634
    , this Court held that a company could not use a private
    driveway in a rural residential zoning district to serve an industrial use in a district
    in an adjacent municipality where such use was permitted and existed. In so
    holding, we concluded that the driveway use on the residential property was
    prohibited in that it “would serve no purpose other than to provide additional
    12
    We are troubled by Council’s refusal to permit Appellants to resubmit the First Plan
    without the waiver request, thereby exhibiting an apparent failure to comply with its “legal
    obligation to proceed in good faith in reviewing and processing development plans.” Kohr v.
    Lower Windsor Twp. Bd. of Supervisors, 
    910 A.2d 152
    , 160 n.13 (Pa. Cmwlth. 2006). This duty
    “includes discussing matters involving technical requirements or ordinance interpretation with an
    applicant, and providing an applicant a reasonable opportunity to respond to objections or to
    modify plans where there is a misunderstanding or difference of opinion.” 
    Id. This seeming
    lapse in good faith is especially troublesome given the fact that the proposed use is permitted, by
    right, in the M-2 Zoning District.
    15
    means of ingress and regress [sic] for persons employed at the industrial site.” 
    Id. at 636
    (emphasis added). We focused, in particular, on the disparity, if any,
    between the permissible uses of the lot and the uses to be served by the driveway.
    
    Id. at 635.
                  In Atria, 
    264 A.2d 609
    , the Supreme Court considered a situation
    where the driveway at issue was located in a residential zone and was an accessory
    use to the commercial facility located in an adjacent commercial zone. Mindful
    that a driveway had to be considered with the use it served, the Court concluded
    that use of a private driveway for seventy-five to one hundred cars per day would
    severely alter the character of the residential district such that, even though only an
    accessory use, the driveway’s connection to the commercial property would render
    it prohibited under the applicable zoning ordinance.
    While it is true that both Mine Safety and Atria hold that an access
    driveway cannot traverse a residentially-zoned lot in order to access incompatible
    uses (industrial and commercial), there are also cases in which access driveways
    were permitted in more compatible circumstances. In Sprint Spectrum, L.P. v.
    Zoning Hearing Board of the Township of North Whitehall, 
    823 A.2d 258
    , 262 (Pa.
    Cmwlth. 2003), Sprint sought to access a communications tower to be located on
    leased property in an agricultural zone. This Court held that an existing driveway
    to be used once per month for inspection of the tower would not change the
    character of the residential district and that one SUV per month was less intrusive
    than the permitted use by farm vehicles to access the property for farming
    purposes. In Prospect Park Borough v. McClaskey, 
    30 A.2d 179
    , 181 (Pa. Super.
    1943), the Superior Court held that property owner’s use of commercially-zoned
    parcel for ingress and egress to brick manufactory in an industrial zone was
    permitted because the access was not part of the manufacturing process, did not
    alter the character of the district in which it was located and would not endanger
    16
    the interests which the zoning ordinance was intended to protect. 
    Id. at 181.
    In
    other words, truck access was equally advantageous and suitable for commercial as
    well as industrial purposes.
    In the present case, even though Appellants estimate that the traffic
    generated could be in the realm of 861 vehicles on a typical weekday, the use on
    both the Apartment and the Driveway Properties is residential in nature.           As
    Appellants also assert, there seemingly are no provisions in the Zoning Ordinance
    prohibiting access to a more intense residential use such as a multi-family
    apartment building via property zoned for a less intense residential use. There are
    three provisions, however, prohibiting access via a residential area to three types of
    commercial-type areas: (1) shopping centers; (2) industrial parks; and (3) storage
    facilities. Sections 212-1905.R(11), 212-1906.E(11), and 212-1906.F(2) of the
    Zoning Ordinance.       The principle of expressio unius est exclusio alertius
    establishes the inference that the express mention of specific matters implies the
    exclusion of others.    Finkelstein v. Commonwealth, 
    433 A.2d 146
    , 148 (Pa.
    Cmwlth. 1981).
    In addition, in neither Mine Safety nor Atria was the property sought
    to be accessed rendered landlocked as a result of the denial of access. In that
    regard, this Court in Taged, Inc. v. Zoning Board of Adjustment of Borough of
    Monroeville, 
    276 A.2d 845
    , 851 (Pa. Cmwlth. 1971), noted that a controlling factor
    in Atria was that the business premises were not landlocked as a result of the denial
    of additional access. Here, Council is denying ostensibly legal access to what is
    evolving into a landlocked parcel. As this Court long ago stated:
    [T]he vital importance of a landowner’s property right in
    an easement of access for ingress and regress . . . where
    his land is otherwise landlocked, is too obvious for
    discussion. . . . [T]he denial of the right to use it can
    result in the deprivation of every property right and use
    that attaches to his real property ownership.
    17
    
    Id. at 849.
    See also Rolling Green Golf Club Case, 
    97 A.2d 523
    , 526 (Pa. 1953)
    (holding that, “[t]he right of a property owner to have (or build) a road over his
    own land to connect with a public road has been recognized for centuries as one of
    his fundamental inalienable rights.”).13
    Accordingly, having concluded that Council erred in determining that
    Appellants could not use their R-2 lot in order to access their M-2 lot, we reverse
    common pleas’ order affirming Council’s denial of the Second Plan. We turn,
    briefly, to Appellants’ final issue pertaining to Council’s treatment of technical
    deficiencies.
    IV
    Pursuant to Council’s September 2015 decision, the technical
    deficiencies issue arose primarily from its denial of the Second Plan, proposing
    access to the Apartment Property via a new driveway over the Driveway Property.
    As part of the Second Plan, Appellants at Council’s request filed a Lot
    Consolidation Plan for the Apartment and Driveway Properties. In that regard,
    Council in denying the Second Plan stated that the minor subdivision final plan
    “does not show the zoning district boundary on the plan and label the zoning
    13
    In response to Appellants’ valid concern that the Apartment Property could be rendered
    landlocked, Council argues that they could use the Apartment Property for other permissible uses
    in an M-2 zoning district and use the Driveway Property for access with none of the attendant
    problems present herein. These uses include farm, forestry, greenhouse, emergency service and
    municipal facility, municipal building and facilities, place of worship, public utility structure
    (other than telecommunications tower), essential/commercial telecommunications tower, and
    public utility building. Section 212-404 of the Zoning Ordinance. However, only farm (without
    animal husbandry) and forestry uses are permitted; the others are conditional uses. Moreover,
    the only residential use allowed in the R-2 district is a single-family dwelling, a use not
    permitted in M-2. Finally, as Appellants note, several of these uses would require the Borough
    to purchase their property. Therefore, the options suggested by Council are of extremely limited
    viability.
    18
    district, does not show the acreage of the existing residential lot, and does not note
    the intended future use of the existing residential single-family dwelling on the R-2
    property.”     Council’s September 17, 2015, Decision at 2; Appellants’ Brief,
    Appendix II at 2. Council states that, “[t]his information was deemed pertinent by
    the Zoning Officer in the August 27, 2015 Staff Report.” 
    Id. In response,
    Appellants assert that Council already knew the zoning of
    the two parcels, the fact that the boundary line of the zoning districts was on the
    western property line of the Apartment Property, the acreage of the Driveway
    Property and the acreage of each individual lot. In addition, Appellants maintain
    that the zoning officer knew the intended future use of the existing single-family
    dwelling on the Driveway Lot in that they asserted throughout the documents filed
    in connection with the Second Plan that the dwelling would be razed to make way
    for the new driveway and explained such throughout the entire review process. In
    addition, Appellants assert that the Lot Consolidation Plan was filed only at the
    behest of Council,14 was unnecessary given the commonality of ownership and that
    CGR Holdings could have provided the Apartment Property with an easement over
    the Driveway Property.
    As Council asserts, a final plan can be approved only after a developer
    has complied fully with a municipality’s subdivision and land development
    ordinance and zoning ordinance. Lyons Borough v. Twp. of Maxatawny, 
    123 A.3d 347
    , 353-54 (Pa. Cmwlth. 2015). It is equally true, however, that “the preliminary
    plan containing minor defects correctable by amendment must be approved subject
    14
    See June 3, 2015, Letter from Appellants at ¶¶ 1and 7 indicating that no lot consolidation
    is proposed and, more specifically, that there is no proposal to add parcel 1346-N-91 to parcel
    1346-R-258; R.R. at 280-81a.
    19
    to a condition that necessary corrections be made.” CACO Three, Inc. v. Bd. of
    Supervisors of Huntington Twp., 
    845 A.2d 991
    , 994 (Pa. Cmwlth. 2004). In any
    event, we emphasize a governing body’s legal obligation to proceed in good faith.
    See Kohr v. Lower Windsor Twp. Bd. of Supervisors, 
    910 A.2d 152
    , 160 n.13 (Pa.
    Cmwlth. 2006).
    V
    Accordingly, consistent with the foregoing opinion, we affirm
    common pleas’ order that affirmed Council’s denial of the First Plan and reverse
    the court’s order that affirmed Council’s denial of the Second Plan.
    _____________________________________
    BONNIE BRIGANCE LEADBETTER,
    Senior Judge
    20
    IN THE COMMONWEALTH COURT OF PENNSYLVANIA
    CGR Real Estate, LLC, CGR RE              :
    Franklin Park, LP, and CGR Holdings, LLC, :
    :
    Appellants             :
    :
    v.                            : No. 780 C.D. 2016
    :
    Borough Council of The Borough of         :
    Franklin Park                             :
    :
    v.                            :
    :
    Gregory and Kathleen Woodworth,           :
    Helene Donch and Bernard M. Avon, Jr.     :
    CGR Holdings, LLC                        :
    :
    v.                            : No. 971 C.D. 2016
    :
    Borough Council of the Borough of        :
    Franklin Park                            :
    :
    v.                            :
    :
    Gregory and Kathleen Woodworth,          :
    Helene Donch and Bernard M. Avon, Jr.    :
    :
    Appeal of: CGR Real Estate,              :
    LLC and CGR Holdings, LLC                :
    CGR Real Esstate, LLC                    :
    :
    v.                            : No. 972 C.D. 2016
    : ARGUED: November 14, 2016
    LLC and CGR Holdings, LLC                :
    Borough Council of the Borough of              :
    Franklin Park                                  :
    :
    v.                                :
    :
    Gregory and Kathleen Woodworth,                :
    Helene Donch and Bernard M. Avon Jr.           :
    :
    Appeal of: CGR Real Estate,                    :
    LLC and CGR Holdings, LLC                      :
    ORDER
    AND NOW, this 26th day of January, 2017, the order of the Court of
    Common Pleas of Allegheny County is hereby affirmed in part, and reversed in
    part, consistent with the foregoing opinion.
    _____________________________________
    BONNIE BRIGANCE LEADBETTER,
    Senior Judge
    2