Conshohocken Borough v. Conshohocken Borough ZHB ~ Appeal of: K.J. Waller & L. Rhodes ( 2021 )


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  •            IN THE COMMONWEALTH COURT OF PENNSYLVANIA
    Conshohocken Borough                        :
    :
    v.                             :   No. 501 C.D. 2020
    :   Argued: March 15, 2021
    Conshohocken Borough                        :
    Zoning Hearing Board                        :
    :
    Appeal of: Kris J. Waller                   :
    and Lisa Rhodes                             :
    BEFORE: HONORABLE P. KEVIN BROBSON, President Judge
    HONORABLE ANNE E. COVEY, Judge (P.)
    HONORABLE MICHAEL H. WOJCIK, Judge
    OPINION BY
    PRESIDENT JUDGE BROBSON                                 FILED: August 16, 2021
    Appellants Kris J. Waller and Lisa Rhodes (Neighbors) appeal from an order
    of the Court of Common Pleas of Montgomery County (Common Pleas), dated
    January 17, 2020, which reversed a decision by the Borough of Conshohocken
    (Borough) Zoning Hearing Board (ZHB), sustaining Neighbors’ substantive validity
    challenge brought pursuant to Section 916.1 of the Pennsylvania Municipalities
    Planning Code (MPC).1          The ZHB concluded that the Borough’s Zoning
    Ordinance 08-2017 (Zoning Amendment), which, in relevant part, revised the
    permitted uses in the Borough’s Residential Office (RO) zoning district to include
    convenience retail food stores with the sale of fuel, constituted spot zoning. We now
    reverse.
    1
    Act of July 31, 1968, P.L. 805, as amended, added by the Act of December 21, 1988,
    P.L. 1329, 53 P.S. § 10916.1.
    I. BACKGROUND
    Provco Pineville Fayette, L.P. (Provco) is the equitable owner of a property
    (Property) located at 1109 and 1119 Fayette Street and 1201 Fayette Street in the
    Borough. Fayette Street is a four-lane highway. The Property includes multiple
    one- and two-story buildings. The Property is adjacent to a cemetery, and it is nearby
    to the Borough’s Stadium and playing fields; various buildings for businesses,
    including a real estate office, a dry cleaning business, and a physical therapy
    business; and some residential properties. Neighbors reside near the Property, which
    is located within the RO zoning district.
    In April 2014, Provco applied to the ZHB for a special exemption or, in the
    alternative, a variance to build a retail convenience store with gas pumps on the
    Property. Following twenty-eight days of hearings on Provco’s zoning application
    between April 2014 and August 2016, the ZHB denied Provco’s application for a
    special exemption or a variance.2
    In August 2017, Provco sought an amendment to the Borough’s Zoning
    Ordinance to provide additional permitted new uses, standards, and special
    regulations for the RO zoning district, including the permitted use of convenience
    retail stores that included fuel sales. On November 15, 2017, the Borough Council
    enacted the Zoning Amendment, which amended Part 12 of the Township’s Zoning
    Ordinance, thereby adding the permitted use of “convenience retail food store[,]
    including the sale of fuel[,] an ATM[,] and lottery sales.” (Reproduced Record
    (R.R.) at 588a.) That same night, Borough Council approved Land Development
    Resolution 2017-24, which was the preliminary/final land development plan for
    2
    We note that the matter before us does not include the appeal of the ZHB’s denial of
    Provco’s application for a special exemption or a variance.
    2
    Provco to build a convenience store with fuel pumps on the Property in the newly
    revised RO zoning district.3 Neighbors, as intervenors, filed a substantive validity
    challenge to the Zoning Amendment on December 15, 2017. Provco also intervened
    in the matter.
    The ZHB held hearings on the substantive validity challenge, at which counsel
    for Neighbors, Provco, and the Borough presented evidence. Neighbors testified on
    their own behalf and presented the testimony of Thomas Comitta, an expert in land
    planning, and nearby property owners, Clare Dorsey and David Rhodes. Provco
    presented the testimony of Joseph Baran, an expert in civil engineering, and E. Van
    Rieker, an expert in municipal and developer planning. The ZHB, in addition to
    hearing the testimony, admitted 26 documents into evidence at the hearings. The
    parties were given the opportunity to make closing arguments to the ZHB on
    January 29, 2019, and, that same night, the ZHB, in a 3-2 decision, sustained
    Neighbors’ substantive validity challenge and declared the Zoning Amendment void
    in its entirety.
    The ZHB issued its written decision on March 11, 2019. With regard to the
    Zoning Amendment itself, the ZHB found, in part:
    3
    Neighbors filed an appeal in Common Pleas, challenging the approval of the Land
    Development Plan. By order dated October 2, 2020, Common Pleas affirmed the Borough’s
    passage of Resolution No. 2017-24, approving the Preliminary/Final Land Development Plan for
    Provco. Neighbors have since appealed Common Pleas’ decision to this Court, and the matter is
    docketed as Clare M. Dorsey v. Borough Council of Conshohocken Borough, No. 1114 C.D. 2020.
    We note that this case is not part of the matter presently before this panel of the Court.
    Neighbors also filed an appeal in Common Pleas, challenging the enactment of the Zoning
    Amendment on procedural grounds. By order dated October 2, 2020, Common Pleas denied this
    appeal as well, concluding that the Zoning Amendment was procedurally valid. Neighbors have
    since appealed Common Pleas’ decision to this Court, and the matter is docketed at Clare M.
    Dorsey v. Borough Council of Conshohocken Borough, No. 1115 C.D. 2020. We note that this
    case is also not part of the matter presently before this panel of the Court.
    3
    6. [The Zoning Amendment] amended Chapter 27, “Zoning,” Part 12
    “R-O Residential Office District” to add to the “permitted uses” found
    i[n] Section 27-1202.
    7. Specifically, the additional “permitted uses” included:
    a. Business offices, including, but not limited to, security and
    commodity brokerage, real estate sales, travel agency,
    employment counseling, insurance sales, advertising, mailing
    and stenographic services.
    b. Professional office for the practice of medicine, law,
    engineering, architecture or design, real estate, insurance, or
    financial institution.
    c. Retail establishment for the sale of dry goods, variety
    merchandise, clothing, food, baked goods, beverages, flowers,
    plants, drugs, hardware, books, and furnishings.
    d. Restaurants, excluding drive-in or drive through.
    e. Convenience retail food store, including the sale of fuel, an
    ATM, and lottery sales. No convenience retail store which
    provides for the sale of fuel shall be located within 1,000 feet of
    another convenience retail food store which provides for the sale
    of fuel.
    f. Parking lots or garages, provided that they are secondary to
    the principal use.
    ....
    9. The previous Zoning Code did not identify convenience stores,
    including the sale of fuel, as a permitted use or a conditional use.
    Section 27-1203 of the previous code also identified as a conditional
    use, “Other uses of similar intensity and scale.”
    10. The [Zoning Amendment] also added dimensional standards to the
    above uses and specifically provided for the dimensional standards for
    a convenience retail food store, including the sale of fuel, an ATM, and
    lottery sales.
    11. The [Neighbors] filed the Petition challenging the validity of [the
    Zoning Amendment] on the basis of, inter alia, spot zoning.
    12. [Neighbors] further alleged in their petition that [the Zoning
    Amendment] only applies to one property within the [RO] Zoning
    District, that being the [Property], in which [Provco] has an equitable
    interest in.
    (ZHB decision at 4-6.)
    4
    In its findings, the ZHB considered the testimony of Mr. Comitta, Neighbors’
    expert in land planning who had reviewed the previous Zoning Ordinance and the
    Zoning Amendment and prepared a report titled “Planner’s Review and Critique of
    RO District Amendment and Related Plan, Borough of Conshohocken, Montgomery
    County.” In finding of fact number 13, the ZHB, summarizing Mr. Comitta’s
    testimony regarding the previous Zoning Ordinance and the Zoning Amendment,
    found:
    f. [Mr. Comitta] stated that a Wawa convenience market with gas
    pumps would not have been permitted in the RO Zoning District
    pursuant to the previous Zoning Ordinance.
    g. One of his concerns with the Zoning Amendment was how it
    derailed the front yard regulation that said no parking in the front yard.
    He also believes it derailed . . . encouraging retention and preservation
    of Victorian structures.
    h. Most of the buildings in the RO Zoning District are between 18 to
    25 feet from the curb and do not allow parking in the front yard.
    However, the Zoning [Amendment] allows setbacks from 25 to 30 feet
    and took away the prohibition of parking in the front yard.
    i. The [Property] is the only piece of property in the RO District that
    could satisfy the requirements for a 250-foot lot width and
    the 40,000[-]square[-]foot minimum lot size. As such, the [Property]
    is the only property that could have a convenience store with fuel
    pumps and an ATM.
    j. In order to construct a convenience store with fuel pumps and an
    ATM in other areas of the RO Zoning District you would need to
    demolish an existing structure to build the use, including Victorian
    structures, which is contrary to the declaration of legislative intent for
    the RO Zoning District, which seeks to “encourage the retention and
    preservation of existing Victorian and early 20th century residences.”
    k. Without demolishing any Victorian buildings and without
    assembling any parcels only the [Property] could construct the
    convenience market with fuel pumps.
    l. The Zoning Amendment created a situation that is out of character
    with the residential scale and character of the Borough in the RO
    Zoning District.
    5
    m. A convenience market at the [Property] would violate several
    provisions of the existing RO Zoning District, including not
    maintaining the existing residential streetscape pursuant to
    Section 27-1201 [of the Zoning Code], and adding parking in the front
    yard.
    n. The convenience market will dramatically change the character of
    Fayette Street’s streetscape with lighting, traffic flow across pedestrian
    sidewalks, and parking in the front yard.
    o. In the RO Zoning District there are 16 small office uses, one bank,
    one cleaner, nine personal service establishments, four restaurants, a
    deli, and a coffee shop. These uses are less impactful on their existing
    residential neighbors. They do not have 24-hour operations.
    p. The proposed Wawa at the [Property] is out of character with the
    existing RO Zoning District.
    (Id. at 6-8.)
    In finding of fact number 13, the ZHB also considered Mr. Comitta’s
    testimony regarding his agreement with the Montgomery County Planning
    Commission’s views on the Zoning Amendment and found:
    q. In preparing his report, [Mr. Comitta] also reviewed the review letter
    of the Montgomery County Planning Commission which concluded
    and recommended that the Zoning Amendment not be approved as it
    would not fit the character of this part of the Borough and would be
    inconsistent with the intent of the zoning district.
    r. [Mr. Comitta] agrees with the conclusion of the County Planning
    Commission.
    s. The Conshohocken Borough Planning Commission                      also
    recommended denial of the proposed Zoning Amendment.
    t. [Mr. Comitta] also agrees with the conclusion of the Borough
    Planning Commission.
    u. [Mr. Comitta] does not believe that the Zoning Amendment
    complies with the Statement of Community Development Objectives.
    (Id. at 8.)
    In finding of fact number 14, the ZHB, based on the cross-examination of Mr.
    Comitta by the Borough’s attorney and Provco’s attorney and on questions by the
    members of the ZHB, found:
    6
    a. The neighborhood around the [Property] is primarily residential.
    b. The [Property] is adjacent to the Borough Stadium. The four corners
    of 11th and Fayette are properties that have non-residential uses. In
    addition to the stadium there is a dry cleaning store, a cemetery, and a
    real estate office on the other side of the cemetery.
    c. There is no existing Victorian or early 20th Century residence at the
    [Property].
    d. [Mr. Comitta] is aware that there are other gas stations on Fayette
    Street that have pumps in the front of the property.
    e. [Mr. Comitta] did not check whether the Borough has a lighting or
    noise ordinance.
    f. [Mr. Comitta] has driven on Fayette [S]treet “about a thousand
    times” but did not do any traffic counts.
    g. There is no other property in the RO Zoning District that could
    qualify to construct a convenience market with fuel pumps by-right. A
    developer could ask the [ZHB] for variances from the lot width
    requirement.
    h. The Zoning Amendment did not add any property or take away any
    property from the RO Zoning District.
    i. The boundaries of the RO Zoning District did not change with the
    Zoning Amendment.
    j. The Zoning Amendment also added five other permitted uses
    including business office, professional office, retail, restaurant, and
    parking lot or garage.
    k. A build-to line is not required to be in a zoning ordinance.
    l. The Zoning Amendment did not change the lot size or the lot width
    of the [Property].
    m. There could potentially be some commercial uses that are not
    located in 20th Century or Victorian structures.
    n. There are no other properties that had a 250-foot width and
    a 40,000[-]square[-]foot lot area. As such, [Mr. Comitta] believes that
    the [Zoning Amendment] is spot zoning as the [Property] is the only
    property that could comply with the Zoning Amendment to construct a
    convenience market with fuel pumps.
    o. There are a number of non-residential uses that are allowed in the
    RO Zoning District.
    7
    (Id. at 8-10.)
    As to the testimony of Neighbors and Mrs. Dorsey, the ZHB issued similar
    findings for all three. Generally, the ZHB found that they live near the Property and
    have concerns that the presence of a convenience store with fuel sales on the
    Property will change their way of living or affect their quality of life due to crime,
    pollution, trash, gas odors, noise, lighting, and/or loitering. (Id. at 2, 10, 11, Finding
    of Fact (FF) Nos. 15-17.) Also, based on their testimony, the ZHB found that, while
    there are some commercial properties in the neighborhood, none of the businesses
    are open 24 hours a day or are noisy. (Id. at 10-11, FF Nos. 15-16.)
    In finding of fact number 18, the ZHB considered the testimony of Mr. Baran,
    Provco’s expert in civil engineering, and found, in part:
    b. There are four commercial uses at the corner of 11th and Fayette
    Street.
    c. There are currently sidewalks in front of the [Property].
    d. [Mr. Baran] created a plan titled Existing Non-Conforming
    Commercial Use Exhibit which is two sheets. The[] exhibit shows how
    an assemblage of properties could meet or could not meet the
    requirements for a convenience store with fuel sales. His exhibit also
    identified the nonconforming commercial uses within the RO Zoning
    District.
    (Id. at 11-12.)
    Based on Mr. Baran’s testimony on cross-examination and in response to
    questions from members of the ZHB, the ZHB found in finding of fact number 19:
    a. [Mr. Baran] reviewed the [Z]oning [A]mendment and provided
    some input regarding the dimensional standards.
    b. The assemblages of properties on his [E]xhibit PP-3 are properties
    that could meet the dimensional requirements of the [Zoning
    Amendment] to develop a convenience store with gas sales.
    c. There are not any single lots that could be developed as a Wawa
    convenience store.
    8
    d. Some of the assemblages on his [E]xhibit PP-3 may contain a
    Victorian or early 20th Century residential structure.
    e. If the [Property] was developed as a Wawa, there could not be any
    other property within the RO Zoning District that could be developed
    as another convenience retail store with fuel pumps.
    f. It is common for development projects to consolidate lots to meet
    dimensional requirements.
    g. If a development could not meet the dimensional requirements the
    developer could ask the [ZHB] for dimensional variances.
    h. The [Property] is an assemblage of lots.
    i. [Mr. Baran] believes that the [Property] has been operating as a
    Chevrolet Dealership, as a single land use, since the 1950s.
    j. There are no convenience stores with gasoline sales in the RO
    Zoning District currently.
    (Id. at 12-13.)
    In finding of fact number 20, the ZHB considered the testimony of Mr. E. Van
    Rieker, Provco’s expert in municipal and developer planning, and found, in part:
    c. The [Zoning Amendment] does not change the RO Zoning District
    boundary.
    d. The [Zoning Amendment] does not change the [Property] boundary.
    e. The [Zoning Amendment] added a list of six permitted uses to the
    Original RO Zoning District.
    f. The [Zoning Amendment] also provides dimensional requirements
    for permitted uses and separate standards for convenience food stores.
    g. There is no obligation that the [Property] be developed as a
    convenience market with gas sales.
    h. There are no prohibitions in the Ordinance on removing a Victorian
    or [e]arly 20th Century structure.
    ....
    k. Of the 66 properties [in the RO Zoning District], 24 percent were
    single family residential, 21 percent was [sic] multi-family
    residential, 52 percent was [sic] non[]conforming commercial, and the
    remaining three percent was [sic] other. In total, approximately 75
    percent of the properties are not single family residential.
    9
    l. If the [Property] is not developed with [sic] as a convenience market
    with gasoline, there are other properties in the RO Zoning District that
    could be assembled to be developed with a convenience market with
    gasoline.
    m. The [Property] does not have an early 20th Century or Victorian
    structure on it.
    n. The Borough is one square mile which is 640 acres and the RO
    Zoning District is approximately 18 acres. The [Property] is 1.21 acres,
    which is nine percent of the RO Zoning District.
    o. The Borough does have a lighting ordinance and a noise ordinance.
    p. [Mr. Van Rieker] does not believe the Zoning [Amendment] creates
    spot zoning.
    (Id. at 13-14.)
    Based on Mr. Van Rieker’s testimony on cross-examination and in response
    to questions from members of the ZHB, the ZHB found in finding of fact number 21:
    a. [Mr. Van Rieker’s] Exhibit PP-6 depicts land masses that could be
    assembled that would satisfy the dimensional requirements for a
    convenience market with gas sales.
    b. Only one Wawa that sells gas could be built in the RO Zoning
    District.
    c. For a property to receive conditional use approval [the property
    owner] would have to file an application with Borough Council for a
    conditional use.
    d. If a property is a non[]conforming use in a district and then a
    conditional use standard is adopted, the property owner does not need
    to apply for a conditional use in order to continue operating.
    e. The [MPC4] allows landowners to submit amendments to zoning
    ordinances.
    f. The declaration of legislative intent for the RO Zoning District was
    not modified when the Zoning Amendment was adopted.
    g. The Borough’s Comprehensive Plan is silent [as] to the [Property]
    and nonconforming uses in the RO Zoning District.
    h. The proposed Wawa at the [Property] would not be similar to other
    properties within the RO Zoning District, but it would be suitable.
    4
    53 P.S. §§ 10101-11202.
    10
    (Id. at 14-15.)
    In finding of fact number 22, the ZHB considered the testimony of David
    Rhodes, a non-party neighbor who testified on behalf of Neighbors, and found, in
    part:
    b. After the last meeting, [Mr. Rhodes] reviewed Mr. Van Rieker’s list
    to determine whether the properties were in fact non[]conforming and
    commercial.
    c. [Mr. Rhodes] determined that of the 34 structures listed as
    nonconforming commercial on Mr. Van Rieker’s exhibit, 23 of them
    actually did have residences in addition to the business.
    d. Many of the properties have apartments upstairs.
    e. Approximately 80 percent of the properties in the RO Zoning
    District are either residential or mixed use.
    (Id. at 15.)
    Finally, the ZHB found that multiple members of the public offered public
    comment, much of which “focused on, inter alia, concerns with traffic, loitering,
    trash, [and their belief that] the proposed text amendment did not benefit the
    Borough.” (Id. at 16, FF No. 23.)
    The ZHB concluded that Neighbors successfully proved that the Zoning
    Amendment constituted arbitrary spot zoning and did not benefit the health, welfare,
    and safety of the community. (Id. at 17.) The ZHB focused on how the Zoning
    Amendment related to the Statement of Community Development Objectives. The
    ZHB observed:
    Section 27-105.A [of the Zoning Ordinance], titled “Growth,”
    [provides], “Conshohocken Borough is a developed community with
    an established character that should be preserved. All future growth,
    whether by infilling of remaining vacant land or by redevelopment,
    should occur in an orderly and controlled manner that is consistent with
    the scale and character of the Borough.”
    11
    (Id. at 18 (quoting Zoning Ordinance § 27-105.A).) The ZHB also observed that
    Section 27-105.D of the Zoning Ordinance, titled “Commerce,” provides that “future
    commercial development should respect surrounding residential neighborhoods. In
    the Borough, commercial activities should mix with residential in certain areas such
    as Fayette Street and the redevelopment area.” (Id. (quoting Zoning Ordinance
    § 27-105.D).) The ZHB also reviewed the Legislative Intent of the Residential
    Office District, set forth in Section 27-1201 of the Zoning Ordinance, which
    provides:
    In the expansion of the declaration of legislative intent . . . , the intent
    of the Residential Office District is to encourage the retention and
    preservation of existing Victorian and early 20th Century residences by
    permitting residential uses and conditionally allowing limited office
    conversions. Furthermore, it is the intent . . . to maintain the existing
    residential streetscape of upper Fayette Street through regulations that
    allow these conversions only when the front facades and porches are
    preserved and if building additions and parking areas are not
    constructed in the front yards.
    (Id. (quoting Zoning Ordinance § 27-1201).) The ZHB explained that the Zoning
    Amendment “was contrary to the terms of both the Legislative Intent of the [RO]
    Zoning District and Objectives A and D of the Statement of Community
    Development Objectives.” (Id. at 19.)
    The ZHB also concluded that allowing a convenience store use with fueling
    pumps in the RO zoning district would be inconsistent with the scale and character
    of the other properties within the RO district. (Id.) The ZHB reasoned that, “[w]hile
    the RO Zoning District contains a mix of residential and commercial properties,
    none of the offices, restaurants, or mixed[-]use properties are as intense as a
    convenience store with fueling pumps.” (Id.) The ZHB explained that it was
    swayed by the testimony of [Mr.] Comitta, especially when he stated
    that “all of the attributes in the [Zoning Amendment] are different to
    enable just the Wawa . . . its’ [sic] a completely different use and
    12
    different character than what is typical in the Borough.” Mr. Comitta’s
    comments were echoed by [the non-party] neighbors and [Neighbors],
    who both testified that the retail convenience store with fuel pumps
    would change the residential character of the neighborhood.
    (Id. at 19-20.) The ZHB, in concluding that the Zoning Amendment constituted
    arbitrary spot zoning, reasoned:
    [I]t was intentionally designed to affect one lot or a small area for
    different treatment than that [sic] the similar surrounding land uses.
    The [Property], as it is currently configured, is the only property that
    could benefit from the Zoning Amendment. The specific dimensional
    standards in the Zoning Amendment point[] to only one viable location
    that could fulfill the dimensional standards. There are no other
    properties that could meet these specific dimensional standards without
    consolidating groups of properties. As Mr. Comitta stated, “there’s no
    other place in the RO district to create another island.”
    (Id. at 20.) The ZHB sustained Neighbors’ substantive validity challenge and
    declared the Zoning Amendment invalid. (Id. at 21.) The Borough and Provco
    appealed the decision to Common Pleas.
    By order dated January 17, 2020, Common Pleas, without taking additional
    evidence, reversed the ZHB’s decision. In its Pa. R.A.P. 1925(a) opinion, Common
    Pleas concluded that Neighbors did not meet their heavy burden of demonstrating
    that the Zoning Amendment is not constitutionally valid, because they failed to
    introduce evidence that clearly established the Zoning Amendment was spot zoning.
    This appeal followed.
    II. ISSUES
    Neighbors raise two issues on appeal.5 First, Neighbors argue that Common
    Pleas committed an error of law in applying a de novo standard of review to the
    5
    When a court of common pleas does not take additional evidence in a substantive validity
    challenge to an ordinance, this Court’s scope of review is limited to determining whether the
    zoning hearing board committed an error of law or a manifest abuse of discretion. Sowich v.
    Zoning Hearing Bd. of Brown Twp., 
    245 A.3d 1188
    , 1195 n.3 (Pa. Cmwlth. 2021) (citing Valley
    13
    ZHB’s decision. Second, Neighbors contend that Common Pleas erred as a matter
    of law when it concluded that the Zoning Amendment did not constitute spot zoning.
    III. DISCUSSION
    A. Common Pleas’ Standard of Review
    Neighbors argue that Common Pleas exceeded its standard of review in
    reviewing the ZHB’s decision because it used a de novo standard of review rather
    than an appellate standard of review. Neighbors also argue that Common Pleas
    “impermissibly substituted its own judgment for that of the [ZHB]” and ignored the
    ZHB’s findings that the Zoning Amendment was the product of spot zoning and
    should be stricken in its entirety. (Neighbors’ Brief at 21-22.) Neighbors submit
    that Common Pleas “failed to give [them] the benefit of reasonable inferences arising
    from the evidence” and focused instead “on discrediting the weight of the evidence
    supporting the ZHB’s decision,” including the testimony of various witnesses.
    (Neighbors’ Brief at 22.) Neighbors argue that Common Pleas “made its own
    findings based on evidence before the ZHB when the record clearly shows that the
    ZHB made its determination in consideration of all the evidence before it.” (Id.)
    View Civic Ass’n v. Zoning Bd. of Adjustment, 
    462 A.2d 637
    , 639 (Pa. 1983) (Valley View)). When
    the appeal presents a question of law our scope of review is plenary. Stoltzfus v. Zoning Hearing
    Bd. of Eden Twp., 
    937 A.2d 548
    , 550 n.2 (Pa. Cmwlth. 2007), appeal denied, 
    953 A.2d 542
    (Pa. 2008). A zoning hearing board abuses its discretion only when its findings are not supported
    by substantial evidence in the record. Demko v. City of Pittsburgh Zoning Bd. of Adjustment,
    
    155 A.3d 1163
    , 1167 n.7 (Pa. Cmwlth. 2017); Hertzberg v. Zoning Bd. of Adjustment of the City
    of Pittsburgh, 
    721 A.2d 43
    , 46 (Pa. 1998). While we are bound by the zoning hearing board’s
    determinations on credibility and evidentiary weight, we must conduct an independent review of
    the record to determine whether the zoning hearing board’s findings of fact are supported by
    substantial evidence. Wyomissing Area Sch. Dist. v. Zoning Hearing Bd. of Wyomissing Borough,
    
    128 A.3d 851
    , 855 n.2 (Pa. Cmwlth. 2015), appeal denied, 
    141 A.3d 484
     (Pa. 2016).
    14
    The Borough and Provco counter that Neighbors’ “displeasure with [Common
    Pleas’] holding does not legitimize their claim that [Common Pleas] applied a
    de novo standard of review.” (Borough’s and Provco’s Brief at 8.) The Borough
    and Provco submit that Common Pleas, based on the record, “determined that the
    ZHB ignored Pennsylvania law and reached a decision that was not supported by
    substantial evidence . . . [and that Common Pleas] applied the correct standard of
    review in holding that the ZHB abused its discretion when it sustained the
    substantive validity challenge.” (Borough’s and Provco’s Brief at 9.) Significantly,
    all parties agree that Common Pleas did not take additional evidence after the ZHB
    rendered its decision. (Neighbors’ Brief at 21; Borough’s and Provco’s Brief at 2.)
    This Court recently reviewed a similar argument that a court of common pleas
    “exceeded its scope of review because, although it did not take additional evidence,
    it referenced in its decision statements of the attorneys and/or testimony contained
    in the record that were not part of the [Zoning Board of Adjustment’s (ZBA)]
    findings of fact, thereby essentially making its own factual findings.” Dowds v.
    Zoning Bd. of Adjustment, 
    242 A.3d 683
    , 695 (Pa. Cmwlth. 2020). Without directly
    addressing the argument, we explained:
    Regardless of whether [c]ommon [p]leas may have exceeded its scope
    of review, we are mindful of our role in this matter. Our role, here,
    given that [c]ommon [p]leas did not take additional evidence in the
    zoning appeal, is limited to reviewing the ZBA’s decision, not that of
    [c]ommon [p]leas. In other words, we will consider whether [the]
    ZBA—not [c]ommon [p]leas—erred as a matter of law or abused its
    discretion. Thus, we do not need to consider whether [c]ommon [p]leas
    exceeded its scope of review in referencing statements made during the
    proceedings that were not encompassed in the findings of the ZBA. Nor
    do we have to consider whether such error, if it occurred, constitutes
    harmless error. Instead, we will consider the issues now before this
    Court in the context of the ZBA’s decision—not the decision of
    [c]ommon [p]leas.
    15
    
    Id.
     (citing Singer v. Philadelphia Zoning Bd. of Adjustment, 
    29 A.3d 144
    , 148 n.1
    (Pa. Cmwlth. 2011)). The same rationale applies in this case, and we will, therefore,
    review the ZHB’s decision (rather than Common Pleas’ decision) based on the
    record using the error of law or abuse of discretion standard of review.
    B. Spot Zoning
    The law is clear that spot zoning is unconstitutional and invalid. Lower Allen
    Citizens Action Grp., Inc. v. Lower Allen Twp. Zoning Hearing Bd., 
    500 A.2d 1253
    ,
    1260 (Pa. Cmwlth. 1985). The law is equally clear that all zoning ordinances are
    presumed constitutional and valid. Atherton Dev. Co. v. Twp. of Ferguson, 
    29 A.3d 1197
    , 1204 (Pa. Cmwlth. 2011). The burden thus falls on the challenger to prove
    otherwise. 
    Id.
     In Takacs v. Indian Lake Borough Zoning Hearing Board, 
    11 A.3d 587
     (Pa. Cmwlth. 2010), we explained spot zoning and the relevant legal standard,
    as follows:
    Spot zoning is a singling out of one lot or a small area for
    different treatment from that accorded to similar surrounding land
    indistinguishable from it in character, for the economic benefit or
    detriment of the owner of that lot. The most determinative factor in an
    analysis of spot zoning is whether the parcel in question is being treated
    unjustifiably different from similar surrounding land, thus creating an
    “island” having no relevant differences from its neighbors.
    To establish improper spot zoning, the challenger must prove that
    the provisions at issue are arbitrary and unreasonable and have no
    relation to the public health, safety, morals and general welfare. If the
    validity of a zoning ordinance is debatable, it must be permitted to
    stand. Spot zoning cases should be decided on the facts, guided by case
    law; there is no precise formula for determining whether a rezoning of
    property constitutes spot zoning.
    Takacs, 
    11 A.3d at 594
     (citations omitted) (emphasis added); see also Sharp v.
    Zoning Hearing Bd. of Twp. of Radnor, 
    628 A.2d 1223
    , 1228 (Pa. Cmwlth.) (holding
    there is no precise formula to determine spot zoning; whether classification
    16
    constitutes spot zoning is determined by facts and guided by case law), appeal
    denied, 
    637 A.2d 290
     (Pa. 1993). Thus, a challenger in a spot zoning case first must
    demonstrate that a governing body’s rezoning reflects a difference in treatment of a
    tract of land from surrounding land similar in character.
    1. Difference in Treatment of the Property
    The Pennsylvania Supreme Court has held that a factor to consider in
    determining whether a property is spot zoned is to review how the property and
    zoning at issue relates to the government entity’s comprehensive zoning plan. See
    Schubach v. Silver, 
    336 A.2d 328
    , 338 (Pa. 1975); see also Knight v. Lynn Twp.
    Zoning Hearing Bd., 
    568 A.2d 1372
    , 1375 (Pa. Cmwlth. 1990). The Pennsylvania
    Supreme Court has stated:
    Zoning is the legislative division of a community into areas in each of
    which only certain designated uses of land are permitted so that the
    community may develop in an orderly manner in accordance with a
    comprehensive plan.
    French v. Zoning Bd. of Adjustment, 
    184 A.2d 791
    , 792 (Pa. 1962) (quoting Best v.
    Zoning Bd. of Adjustment, 
    141 A.2d 606
    , 609 (Pa. 1958) (emphasis in original)).
    “[T]o promote the orderly development of a community the zoning authorities must
    be allowed to put a piece of property to the use which is most beneficial to the
    comprehensive plan, i.e., establish a land use which best blends in with surrounding
    different uses.” Schubach, 336 A.2d at 338.
    The ZHB recognized that the Borough’s Zoning Ordinance does not prohibit
    the removal of a Victorian or early 20th Century structure. (ZHB decision at 13.)
    The ZHB, however, considered the Borough’s Statement of Community Objectives
    and its guidance that redevelopment should occur in an orderly and controlled
    fashion, and the Borough’s established character should be preserved.           (Id.
    at 18 (citing Zoning Ordinance § 27-105.A).)           The ZHB recognized that
    17
    Section 27-105.D of the Zoning Ordinance, titled “Commerce,” provides that
    “future   commercial    development     should      respect   surrounding   residential
    neighborhoods.” (Id. (quoting Zoning Ordinance § 27-105.D).) In the Borough,
    “commercial activities should mix with residential in certain areas such as Fayette
    Street and the redevelopment area.” (Id. (quoting Zoning Ordinance § 27-105.D).)
    The ZHB also reviewed the Legislative Intent of the Residential Office
    District, set forth in Section 27-1201 of the Zoning Ordinance, to encourage the
    retention and preservation of “Victorian and early 20th Century residences” and
    “maintain[ing] the existing residential streetscape of upper Fayette Street through
    regulations that allow these conversions only when the front facades and porches are
    preserved and if building additions and parking areas are not constructed in the front
    yards.” (Id. (quoting Zoning Ordinance § 27-1201).) The declaration of Legislative
    Intent for the RO zoning district was not modified at the time of the Zoning
    Amendment’s adoption.       (Id. at 15.)        The ZHB explained that the Zoning
    Amendment “was contrary to the terms of both the Legislative Intent of the [RO]
    Zoning District and Objectives A and D of the Statement of Community
    Development Objectives.” (Id. at 19.) Based on our review of the record, we
    conclude that the ZHB neither committed an error of law nor abused its discretion
    in relying on the Borough’s statements of policy in reaching its spot zoning
    conclusion.
    Next, the ZHB heard testimony at the hearings from three expert witnesses
    and four non-expert witnesses and admitted 28 documents into evidence, from which
    it gleaned the following findings of fact. The Borough is one square mile, which is
    a total of 640 acres; the RO zoning district is approximately 18 acres; and the
    Property is 1.21 acres, which accounts for nine percent of the RO zoning district.
    18
    (ZHB Decision at 14.) Within the RO zoning district there are sixteen small office
    uses, including one bank, one cleaner, nine personal service establishments, four
    restaurants, a deli, and a coffee shop. (Id. at 8.) Eighty percent of the properties in
    the RO zoning district are either residential or mixed use. (Id. at 15.)
    The Property is an assemblage of lots. (Id. at 12.) The neighborhood around
    the Property is primarily residential. (Id. at 9.) A convenience market with gas
    pumps would not have been permitted in the RO zoning district pursuant to the
    previous Zoning Ordinance. (Id. at 6.) The Property does not have a Victorian or
    early 20th Century structure on it. (Id. at 14.) There are no convenience stores with
    gasoline sales in the RO zoning district, and if the Property was developed as such,
    no other property within 1,000 feet of the new store could be developed as another
    convenience store with fuel pumps. (Id. at 12-13.) The Property is the only piece
    of property in the RO zoning district that could satisfy the requirements for
    a 250-foot lot width and the 40,000-square-foot minimum lot size, and, as such, it is
    the only property that could have a convenience store with fuel pumps and an ATM.
    (Id. at 7.) In order to construct a convenience store with pumps and an ATM in other
    areas of the RO zoning district, one would need to demolish existing structures,
    including Victorian structures, which is contrary to the declaration of legislative
    intent for the RO zoning district. (Id.)
    In the RO zoning district, the buildings are between 18 to 25 feet from the
    curb and do not allow parking in the front; however, the Zoning Amendment allows
    setbacks from 25 to 30 feet and removed the prohibition of parking in the front yard.
    (Id. at 7.) A convenience market at the Property would violate several provisions of
    the existing RO zoning district, including not maintaining the existing residential
    streetscape pursuant to Section 27-1201 of the Zoning Ordinance, and adding
    19
    parking in the front yard. (Id.) The Zoning Amendment created a situation that is
    out of character with the residential scale and character of the Borough in the RO
    zoning district. (Id.) The proposed convenience store with fuel pumps would
    dramatically change the character of Fayette Street’s streetscape with lighting, traffic
    flow across pedestrian sidewalks, and parking in the front yard.            (Id. at 8.)
    Accordingly, based on our review of the record, we believe the ZHB’s conclusion
    that the Zoning Amendment reflects a difference in treatment of the Property from
    surrounding land similar in character was not an error of law.
    2. Relation to Public Health, Safety, Morals, and General Welfare
    Next, for the Property to be considered spot zoned, Neighbors also must prove
    that the provisions at issue are arbitrary and unreasonable and that they have no
    relation to the public health, safety, morals, and general welfare. As this Court has
    previously held:
    To determine if these factors are met, Pennsylvania Courts use a
    substantive due process analysis balancing the public interest served by
    the zoning ordinance against the confiscatory or exclusionary impact of
    the regulation on individual rights. In other words, we must examine
    the reasonableness of the restriction on land use in light of the
    deprivation of the landowner’s freedom thereby incurred.
    Penn St., L.P. v. E. Lampeter Twp. Zoning Hearing Bd., 
    84 A.3d 1114
    , 1134 (Pa.
    Cmwlth.), appeal denied, 
    99 A.3d 708
     (Pa. 2014) (citations omitted). “An ordinance
    will be found unreasonable and not substantially related to a police power purpose
    if it is shown to be unduly restrictive or exclusionary.” C&M Dev. v. Bedminster
    Twp. Zoning Hearing Bd., 
    820 A.2d 143
    , 151 (Pa. 2002).               Additionally, “an
    ordinance will be deemed arbitrary where it is shown that it results in disparate
    treatment of similar landowners without a reasonable basis for such disparate
    treatment.” C&M Dev., 820 A.2d at 151.
    20
    With this legal background in mind, we emphasize that “[i]t is the function of
    a zoning hearing board to weigh the evidence before it” and the “board is the sole
    judge of the credibility of witnesses and the weight afforded their testimony.”
    Taliaferro v. Darby Twp. Zoning Hearing Bd., 
    873 A.2d 807
    , 811 (Pa. Cmwlth.)
    (citations omitted), appeal denied, 
    887 A.2d 1243
     (Pa. 2005). A zoning hearing
    board is free to reject even uncontradicted testimony it finds lacking in credibility,
    including testimony offered by an expert witness, and it does not abuse its discretion
    by choosing to believe the opinion of one expert over that offered by another. 
    Id.
    Our role in this appeal is limited to determining whether the ZHB’s findings
    of fact provided “substantial evidence” in the form of relevant evidence as a
    reasonable mind might accept as adequate to support a conclusion. DeAngelo v. N.
    Strabane Twp. Zoning Hearing Bd., 
    208 A.3d 156
    , 161 n.3 (Pa. Cmwlth. 2019)
    (citing Valley View, 462 A.2d at 640). With regard to substantial evidence, our
    Supreme Court has explained:
    Information admitted into evidence must have sufficient indicia of
    reliability and be relevant to the matter under consideration.
    Accordingly, to test whether the evidence relied upon is substantial
    evidence in support of a finding, the reviewing court should ascertain
    whether the evidence admitted is competent, and if it is competent,
    whether it is sufficient to support the administrative finding. If the
    evidence is both competent and sufficient, the finding is supported by
    substantial evidence.
    Gibson v. Workers’ Comp. Appeal Bd. (Armco Stainless & Alloy Products),
    
    861 A.2d 938
    , 944 (Pa. 2004) (Gibson).
    The Borough and Provco argue that because Neighbors “only offered their
    own personal opinions, and not substantial evidence related to the public health,
    safety, morals and general welfare,” Common Pleas’ decision should be affirmed.
    (Borough’s and Provco’s Brief at 17.)         Neighbors counter that, based on the
    21
    testimony of its expert witness, Mr. Comitta, the ZHB properly found that the
    Property did not benefit the health, welfare, and safety of the community. Neighbors
    further argue:
    [I]t is unfathomable that the main argument made by [the Borough] and
    [Provco] for an ordinance that permits a Wawa convenience store with
    gas pumps in only one location in the [RO zoning district] is not subject
    to testimony and evidence offered by neighbors of the property as to
    the character of their neighborhood, the land uses in their neighborhood
    and the substantial changes wrought by the Provco [Zoning
    Amendment] to the benefit of no one but Provco.
    (Neighbors’ Reply Brief at 5-6.)
    Before discussing the merits of the respective arguments, a brief overview
    regarding witnesses will help clarify the parties’ positions. Our Supreme Court has
    explained:
    The distinction between an expert and a non-expert witness is that a
    non-expert witness’s testimony results from a process of reasoning
    familiar in everyday life and an expert’s testimony results from a
    process of reasoning which can be mastered only by specialists in the
    in the field. At law, every person is competent to be a witness unless
    otherwise provided by statute or by the Rules of Evidence. However,
    a witness may not testify to a matter unless evidence is introduced
    sufficient to support a finding that the witness has personal knowledge
    of the matter. Therefore, if the witness is not testifying as an expert,
    the witness’[s] testimony in the form of opinions or inferences is limited
    to those opinions or inferences that are within the personal knowledge
    of the witness and can assist the trier of fact to obtain a clear
    understanding or determination of a fact in issue.
    Gibson, 861 A.2d at 945 (citations and quotations omitted).
    We recognize in the case before us that neither Neighbors nor Mrs. Dorsey
    were deemed “expert witnesses” in a particular field. Yet, even as lay witnesses,
    they could provide the ZHB with testimony based on their opinions and inferences
    to aid the ZHB in determining issues of fact. There is nothing in the record to
    22
    indicate that Neighbors and Mrs. Dorsey were not competent to testify and all three
    testified under oath or affirmation. The ZHB found that Neighbors and Mrs. Dorsey
    all owned property near the Property (two for over twenty years) and that they all
    had personal knowledge of the neighborhood and the types of commercial
    businesses in the neighborhood. (ZHB Decision at 10-11, FF Nos. 15-17.) Their
    testimony included opinions and inferences, resulting from a process of reasoning
    familiar in everyday life, on topics within the realm of a layperson; specifically,
    about: (1) how a convenience store with gasoline sales would change their way of
    living, or affect their quality of life due to crime, pollution, trash, gas odors, noise,
    lighting, and/or loitering; and (2) how none of the current businesses in the
    neighborhood are open 24 hours a day.                  (Id. at 2, 10, 11, FF Nos. 15-17.)
    Consequently, their testimony was relevant evidence to the issue of the Zoning
    Amendment’s effect on the Borough’s public health, safety, morals, and general
    welfare.6
    We conclude that the ZHB acted within its power as the sole judge of the
    credibility of the witnesses and the weight afforded to their testimony. It is not an
    abuse of discretion for the ZHB to accord more weight to the expert testimony of
    Mr. Comitta over the other two experts who testified in the case. Similarly, the ZHB
    did not err when it considered Neighbors’ and Mrs. Dorsey’s testimony about how
    a convenience store, with the sale of gasoline would affect the Borough’s public
    health, safety, morals, and general welfare. The ZHB’s conclusion that the Zoning
    Amendment constituted arbitrary spot zoning rests on the solid foundation of the
    substantial evidence in its findings of fact. Accordingly, the ZHB neither committed
    6
    ZHB also found that “[m]ultiple members of the public offered public comment . . .
    focused on, inter alia, concerns with traffic, loitering, trash, [and their belief that] the proposed
    text amendment did not benefit the Borough.” (ZHB Decision at 16, FF No. 23.)
    23
    an error of law nor a manifest abuse of discretion in reaching its decision that the
    Property was spot zoned.
    IV. CONCLUSION
    Accordingly, we reverse the Common Pleas’ order.
    P. KEVIN BROBSON, President Judge
    Judge Fizzano Cannon did not participate in the decision of this case.
    24
    IN THE COMMONWEALTH COURT OF PENNSYLVANIA
    Conshohocken Borough                  :
    :
    v.                        :   No. 501 C.D. 2020
    :
    Conshohocken Borough                  :
    Zoning Hearing Board                  :
    :
    Appeal of: Kris J. Waller             :
    and Lisa Rhodes                       :
    ORDER
    AND NOW, this 16th day of August, 2021, the order of the Court of Common
    Pleas of Montgomery County is REVERSED.
    P. KEVIN BROBSON, President Judge
    

Document Info

Docket Number: 501 C.D. 2020

Judges: Brobson

Filed Date: 8/16/2021

Precedential Status: Precedential

Modified Date: 11/21/2024