Jeffrey Depolo v. Tredyffrin Township Board of S , 835 F.3d 381 ( 2016 )


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  •                                    PRECEDENTIAL
    UNITED STATES COURT OF APPEALS
    FOR THE THIRD CIRCUIT
    _____________
    No. 15-2495
    _____________
    JEFFREY DePolo,
    Appellant
    v.
    BOARD OF SUPERVISORS TREDYFFRIN
    TOWNSHIP; MICHAEL C. HEABERG; KRISTEN
    K. MAYOCK; PAUL OLSON; EVELYN RICHTER;
    JOHN P. DIBUONAVENTURO; MARK FREED;
    MURPH WYSOCKI, In their capacities as members
    of the Board of Supervisors of Tredyffrin Township;
    TREDYFFRIN TOWNSHIP ZONING HEARING
    BOARD OF APPEALS; ARNOLD BORISH;
    DANIEL MCLAUGHLIN; NEILL KLING, in their
    capacities as members of the Zoning Heard Board of
    Appeals of Tredyffrin Township
    SCHUYLKILL TOWNSHIP; PAUL ADACK;
    PATRICIA ADACK; MARK SAMUELS;
    KIMBERLY SAMUELS; GEORGE RANDOLPH;
    SUZANNE RANDOLPH
    (Intervenors in D.C.)
    ________________
    Appeal from the United States District Court
    for the Eastern District of Pennsylvania
    (Civil Action No. 2-14-cv-06689)
    District Judge: Stewart Dalzell
    ________________
    Argued January 12, 2016
    Before: McKEE, Chief Judge, AMBRO, and SCIRICA,
    Circuit Judges
    (Opinion filed: August 30, 2016)
    Robert B. Famiglio, Esq.
    Famiglio & Associates
    P.O. Box 1999
    Media, PA 19063
    Fred Hopengarten, Esq. (ARGUED)
    6 Willarch Road
    Lincoln, MA 01773
    Counsel for Appellant
    Maureen M. McBride, Esq. (ARGUED)
    Lamb McErlane
    24 East Market Street
    P.O. Box 565
    West Chester, PA 19381
    Counsel for Appellee Tredyffrin Township
    Board of Supervisors, et al
    Stacey L. Fuller, Esq.
    John Larkin, Esq. (ARGUED)
    Gawthrop Greenwood
    17 East Gay Street
    Suite 100
    West Chester, PA 19381
    Counsel for Appellee Tredyffrin Township Zoning
    Hearing Board of Appeals, et al
    Patricia Adack [Pro Se]
    Paul Adack [Pro Se]
    1235 Horseshoe Trail
    Phoenixville, PA 19460
    Suzanne Randolph[Pro Se]
    1245 Horseshoe Trail
    Valley Forge, PA 19481
    2
    Kimberly Samuels [Pro Se]
    Mark Samuels [Pro Se]
    1255 Horseshoe Trail
    Phoenixville, PA 19460
    George B. Randolph, III, Esq. [Pro Se]
    Riley Riper Hollin & Colagreco
    717 Constitution Drive
    Eagleview Corporate Center, P.O. Box 1265
    Exton, PA 19341
    William J. Brennan, Esq.
    Butera Beausang Cohen & Brennan
    630 Freedom Business Center
    Suite 212
    King of Prussia, PA 19406
    Counsel for Intervenor Township of Schuylkill
    Christopher D. Imlay, Esq.
    Booth Freret & Imlay
    14356 Cape May Road
    Silver Spring, MD 20904
    Counsel Amicus Appellant, American Radio Relay
    League, Inc.
    ________________
    OPINION OF THE COURT
    ________________
    McKEE, Chief Judge
    This appeal arises from a land use dispute between
    Jeffrey DePolo, a federally licensed amateur or “ham” radio
    enthusiast, and the Township of Tredyffrin (“Township”).
    DePolo attempted to have the Township’s Zoning Hearing
    Board of Appeals (“ZHBA”) approve a 180-foot radio
    antenna tower on his property so that he could communicate
    with other ham radio operators around the world. The
    property is surrounded by mountains or hills, and he claimed
    a shorter tower would not allow him to reliably communicate
    3
    with other ham radio operators.        The ZHBA denied
    permission for a 180-foot tower, but agreed to a tower that
    was 65-feet tall. The ZHBA viewed that intermediate height
    as a reasonable accommodation under the applicable zoning
    ordinance.
    DePolo did not appeal that decision to the Chester
    Court of Common Pleas as is allowed under state law.
    Instead, he filed this suit in the U.S. District Court for the
    Eastern District of Pennsylvania.        He claims that the
    Township’s zoning ordinance, which prohibited any building
    taller than 35-feet, is preempted as enacted and as applied
    under the applicable federal regulation, 
    47 C.F.R. § 97.15
    (b),
    and the closely related FCC declaratory ruling, known as
    PRB-1. The District Court granted motions to dismiss by the
    Township’s Board of Supervisors (“BOS”) and the ZHBA
    based upon its conclusion that the 65-foot variance offered by
    the ZHBA was a reasonable accommodation. The District
    Court also concluded that the Township’s zoning ordinance
    was not preempted by PRB-1.
    For the reasons that follow, we conclude that DePolo’s
    failure to appeal the ZHBA’s determination to state court
    rendered the decision final and that, given the unique
    procedural history of this case, we must afford the ZHBA’s
    final judgment the same preclusive effect that it would have
    had in state court. It is therefore not reviewable in this suit.
    I.
    This dispute results from the frequent tension arising
    from local land use regulations. Local municipalities enact
    zoning ordinances to ensure the health, safety and general
    welfare of those residing within the municipality by
    regulating activities within the municipality. This typically
    involves creating various districts within the municipality and
    then regulating the use of the land and building type within
    those districts.1 The land use regulations also usually provide
    1
    For a comprehensive background and explanation of local
    land use law and zoning, see Gerald S. Dickinson,
    Inclusionary Eminent Domain, 45 LOY. U. CHI. L.J. 854-55
    (2014) (explaining that “[a]s land was acquired and
    4
    that one or more administrative agencies of the local
    municipality are the appropriate forum for resolving disputes
    arising from these regulations.          Accordingly, local
    governments are usually responsible for establishing
    mechanisms and processes to reconcile the competing
    interests of landowners and their neighbors. This is typically
    done through zoning ordinances, which are administered by a
    zoning officer and enforced by a quasi-judicial state
    administrative agency known as a zoning hearing board.2
    Amateur radio operators, or “hams,” often find that
    zoning ordinances inhibit the use of their own land by
    limiting the size of permitted radio towers to an extent that
    precludes all (or nearly all) amateur communications. Hams
    have an interest in maintaining successful amateur
    communications and in sustaining a strong network of radio
    amateurs. Concomitantly, the towers that are necessary for
    reliable radio communication may impede the scenic view of
    neighbors, pedestrians or drivers. Moreover, concerns that
    such towers could fall onto nearby residences could
    theoretically decrease property values.
    However, disputes such as the one at the center of this
    appeal affect more than local interests because the federal
    government also has an interest in preserving amateur radio
    communications. Hams who broadcast using these towers
    afford the federal government reliable emergency
    preparedness, national security, and disaster relief
    communications. Therefore, federal interests are furthered
    when local land use regulations do not unduly restrict the
    construction of these towers. The result is a “perfect storm”
    redeveloped in the suburbs, local officials and zoning boards
    made decisions to regulate and control the land density in
    accordance with desired local health, safety and welfare
    standards…The land could be zoned for purposes of single-
    family or multi-family residential housing, commercial
    property or light industrial.”).
    2
    Robert S. Ryan, Pennsylvania Zoning Law and Practice, §
    1.2.2. (noting that the zoning hearing board reviews appeals
    from the municipal zoning officer’s denial of permits, hears
    requests for special exceptions and variances, and may
    declare a zoning provision invalid).
    5
    for conflict because there is a direct correlation between a
    ham’s antenna height and an ability to properly transmit
    signals.3 The Federal Communications Commission (“FCC”)
    regulation 
    47 C.F.R. § 97.15
    (b) concerns amateur radio
    service. The applicable portion of the FCC’s regulation
    explains that:
    Except as otherwise provided herein, a station
    antenna structure may be erected at heights and
    dimensions sufficient to accommodate amateur
    service communications. (State and local
    regulation of a station antenna structure must
    not preclude amateur service communications.
    Rather, it must reasonably accommodate such
    communications and must constitute the
    minimum practicable regulation to accomplish
    the state or local authority's legitimate purpose.
    See PRB–1, 101 FCC 2d 952 (1985) for
    details.)4
    As indicated by the language of this regulation, the FCC
    ruling, PRB-1, must be examined to obtain a more complete
    understanding of the regulation’s application.
    The FCC issued PRB-1 in 1985 in an attempt “to strike
    a balance between the federal interest in promoting amateur
    operations and the legitimate interests of local governments in
    regulating local zoning matters.”5 Indeed, this ruling weighs
    local government, federal government, and amateur radio
    operator interests, and has a limited, rather than complete,
    federal preemptive effect on local zoning ordinances. Thus, a
    zoning ordinance is preempted when a local municipality fails
    to apply the land use regulation in a manner that reasonably
    accommodates amateur communications. The federal courts
    that have interpreted PRB-1 have upheld this preemptive
    effect.6
    3
    Pentel v. City of Mendota Heights, 
    13 F.3d 1261
    , 1263 (8th
    Cir.1994).
    4
    
    47 CFR § 97.15
    (e).
    5
    PRB–1 ¶ 22.
    6
    See, e.g., Evans v. Bd. of Cnty. Comm’rs of Cnty. of
    Boulder, 
    994 F.2d 755
    , 760–61 (10th Cir.1993); Thernes v.
    6
    In publishing PRB-1, the FCC did not specify a
    minimum height below which local governments must allow
    for radio towers. Rather, as the FCC has explained, PRB-1
    provides that “local regulations which involve placement,
    screening, or height of antennas based on health, safety, or
    aesthetic considerations must be crafted to accommodate
    reasonably amateur communications, and to represent the
    minimum practicable regulation to accomplish the local
    authority’s legitimate purpose.”7
    Notwithstanding PRB-1’s somewhat vague language,
    several principles emerge. First, local municipalities must
    reasonably accommodate amateur communications. Second,
    zoning ordinances should be the minimum practicable
    restrictions which accomplish the local municipalities’
    legitimate purposes. Third, local municipalities may not ban
    all amateur communications towers. Finally, the FCC has
    explicitly declined to regulate the specific permissible heights
    for antenna towers.
    II.
    DePolo’s property is an R1/2 residential zoning district.
    On November 25, 2013, DePolo submitted an application to
    the Township zoning officer requesting a building permit to
    construct a 180-foot tower on his property. His application
    was denied by the zoning officer who concluded that Section
    208-18(G) of the zoning ordinance limited structures in the
    R½ Residence Zoning District to 35-feet.8 Notwithstanding
    that restriction, however, the zoning officer offered DePolo a
    permit to construct a 65-foot tower. DePolo rejected this
    proposal and appealed the denial of his application to the
    ZHBA.
    City of Lakeside Park, 
    779 F.2d 1187
    , 1188–89 (6th
    Cir.1986) (per curiam); Williams v. City of Columbia, 
    906 F.2d 994
    , 998 (4th Cir.1990); Howard v. City of Burlingame,
    
    937 F.2d 1376
    , 1380 (9th Cir.1991); Pentel, 
    13 F.3d at 1261
    .
    7
    PRB-1, 101 FCC 2d 952, 960 Fed.Reg. (1985).
    8
    Tredyffrin Zoning Ordinance, § 208-18, 19(G). § 208-113.
    “Area, bulk and height regulations relating to dwellings: The
    height of any building shall not exceed 35 feet.”
    7
    His appeal was accompanied by a variance application
    in which he asked the ZHBA to allow him to engage in an
    activity that was otherwise prohibited by the zoning
    ordinance.9 DePolo’s variance application, if granted, would
    have allowed him to erect a tower that exceeded the height
    restriction in the ordinance.10 The ZHBA held hearings over a
    total of five days between March and June 2014. During those
    hearings, DePolo offered expert reports and testimony to
    support his contention that the zoning officer erred in refusing
    to issue the requested permit. He offered the testimony to
    support his claim that, because of the surrounding
    topography, he needed an antenna tower of 180-feet to be
    able to ensure reliable radio communications.
    At the conclusion of the hearings, on October 23,
    2014, the ZHBA granted DePolo a variance for a 65-foot
    tower, even though he withdrew his application for a variance
    prior to the conclusion of the ZHBA hearing. The ZHBA
    concluded that DePolo’s proposed 180-foot tower was “not
    compatible” with the surrounding residential neighborhood
    and would create an adverse visual impact on the
    neighborhood. The ZHBA also concluded that the tower’s
    “height, mass, and latticework design” was “of a type
    universally associated with. . . a factory area or industrialized
    complex” and posed a safety hazard to neighboring properties
    because its fall radius extended well into those properties.
    9
    While landowners are ordinarily not permitted to violate
    perfectly valid land use regulations, the variance is a
    necessary legal mechanism to respond to imperfect
    topographical conditions that the ordinance does not
    adequately address. A variance in Pennsylvania, where
    DePolo’s claim arises, is usually granted if the landowner
    establishes by evidence that (1) the physical features of the
    property are such that it cannot be used for a permitted
    purpose; or (2) that the property can be conformed for a
    permitted use only at a prohibitive expense; or (3) that the
    property has no value for any purpose permitted by the
    zoning ordinance. Hertzberg v. Zoning Board of Adjustment
    of the City of Pittsburgh, 
    554 Pa. 249
    , 
    721 A.2d 43
     (1998).
    10
    Robert S. Ryan, Pennsylvania Zoning Law and Practice, §
    1.2.1.
    8
    While acknowledging that the PRB-1 still gave local
    municipalities authority to regulate the height of structures,
    the ZHBA noted that the municipality may forbid the
    construction and installation of antennas that are associated
    with those found in a factory area or an industrialized
    complex.11 The ZHBA also noted that a 180-foot tower
    greatly exceeds the height of the residences in the area.12 The
    ZHBA explained its rejection of DePolo’s preemption claim
    as follows:
    Regardless, where the height limitations of the
    Zoning Ordinance are not absolute and can, by
    the very language of the Zoning Ordinance and
    the Pennsylvania Municipalities Planning Code,
    be varied or modified, they cannot be
    considered absolute or unvarying. Therefore,
    §208-18.G of the Zoning Ordinance is not
    invalid.
    Rather than appeal that decision to the Chester County Court
    of Common Pleas as provided under the state regulatory
    scheme, DePolo filed this suit in federal court. He now claims
    that the ZHBA’s 65-foot variance and the zoning ordinance’s
    fixed and firm height restriction of 35-feet, as enacted and as
    applied, was preempted by PRB-1.
    The BOS and the ZHBA moved to dismiss DePolo’s
    suit for failure to state a claim. The District Court agreed and
    granted the motions. It held that the Township’s proposed
    65-foot variance was a valid and reasonable accommodation
    for DePolo’s 180-foot tower request and held that the
    Township’s local zoning ordinance was not preempted by
    11
    In the Matter of Modification and Clarification of Policies
    and Procedures Governing Siting and Maintenance of
    Amateur Radio Antennas and Support Structures, and
    Amendment of Section 97.15 of the Commission’s Rules
    Governing the Amateur Radio Service, 15 F.C.C.R 22151,
    22154 (F.C.C. 2000).
    12
    The ZHBA stated that “to the extent that the Zoning Officer
    did not have the authority to grant a permit for a tower 65 feet
    in height, the Zoning Hearing Board does have such authority
    and hereby grants said permit for a 65 ft. tower.”
    9
    PRB-1. The District Court was also troubled by DePolo’s
    insistence that a 180-foot tower was necessary to satisfy the
    FCC’s reasonable accommodation requirements, and
    exhorted the “parties to work together to arrive at a
    satisfactory solution.”13 No such solution was achieved. This
    appeal followed.
    III.
    We have jurisdiction pursuant to 
    28 U.S.C. § 1291
    . A
    District Court’s dismissal of a complaint under Rule 12(b)(6)
    is reviewed de novo.14 Accordingly, we assume the truth of
    the factual allegations and draw every reasonable inference in
    favor of DePolo. We have yet to consider the effect of PRB-1
    on local land use disputes. Moreover, this is the first time in
    the 30-year history of PRB-1 that a District Court has
    dismissed a preemption claim under § 97.15(b) pursuant to
    Fed. R. Civ. P. 12(b)(6).
    Although we have not decided a PRB-1 preemption
    claim, we touched upon it in Izzo v. Borough of River Edge,
    
    843 F.2d 765
     (3d Cir. 1988). There, an amateur radio
    operator brought action against the Borough of River Edge,
    its zoning officer, and members of the planning board,
    challenging the legality of the prohibition of a 40-foot
    transmission tower. The United States District Court for the
    District of New Jersey abstained under Burfod v. Sun Oil
    Co.,15 and we held that abstention was improper. We
    explained that abstention was unnecessary because land use
    regulation was not so technical that it required the District
    Court to enmesh itself in a highly specialized local regulatory
    scheme. Although DePolo suggests that we should decide
    this case on the merits and hold that a 12(b)(6) dismissal is
    13
    Pentel, 
    13 F.3d at 1266
    .
    14
    Schmidt v. Skolas, 
    770 F.3d 241
    , 248 (3d Cir. 2014).
    15
    
    319 U.S. 315
    , 334 (1943) (rather than a federal court
    becoming enmeshed in an intricate state regulatory scheme,
    “equitable discretion of the federal courts should be exercised
    to give [the state] courts the first opportunity to consider it[]”
    because “sound respect for the independence of state action
    requires the federal equity court to stay its hand.”).
    10
    simply not appropriate here, the procedural posture of this
    case precludes our review of the merits of his claims.
    We have explained that “in determining whether a
    litigant has been given a ‘full and fair’ opportunity to litigate
    a claim, we must take into account the possibility of appellate
    review” because a full and fair opportunity to litigate
    “includes the possibility of a chain of appellate review.”16
    The ZHBA is a state administrative agency acting in a quasi-
    judicial capacity. It resolved this dispute by issuing a written
    determination containing final findings of fact and
    conclusions of law. While DePolo was aggrieved by the
    ZHBA’s decision limiting the variance to 65-feet, he had
    adequate opportunity to litigate the matter beyond the ZHBA
    by appealing to the appropriate Court of Common Pleas
    within thirty days of the ZHBA’s decision.17 Rather than do
    that, DePolo filed this suit in the District Court, and allowed
    the thirty-day appeal period under state law to expire. This
    was fatal to his ability to obtain federal review of his claim.18
    16
    Crossroads Cogeneration Corp. Orange & Rockland Utils.,
    Inc., 
    159 F.3d 129
    , 137 (3rd Cir. 1998).
    17
    53 Pa.C.S. § 11002-A (“All appeals from all land use
    decisions . . . shall be taken to the court of common pleas of
    the judicial district wherein the land is located.”); See also
    Dickinson, Inclusionary Eminent Domain 873 (discussing the
    appeal process, noting that a developer or landowner whose
    permit or variance request is denied may appeal the local
    zoning board’s decision in state court.).
    18
    We acknowledge that this decision leaves amateur radio
    enthusiasts with limited avenues into federal court. DePolo
    could have appealed the ZHBA’s decision and stayed the
    matter in state court, while his federal claims were resolved.
    That would have allowed the District Court to narrowly
    address the question of preemption. Eichenlaub v. Twp. of
    Indiana, 
    385 F.3d 274
    , 285 (3d Cir. 2004); See, e.g.,
    MacMillan v. City of Rocky River, 
    748 F. Supp. 1241
    , 1244
    (N.D. Ohio 1990) (radio-operator plaintiff appealed zoning
    board decision, secured stay, and filed federal complaint to
    resolve preemption claim); Chedester v. Town of Whately,
    
    279 F.Supp.2d 53
     (2003)(amateur radio enthusiast brought
    suit in both state and federal court simultaneously and District
    Court decided to wait until the state court had ruled).
    11
    DePolo actually withdrew his request for a variance before
    the ZHBA and then failed to challenge its factual findings or
    legal conclusions in the forum provided under state law. He is
    therefore now bound by the final judgment of the ZHBA.19 Its
    ruling is a final judgment on the merits that is entitled to
    preclusive effect in federal court.20 Accordingly, we will
    dismiss this appeal.
    Alternatively, the FCC has enforcement powers, conferring
    jurisdiction on the District Courts of the United States “upon
    application of the Attorney General of the United States at the
    request of the Commission, alleging a failure to comply with
    or a violation of any of the provisions.” 
    47 U.S.C. § 401
    .
    19
    Ridley Sch. Dist. v. M.R., 
    680 F.3d 260
    , 283 (3d Cir. 2012).
    20
    
    Id.
     See Crossroads Cogeneration Corp., 
    159 F.3d at 135
    (noting that “factual findings of state agencies should be
    given the same preclusive effect they would be accorded in
    the courts of that state.”)(citing Elliott, 478 U.S. at
    797); Edmundson, 4 F.3d at 189 (“Decisions of state
    administrative agencies that have been reviewed by state
    courts are…given preclusive effect in federal courts.”); Caver
    v. City of Trenton, 
    420 F.3d 243
    , 259 (3d Cir.2005).
    12