Fort Joy Dev. 2, L.P. v. Newtown Twp. Bd. of Supers. ( 2022 )


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  •            IN THE COMMONWEALTH COURT OF PENNSYLVANIA
    Fort Joy Development 2, L.P.              : CASES CONSOLIDATED
    :
    v.                          : No. 53 C.D. 2021
    : No. 54 C.D. 2021
    Newtown Township Board of                 :
    Supervisors,                              :
    Appellant            :
    Fort Joy Development 2, L.P.              :
    :
    v.                     : No. 55 C.D. 2021
    : No. 56 C.D. 2021
    Newtown Township Board of                 : Argued: June 23, 2022
    Supervisors                               :
    :
    Appeal of: Christopher Rohner and         :
    Yvonne Rohner                             :
    BEFORE:       HONORABLE RENÉE COHN JUBELIRER, President Judge
    HONORABLE STACY WALLACE, Judge
    HONORABLE BONNIE BRIGANCE LEADBETTER, Senior Judge
    OPINION NOT REPORTED
    MEMORANDUM OPINION
    BY JUDGE WALLACE                              FILED: July 21, 2022
    The Newtown Township Board of Supervisors (the Board) and Christopher
    Rohner and Yvonne Rohner (the Rohners) appeal the December 2020 orders of the
    Court of Common Pleas of Delaware County (Common Pleas)1 reversing the
    1
    Common Pleas stated in its Opinion in Support of Order, filed pursuant to Pennsylvania Rule of
    Appellate Procedure 1925(a), that its order
    docketed on December 16, 2020. Due to a breakdown in Delaware County’s online dock
    system, the court signed a second order on December 16, 2020, which was docketed on December
    21, 2020.”                     An appellant must file                         entry of a    notice o
    the order
    from which the appeal                                 is added).
    903(a) (emphasis taken.”               Pa.R.A.P.
    Although the Rohners    filed
    )RRWQRWHFRQWLQXHGRQQH[WSDJH«
    January 22, 2018 decision of the Board to deny Fort Joy(Fort
    Develop
    Joy) application for conditional use approval of a roadway through portions of its
    property that are in a Slope Conservation District. For the reasons set forth below,
    we reverse                 Common
    s. Pleas’                           order
    I.      Background
    Fort Joy is the owner of approximately 71.55 acres of land in Newtown
    Township that is bounded on the north by Gradyville Road and on the south by
    Marple Township. Reproduced Record (R.R.) at 7a, 17a, 314a. Fort Joy’s
    land is
    composed of two separate parcels that are located in an R-1 residential zoning
    district, as established by the Newtown Township Zoning Ordinance (Zoning
    Ordinance).2 Id. at 21a, 314a. The first and smaller parcel, located in the northeast
    corner of Fort            Joy’s        lands two and three-quarters acres and
    , contains approximately
    has an existing residence with a driveway that provides access to Gradyville Road.
    Id. at 17a-18a, 314a. The remaining parcel is vacant, undeveloped land. Id. at 17a.
    Approximately 33% of the property is within a Slope Conservation District3 due to
    its steep and very steep slopes.4 R.R. at 36a.
    one of their notices of appeal more than 30 days after Common Pleas signed the order being
    appealed, both the Board and the Rohners filed notices of appeal from each order within 30 days
    of the entry of the orders being appealed. Accordingly, both the Board and the Rohners preserved
    appellate review by timely appealing from each order. All four appeals were consolidated by our
    Court by order dated March 11, 2021.
    2
    Newtown Twp., Pa. Zoning Ordinance (1959), as amended.
    3
    Newtown Township’s Slope Conservation                             with the enactment of Distri
    Ordinance No. 1983-13 on November 14, 1983, and amended by Ordinance 1995-5 on June 12,
    1995, Ordinance 2000-7 on September 11, 2000, and Ordinance 2017-01 on November 13, 2017.
    4
    “ [S]teep slope                 areas”
    locations “with are    a difference of elevation
    distance of 50 feet based on a topographic survey showing two-foot contours,” and
    )RRWQRWHFRQWLQXHGRQQH[WSDJH«
    2
    Fort Joy owns a separate parcel of land that adjoins its 71.55 acres to the
    southeast, in Marple Township. R.R. at 8a. Marple Township previously approved
    Fort        Joy’s         plans
    to create a 38-home development on this separate parcel. Id. at 8a,
    303a-04a. Those plans depict a roadway, to be known as Cherry Blossom Lane,
    connecting the        approved               development’s
    in Marple Township with road
    Fort             sy
    Joy’s          lands in. Id.
    Newtown
    at 309a. Township
    On February 12, 2016, Fort Joy filed an application with the Board for
    conditional use approval to permit construction of Cherry Blossom Lane within
    Newtown             Township’s
    Slope Conservation District. R.R. at 272a, 581a-84a. This
    relief was requested in connection with Fort proposed
    Joy’s   subdivision of its
    Newtown Township property, filed pursuant to the Zoning Ordinance, in which Fort
    Joy proposed changing its existing two lots such that the smaller, easterly lot would
    be expanded to 12 acres, including the existing home and driveway, and the larger,
    westerly lot would be reduced to approximately 56.6 acres of undeveloped land. Id.
    at 18a-19a, 272a, 314a. In its subdivision plans, Fort Joy proposed that Cherry
    Blossom Lane, a two lane, approximately 1,200-foot long roadway, would divide
    the two new parcels and bisect Fort Newtown
    Joy’s  Township property, connecting
    Gradyville Road at its northern end with a road in Fort Joy
    Township at its southern end. Id. at 19a, 26a, 314a, 516a. Fort Joy did not propose
    any other improvements to its lands in Newtown Township. Id. at 8a, 18a.
    The Newtown Township Planning Commission reviewed                                 Fort
    conditional use application and recommended that the Board deny the application.
    R.R. at 9a. The Board held public hearings on       Fort         Joy’s           applica
    2021 and November 27, 2021. Id. at 1a-270a. The Rohners, who are owners and
    slopeareareas”  locations “with a difference of elevation ove
    of 50 feet based on a topographic survey showing two-foot contours.”
    R.R. at 582a.
    3
    residents of a nearby property, appeared at the hearings before the Board and
    presented evidence and testimony in opposition to the application. A civil engineer,
    testifying on behalf of Fort Joy, admitted that the two proposed subdivision lots
    could be adequately served by driveways from Gradyville Road, one of which
    already exists, and that Fort Joy did    “ [Cherry Blossom Lane] to have the
    not need
    two lots.”Id. at 44a, 78a. Fort          Joy’s     engineer
    also admitted that the main purpose
    of Cherry Blossom Lane was to connect Fort
    MarpleJoy’s
    Township deve
    with Gradyville Road in Newtown Township. Id. at 44a. A notation on one of the
    subdivision plan drawings that Fort           Joy’s     engineer
    submitted even stated                 that
    intent of this project is to provide required access from Gradyville Road to the
    approved               . . . [d]evelopment
    Id. at 75a.                            in    Marple
    When the Board pointed out that Fort Joy’s
    proposed roadway was not a
    primary use consistent with a property zoned residential (R-1) and that a roadway is
    an accessory use that must support a primary use on the same property, Fort            Joy’s
    engineer stated that Cherry Blossom Lane was an accessory use for the two
    residential lots. R.R. at 50a. Despite this assertion, he admitted that the two lots
    could be accessed by driveways and that there was no use in Newtown Township
    that required Cherry Blossom Lane. Id. at 44a, 53a. In addition, Cherry Blossom
    Lane does not end within or provide direct access to either lot. Id. at 314a.
    Fort         Joy’s      engineer
    also stated that his firm had developed future concept
    plans for a larger residential subdivision on Fort Joy’s    lands
    Newtown Township, in
    for which Cherry Blossom Lane would be necessary. R.R. at 84a. Fort Joy had not,
    however, finalized or submitted those plans for review or approval. Id. Accordingly,
    Fort only
    Joy’s
    present intention was to use Cherry Blossom Lane to access its
    development in Marple Township. Id. at 88a.
    4
    On January 23, 2018, the Board denied Fort              Joy’s           applicatio
    use approval. R.R. at 543a. The Board determined that the proposed road was not
    a permitted principal use in a residential district (R-1) and that it was also not an
    accessory use as defined in the Zoning Ordinance, because it “is            not        subord
    the main use of the land, i.e. the two residential lots, but rather is the proposed
    principal use of the land.”Id. at 548a. The Board also concluded that an alternative
    alignment or location was feasible, because one lot already had access to Gradyville
    Road by a driveway and the second lot had road frontage on Gradyville Road that
    was suitable for driveway access. Id. at 551a. Fort Joy appealed the Board’
    s
    decision to Common Pleas.
    On December 16, 2020, after reviewing the record, the parties’briefs, and
    conducting oral argument,5 Common Pleas reversed the Board’
    s decision, finding
    that it was not supported by substantial evidence and was, therefore, an abuse of
    discretion. The Board’s atBr.
    47. Common Pleas did not identify a permitted use
    for which Cherry Blossom Lane was providing access. Id. at 48-49. Instead,
    Common Pleas asserted that a conditional use is not based upon need and the Board
    “erred             in       finding               that          the        permitted
    Id. at 48.
    Accordingly, Common Pleas began by accepting that a road through Fort Jo
    was a permissible use, and then determined that the location chosen was the only
    feasible location for that road. Id. at 48. The Board and the Rohners separately
    appealed Common Pleas’orders.
    5
    Since a court reporter transcribed the Board’s hearings, Common Pleas had a “full            a
    nd complete
    record of the proceedings”                     and was required     beforeto          the  “hearBoardthe
    on the record certified”                                       by the
    See 2 Pa.C.S. §754(b). Accordingly,     Board.
    Common     Pleas could
    have only “properly               ” the Board       reverse[d]  if
    ermine[d]       it “det
    that constitutional  rights were
    violated, an error of law was committed, the procedure before the agency was contrary to statute,
    or the necessary findings of fact                                                In re were
    Thompson, not su
    
    896 A.2d 659
    , 668 (Pa. Cmwlth. 2006) (citation omitted).
    5
    II.     Analysis
    On appeal, the Board and the Rohners argue the Board did not abuse its
    discretion                        in      denying                Fort       Joy’s
    Fort condi
    Joy’s
    proposed road does not provide access to a permitted use on the property and
    alternative alignments or locations exist to the proposed road. The Board and the
    Rohners also argue that the Rohners presented substantial evidence to show that Fort
    Joy’s conditional use   application
    because the proposed road would shoul
    have a detrimental effect on neighboring properties and cause dangerous traffic
    conditions.
    Under the Pennsylvania Municipalities Planning Code6 (MPC), a zoning
    ordinance                     may         include
    for conditional uses“provisions
    to be allowed or denied by
    the governing body after recommendations by the planning agency and hearing,
    pursuant to express standards and criteria set
    603(c)(2) of the MPC, 53 P.S. §10603(c)(2).                 “An           applicant        is   e
    conditional use as a matter of right, unless the governing body determines that the
    use does not satisfy the specific, objective criteria in the zoning ordinance for that
    conditional      use.”
    In re Drumore Crossings, L.P., 
    984 A.2d 589
    , 595 (Pa. Cmwlth.
    2009) (citations omitted).
    In       reviewing                   a     municipality’s
    “[o]ur
    denial
    review is limited to determining whether the municipality abused its discretion, or
    committed an error of law in denying the application.”
    EQT Prod. Co. v. Borough
    of Jefferson Hills, 
    208 A.3d 1010
    , 1024 (Pa. 2019) (citing Visionquest Nat’l Ltd. v.
    Bd. of Supervisors of Honey Brook Twp., 
    569 A.2d 915
    , 918 (Pa. 1990)). “An abuse
    of discretion will be found whenever the findings of the governing body are not
    6
    Act of July 31, 1968, P.L. 805, as amended, 53 P.S. §§ 10101-11202.
    6
    supported by substantial evidence.” Id. Substantial evidence is “
    such relevant
    evidence as      a    reasonable                   mind        might          accept       a
    Gorsline v. Bd. of Supervisors of Fairfield Twp., 
    186 A.3d 375
    , 385 (Pa. 2018). We
    conduct a de novo review             of      “whether               the       governin
    f
    law”        and nd
    “are         not
    by the legal       bou
    conclusions of the governing body or lower
    court[].”
    EQT Prod. Co., 208 A.3d at 1025 (citation omitted).
    Pursuant to Section 172-29(A) of the Zoning Ordinance, a road is not a
    permitted primary use of land in an R-1 residential district. R.R. at 575a-76a. In
    addition, Section 172-29(A)(g)(5) of the Zoning Ordinance establishes that a road
    can only be an accessory use if it is “with and customarily inc
    use. Id. at 575a. Fort Joy’s attempt          to Blossom Lane was with
    establish that Cherry
    and incidental to its proposed two residential lots was not persuasive. One of the
    two residential lots         in     Fort
    roposed     Joy’s
    subdivision alreadyp
    has a home and
    driveway that provides access directly to Gradyville Road. The second residential
    lot has extensive frontage on Gradyville Road for driveway access. In addition, each
    lot would still require a driveway under Fort         Joy’s           proposal,
    Cherry            b
    Blossom Lane does not end within, or provide direct access to, either lot. Instead,
    Cherry Blossom Lane, as Fort engineer
    Joy’s  acknowledged on numerous occasions,
    was designed to       permit            traffic             from         Fort          Joy’s
    travel over          Fort        Joy’s             Newtown            Township            la
    Accordingly, the Board’s       determination
    , that Cherry Blossom Lane, as proposed, is
    not an accessory use to a permitted primary use of       Fort        Joy’s             Newto
    property, was supported by substantial evidence.
    The Board also determined that Fort proposed
    Joy’s  use did not qualify under
    the Zoning Ordinance for conditional use approval. The specific, objective criteria
    7
    for conditional use approval of a roadway through areas of the Slope Conservation
    District are found in subsections 134-7(A)(2)(e) and 134-7(B)(2)(f) of the Zoning
    Ordinance, which provide that a “road or access
    use driveway”
    “permitted
    authorized                      asif ita“ conditional
    provide[s] access to a permitted use”
    use”and
    the “
    Board            of       Supervisors                         determines                      no     alte
    R.R. at 583a-84a. Section 147-14(B)(5) of the Zoning Ordinance further provides
    that “[n]o conditional use . . . in a S
    it has been demonstrated by the applicant that [n]o other alternative location is
    feasible or practical for the proposed use.”
    Id. at 587a.
    The Board determined that an alternative alignment or location was feasible
    for the proposed use. This determination was supported by substantial evidence, as
    one of the residential lots already has access to Gradyville Road and a second, new
    driveway to Gradyville Road to access the second lot is feasible. In addition to being
    a feasible alternative, a second driveway would cause significantly less disturbance
    to areas within the Slope Conservation District than constructing a two-lane,
    approximately 1,200-foot roadway                        across                Fort
    . ThisJoy’s
    is               e
    especially true when one considers that the second lot would still need a driveway
    to access Cherry Blossom Lane. 7
    Because Fort             Joy’s8 does
    proposed              useobjective
    not satisfy the specific,
    criteria in the Zoning Ordinance for a conditional use, Fort Joy is not entitled to
    7
    The Board also determined that Cherry Blossom Lane does not provide access to the permitted
    use of two residential lots. R.R. at 551a. We need not reach that issue due to our conclusion that
    the Board’s  determination, that an alternative alignment or location is feasible for the proposed
    use, was supported by substantial evidence.
    8
    Fort Joy’s proposed              Cherry Blossom use
    Lane to provide
    was for access to                          For
    Township Property and split its Newtown Township property into two new residential lots, neither
    )RRWQRWHFRQWLQXHGRQQH[WSDJH«
    8
    approval of its proposed conditional use. See In re Drumore Crossings, L.P., 
    984 A.2d at 595
    . The Board did not abuse its discretion or commit an error of law in
    reaching this determination, which was supported by substantial evidence.
    Accordingly, Common Pleas should not have reversed the Board’s                        decision
    .9
    III.    Conclusion
    For the reasons set forth above, we reverse Common December
    Pleas’   2020
    orders.
    ______________________________
    STACY WALLACE, Judge
    Judge Fizzano Cannon did not participate in the decision of this case.
    of which would be given direct access by Cherry Blossom Lane. Fort Joy did not propose any
    further development of its lands in Newtown Township. Our holding does not preclude Fort Joy
    from presenting a different proposed use in the future, which may or may not qualify for
    conditional use approval under the Zoning Ordinance.
    9
    Due to our resolution of the Board and the Rohners’appeals, in their favor, based upon their first
    claims for relief, we need not address their additional claims for relief.
    9
    IN THE COMMONWEALTH COURT OF PENNSYLVANIA
    Fort Joy Development 2, L.P.          : CASES CONSOLIDATED
    :
    v.                         : No. 53 C.D. 2021
    : No. 54 C.D. 2021
    Newtown Township Board of             :
    Supervisors,                          :
    Appellant        :
    Fort Joy Development 2, L.P.          :
    :
    v.                    : No. 55 C.D. 2021
    : No. 56 C.D. 2021
    Newtown Township Board of             :
    Supervisors                           :
    :
    Appeal of: Christopher Rohner and     :
    Yvonne Rohner                         :
    ORDER
    AND NOW, this 21st day of July, 2022, the orders of the Court of
    Common Pleas of Delaware County that were entered on December 16, 2020 and
    December 21, 2020 are REVERSED.
    ______________________________
    STACY WALLACE, Judge
    

Document Info

Docket Number: 53-56 C.D. 2021

Judges: Wallace, J.

Filed Date: 7/21/2022

Precedential Status: Non-Precedential

Modified Date: 12/13/2024