IN THE COMMONWEALTH COURT OF PENNSYLVANIA
Wimer Realty, LLC; Wimer Holdings :
Corporation; and Richard G. Wimer Jr. :
and Jody Wimer, husband and wife, :
: No. 656 C.D. 2018
v. :
: Argued: February 14, 2019
Township of Wilmington, :
Appellant :
BEFORE: HONORABLE PATRICIA A. McCULLOUGH, Judge
HONORABLE MICHAEL H. WOJCIK, Judge
HONORABLE ELLEN CEISLER, Judge
OPINION BY
JUDGE McCULLOUGH FILED: March 27, 2019
The Township of Wilmington (Township) appeals from the April 13, 2018
order of the Court of Common Pleas of Lawrence County (trial court) granting the land
use appeal of Wimer Realty, LLC, Wimer Holdings Corporation, and Richard G.
Wimer Jr. and Jody Wimer, husband and wife (collectively, the Wimers), and denying
the Township’s motions to strike and dismiss.
Facts and Procedural History
The Wimers are engaged in the business of catering and operating special
events and, more recently, have managed a barn wedding venue. On June 22, 2017,
the Wimers purchased real property located at 3538 State Route 956 in Wilmington
Township, Lawrence County, Pennsylvania (the Property), consisting of three parcels.
The parcel at issue consists of 31.42 acres, approximately 25 of which are used for
farming, and has a barn situated upon it. The Wimers intended to invest approximately
$2,200,000.00 into the Property in order to renovate and improve the barn so that they
can host events in it, including weddings and receptions. (Trial court op. at 2.)
Wilmington Township’s Zoning Ordinance was originally silent as to the
use of a barn as a wedding venue in the Township. In September 2016, the Township’s
Planning Commission drafted a proposed amendment to the Zoning Ordinance to
address wedding barns, which was considered by the Township’s Board of Supervisors
(Board) at a November 7, 2016 meeting. Shortly thereafter, the first wedding barn
venue, “Five Fillies,” was established in the Township and began operations pursuant
to a special exception granted by the Zoning Hearing Board. Id. at 2, 14.
In January 2017, the Township sent three unnumbered draft ordinances,
which became known as “Ordinance No. 1 of 2017,” addressing wedding barn venues
located in the Township, to the Lawrence County Planning Commission, as well as the
Township Planning Commission, for review and comment. A public hearing on
Ordinance No. 1 of 2017 was advertised on February 14, 2017, and February 21, 2017,
and the hearing was held on March 2, 2017. At the conclusion of the hearing,
Ordinance No. 1 of 2017 was voted down by the Board. Id. at 2-3.
On June 27, 2017, the Township forwarded draft Ordinance No. 2 of 2017,
which pertained to wedding barns by conditional use in agricultural districts, and
Ordinance No. 3 of 2017, which pertained to the same in residential zoning districts, to
the Lawrence County and Township Planning Commissions for review and comment.
Neither of the draft ordinances were advertised for adoption as of June 27, 2017. Id. at
3.
The following month, on July 20, 2017, the Wimers filed a request for
hearing on their challenge to the Township’s Zoning Ordinance, as amended, as well
2
as a proposed curative amendment, pursuant to section 916.1(a)(2) of the Pennsylvania
Municipalities Planning Code (MPC), 53 P.S. §10916.1(a)(2).1 On September 7, 2017,
a hearing was held before the Board, at which the Wimers presented the testimony of
Stephen Victor, a landscape architect and expert in zoning and land use planning, who
assisted the Wimers in preparation of the plans and explanatory materials they
submitted to the Township. Mr. Victor stated that Ordinance No. 105 of 1997, which
was in effect at the time of the hearing, would not permit the use of a special event
venue proposed by the Wimers but noted that the curative amendment submitted by the
Wimers would cure the deficiency in the Zoning Ordinance. (Trial court op. at 6;
Reproduced Record (R.R.) at 84a, 93a-125a.)
The Township presented the testimony of John Trant, an attorney and land
use planning consultant certified by the American Institute of Certified Planners. Mr.
Trant impliedly agreed that the use proposed by the Wimers was not provided for in
the Zoning Ordinance, but opined that the Wimers’ proposed curative amendment was
deficient in that it was, among other things, too specific so as to be exclusionary and
difficult to enforce throughout the Township. However, Mr. Trant did not testify that
1
Act of July 31, 1968, P.L. 805, added by Act of December 21, 1988, P.L. 1329, as
amended, 53 P.S. §10916.1(a)(2). This section states,
A landowner who, on substantive grounds, desires to challenge the
validity of an ordinance or map or any provision thereof which
prohibits or restricts the use or development of land in which he has an
interest shall submit the challenge either:
...
(2) to the governing body under section 909.1(b)(4),
together with a request for a curative amendment under
section 609.1.2.
53 P.S. §10916.1(a)(2).
3
the proposed curative amendment would pose a threat to the health, safety, or wellbeing
of the Township’s residents. Several Township residents also testified and presented
their opinions on the proposed curative amendment. (Trial court op. at 6-7; R.R. at
147a-53a.)
At the conclusion of the hearing, the Board voted to deny the Wimers’
challenge to the Zoning Ordinance and not to accept the proposed curative amendment.
The Board additionally voted to refer draft Ordinance No. 3 of 2017, incorporating the
comments of Mr. Trant, to the Township and Lawrence County Planning Commissions
for review and comment. (Trial court op. at 7.)
On September 25, 2017, the Wimers filed a land use appeal in the trial
court, seeking review of the Board’s decision. The Wimers subsequently filed a
“Renewed, Supplemental and Restated Land Use Appeal Notice” (Renewed Land Use
Appeal), which “recit[ed] the history of the case subsequent to [the date of the Board’s
decision] and set[] forth essentially a restatement of the original Land Use Appeal
Notice.” Id. at 7. The Township responded by filing four motions: (1) a motion to
open the record and present additional evidence; (2) a motion to strike the Wimers’
Renewed Land Use Appeal; (3) a motion to dismiss the land use appeal as moot; and
(4) a motion to dismiss the land use appeal based upon the pending ordinance doctrine.
Id. at 7-8.
The Township’s motion to dismiss the land use appeal was premised upon
the argument that any alleged deficiencies in the current Zoning Ordinance would be
moot after the Township adopted Ordinance No. 5 of 2017, or because the Zoning
Ordinance was not exclusionary. Ordinance No. 3 of 2017, following revisions,
became titled Ordinance No. 5 of 2017, which permitted a “Special Event Barn” as an
accessory use in an A-Agricultural Zoning District and as a principal or accessory use
4
in a C-Commercial Zoning District. Ordinance No. 5 of 2017 was adopted by the
Board on November 9, 2017, following an advertised public hearing. Id. at 8.
The court granted, in part, the Township’s motion to open the record,
permitting it to enter into the record a certified copy of Ordinance No. 5 of 2017, on
the basis that it was not available for introduction at the hearing before the Board and
because it might have been relevant to the Township’s argument that it cured any
alleged defect in the Zoning Ordinance. However, the court denied the motion in all
other respects, reasoning that “the Township had the opportunity to be fully heard on
the underlying matter at the hearing on September 7, 2017, the Township’s expert,
John Trant, testified on September 7, 2017[,] and presented his expert opinion[,] and
there was no mention in the record that the Township intended to present additional
testimony or that certain evidence proffered by the Township was excluded.” Id. at 8.
After hearing legal argument, the trial court issued an opinion and order
finding in favor of the Wimers. Initially, the trial court ruled that the Wimers had
perfected their land use appeal. The court noted that, while the Board voted to deny
the Wimers’ challenge to the Zoning Ordinance, it did so orally and it did not issue
specific findings of fact or conclusions of law. Additionally, the Board voted to amend
Ordinance No. 3 of 2017 to include the recommendations of Mr. Trant and to send it
for review and comment. Thus, the trial court found that the Board’s decision after the
hearing was
not entirely dispositive towards the Wimers’ concerns in that
the Board denied the Wimers’ challenge and proposed
curative amendment, and did not ‘approve’ a draft ordinance
since revisions needed to be made to Ordinance No. 3 of
2017 and it needed to be sent to [the] Township Planning
Commission and [the] Lawrence County Planning
Commission for recommendation and comment.
Id. at 10.
5
The trial court next addressed the Township’s motion to strike, which
asserted that the Wimers’ Renewed Land Use Appeal should have been stricken
because it attempted to raise an issue that the Wimers waived by failing to raise it in
their original land use appeal. Id. Specifically, the Township asserted that the Wimers
were raising an issue as to whether the Board actually made a decision or whether their
land use appeal was deemed denied. The Township contended that the Board did
indeed deny the Wimers’ land use appeal/curative amendment at the end of the hearing
and, thus, the decision was not a deemed denial.2 (Original Record (O.R.) at Item No.
8.)
The court disagreed that the Renewed Land Use Appeal should have been
stricken from the record. It noted that section 1002-A(a) of the MPC, added by Act of
December 21, 1988, P.L. 1329, requires an appeal from a land use decision to be filed
30 days after the “entry of the decision,” 53 P.S. §11002-A(a), and that section
916.1(c)(7) of the MPC provides that, if the governing body fails to act on the
landowner’s request within 45 days after the last hearing, “a denial of the request is
deemed to have occurred on the 46th day after the close of the last hearing.” 53 P.S.
§10916.1(c)(7). Thus, the court explained that the Wimers filed the original land use
appeal within 30 days of the September 7, 2017 hearing but, out of an abundance of
caution, also filed the Renewed Land Use Appeal 30 days after the hearing in the event
the Board’s decision was a deemed denial. The court observed that the Renewed Land
Use Appeal “substantially contain[ed] the same factual matters and arguments as the
2
The Township acknowledged that section 908(9) of the Municipalities Planning Code
(MPC), Act of July 31, 1968, P.L. 805, as amended, 53 P.S. §10908(9), requires written findings of
fact and conclusions of law in support of the denial of a curative amendment. However, the Township
noted that section 609.1(b) of the MPC, added by Act of June 1, 1972, P.L. 333, 53 P.S. §10609.1(b),
which addresses the procedure for curative amendments, specifically states that section 908(9) does
not apply to a zoning challenge/curative amendment proceeding. See O.R. Item No. 8.
6
[original] [l]and [u]se [a]ppeal, and only recited matters subsequent to the hearing of
September 7, 2017.” (Trial court op. at 12.) Additionally, the court emphasized that,
during argument before it, counsel for the Township conceded that the Wimers’ land
use appeal was timely filed. In denying the motion to strike the court stated,
[A]ny defect or error made by the Wimers in filing [] does
not affect substantial rights of the parties, but rather only
confirms the ability of the Wimers to indeed take an appeal
to this [c]ourt of the Board’s actions given the manner by
which the hearing before the Board was concluded.
Id.3
Next, the court addressed whether the Wimers’ appeal was moot given the
Township’s adoption of Ordinance No. 5 of 2017. In concluding that the appeal was
not moot, the court observed that there were certain “substantial [i]nconsistencies”
between Ordinance No. 5 of 2017 and the Wimers’ proposed curative amendment.
Specifically, Ordinance No. 5 limited the number of events to 12 per year and gave the
Board authority to reduce below 300 the maximum number of guests, whereas the
curative amendment did not include these restrictions. On this point, the court cited
Mr. Wimer’s testimony that, in order for the wedding barn to be financially feasible,
the Wimers would need to be able to hold more than 12 events per year with up to 300
guests per event. Thus, the court concluded that because Ordinance No. 5 of 2017
substantially impacted the Wimers’ ability to conduct their proposed use in a manner
3
It appears the court proceeded to address the merits of the land use appeal and not the
Renewed Land Use Appeal. See Trial court op. at 12; Trial court order at 1-2 (granting the Wimers’
“Land Use Appeal” but denying the Township’s motion to strike the Wimers’ “Renewed,
Supplemental and Restated Land Use Appeal Notice”). It does not appear that the trial court
ultimately ruled on the Wimers’ Renewed Land Use Appeal, despite refusing to strike it from the
record. Nonetheless, the distinction is meaningless for our purposes, as the Renewed Land Use
Appeal contained the same facts and arguments as the original and differed only insofar as it “recited
matters subsequent to the hearing of September 7, 2017.” (Trial court op. at 12.) Thus, the Renewed
Land Use Appeal is legally insignificant here.
7
which was financially and economically reasonable under the circumstances, the
Wimers’ land use appeal was not moot by virtue of the passage of Ordinance No 5.
2017. Id. at 13.
The court then addressed whether the Wimers’ land use appeal was moot
under the pending ordinance doctrine or because the Zoning Ordinance was not
exclusionary. The court again determined it was not. It observed that, in order for the
pending ordinance doctrine to apply, the municipality must publically declare its intent
to consider a particular zoning scheme by advertising to the public its intention to hold
a public hearing on such rezoning. See Casey v. Zoning Hearing Board of Warwick
Township, 328 A.2d 464 (Pa. 1974). In this case, the trial court noted that the Wimers
filed their request to challenge the Zoning Ordinance and for adoption of a curative
amendment on July 20, 2017, at which point the Board had already declined to adopt
Ordinance No. 1 of 2017 but had not advertised its intent to adopt Ordinance No. 3 of
2017. Further, the court emphasized that the Board “gave no approval to advertise the
notice of intent to adopt Ordinance No. 5 of 2017 until after the Board had denied the
Wimers’ challenge and proposed curative amendment on September 7, 2017.” (Trial
court op. at 15.) Accordingly, the court found that the pending ordinance doctrine did
not apply.
The court next addressed the Township’s argument that the Wimers’
zoning challenge was properly denied because the Zoning Ordinance was not
exclusionary in that another wedding barn, the Five Fillies, had been previously
authorized by the Zoning Hearing Board and that, instead of filing a land use appeal,
the Wimers should have likewise sought a special exception from the Zoning Hearing
Board. The court noted that the Zoning Hearing Board’s decision permitting the Five
Fillies wedding barn appeared to be an “aberration,” as there was, at that time, no
8
provision in the Zoning Ordinance allowing use as a special event barn. Consequently,
the court found that the Wimers were not required to submit to a hearing before the
Zoning Hearing Board to seek a special exception for a wedding barn use when such a
use was not permitted and, thus, the Wimers were not barred from pursuing their land
use appeal merely because the Five Fillies farm had obtained special permission to
operate a wedding barn. Accordingly, the court denied the Township’s motion to
dismiss the land use appeal on the basis of the pending ordinance doctrine and/or
because the Zoning Ordinance was not exclusionary. Id. at 16.
The trial court then considered whether the Township established that the
exclusion of the proposed zoning use was related to the protection of the public health,
safety, or welfare of the residents of the Township, or whether the proposed use was
injurious to the public health, safety, morals, or general welfare of its residents. The
trial court again answered this in the negative, reasoning that although Mr. Trant
offered various technical objections to the content of the curative amendment, he did
not opine that it would be in any way injurious to the public health, safety, morals, or
general welfare of the Township’s residents. Thus, the court determined that the
Township did not present sufficient evidence to hold that the Wimers’ proposed use of
the land would pose a threat of injury to the health, safety, morals, or general welfare
of the public. Id. at 16-17.
Finally, the trial court addressed whether the Wimers’ challenge to the
Zoning Ordinance and proposed curative amendment should have been granted by the
Board, answering it in the affirmative. The court analyzed Casey, 328 A.2d at 464,
wherein our Supreme Court held that a successful challenger of a zoning ordinance
must be granted the relief requested unless the governmental unit proves that the
proposed use will be injurious to the public health, safety, or welfare. The trial court
9
also considered our precedent in In re Miller & Son Paving, Inc., 636 A.2d 274 (Pa.
Cmwlth. 1993), wherein we held that, in the case of a de jure exclusion of a use, the
sole remedy for a successful challenger is to allow the use somewhere, and the
successful challenger must receive that benefit in the form of at least partial approval
of his proposal. In re Miller & Son, 636 A.2d at 277.
With regard to the present case, the trial court made several conclusions.
First, the court stated that “a use as a wedding barn in Wilmington Township, where
the number of wedding-type events is unlimited and the number of guests at the facility
is limited to 300 is entirely reasonable.” (Trial court op. at 18.) Next, the trial court
held that the Wimers “indeed satisfied their burden of proving that Wilmington
Township Ordinance No. 105 of 1997, as amended, as it existed on September 7, 2017,
failed to adequately provide for use as a special event venue.” Id. Finally, the trial
court found that the Board did not “sufficiently justify” its decision to decline the
Wimers’ challenge to the Zoning Ordinance and proposed curative amendment because
the Township “failed to demonstrate that the Wimers’ use of their property as a special
event venue would have an [e]ffect on the public health, safety and welfare in a
meaningful way.” Id. Thus, the court concluded that the Wimers’ request for a
challenge to the Zoning Ordinance and proposed curative amendment should have been
granted by the Board.
Accordingly, the court determined that the Board’s decision was an abuse
of discretion, granted the Wimers’ land use appeal, and permitted them to use the
Property in accordance with the terms of their proposed curative amendment, but
10
required them to comply with all other applicable Township ordinances not addressed
with the curative amendment.4
The Township filed the present appeal,5 arguing (1) the Wimers’ land use
appeal was moot based upon Ordinance No. 5 of 2017; (2) the Wimers’ land use appeal
should have been dismissed under the pending ordinance doctrine and/or because the
Township’s Zoning Ordinance was not exclusionary; (3) the Board’s decision was
supported by substantial evidence; and (4) the trial court abused its discretion in
refusing to permit the Township to supplement the record.
Discussion
1. Mootness under Ordinance No. 5 of 2017
The Township argues that the trial court erred in determining that the
Wimers’ land use appeal was not moot as a result of the passage of Ordinance No. 5 of
2017 because it cured any alleged defects raised in the Wimers’ land use appeal. The
Township relies on our decision in Paradise Materials, Inc. v. Paradise Township, 676
A.2d 1314 (Pa. Cmwlth. 1996), wherein we granted a township’s motion to quash a
4
The court limited the application of the curative amendment provision “only to the subject
premises and not to any other property or location in Wilmington Township.” (Trial court order at 1-
2.)
5
Where the trial court takes additional evidence on the merits, it must review the case de novo,
and this Court reviews the trial court’s findings of fact and conclusions of law for an error of law or
abuse of discretion. See Coal Gas Recovery, L.P. v. Franklin Township Zoning Hearing Board, 944
A.2d 382 (Pa. Cmwlth. 2008).
11
landowner’s appeal because the township’s curative amendment specifically addressed
each element of the landowner’s proposed curative amendment, thereby curing the
zoning ordinance’s invalidity and rendering the landowner’s appeal moot. 6 Id. at 1317.
Notably, the landowner’s proposed curative amendment sought to permit the
following:
(1) concrete plants; (2) asphalt plants; (3) the manufacture of
stone-related products; (4) the storage, maintenance and
repair of construction and quarry vehicles and equipment; (5)
the storage of stone and stone products; (6) stone crushing
and screening; and (7) attendant and accessory uses for the
aforesaid structures, storage equipment, scales and offices
related to the operation of the foregoing.
Id. In comparison, the township’s municipal curative amendment permitted, as a
conditional use in a B-2 Business District,
(1) concrete plants; (2) asphalt plants; (3) the manufacture of
stone-related products; (4) the storage and minor
maintenance of vehicles and equipment; (5) retail and
wholesale sales of stone excavated on the site; and (6) offices
related to the operations.
Id. (internal citations omitted).
The Township analogizes Paradise Materials to the instant case, arguing
that the Board “has done exactly as requested by the Wimers,” (Township’s brief at
14), in their challenge, which urged the Board “to cure the invalidity of the Zoning
Ordinance by providing for Special Event Venue use in [the] Township,” (R.R. at 4a),
by amending the Zoning Ordinance “to permit Special Event Venues as well as similar
6
In Paradise Materials, the township had already begun the process of enacting a municipal
curative amendment and, in April 1994, passed a resolution with specific findings regarding the issues
that the municipal curative amendment was to address. In August 1994, the landowner filed a petition
for its own curative amendment. One month later, the township enacted its municipal curative
amendment. Paradise Materials, 676 A.2d at 1315-16.
12
uses within the Township,” (Township’s brief at 14). The Township states that
Ordinance No. 5 of 2017 provides for Special Event Barns as an accessory use in the
Agricultural Zone, which is where the Wimers’ Property is located. Additionally, the
Township notes that the Ordinance also permits Special Event Barns, banquet halls,
conference centers, and special event venues in C-Commercial Districts as a principal
and accessory use. The Township further asserts that the “Special Event Barn” and
“Special Event Venue” definitions in Ordinance No. 5 of 2017 closely track the use
proposed by the Wimers’ proposed curative amendment.
The Township acknowledged that some of the regulations of the Special
Event Barn and Special Event Venue use in Ordinance No. 5 differ from the curative
amendment terms proposed by the Wimers, but it argues that the Wimers are not
guaranteed an absolute right to site-specific relief to develop in the specific way they
propose. On that point, the Township asserts that the trial court erred in granting site-
specific relief to the Wimers because it provided “a windfall beyond what [was]
necessary to cure the alleged defect in the ordinance.” (Township’s brief at 16) (citing
Piper Group, Inc. v. Bedminster Township Board of Supervisors, 30 A.3d 1083 (Pa.
2011)). The Township asserts that under Piper Group, all that should have been
granted to the Wimers is that which was necessary to the cure the constitutional defect.
In response, the Wimers challenge the applicability of Paradise Materials,
observing that, in that case, the township recognized the deficiencies in its zoning
ordinance and, taking advantage of section 609.2 of the MPC, 53 P.S. §10609.2,7 had
180 days to adopt an ordinance curing the acknowledged deficiency, during which no
landowner challenge could be asserted. Noting that the landowner improvidently filed
a petition for a curative amendment during those 180 days, the Wimers assert that the
7
Section 609.2 of the MPC was added by Section 2 of the Act of October 5, 1978, P.L. 1067,
53 P.S. §10609.2.
13
township rightfully refused to hold a hearing and to adopt its own curative amendment.
The Wimers emphasize that, in Paradise Materials, the township’s curative
amendment was nearly identical to the one proposed by the landowner, which resulted
in the issue being moot.
Conversely, the Wimers observe that, here, the Township did not
acknowledge a deficiency and resolve to enact a municipal amendment and, further,
the municipal amendment adopted after the Wimers’ challenge was “not close” to what
the Wimers sought. (Wimers’ brief at 25.) The Wimers assert that the use described
in their proposed curative amendment was a permitted use, which would be a full-time,
year-round commercial operation, that would not be limited with regard to the number
of events per year, the days on which events may be held, the presence of alcohol, or
extent of improvements to the host structure. Further, they observe their proposed use
would involve catering facilities or other culinary and special event-related services
and would require some on-site food preparation.
In comparison, the Wimers contend that Ordinance No. 5 of 2017 would
permit “Special Event Barns” only as a conditional accessory use in the agricultural
district, which must be “secondary and shall not drastically alter the visual or material
character of the Barn except as necessary to provide safe use by patrons . . . .” (Wimers’
brief at 26) (quoting Ordinance No. 5 of 2017, R.R. at 445a). Further, the Wimers
observe that, under Ordinance No. 5, the number of events is limited to 12 per year,
which may be held on Fridays, Saturdays, and Sundays, the number of guests is limited
to 200 people, excluding staff, no alcohol may be sold, and food preparation on-site is
limited. Thus, the Wimers argue that Ordinance No. 5 of 2017 did not resolve their
14
challenge because it did not permit their proposed use in an agricultural district, thus,
the mootness doctrine is inapplicable here.8
We disagree with the Township that Ordinance No. 5 rendered the
Wimers’ challenge moot. As the Wimers point out, there were substantial differences
between Ordinance No. 5 and their proposed curative amendment, such that we cannot
agree that Ordinance No. 5 substantially granted them what they sought. Notably, in
Paradise Materials, in determining that the landowner’s challenge was moot, we relied
upon the fact that the amended ordinance was very nearly identical to what the
landowner sought. 676 A.2d at 1317. Such was not the case here and thus we find no
error in the trial court’s refusal to dismiss the land use appeal for mootness.
2. Pending Ordinance Doctrine
The Township argues that the Wimers’ challenge should have been
dismissed pursuant to the pending ordinance doctrine and/or because the Zoning
Ordinance was not exclusionary. The Township asserts that it publically declared its
intention to amend the Zoning Ordinance to provide for wedding barns, or similar uses,
as early as February of 2017, when it published advertisements in the local paper on
February 14 and 21 announcing a public hearing on Ordinance No. 1 of 2017, which
was to occur on March 2, 2017. The Township asserts that when the Board voted down
Ordinance No. 1, “the matter was returned to the Board [], and the Planning
8
The Wimers also argue that the Township misconstrues Piper Group, which involved a
second landowner challenger of an ordinance, who attempted to piggyback onto the first successful
challenger. The Wimers assert that Piper Group stood for the proposition that only the first challenger
is entitled to site-specific relief, which, in the present case, are the Wimers.
15
Commission for further revisions of the amendment, ultimately leading to the adoption
of [Ordinance No. 5 of 2017] on November 9, 2017.” (Township’s brief at 19.)
The Township asserts that, even if the amendment was not pending when
the Wimers filed their challenge, their argument fails nonetheless because the
Township did not violate the ultimate goal of the pending ordinance doctrine, which is
to bar a municipality from attempting to thwart a valid zoning challenge by enacting a
zoning amendment after a zoning challenge has been filed. See Casey, 382 A.2d at
469. Further, the Township asserts that the Wimers’ challenge should have been
considered in light of the amended zoning ordinance because the Township did not
attempt to “zone around” the Wimers’ Property by fixing the unconstitutionality of the
Zoning Ordinance but leaving the Wimers without relief, since wedding barns are
permitted in the area that encompasses the Wimers’ Property, pursuant to Ordinance
No. 5. (Township’s brief at 20.)
The Township asserts that Piper Group’s pronouncement—where a
township cures a de facto defect in its ordinance and the cure applies to the challenger’s
property, it is lawful for a challenger to be “thwarted” from developing the property in
the specific manner it proposed—applies here and, therefore, the trial court should not
have granted relief beyond that which was necessary to cure the constitutional defect,
which resulted in a windfall for the Wimers. 30 A.3d at 1097.
In response, the Wimers assert that there was no pending ordinance when
they filed their challenge because there had been no public advertisement regarding the
Township’s intention to hold public hearings on the matter. Citing Kaufman & Broad,
Inc. v. Board of Supervisors of West Whiteland Township, 442 A.2d 1220 (Pa. Cmwlth.
1982), the Wimers assert that the critical point in time is the date of advertisement. The
Wimers contend that “there is no evidence in the record” that the February
16
advertisements for the public hearing on Ordinance No. 1 occurred.9 (Wimers’ brief at
23.) With regard to Ordinance Nos. 2 and 3, the Wimers state that the fact they were
forwarded to the planning commissions for consideration in June 2017 did not render
them “pending” under Casey because there was no advertisement prior to when the
Wimers filed their challenge in July 2017. Id.
The Wimers argue that, even if Ordinance Nos. 1, 2, or 3 were under
consideration when they filed their challenge, none can be considered a pending
ordinance in that they were all materially different than the Wimers’ proposed curative
amendment. Further, the Wimers note that Ordinance No. 3, which was scheduled for
a hearing just prior to the Wimers’ hearing on their challenge, only addressed incidental
use of barns for weddings, whereas their proposed use sought a full-time, full service
event venue providing all the amenities and services necessary to host weddings,
receptions, and similar events, without limitation or restriction.
Finally, the Wimers assert that the Township failed to formally recognize
a deficiency in its Ordinance because the Board voted down the first ordinance
addressing wedding barn venues and, only after the Wimers “pushed the issue,” the
Township took action after having tabled the amendment for six months. (Wimers’
brief at 27.) The Wimers contend that the Township’s cure, via Ordinance No. 5, must
be disregarded as an impermissible attempt to thwart a valid challenge since there was
no similar ordinance pending on the date their challenge was filed.
9
Exhibit 7 attached to the Township’s motion to dismiss pursuant to the pending ordinance
doctrine and/or because the Zoning Ordinance was not exclusionary is a letter titled, “Notice of Public
Hearing, Special Meeting and Intention to Adopt Wilmington Township Ordinance No. 1 of 2017,”
indicating that Ordinance No. 1 of 2017 was available for public inspection and notifying the public
that a hearing on its adoption would occur on March 2, 2017, at 5:00 p.m. at the provided address.
(O.R. at Item No. 11, Ex. 7.) In the footnote portion of the document, the letter stated, “Please publish
on February 14 and February 21, 2017,” and “Please bill Wilmington Township directly.” Id.
17
In Piper Group, the Supreme Court set forth a thorough analysis of its
case law on the pending ordinance doctrine:
In Casey, 328 A.2d 464, a landowner challenged a Warwick
Township, Bucks County, zoning ordinance because it failed
to provide for multi-family housing.[] Two days later, the
planning commission recommended adopting a curative
ordinance that would provide for multifamily housing in the
township, but not in the specific district where the
challenger’s land was located. Approximately two weeks
later, the Board gave public notice of the proposed
amendment. It was enacted three weeks thereafter. The
zoning board then dismissed the landowner’s challenge. The
court of common pleas affirmed, reasoning that the amended
ordinance cured the defect. The Commonwealth Court
reversed, holding that the amended ordinance could not be
considered because it was not pending at the time of the
landowner’s challenge.
This Court affirmed the Commonwealth Court, and in doing
so considered the pending ordinance doctrine, as it applied
to the Casey factual scenario. We noted that in the typical
pending ordinance case, a landowner seeks a building permit
for a particular use permitted under the current ordinance but
prohibited under a new ordinance pending when the
landowner files its application. In that situation, courts will
look to the new ordinance, rather than the prior one, if the
ordinance was “pending”: i.e., if the governing body had
“resolved to consider a particular scheme of rezoning and has
advertised to the public its intention to hold public hearings
on the rezoning” before the landowner sought the permit.
Casey, 328 A.2d at 467.
In Casey, we applied those same principles of the pending
ordinance doctrine from the building permit application
cases to the scenario of ordinance challenges. Id. As in the
building-permit situation, the new ordinance would be
considered if it was pending at the time of the landowner’s
challenge to the ordinance. However, the converse is true as
well: “we cannot allow a municipality to thwart a valid
challenge to its zoning ordinance by adopting a curative
18
provision, which was not considered or advertised prior to
the time of the challenger’s application.” Id. at 469. The
reason for the Casey rule is simple: it would be inequitable
to “penalize the successful challenger by enacting an
amendatory ordinance designed to cure the constitutional
infirmity, but also designed to zone around the challenger.”
Id. at 468. Otherwise, the process as a whole would be a
“farce,” where the landowner who takes the time and effort
to file a valid challenge is thwarted by a “retributory
township.” Id. at 468–469.[] Instead, we held that a
successful challenger is entitled to “definitive relief” so long
as the challenger complies with other reasonable extant
zoning restrictions.
Piper Group, 30 A.3d at 1094-95 (footnotes omitted).
Here, the trial court focused on the fact that the public did not have notice
that an ordinance was “pending” at the time the Wimers filed their challenge because
the Township did not advertise its intent to address Ordinance No. 3 after the Board
voted down Ordinance No. 1 of 2017. With regard to advertisement, the trial court
states that the Township did advertise for a public hearing on Ordinance No. 1 on
February 14, 2017, and February 21, 2017. (Trial court op. at 3.) The Wimers
specifically challenge this fact. Significantly, although the Township contends that
these advertisements occurred, it does not appear that copies of the advertisements, as
they appeared in the paper, were ever actually submitted into the record.10
We need not, however, resolve the issue of whether there is substantial
evidence that the February 2017 advertisements occurred because we conclude that,
even if the record contained definitive evidence that the advertisements occurred, that
action did not constitute a “sufficient public declaration” of the Township’s intention
10
As noted above, an exhibit to the Township’s motion to dismiss indicated that a public
hearing for Ordinance No. 1 would occur on March 2, 2017, at 5:00 p.m. at the advertised address.
(O.R. at Item No. 11, Ex. 7.) In the footnote portion of the document, the notice stated, “Please
publish on February 14 and February 21, 2017,” and “Please bill Wilmington Township directly.” Id.
19
to continue to address the wedding barn issue six months later when the Wimers filed
their challenge and proposed curative amendment. In order for the Township to have
taken advantage of the pending ordinance doctrine, it should have advertised its
intention to continue to address the wedding barn issue—specifically, by giving the
public notice that it revised Ordinance No. 1 by splitting it into Ordinance Nos. 2 and
3 of 2017.11 As it stands, there is no evidence, and the Township does not contend,
that the public had any reason to know of the private correspondence between the Board
and the planning commissions regarding Ordinance Nos. 2 and 3. Further, it is of note
that after the September 7, 2017 hearing on the Wimers’ land use appeal, the Board
voted to refer only Ordinance No. 3 of 2017 to the planning commissions. Even if
Ordinance No. 3 of 2017, pertaining to wedding barns in residential districts, had been
adopted, the Wimers would still have been without relief as the Property and proposed
site of their wedding barn is located in an agricultural district. See Casey, 328 A.2d at
468 (forbidding a municipality from attempting to cure an exclusionary zoning
ordinance with an amendment designed to “zone around the challenger,” thereby
permitting the use while nonetheless leaving the challenger without relief).
Accordingly, the trial court did not commit legal error in declining to
consider Ordinance No. 5 of 2017, instead of the unamended Zoning Ordinance, in the
context of the Wimers’ land use appeal.
3. Judicial Remedy
11
Pertinent to this point, in its motion to dismiss, the Township stated that, after being voted
down, Ordinance No. 1 of 2017 “was returned to the Board of Supervisors, and the Planning
Commission for further revisions.” (O.R. at Item No. 11, ¶23.) However, it is not clear whether this
was publicly announced at the hearing after the vote.
20
Having concluded the trial court appropriately considered the Wimers’
challenge to the unamended Zoning Ordinance, we must consider whether the trial
court erred in determining the Zoning Ordinance was unconstitutionally exclusionary
and whether it erred in granting relief in the form of permitting the Wimers to use the
Property in accordance with the terms of their proposed curative amendment.
In a de jure challenge to a zoning ordinance, a landowner asserts that the
ordinance totally excludes a proposed use. Caln Nether Company, L.P. v. Board of
Supervisors, 840 A.2d 484, 491 (Pa. Cmwlth. 2004). The issue of whether a zoning
ordinance is exclusionary is a question of law, reviewable by this Court. Id. While a
zoning ordinance is presumptively valid and constitutional, an ordinance that effects a
total prohibition of an otherwise legitimate business use is particularly suspect. Atiyeh
v. Board of Commissioners of the Township of Bethlehem, 41 A.3d 232, 236 (Pa.
Cmwlth. 2012). A challenger can rebut the presumption of validity by demonstrating
that the ordinance completely excludes a legitimate use. Id. Once this is established
by the landowner, the burden shifts to the municipality to show that the exclusion is
substantially related to the promotion of public health, safety, and welfare. Id.
The fact that a zoning ordinance does not contain a specific provision
addressing a proposed use is not, by itself, a basis for finding an unconstitutional
exclusion of that use. Caln Nether, 840 A.2d at 491. Where an ordinance does not
mention a specific use, we must determine whether the proposed use is included within
another use that has been specifically provided. Id. When a proposed use can be
considered within another zoning classification or, where a zoning ordinance is broad
enough to encompass the proposed use, there is no de jure exclusion. Id. When
considering whether a proposed use falls within a given category of permitted use, we
21
are mindful that ordinances are to be construed expansively, affording the landowner
the broadest possible use and enjoyment of his or her land. Id.
In this case, the trial court did not err in finding that the Zoning Ordinance
in effect at the time of the Wimers’ challenge was unconstitutionally exclusionary. The
Wimers’ expert, Mr. Victor, testified that, after having performed a thorough analysis
of the Zoning Ordinance, including preparing a chart for the purpose, he concluded a
wedding barn facility, special event venue, or similar facility was not provided for in
any part of the Ordinance, including the “use not specifically listed” provision. (R.R.
at 102a-04a.) Crucially, the Township does not appear to have taken the position at
any point that the Zoning Ordinance did provide for such a use. Indeed, the Township’s
expert, Mr. Trant, implicitly acknowledged as much in his testimony. While Mr. Trant
testified regarding what he considered to be several deficiencies in the Wimers’
proposed curative amendment, which he believed would make it difficult to enforce
throughout the Township, his ultimate suggestion was for the Township to amend the
Zoning Ordinance to address the wedding barn issue by proceeding with Ordinance
Nos. 2 and 3, with some revisions. (R.R. at 152a-55a, 162a-64a.)
Because the Wimers showed that the Ordinance totally excluded wedding
barns as a permitted use, the burden shifted to the Township to show, with evidence,
that the exclusion bore “a substantial relationship to the public health, safety, morality,
or welfare.” Township of Exeter v. Zoning Hearing Board of Exeter Township, 962
A.2d 653, 661 (Pa. 2009).
When courts examine a zoning ordinance that fails to permit
a particular lawful use throughout a municipality, the
defending municipality must present evidence to support the
ban of the use throughout the municipality, and not simply
rely upon evidence demonstrating only that health, safety,
and welfare concerns support the prohibition on the
particular sites upon which an applicant proposes to develop
22
or construct the prohibited use. See Exeter Twp., 962 A.2d
at 653 (“[A] blanket prohibition without justification cannot
pass constitutional muster.”); see also Application of Friday,
381 A.2d 504, 507 (Pa. Cmwlth. 1978) (en banc) (holding
site suitability irrelevant to question of constitutional validity
of municipality-wide use prohibition).
In re Bartkowski Investment Group, Inc., 106 A.3d 230, 240 (Pa. Cmwlth. 2014).
Here, as the trial court observed, the Township did not offer any evidence
that the proposed use could pose a threat to the public health, safety and welfare. To
the contrary, the Township appeared to concede the opposite, by proposing that the
Board amend the Zoning Ordinance to permit such a use, albeit with limitations.
Accordingly, the trial court did not err in holding that the Zoning Ordinance was
unconstitutionally exclusionary in light of the lack of evidence from the Township
demonstrating the exclusion bore a relationship to the health, safety, or welfare of the
public.
With regard to fashioning relief, section 1006-A(c) states,
If the court finds that an ordinance or map, or a decision or order
thereunder, which has been brought up for review unlawfully
prevents or restricts a development or use which has been described
by the landowner through plans and other materials submitted to
the governing body, agency or officer of the municipality whose
action or failure to act is in question on the appeal, it may order the
described development or use approved as to all elements or it may
order it approved as to some elements and refer other elements to
the governing body, agency or officer having jurisdiction thereof
for further proceedings, including the adoption of alternative
restrictions, in accordance with the court’s opinion and order.
53 P.S. §11006-A(c) (emphasis added).12 In H.R. Miller Company v. Board of
Supervisors of Lancaster Township, 605 A.2d 321, 325 n.5 (Pa. 1992), the Supreme
Court stated that, in the case of a de jure exclusion, “[t]he sole remedy is to allow the
12
Section 1006-A(c) of the MPC was added by the Act of December 21, 1988, P.L. 1329, 53
P.S. §11006–A(c).
23
use somewhere, and under Casey and Section 1006-A(c) of the [MPC] . . . , the
successful litigant must receive that benefit in the form of at least partial approval of
the proposal.”
Further,
While approval of a challenger’s plan is not automatic but
must be predicated on the suitability of the proposed site and
various health and safety considerations, the [Supreme]
Court specifically held that a zoning provision adopted by a
municipality which cures the constitutional infirmity but
which was not considered prior to the filing of the challenge
to the zoning ordinance, may not be given effect for purposes
of fashioning the appropriate relief to be awarded to the
successful challenger. Thus, if a governing body determines
that its ordinance is defective, because it totally prohibits the
use proposed by the challenging landowner, then the
governing body must permit the challenging landowner to
develop his land as proposed in the plans submitted with the
challenge, provided, of course, that what is submitted is
reasonable, and not injurious to the public health, safety and
welfare and morals.
Adams Outdoor Advertising, Ltd. v. Hanover Township Zoning Hearing Board, 633
A.2d 240, 245 (Pa. Cmwlth. 1993) (internal citation omitted).
In the present case, the trial court, noting the Township’s failure to present
any evidence that the proposed use posed a threat to public health, safety, or welfare,
determined it was appropriate to permit the Wimers to use their Property in accordance
with the terms of the proposed curative amendment, given that “use as a wedding barn
in [the] Township, where the number of wedding-type events is unlimited and the
number of guests at the facility is limited to 300[,] is entirely reasonable.” (Trial court
op. at 18.) We cannot conclude that this relief was an error of law or abuse of
discretion. See Adams Outdoor, 663 A.2d at 246 (holding that challengers should have
been permitted to develop their property as proposed, regardless of how the land was
24
presently zoned because “the Township produced no evidence that would show that
the proposed [use] would be injurious to the public health, safety and welfare of its
citizens”).
Although the Township argues the trial court should have granted the
Wimers only as much relief as was necessary to remove the constitutional defect, we
note that, under section 1006-A, a trial court’s power to fashion appropriate relief for
the successful challenger of a zoning ordinance is both “broad and discretionary.” In
re Bartkowski, 106 A.3d at 248 (emphasis in original). While the Township observes
that the Wimers were not “guaranteed an absolute right to develop in the specific way
they have proposed,” the Township has not demonstrated that the trial court’s remedy
applying the terms of the proposed curative amendment solely to the Wimers’ Property,
while requiring compliance with all other applicable ordinances not addressed in the
curative amendment, was an abuse of discretion. (Township’s brief at 22.)
4. Substantial Evidence for Board’s Decision
The Township argues the trial court erred in finding there was not
substantial evidence to support the Board’s finding that the Zoning Ordinance was not
exclusionary. In support, the Township cites the fact that the Five Fillies barn was
permitted to operate a wedding barn in the Township via special exception, with
conditions, prior to the Wimers’ challenge. The Township asserts that, if the Wimers
desired to engage in a similar use on their property, they should have followed the same
process by seeking a special exception. The Township contends that the trial court
substituted its own judgment for that of the Board when it stated that the Five Fillies
barn special exception was “an aberration” and concluded that the Wimers’ use was
excluded under the Zoning Ordinance.
25
We disagree. The mere fact that another operation was able to obtain a
special exception permitting it to operate a wedding barn did not change the fact that
the Zoning Ordinance did not permit the use proposed by the Wimers when they filed
their challenge. Thus, the presence of Five Fillies barn in the county did not operate to
cure or invalidate the Wimers’ challenge to the contents of the Zoning Ordinance.
5. Abuse of Discretion and Supplementation of the Record
Finally, the Township argues the trial court erred in not permitting the
Township to further supplement the record. The Township indicates it sought to open
the record in order to permit additional testimony regarding issues of mootness and the
pending ordinance doctrine and that, because those are issues on appeal, the trial court
abused its discretion.
Section 1005-A of the MPC states, “If upon motion, it is shown that proper
consideration of the land use appeal requires the presentation of additional evidence, a
judge of the court may hold a hearing to receive additional evidence . . . .” 53 P.S.
§11005-A (emphasis added).13 “The question of whether presentation of additional
evidence is to be permitted is a matter within the sound discretion of the trial court.”
Caln Nether, 840 A.2d at 498. “A [trial court] faces compulsion to hear additional
evidence in a zoning case only where the party seeking the hearing demonstrates that
the record is incomplete because the party was denied an opportunity to be heard fully,
or because relevant testimony was offered and excluded.” Eastern Consolidation &
13
Section 1005 of the MPC was added by Act of December 21, 1988, P.L. 1329.
26
Distribution Services, Inc. v. Board of Commissioners of Hampden Township, 701
A.2d 621, 624 (Pa. Cmwlth. 1997) (internal quotation marks omitted).
Here, the trial court reasoned that it would open the record insofar as it
would permit the Township to submit a certified copy of Ordinance No. 5 of 2017,
reasoning that the Ordinance was not available for submission into the record during
the hearing before the Board. The trial court denied the Township’s motion in all other
respects, however, reasoning that it was unnecessary as the Township had the
opportunity to be fully heard before the Board and there was no indication in the record
that the Township sought to present additional evidence or testimony.
We agree. The Township does not explain why it was unable to offer
testimony or evidence regarding mootness or the pending ordinance doctrine during
the hearing before the Board. Therefore, the trial court did not abuse its discretion in
denying the Township’s motion in that respect.
Conclusion
In conclusion, we hold that the trial court did not err in finding that the
Zoning Ordinance was unconstitutional in that it totally excluded the use of wedding
barns in the municipality, despite the fact that another entity was running a similar
business by means of special exception. Further, we agree that the Township did not
prove a substantial relationship between the exclusion and the public health, safety,
morality, or general welfare. In light of the lack of that evidence, the trial court did not
abuse its discretion in fashioning a remedy permitting the Wimers to use their Property
in accordance with the terms of the proposed curative amendment. Additionally, we
hold that the trial court did not err in determining that the matter was not moot or in
27
refusing to reopen the record to permit the Township to present additional evidence.
The order of the trial court is hereby affirmed.
________________________________
PATRICIA A. McCULLOUGH, Judge
28
IN THE COMMONWEALTH COURT OF PENNSYLVANIA
Wimer Realty, LLC; Wimer Holdings :
Corporation; and Richard G. Wimer Jr. :
and Jody Wimer, husband and wife, :
: No. 656 C.D. 2018
v. :
:
Township of Wilmington, :
Appellant :
ORDER
AND NOW, this 27th day of March, 2019, the order of the Court of
Common Pleas of Lawrence County, dated April 13, 2018, is hereby affirmed.
________________________________
PATRICIA A. McCULLOUGH, Judge