Abington Little League, Inc. v. Glenburn Twp. ZHB ~ Appeal of: D. Druck ( 2023 )


Menu:
  •           IN THE COMMONWEALTH COURT OF PENNSYLVANIA
    Abington Little League, Inc.        :          CASES CONSOLIDATED
    :
    v.                      :          No. 895 C.D. 2021
    :
    Glenburn Township Zoning Hearing :
    Board                               :
    :
    Appeal of: David Druck, Marilyn     :
    Druck, Charles Sansky, Lynn Sansky, :
    Gerard O’Sullivan, Cara O’Sullivan, :
    and Marilyn Costa                   :
    Abington Little League, Inc.,           :
    Appellant      :
    :
    v.                         :      No. 925 C.D. 2021
    :      Argued: December 15, 2022
    Glenburn Township Zoning                :
    Hearing Board                           :
    BEFORE:      HONORABLE RENÉE COHN JUBELIRER, President Judge
    HONORABLE LORI A. DUMAS, Judge
    HONORABLE MARY HANNAH LEAVITT, Senior Judge
    OPINION NOT REPORTED
    MEMORANDUM OPINION
    BY SENIOR JUDGE LEAVITT                                FILED: March 7, 2023
    David Druck, Marilyn Druck, Charles Sansky, Lynn Sansky, Gerard
    O’Sullivan, Cara O’Sullivan, and Marilyn Costa (collectively, Objectors) have
    appealed an order of the Court of Common Pleas of Lackawanna County (trial court)
    that reversed a decision of the Glenburn Township Zoning Hearing Board (Zoning
    Board or Zoning Hearing Board) to deny Abington Little League, Inc. (Little League
    or Abington) a special exception for the installation of lighting at two of its baseball
    fields, along with a sound system. In reversing the Zoning Board, the trial court
    imposed six conditions on the special exception that limited the hours that the
    lighting and sound system could be used. Little League, designated as cross-
    appellant, has appealed those conditions.1 After review, we affirm the trial court’s
    decision on the special exception and reverse the trial court’s imposition of
    conditions on Little League’s use of the lights and sound system.
    Background
    Little League is a non-profit corporation that owns the Ackerly Fields
    Complex (Ackerly Fields), approximately 30 acres in size. Ackerly Fields consists
    of five baseball fields, dugouts, batting cages, a concession stand, a playground, an
    equipment shed, bleachers, parking facilities, a walking trail, and upgraded sewage
    disposal facilities. Portions of the complex remain undeveloped. Ackerly Fields is
    located in the M-1 District, Light Manufacturing. GLENBURN TOWNSHIP ZONING
    ORDINANCE, §201.1 (December 2003) (ZONING ORDINANCE); Reproduced Record
    at 80 (R.R.___).2 The intent of the M-1 District is stated as follows:
    Based on location, existing uses and facilities, and the
    relationship to other land uses, to reserve those areas in the
    Township best suited for manufacturing and industry, uses with
    potential for greater community impact, and other offensive uses.
    ZONING ORDINANCE, §201.2; R.R. 81. The Zoning Board described Ackerly Fields
    as “a grandfathered use in an M-1 zoning district.”                       Zoning Board Remand
    Adjudication, 4/1/2019, at 6; R.R. 57.
    1
    Objectors’ and Little League’s respective appeals were consolidated by Order of this Court dated
    January 20, 2022.
    2
    Rule 2173 of the Pennsylvania Rules of Appellate Procedure specifies: “[T]he pages of . . . the
    reproduced record . . . shall be numbered separately in Arabic figures . . . thus 1, 2, 3, etc., followed
    in the reproduced record by a small a, thus 1a, 2a, 3a, etc.” PA. R.A.P. 2173. Because Objectors’
    Reproduced Record page numbers are not followed by a small “a,” for ease of reference, this
    opinion refers to the reproduced record pages as numbered by Objectors.
    2
    In 2017, Little League sought a special exception from the Zoning
    Board to install lights on two of its five fields. Little League explained that the lights
    would be used for night games during the regular spring season, which runs from
    April through June. The lights would also be used for All-Star games one or two
    nights per week in June and July, with three games per week possible but unlikely.
    Finally, Little League would use the lights during Fall Ball, which occurs in
    September and October.           Little League does not use its baseball fields from
    November to March.
    In its application to the Zoning Board, Little League requested (1) a
    special exception because an outdoor lighting installation at a baseball field is not a
    use specifically allowed or denied in any zoning district;3 (2) an interpretation of the
    outdoor lighting provisions in the Zoning Ordinance; and (3) in the alternative, a
    dimensional variance from the height limitation on the lighting poles should the
    Zoning Ordinance be construed to impose such a limitation. Little League sought to
    install six lighting poles on one of its larger fields and four lighting poles on one of
    its smaller fields. The poles on the larger field would be between 60 and 80 feet
    high, and the poles on the smaller field would be between 60 and 70 feet high. The
    light poles will use LED lights that will be directed downward to focus on the fields.
    The chosen lighting technology eliminates any glare and prevents almost all light
    from spilling beyond Little League property borders.
    The Zoning Board referred the matter to the Township’s Planning
    Commission, which considered the special exception at a meeting on May 25, 2017.
    At the meeting, Little League presented testimony from its president, Ryan
    3
    The Zoning Ordinance provides that “[w]henever a use is neither specifically permitted nor
    specifically denied in any zoning district established under [the Zoning Ordinance] and an
    application is made to the Zoning Officer for such use, the application shall be submitted to the
    Zoning Hearing Board which shall have the authority to permit the use or deny the use as a special
    exception.” ZONING ORDINANCE, §301.2A; R.R. 83.
    3
    Mitvalsky, and Robert Zoeller, a technical consultant with Musco Sports Lighting,
    an international company that specializes in lighting for sports facilities and
    stadiums. Zoeller is a member of the Illumination Engineering Society of North
    America and qualified as a lighting expert in six states. Zoeller testified that Little
    League Baseball guidelines are more stringent than those of the Illumination
    Engineering Society of North America, and Little League’s proposal for Ackerly
    Fields meets the more stringent guidelines.
    The Planning Commission voted unanimously to recommend denial of
    Little League’s request for a special exception. The Planning Commission believed
    the Zoning Board lacked jurisdiction to consider Little League’s application because
    baseball fields are a use permitted in a zoning district where private recreational
    facilities are authorized, and lighting is an accessory use to the principal use of a
    recreational facility.4 Accordingly, the Planning Commission determined Little
    League’s proposed lighting installation was not a use that could be permitted as a
    special exception. It also found that Little League’s proposed light poles were not
    compatible with the existing, mainly residential, use in the surrounding area. As
    such, the proposal was not consistent with the purpose and intent of the Zoning
    Ordinance. In regard to the alternate request for a variance from the 25-foot height
    limitations, the Planning Commission found that Little League did not prove its
    proposal constituted the minimum variance needed.
    4
    The Zoning Ordinance defines Private Recreational Facilities as follows:
    Outdoor or indoor areas of structures, operated by private non-profit or private
    commercial entities, open to the public, which may contain entertainment and
    amusement devices or attractions, including but not limited to picnic groves, animal
    farms, zoological parks, tennis and racquetball courts, ski areas, miniature golf
    courses, golf driving ranges, animal racing tracks, and the like, but excluding golf
    courses, theaters, public parks and playgrounds.
    ZONING ORDINANCE, §1003 (Definitions); R.R. 235.
    4
    Thereafter, the Zoning Board held hearings on July 10, and August 16,
    2017. Essentially adopting the Planning Commission’s reasoning, the Zoning Board
    held that it did not have jurisdiction to grant a special exception request but, in any
    case, the grant of a special exception was not appropriate. The Zoning Board denied
    Little League’s request for an interpretation of the lighting provision in the Zoning
    Ordinance, finding that Little League satisfied some, but not all, of the applicable
    standards. Finally, the Zoning Board held that Little League had not sustained its
    burden for a variance and denied this request as well.
    Little League appealed the Zoning Board’s decision to the trial court,
    which heard oral argument on February 2, 2018. On September 18, 2018, the trial
    court sustained Little League’s appeal and remanded the matter to the Zoning Board.
    Noting that a private ballfield is not included in, or excluded from, the
    Zoning Ordinance’s definition of private recreational facilities, the trial court
    concluded that the Zoning Board erred in holding that it lacked jurisdiction over the
    special exception application. On the merits, the trial court also determined that the
    Zoning Board erred in concluding that Little League’s proposed outdoor lighting
    project did not comply with Sections 601.8 E. (Nuisances) and 601.8 F. (Height) of
    the Zoning Ordinance.
    The Zoning Ordinance states that the “standards of the Illuminating
    Engineering Society shall be used” for the design of a lighting installation. ZONING
    ORDINANCE, §601.8; R.R. 159. The trial court identified inconsistencies both in the
    Zoning Ordinance provisions on lighting standards and in the Zoning Board’s
    analysis thereof. The trial court explained as follows:
    So on the one hand, we have an Ordinance requiring proposed
    projects to comply with specified standards and a project which
    complies with those standards. On the other hand, we have a
    conclusion of the Zoning Board that a project complying with
    specifically mandated standards nonetheless violates the same
    5
    Ordinance. Additionally, the Board found that Abington’s
    proposal satisfied the requirements for shielding (601.8 C.) and
    glare (601.8 D.) (Findings and Conclusions, p. 35) but at the
    same time was somehow inadequate with respect to shielding
    (601.8 E. Nuisances). Additionally, Abington’s proposal called
    for light standards ranging in height from 60-80 feet while the
    Ordinance lists a maximum height of light standards at 25 feet
    (with exceptions that do not apply here (601.8 F.)). So in effect,
    the standards mandated by the Ordinance are in turn negated by
    the Ordinance.
    Trial Court Op., 9/18/2018, at 11; R.R. 47 (emphasis added). These inconsistencies
    in the Zoning Ordinance led the trial court to conclude that there was no applicable
    height limitation and, thus, a variance was not needed. It explained:
    Since Abington employed the standards of the Illuminating
    Engineering Society, as it was required to do by the Zoning
    Ordinance, see Section 601.8 Lighting and Glare, and its
    proposal was consistent with the mandated standards with
    respect to the height of the poles, was a variance even necessary?
    We conclude that it was not.
    Trial Court Op., 9/18/2018, at 12-13; R.R. 48-49. The trial court remanded the
    matter to the Zoning Board for further proceedings consistent with its opinion.
    On remand, the Zoning Board conducted hearings over two days. On
    January 9, 2019, Mitvalsky and Zoeller again testified. In addition, Little League
    presented the testimony of Sue Savitski, a traffic engineer; Chris O’Boyle, a
    professional realtor and Little League board member; Scott Douglas Allen, a
    registered architect; and Robert Naegele, a civil engineer. On February 18, 2019,
    real estate appraiser Leonard Silvestri and Thomas Shepstone, a planning consultant,
    testified for Objectors, as did two Objectors, Lynn Sansky and David Druck. In
    rebuttal, Naegele testified.
    Zoeller testified that Little League’s proposal would not result in any
    light spillage beyond Ackerly Fields. Savitsky, who formerly worked for the
    Pennsylvania Department of Transportation performing traffic studies, testified that
    6
    there would be no significant impact on traffic caused by night games. O’Boyle
    testified that Little League’s presence has had a positive effect on property values in
    the community, and that effect has continued even while Little League’s special
    exception request has been pending. Allen testified that Little League’s proposed
    use was similar to, and compatible with, other conditional uses listed for the M-1
    Zoning District. Naegele testified that the storm water drainage was adequate and
    that the proposed lighting was a use consistent with, and even more desirable than,
    the other conditional uses authorized in the M-1 Zoning District. These uses range
    from bus terminals, detention facilities, and slaughterhouses, to solid waste facilities.
    See ZONING ORDINANCE §301.3; R.R. 84-87.
    For Objectors, Silvestri, a real estate appraiser, testified that the lights
    may diminish property values in the nearby residential area by anywhere between
    5% to 25%, given the potential for light trespass or spillover. Shepstone opined that
    Little League did not qualify for a special exception because its proposed use would
    not “be in harmony with the purposes, goals, objectives and standards of [the]
    Ordinance and other ordinances of the Township.” ZONING ORDINANCE, §1108.4
    (Standards and Criteria); R.R. 256.            He recommended that a safety and
    environmental impact study be done. Lynn Sansky, who owns a home abutting the
    Little League property, testified that she can hear the games and see the fields from
    her deck. She expressed concern that her home will lose value if Little League’s
    request were to be approved. David Druck testified about similar concerns and
    added that he does not want to hear Little League’s night games. William Wicks, a
    neighborhood homeowner not affiliated with any party to the present action, testified
    that he was concerned about a reduction in the value of his property should Little
    League’s request be approved.
    7
    On April 1, 2019, the Zoning Board again denied Little League a
    special exception, and Little League appealed to the trial court. On July 20, 2021,
    the trial court reversed the Zoning Board’s remand adjudication, thereby allowing
    the installation of lighting, along with the accompanying sound system, at two of
    Little League’s five baseball fields.            In addition, the trial court imposed six
    conditions on the installation of lighting and a sound system.5
    Objectors and Little League each appealed to this Court.6
    5
    The trial court’s order stated as follows:
    1. Abington Little League, Inc. shall be permitted to install lighting on the two
    baseball fields identified in its application and more fully described in the testimony
    before the Glenburn Township Zoning Hearing Board, together with an
    accompanying sound system;
    2. Abington Little League, Inc. shall take the necessary steps to plant additional
    trees, shrubs and other landscaping around the fields where the lighting will be
    installed to be adequate and sufficient to provide a visual and/or aural buffer
    between the Little League’s property and the neighbors’ properties;
    3. The lighting and sound systems shall not be utilized on Sundays;
    4. The lighting system may be used during the months of May, June, September
    and October and shall cease operation no later than 8:00 p.m. Monday through
    Thursday, and 9:30 p.m. on Friday and Saturday;
    5. The lighting system may be used no more than twice weekly from Monday
    through Thursday during the months of May, June, September and October;
    6. The sound system may be utilized for All-Star games and tournaments during
    June and July, but not for regular season games;
    7. The lighting system will never be utilized during the months of January,
    February, March, November and December.
    Trial Court Op., 7/20/2021, at 32-33; R.R. 32-33.
    6
    “Where, as here, the trial court does not take additional evidence, this Court’s review determines
    whether the Zoning Board committed an abuse of discretion or an error of law. An abuse of
    discretion will be found where the Zoning Board’s findings of fact are not supported by substantial
    evidence.” Frederick v. Allegheny Township Zoning Hearing Board, 
    196 A.3d 677
    , 686 n.13 (Pa.
    Cmwlth. 2018) (citation omitted).
    8
    Appeal
    In their appeal, Objectors have raised three issues. First, they contend
    that Little League did not prove that its proposed use does not conflict with the intent
    of the M-1 Zoning District or the general purpose and intent of the Zoning
    Ordinance. Second, they contend that Little League did not prove that its proposed
    use of outdoor sports lighting is similar to and compatible with the conditional uses
    expressly allowed in the M-1 Zoning District. Third, they contend that assuming
    arguendo Little League established a basis for a special exception, the Zoning Board
    correctly held that the proposed outdoor lighting would be detrimental to the health,
    safety and welfare of the surrounding residential community, and the trial court erred
    in otherwise holding.
    In its appeal, Little League presents one issue for this Court’s review.
    It contends that the trial court erred and abused its discretion in setting limits on
    Little League’s use of the lights and sound system.
    Analysis
    I.
    In their appeal, Objectors first argue that Little League did not meet its
    burden under Section 301.2 of the Zoning Ordinance of proving that its proposed
    use does not conflict with the intent of the M-1 District and the general purpose of
    the Zoning Ordinance. These standards are drawn from Section 301.2(B) of the
    Zoning Ordinance, which requires the applicant for a special exception to show the
    following:
    B. Findings - The use may be permitted only if the Zoning Board
    makes all of the following findings; and, the burden of proof shall
    be upon the applicant:
    1. The use is similar to and compatible with the uses
    listed for the subject zoning district by the Schedule
    Regulations.
    9
    2. The use in no way conflicts with the intent of the
    zoning district and the general purpose and intent
    of this Zoning Ordinance.
    3. The use is not permitted in any other zoning
    district.
    ZONING ORDINANCE, §301.2(B); R.R. 83 (emphasis added). Objectors’ first issue
    turns on the second requirement – the intent of the M-1 District and the general
    purpose of the Zoning Ordinance. Id.
    In response, Little League argues that its burden was to satisfy the
    objective criteria for the conditional use, which then establishes a “presumption []
    that the use is consistent with the health, safety and general welfare of the
    community.” Freedom Healthcare Services, Inc. v. Zoning Hearing Board of City
    of New Castle, 
    983 A.2d 1286
    , 1291 (Pa. Cmwlth. 2009). It is not disputed that
    Little League satisfied the objective criteria in the Zoning Ordinance for the
    installation of outdoor lighting. As the trial court noted: “The [Zoning] Board did
    conclude that the standards of the Illuminating Engineering Society have been met
    with respect to [] Little League’s proposal.” Trial Court Op., 7/20/2021, at 25; R.R.
    25. Little League argues that because the Zoning Ordinance requires applicants to
    show that the proposed use is in harmony with “the general purpose and intent of
    [the] Zoning Ordinance,” it is too vague to be enforceable. It contends that under
    Bray v. Zoning Board of Adjustment, 
    410 A.2d 909
    , 912 (Pa. Cmwlth. 1980), a vague
    requirement of this type requires the opposition to the special exception to bear the
    burden of persuasion and proof. The Zoning Board erroneously required Little
    League to carry this burden. In any case, Little League argues that the trial court
    correctly held that the Zoning Board’s adjudication was unsupported by the record
    or any cogent legal analysis.
    With regard to the intent of the M-1 District, the Zoning Ordinance
    states as follows:
    10
    M-1 Light Manufacturing[:] Based on location, existing uses and
    facilities, and the relationship to other land uses, to reserve those
    areas in the Township best suited for manufacturing and industry,
    uses with potential for greater community impact, and other
    offensive uses.
    ZONING ORDINANCE, §201.2; R.R. 81 (emphasis added). The general intent and
    purpose of the Zoning Ordinance is stated as follows:
    This Ordinance is adopted in accordance with an overall land use
    control program and with consideration for the character of the
    municipality, its various parts and the suitability of the various
    parts for particular uses and structures. This Ordinance is
    enacted for the following purposes:
    A. To promote, protect and facilitate one or more of
    the following: the public health, safety, morals,
    general welfare; coordinated and practical
    community development; density of population; . .
    . disaster evacuation, . . . the provisions of adequate
    light and air; police protection; vehicle parking and
    loading space; transportation; . . . reliable, safe and
    adequate water supplies; safe and adequate
    sewerage disposal, . . . and other purposes set forth
    in the Pennsylvania Municipalities Planning Code
    [(MPC)].[7]
    B. To prevent one or more of the following:
    overcrowding of land, . . . blight, danger and
    congestion in travel and transportation, loss of
    health, life or property from fire, flood, panic or
    other dangers.
    ZONING ORDINANCE, §102; R.R. 77 (emphasis added). In short, the general purpose
    of the Zoning Ordinance is sometimes promotional and other times preventative.
    In looking to “intent” and “purpose,” the Zoning Board focused on
    whether outdoor lighting of a sports field was similar to, and compatible with, the
    conditional uses listed for the M-1 District, not whether it conflicted with the Zoning
    7
    Act of July 31, 1968, P.L. 805, as amended, 53 P.S. §§10101-11202.
    11
    Ordinance’s stated intent for the M-1 District. The stated intent of the M-1 District
    is to provide an area for “uses with potential for greater community impact[] and
    other offensive uses.” ZONING ORDINANCE, §201.2; R.R. 81.
    The trial court concluded that the Zoning Board’s factual findings about
    the adverse impact from the proposed lighting system actually supported the
    conclusion that this use belonged in the M-1 District. Specifically, the Zoning Board
    found that “baseball under the lights has the potential for ‘greater community
    impact’ and, therefore, will be ‘offensive’ because of glare, noise and traffic in the
    evenings on which games are played.” Trial Court Op., 7/20/2021, at 9; R.R. 9
    (quoting Zoning Board Remand Adjudication, 4/1/2019, at 10; R.R. 61). Given the
    Zoning Board’s finding on the “offense” and “greater community impact caused” by
    “baseball under the lights,” the trial court concluded that “these fields are exactly
    where they ought to be,” i.e., in the M-1 District. Trial Court Op., 7/20/2021, at 9;
    R.R. 9.   The M-1 District is specifically intended for “offensive uses.” ZONING
    ORDINANCE, §201.2; R.R. 81.
    As to the general purpose and intent of the Zoning Ordinance, ZONING
    ORDINANCE, §102(A), the Zoning Board concluded that public health, safety,
    general welfare, community development, density of population, adequate light and
    air, police protection, vehicle parking, transportation, and natural resources would
    be adversely impacted by the installation of Little League’s lighting. Zoning Board
    Remand Adjudication, 4/1/2019, at 7-11; R.R. 58-62. The trial court rejected this
    conclusion as lacking any basis in the record. It explained as follows:
    The proposed use has zero impact on the density of population
    and has nothing to do with community development. Likewise,
    there is no additional impact on light or air, parking or
    transportation or natural resources. Any impact this activity
    visits is extant. All that is proposed is the addition of some
    lighting on two fields for the purposes of playing baseball on a
    limited number of evenings. Baseball has been played on these
    12
    fields for years. Any impact it has had on public safety, general
    welfare, community development, density of population,
    adequate light and air, police protection, vehicle parking,
    transportation and natural resources has likewise been extant.
    Trial Court Op., 7/20/2021, at 7-8; R.R. 7-8 (emphasis added). In short, the absence
    of daylight has little or no impact on the matters sought to be promoted by the Zoning
    Ordinance.
    As to the “preventions” set forth in Section 102(B) of the Zoning
    Ordinance, the trial court rejected the Zoning Board’s conclusion that it was
    necessary to deny the special exception in order to prevent overcrowding of land,
    danger and congestion in travel, and loss of property from other dangers. The trial
    court first noted that the Zoning Board did not explain how sports lighting relates to
    overcrowding, especially since lighting would be limited to two of the five baseball
    fields. Second, because there are fewer games in the evening, the presence of lights
    could not have any effect on traffic congestion. Third, the Zoning Board did not
    explain how “loss of property from other dangers” would result from baseball under
    the lights or even what those other dangers could be. Trial Court Op., 7/20/2021, at
    9-10; R.R. 9-10.
    We discern no error in the trial court’s analysis reversing the Zoning
    Board’s conclusion that a lighted baseball field would deviate from the intent of the
    M-1 District or the general purpose of the Zoning Ordinance. We agree with the
    trial court that there was no support in the record for the Zoning Board’s legally
    erroneous conclusions.8 The Zoning Board erred and abused its discretion in holding
    8
    Little League argues that under Bray, 
    410 A.2d 909
    , Section 301.2(B) is vague, and Objectors
    had the burden of coming forward with the evidence. The trial court did not specify which party
    bore the burden of proof. Rather, the trial court determined that the Zoning Board erred by
    reaching conclusions that were based on a misapplication of the law and a lack of the requisite
    support in the record. Even if the Zoning Board incorrectly imposed the burden of proof on Little
    League, rather than Objectors, the outcome is the same.
    13
    that outdoor lighting of Little League’s baseball fields did not satisfy the stated intent
    for the M-1 District and general intent and purpose of the Zoning Ordinance.
    ZONING ORDINANCE, §301.2(B); R.R. 83.
    In their second issue, Objectors contend that Little League did not meet
    its burden of proving that its proposed outdoor sports lighting is similar to, and
    compatible with, the primary and conditional uses authorized in the M-1 District.
    They contend that the Zoning Board correctly concluded that the vehicles and light
    produced by the night use of the baseball fields would not be compatible with the
    primary use, i.e., forestry, or any of the conditional uses contemplated for the M-1
    District.
    The conditional uses authorized for the M-1 District are varied. They
    include:
    - Agricultural and food products processing
    - Bulk fuel storage facilities
    - Bus terminals
    - Construction contractors, including storage of heavy equipment
    - Crematoriums
    - Detention facilities
    - Junk yards
    - Manufacturing, light
    - Manufacturing and industry
    - Natural resources processing
    - Recyclable processing facilities
    - Recycling collection facilities, large
    - Slaughter houses
    - Solid waste facilities, commercial
    - Solid waste facilities, public
    - Solid waste staging areas
    - Truck terminals
    14
    - Warehouses
    ZONING ORDINANCE, §301.3; R.R. 87. The Zoning Board reasoned that none of the
    uses in this list “involve outdoor recreational activity at night, the use of 60-, 70- and
    80-foot lights, nighttime gatherings of children, parents and coaches, vehicular and
    pedestrian traffic, nighttime activity and noise.”            Zoning Board Remand
    Adjudication, 4/1/2019, at 7; R.R. 58. Therefore, the Zoning Board concluded that
    lighted baseball fields were incompatible with the conditional uses authorized in the
    M-1 District.
    The trial court rejected the Zoning Board’s rationale, noting that even
    a cursory review of the authorized conditional uses revealed the Zoning Board’s
    error. The trial court explained as follows:
    Indeed, it is difficult to imagine the allowed uses, for example,
    bus terminals, detention facilities, truck terminals, warehouses,
    recycling facilities, slaughterhouses and solid waste facilities
    (both commercial and public) operating in the absence of people,
    vehicles, pedestrians, light and noise, day and night. Moreover,
    there is nothing in the record to establish any numbers of people,
    children, vehicles, etc., expected with the proposed use in
    relation to the listed uses.
    Trial Court Op. at 6-7; R.R. 6-7 (emphasis in original). We agree.
    Bus terminals, detention facilities and truck terminals necessarily
    generate the presence of people, vehicles, pedestrians, light, and noise. They operate
    day and night. The record is silent on the number of people, children, vehicles, and
    pedestrians, or the amount of light and noise, generated by lighted baseball fields
    relative to the conditional uses allowed in the M-1 District. Simply, the Zoning
    Board’s findings in this regard are not supported by substantial evidence. As such,
    the Zoning Board erred and abused its discretion in concluding that Little League
    did not prove that its proposed use was similar to, or compatible with, the uses listed
    for the M-1 District.
    15
    In their third issue, Objectors argue that assuming arguendo that Little
    League established a right to a special exception, the Zoning Board properly
    concluded that the proposed use would be detrimental to the health, safety, and
    welfare of the surrounding community.          They argue that the trial court erred in
    otherwise holding.
    In granting a special exception, there must be a showing that the
    proposed use
    shall not result in a substantial or undue adverse effect on
    adjacent property, the character of the neighborhood, traffic
    conditions, parking, public improvements, public sites or rights-
    of-way, adjacent property values, or other matters affecting the
    public health, safety, and general welfare[.]
    ZONING ORDINANCE, §1108.4; R.R. 256 (emphasis added). The Zoning Board
    determined that lighted baseball fields would adversely affect the public health,
    safety, and the general welfare because there would be additional light, noise, dust,
    and people, during the nighttime hours, which could require more police, fire, and
    emergency services. Specifically, it reasoned as follows:
    The adverse effect on adjacent property will involve additional
    light, noise, dust, people and traffic at night, which are additional
    times which have not previously been used by [] Little League.
    There will be an undue adverse, [sic] effect on the character of
    the neighborhood. With two fields lit at nighttime by multiple
    light standards, some of which rise to 80 feet, there will be
    additional light, noise, dust, people and traffic. This will change
    the rural aesthetic of both the Township and the neighborhood .
    . . . [A]s codified in the Zoning Ordinance, the Township has a
    rural, subdued aesthetic which is particularly available at night.
    It provides a place where residents, like [Objectors] who
    testified, a place of quiet, dark, inactivity, calmness and
    solemnity. Youth baseball games at night on two fields are
    directly inapposite to and inconsistent with this calmness and
    solemnity.
    16
    Zoning Board Remand Adjudication, 4/1/2019, at 12-13; R.R. 63-64 (emphasis
    added).
    In reaching this conclusion, the Zoning Board rejected all of Little
    League’s evidence and accepted all the evidence of Objectors. The Zoning Board
    explained that “Mr. Allen, Mr. O’Boyle, and Mr. Naegele, while well intentioned
    and well spoken, have children in Little League currently, which affects the
    objectiveness of their opinions.” Zoning Board Remand Adjudication, 4/1/2019, at
    13; R.R. 64. By contrast, the Zoning Board found Silvestri’s opinion that real
    property values could fall anywhere from 5% to 25% persuasive over the opinion of
    Little League’s appraisal expert that the ballfields had a salutary impact on property
    values.     The Zoning Board characterized its decision as “objective” and
    “dispassionate.” Zoning Board Remand Adjudication, 4/1/2019, at 25; R.R. 76.
    The trial court rejected the Zoning Board’s characterization of its work
    as “objective,” noting that “[s]imply because the Zoning Board describes its decision
    as such does not make it so.” Trial Court Op., 7/20/2021, at 31; R.R. 31. The trial
    court acknowledged the prerogative of the Zoning Board to make credibility
    determinations.9 Nevertheless, the record must substantiate the Zoning Board’s
    credibility determinations. Here, the Zoning Board erred in crediting witnesses
    whose opinions lacked a foundation in the record.
    Where an expert opinion lacks a foundation in the record, it must be
    rejected as incompetent. Indeed, an expert opinion “is incompetent and may not be
    admitted into evidence if the expert’s opinion is based upon mere conjecture.”
    Hussey v. May Department Stores, Inc., 
    357 A.2d 635
    , 637 (Pa. Super. 1976); see
    also, e.g., Collins v. Hand, 
    246 A.2d 398
    , 404 (Pa. 1968) (“An expert cannot base
    9
    See Taliaferro v. Darby Township Zoning Hearing Board, 
    873 A.2d 807
    , 811 (Pa. Cmwlth. 2005)
    (stating that the zoning hearing board may reject testimony it finds lacking in credibility and may
    choose to believe one expert and not another).
    17
    his opinion upon facts which are not warranted by the record. No matter how skilled
    or experienced the witness may be, he will not be permitted to guess or to state a
    judgement based on mere conjecture.”); Somerset Welding and Steel v. Workers’
    Compensation Appeal Board (Lee), 
    650 A.2d 114
    , 118 (Pa. Cmwlth. 1994) (the
    supposed facts forming the basis of a medical expert’s opinion must be proven by
    competent evidence).
    Here, the Zoning Board credited the testimony of real estate appraiser
    Silvestri, even though he “offered no method in expressing his opinion about the
    rather broad range in diminution of values [he] applied” between 5% and 25%. Trial
    Court Op., 7/20/2021, at 29; R.R. 29 (emphasis added). Further, Silvestri conceded
    that he “did not do any appraisals on the properties.” Notes of Testimony (N.T.),
    2/18/2019, at 366, 370; R.R. 866, 870. He acknowledged that a full appraisal was
    necessary to assign a diminution in property value.       Silvestri did not address
    Zoeller’s testimony and expert report that the lights would not impact residential
    property values. Instead, Silvestri “in conclusory fashion,” offered “a wide range of
    potential diminution in value” for the neighboring properties, painting “with the
    broadest of brushes.” Trial Court Op., 7/20/2021, at 20; R.R. 20. When asked, for
    sake of comparison, about the potential impact of bus terminals, junk yards, and
    slaughterhouses on neighboring residential property values, Silvestri testified “I
    don’t have an opinion.” N.T. 363; R.R. 863.
    The trial court concluded that Objectors’ witnesses and experts
    established that they do not want Little League’s lights, but it is “not up to the
    neighbors” to decide. Trial Court Op., 7/20/2021, at 28; R.R. 28. They did not show,
    with probative evidence, that lighted baseball fields had an impact on property
    values that was greater than the impact of junk yards and slaughterhouses.
    We discern no error in the trial court’s analysis that the Zoning Board
    erred and abused its discretion in relying upon evidence that did not demonstrate
    18
    more than “unsubstantiated concerns or vague generalities[.]” Siya Real Estate LLC
    v. Allentown City Zoning Hearing Board, 
    210 A.3d 1152
    , 1160 (Pa. Cmwlth. 2019).
    Objectors had to show “a high degree of probability” that the lighted fields will
    adversely impact the health and safety of the community, and they did not. Marr
    Development Mifflinville, LLC v. Mifflin Township Zoning Hearing Board, 
    166 A.3d 479
    , 483 (Pa. Cmwlth. 2017). Objectors’ stated concerns about property values and
    aesthetics did not establish an adverse impact on the general welfare of the
    Township.
    We hold that the trial court properly rejected the Zoning Board’s
    adjudication as not supported by the record and based upon erroneous conclusions
    of law. The trial court issued its holding without addressing Little League’s
    contention that Objectors bore the burden of proving, with a high degree of
    probability, that approval of Little League’s application for a special exception was
    not in harmony with the intent and purposes of the Zoning Ordinance. Because we
    discern no error in the trial court’s conclusion that the Zoning Board’s findings of
    fact were not supported by substantial evidence and its legal conclusions erroneous,
    there is no need for us to decide Little League’s contention that Bray, 
    410 A.2d 909
    ,
    required the Zoning Board to place the burden of proof on Objectors.
    We affirm the order of the trial court that the Zoning Board erred and
    abused its discretion in denying Little League’s application for a special exception.
    II.
    In its appeal, Little League challenges the trial court’s conditions on the
    use of the lights and sound system. It contends that they are not supported by the
    record. Rather, the trial court imposed conditions in an effort to bring the “saga” to
    an end. Little League Brief at 38.
    The MPC authorizes the imposition of conditions upon the approval of
    a special exception. Section 912.1 of the MPC states as follows:
    19
    Where the governing body, in the zoning ordinance, has stated
    special exceptions to be granted or denied by the board pursuant
    to express standards and criteria, the board shall hear and decide
    requests for such special exceptions in accordance with such
    standards and criteria. In granting a special exception, the board
    may attach such reasonable conditions and safeguards, in
    addition to those expressed in the ordinance, as it may deem
    necessary to implement the purposes of this act and the zoning
    ordinance.
    53 P.S. §10912.1 (emphasis added). A zoning board’s conditions may be imposed
    to “mitigate any potential adverse impacts from the proposed use[.]” In re Maibach,
    LLC, 
    26 A.3d 1213
    , 1216 (Pa. Cmwlth. 2011). The MPC specifically authorizes
    the “governing body” of a municipality to impose conditions, but it does not
    authorize a court of common pleas to do so as part of a land use appeal.
    On the other hand, Section 1006-A(a) of the MPC does authorize the
    trial court to modify a zoning board “action, decision or order.”10 Here, because the
    Zoning Hearing Board denied the special exception requested by Little League, the
    trial court was not presented with a decision that imposed any conditions. As we
    have explained:
    Inasmuch as the adjudication of the Board was a denial of a
    special exception, the court could reverse the action of the Board,
    but it then had nothing before it to modify. We do not interpret
    the word “modify” in Section 1009[11] . . . to mean that the court
    10
    Added by the Act of December 21, 1988, P.L 1329. It states:
    In a land use appeal, the court shall have power to declare any ordinance or map
    invalid and set aside or modify any action, decision or order of the governing body,
    agency or officer of the municipality brought up on appeal.
    53 P.S. §11006-A(a) (emphasis added).
    11
    Section 1009 of the MPC, Act of July 31, 1968, P.L. 805, repealed by the Act of December 21,
    1988, P.L. 1329, provided, in relevant part, that on an appeal from a zoning board of adjustment:
    The final decision shall contain conclusions of law, and: (1) Where the appeal is
    from the decision of the board, the court may reverse, affirm or modify the decision
    appealed.
    20
    could reverse the Board’s denial and thereafter impose its own
    restrictions and conditions upon the special exception . . . . [I]t is
    the local zoning officials who have the knowledge of local
    circumstances who should establish the conditions to be applied
    to special exceptions.
    Butler v. Derr Flooring Company, 
    285 A.2d 538
    , 543 (Pa. Cmwlth. 1971) (emphasis
    added). In sum, the trial court’s power to “modify” does not include the power to
    impose its own conditions when it reverses a zoning board’s denial of a special
    exception.
    Here, the trial court reversed the determination of the Zoning Board.
    As such, there were no conditions in the Zoning Board adjudication for the court to
    “modify.” Moreover, the trial court was acting in its appellate capacity, reviewing
    the Zoning Board’s decision for error of law. The record lacked any factual evidence
    that would support the landscaping requirements and limits on hours of use as
    conditions on the special exceptions that were imposed by the trial court.
    For these reasons, we reverse the trial court’s imposition of conditions.
    Conclusion
    For all of the above reasons, the trial court’s order is affirmed, in part,
    and reversed, in part. It is affirmed to the extent it reverses the Zoning Board’s
    denial of Little League’s Application for Special Exception. It is reversed to the
    extent it imposes conditions on Little League’s proposed use.
    ____________________________________________
    MARY HANNAH LEAVITT, President Judge Emerita
    formerly 53 P.S. §11009. Section 1006-A(a) of the MPC replaced former Section 1009 of the
    MPC.
    21
    IN THE COMMONWEALTH COURT OF PENNSYLVANIA
    Abington Little League, Inc.        :          CASES CONSOLIDATED
    :
    v.                      :          No. 895 C.D. 2021
    :
    Glenburn Township Zoning Hearing :
    Board                               :
    :
    Appeal of: David Druck, Marilyn     :
    Druck, Charles Sansky, Lynn Sansky, :
    Gerard O’Sullivan, Cara O’Sullivan, :
    and Marilyn Costa                   :
    Abington Little League, Inc.,           :
    Appellant      :
    :
    v.                         :      No. 925 C.D. 2021
    :
    Glenburn Township Zoning                :
    Hearing Board                           :
    ORDER
    AND NOW, this 7th day of March, 2023, the July 20, 2021, Order of
    the Lackawanna County Common Pleas Court is AFFIRMED in part and
    REVERSED in part. The Order is affirmed to the extent it reverses the Glenburn
    Township Zoning Hearing Board’s denial of Abington Little League, Inc.’s
    Application for Special Exception. The Order is reversed to the extent it imposes
    conditions on Abington Little League, Inc.’s use of its facilities.
    ____________________________________________
    MARY HANNAH LEAVITT, President Judge Emerita