P. Eidson and J.C. Bar Properties, Inc. v. Ross Twp. ZHB and Twp. of Ross ( 2018 )


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  •         IN THE COMMONWEALTH COURT OF PENNSYLVANIA
    Pamela Eidson and                         :
    J.C. Bar Properties, Inc.,                :
    Appellants   :
    :
    v.                           :   No. 714 C.D. 2017
    :   Argued: February 6, 2018
    Ross Township Zoning                      :
    Hearing Board and                         :
    Township of Ross                          :
    BEFORE: HONORABLE P. KEVIN BROBSON, Judge
    HONORABLE PATRICIA A. McCULLOUGH, Judge
    HONORABLE DAN PELLEGRINI, Senior Judge
    OPINION NOT REPORTED
    MEMORANDUM OPINION
    BY JUDGE BROBSON                          FILED: March 12, 2018
    Pamela Eidson (Eidson) and J.C. Bar Properties, Inc. (Developer)
    (collectively, Appellants) appeal from an order of the Court of Common Pleas of
    Allegheny County (Common Pleas), dated May 4, 2017. Common Pleas affirmed
    the decision of the Ross Township Zoning Hearing Board (ZHB), which denied
    Appellants’ application for use and dimensional variances (Application). For the
    reasons discussed below, we affirm Common Pleas’ order.
    I. BACKGROUND
    Eidson is the owner of real property (Property) located at 628 Perry
    Highway in Ross Township (Township), Allegheny County. The Property is located
    at the intersection of Perry Highway and Rochester Road in an R-1 Zoning District,
    as defined by Sections 27-902, 27-905, and 27-906 of the Township’s Code of
    Ordinances (Ordinance). In the late 1970s, Nancy DiCola, M.D. (DiCola), Eidson’s
    aunt and the prior owner of the Property, received conditional use approval to
    construct a 3,000 square foot addition on an existing residence located on the
    Property for use as a medical office (Medical Office Building). DiCola used the
    Medical Office Building for both her residence and her medical practice through
    December 31, 1990, and for her residence until she died in October 2000. From
    October 2000 through 2007, the Property was vacant and under the control of a
    court-appointed conservator.          In November 2006, DiCola’s estate deeded the
    Property to Eidson. Thereafter, on May 17, 2016, Appellants filed their Application,
    seeking, inter alia: (1) a use variance to permit the construction and operation of a
    retail CVS pharmacy on the Property, a use that is not permitted in an R-1 Zoning
    District; and (2) a dimensional variance to reduce the number of required parking
    spaces from 75 to 50.1           The ZHB conducted a public hearing on Appellants’
    Application on August 10, 2016.
    At the hearing, Appellants presented the testimony of Jason Mitchell
    (Mitchell), an employee of Developer. (Reproduced Record (R.R.) at 9a.) Mitchell
    testified that Developer is CVS’s preferred real estate development company in
    Western Pennsylvania, Central Pennsylvania, and Maryland.                        (Id. at 9a-10a.)
    Mitchell explained that after Developer identified the Property as a potential CVS
    location and took the Property through the CVS approval process, Developer met
    with the Township to discuss the Property’s history. (Id. at 11a-12a.) At that time,
    1
    In their Application, Appellants also sought dimensional variances to increase the
    maximum widths of the Property’s entrance and exit driveways. Such dimensional variance
    requests are not the subject of this appeal, and, therefore, we will not address them in any further
    detail.
    2
    Developer learned of a prior attempt to rezone the Property for commercial use. (Id.)
    Through its own research and conversations with the Township, Developer became
    aware of certain concerns that had been raised during that prior rezoning attempt.
    (Id. at 12a-13a.) Mitchell stated that Developer sought to address those concerns in
    its initial design of the CVS and with its presentation to the ZHB. (Id. at 12a-13a.)
    Mitchell testified further that the proposed CVS is a 13,225 square foot
    building, with a prototypical CVS layout and a single drive-through. (Id. at 14a.) It
    will be accessible from both Perry Highway and Rochester Road, however, the Perry
    Highway access will be limited to right turns in and right turns out only. (Id.)
    Mitchell explained that Developer has proposed only 50 parking spaces for the CVS
    because: (1) that is all that is needed; and (2) by reducing the number of parking
    spaces, Developer is able to add more green space and buffer areas. (Id. at 14a-15a.)
    Mitchell explained further that a typical CVS is open from 8:00 a.m. until 10:00 p.m.
    and has four to six employees per shift. (Id. at 16a.) Mitchell stated that the parking
    lot will contain LED down-facing lights that will be turned off when the CVS is
    closed and deliveries to the proposed CVS will be one time per week.
    (Id. at 16a-19a.)
    Mitchell also testified that the Property currently contains 3 structures:
    (1) the main original house that was built in the early 1900s and is currently vacant
    and boarded up (Original Building); (2) a 2-car garage (Garage); and (3) the Medical
    Office Building. (Id. at 20a-21a.) Mitchell explained that Developer’s director of
    construction inspected the condition of the Medical Office Building to determine
    whether it could be rehabilitated for future residential use. (Id. at 21a.) The
    inspection revealed that from a mechanical perspective the Medical Office Building
    is functionally obsolete. (Id. at 22a.) Mitchell testified further that the HVAC
    3
    system and hot water heater are in such a state that they would need to be replaced,
    the electric system was not working in more than 50 percent of the structure, there
    had been temporary plumbing installed on the outside of the walls, and the plumbing
    had been turned off to parts of the structure. (Id. at 22a-23a.) The inspection also
    revealed that from a cosmetic perspective the Medical Office Building would need
    a complete interior renovation down to the studs. (Id. at 23a.) Mitchell stated that
    Developer had estimated that it would cost approximately $171,000 to perform the
    mechanical and cosmetic repairs. (Id. at 24a.) Mitchell stressed, however, that this
    estimate did not include any potential structural damage to the Medical Office
    Building. (Id.) The inspection further revealed a potential moisture issue in the
    Medical Office Building. (Id.) As a result, Developer obtained an environmental
    study, which uncovered the presence of excess moisture and black mold in the
    Medical Office Building. (Id. at 24a-26a.) Mitchell explained that in its existing
    poor condition, the Property appraised at $135,000. (Id. at 26a-27a.) Mitchell
    testified, however, that he did not believe that the Property could be used without
    demolishing the existing structures. (Id. at 27a.)
    Appellants also presented the testimony of Andrew Schwartz
    (Schwartz), the managing principal and lead landscape architect/community planner
    for Environmental Planning and Design. (Id. at 32a-33a.) Appellants’ attorneys
    hired Schwartz to render an expert opinion regarding the appropriateness of the
    requested use and dimensional variances for the construction of a CVS on the
    Property. (Id. at 35a, 397a.) Schwartz testified that the assessor’s office labeled the
    Original Building as unsound, which basically means that it needs to be demolished.
    (Id. at 37a.) Schwartz explained that in addition to the structures, the Property also
    4
    contains a 20-25 car parking lot, a commercial grade driveway, and commercial
    grade lighting. (Id. at 37a-38a.)
    Schwartz explained that the development character of Perry Highway
    and Rochester Road has changed significantly over the years from large residential
    and agricultural uses to commercial uses due to the increase in vehicular traffic.
    (Id. at 41a-44a, 47a-48a.) Schwartz indicated that in its 1995 Strategic Plan, the
    Township even referred to Perry Highway as a “primary commerce corridor.”
    (Id. at 44a, 47a-48a.)    Schwartz explained that around that time people were
    beginning to recognize this area as mixed-use and not just residential neighborhoods.
    (Id. at 48a-49a.) Schwartz also indicated that the Township passed multiple zoning
    amendments from 1930 through the present, which included approximately
    114 changes of use from residential to commercial. (Id. at 45a.) Schwartz described
    these zoning amendments as a piecemeal, reactive approach, where the Township
    changed the zoning for a particular parcel or parcels based on a proposal without any
    analysis to support the amendment. (Id. at 45a-47a.) Schwartz also explained that
    the Township’s 2015 Comprehensive Plan further reinforced that the zoning in this
    area “should be oriented more towards mixed[-]use types of districts that have more
    flexibility.” (Id. at 52a.)
    Schwartz also testified that he identified four hardships affecting the
    Property that are sufficient to justify the grant of a use and dimensional variances.
    (Id. at 53a, 68a, 74a.) Schwartz stated that the first hardship is the “patchwork” of
    non-residential, commercial, and industrial uses surrounding the Property.
    (Id. at 53a.) Schwartz stated further that the Property, which is zoned single-family
    residential, is “kind of like frozen in time[, where e]verything around it has slowly
    changed over time.” (Id. at 53a-54a.) Schwartz also stated that within ¾ of a mile
    5
    of the Property, there are approximately 96 non-residential, commercial, and
    industrial uses, including “anything from auto repair, auto body, to dentist office,
    attorney’s offices, restaurants[,]” and a school campus. (Id. at 39a-40a, 53a-56a.)
    Schwartz admitted, however, that he did not identify which of those uses were
    located in the Township and which of those uses were located within West View, a
    neighboring municipality. (Id. at 40a.)
    Schwartz testified that the second hardship is the intersection of Perry
    Highway and Rochester Road. (Id. at 57a.) Schwartz explained that the current
    traffic volume at the intersection of Perry Highway and Rochester Road is a little
    less than 22,000 vehicles, with approximately 14,300 vehicles on Perry Highway
    and approximately 7,500 vehicles on Rochester Road. (Id. at 39a.) Schwartz
    explained further that “22,000 cars at an intersection in a single-family residential
    area is an extreme number.” (Id. at 58a-59a.) When asked whether these types of
    traffic counts are typical in an R-1 Zoning District, Schwartz stated: “If we were
    kind of reworking the zoning map and the fixed point was an intersection of
    22,000 cars, low-density residential would not be at that corner. That’s not a
    contemporary zoning practice. It doesn’t follow the general rules of real estate.”
    (Id. at 66a.)
    Schwartz stated that the third hardship is the Property’s nonconforming
    use as a medical office. (Id. at 67a.) Schwartz explained that the Medical Office
    Building was “a purpose-built commercial building” and converting it back to
    residential use will be a hardship. (Id. at 68a.)
    Schwartz identified the fourth hardship as the Property’s size.
    (Id. at 67a.) Schwartz explained that Eidson has attempted to sell the Property for
    residential purposes for years, but has been unsuccessful. (Id. at 64a.) Schwartz
    6
    opined that the Property is tough to sell because the Property is larger than what
    people are looking at in today’s market for a single-family lot and is located on an
    intersection with 22,000 vehicles, and the Property is too small to subdivide into
    more than 3 single-family homes. (Id. at 64a-66a.) Schwartz also explained that the
    Property is unique due to its size and the fact that it has 2 access driveways. (Id. at
    67a.)
    Appellants also presented the testimony of Charles Wooster (Wooster),
    a traffic engineer and the owner of David E. Wooster & Associates, Inc.
    (Id. at 75a-76a.)    Wooster performed a traffic assessment in connection with
    Appellants’ Application. (Id. at 76a.) The traffic assessment evaluated both the
    intersection of Perry Highway and Rochester Road and the access driveways to the
    proposed CVS (full access on Rochester Road and right turn in/out on Perry
    Highway). (Id. at 78a.) Wooster testified that the average daily traffic at the subject
    intersection is a little over 14,000 vehicles per day on Perry Highway and
    approximately 7,500 vehicles per day on Rochester Road. (Id. at 78a-79a.) Wooster
    explained that the traffic is multi-municipality, not just local to the Township.
    (Id. at 79a.) When asked whether this is a typical intersection you would see in a
    single-family residential area, Wooster stated that people usually want to live on
    local roads. (Id.) Perry Highway and Rochester Road are arterial highways, not
    local roads. (Id.)
    Based on his traffic assessment, Wooster opined that the proposed CVS
    would    not    have   any   significant   impact   on    the   subject   intersection.
    (Id. at 79a-80a, 94a.) Wooster explained that he generated the anticipated traffic to
    the proposed CVS consistent with traffic engineering industry standards, calculated
    the capacity and level of service both pre-development and post-development, and,
    7
    based on the difference between the two, determined that the greatest impact to the
    subject intersection would be a 1.2-second delay. (Id. at 80a-81a.) Wooster stated
    that the proposed CVS will require highway occupancy permits because Perry
    Highway and Rochester Road are both state-owned highways. (Id. at 81a.) Wooster
    stated further that he has no doubt that the Pennsylvania Department of
    Transportation will issue the highway occupancy permits without the need for any
    traffic mitigation because the proposed CVS will not have any significant impact on
    traffic conditions. (Id. at 81a-82a.)
    Appellants also presented the testimony of Eidson. Eidson testified that
    at the time that she became the owner of the Property in November 2006, the
    Original Building was already boarded up. (Id. at 97a-98a.) Eidson testified further
    that her aunt used the Medical Office Building for her medical practice from
    approximately 1980 through December 1990. (Id. at 98a-99a.) Eidson also testified
    that her aunt continued to reside in the Medical Office Building until she died in
    October of 2000. (Id. at 99a.) Thereafter, the Property passed through a life estate
    and was under the control of a court-appointed conservator until November 2006,
    when Eidson took ownership.              (Id.)   Eidson explained that during that
    approximately 7-year period, the Property was vacant. (Id.) Eidson described the
    Property as “devastation” at the time that she took ownership. (Id. at 100a.) Eidson
    stated that the condition of the Property was worse when she acquired it, because
    she has tried to make it better. (Id.)
    Eidson testified further that she listed the Property for residential sale
    in the spring of 2007. (Id. at 100a, 105a.) She explained that the Property has been
    on the market consistently since that time except for a period of about 2 years when
    she was between real estate agents. (Id. at 101a.) Eidson explained further that the
    8
    asking price for the Property has always been $2.5 million at the recommendation
    of a real estate agent. (Id. at 103a-04a.) Eidson also testified that she has not
    received any legitimate written offers for the purchase of the Property, and that the
    only offers that she has received have been commercial in nature. (Id. at 102a.)
    Eidson indicated that she has resided in the residence portion of the Medical Office
    Building since March 2011. (Id. at 103a.) She described the medical office portion
    of the Medical Office Building as “unusable.” (Id.) When asked whether the
    Property’s deterioration was caused by vandalism, Eidson stated:          “It was a
    combination. There were a couple break-ins, and pipes froze. And just not upkeep.
    Negligence.” (Id. at 104a-05a.) Eidson agreed that the highest percentage of the
    damage resulted from a failure to maintain the Property but indicated that it was not
    “under her watch.” (Id. at 105a.)
    Appellants also presented the testimony of Mike Netzel (Netzel), a
    realtor licensed with Keller Williams Realty. (Id. at 108a.) Netzel testified that in
    his opinion the Property is not marketable for single-family residential use.
    (Id. at 109a.) Netzel testified further that the $135,000 appraised value is not
    representative of what the Property is worth as a residential property. (Id.) He
    explained: “Appraisers are very handcuffed today by the federal government with
    the economic collapse related to my industry. They really put tight constraints on
    what an appraiser can and cannot do. They have to go off sale data, proximity; and
    the comparable sales aren’t comparable.” (Id. at 109a-10a.) Netzel agreed that the
    commercial nature of the intersection of Perry Highway and Rochester Road affects
    the marketability of the Property for residential purposes. (Id. at 110a.) He stated
    that the Property presents an inherent contradiction because people who are looking
    for a residential 1-acre lot are interested in privacy and no matter how far back you
    9
    build the house, the Property is still located in a heavily congested area.
    (Id. at 111a.)
    Netzel testified further that he reviewed other residential properties
    located within a 1-block radius of the Property and the subject intersection that also
    deal with the traffic issue. (Id. at 111a-14a.) Netzel agreed that all of these
    properties are in better condition than the Property. (Id. at 116a.) Netzel suggested
    that at least some of these properties sat on the market for an extended period and
    then sold for less than asking price or were resold some years later for less than the
    purchase price—i.e., 742 Perry Highway sat on the market for almost 3 years and
    sold for $100,000 less than asking price and a Tudor home located in Wellington
    Heights sold for $267,000 in 2009 and $226,000 in 2013. (Id. at 112a-14a.) Netzel
    explained that traffic matters and “a home on a busy road is just not where people
    are looking to be.” (Id. at 131a.)
    When asked what the value of the Property would be if the buildings
    were in immaculate condition, Netzel indicated about $250,000. (Id. at 118a-21a.)
    Netzel explained, however, that one of the buildings on the Property cannot be
    rehabbed and must be knocked down and the Property has “functional obsolescence
    out the wazoo.” (Id. at 119a-21a.) Netzel also indicated that without anything on
    the Property, he did not believe it was even worth $100,000. (Id. at 122a.) Netzel
    believed that the Property would without a doubt be worth more if it was zoned
    commercial and not residential. (Id. at 123a.) Netzel also indicated that there is no
    chance of obtaining a mortgage on the Property for residential purposes.
    (Id. at 125a-26a.) Netzel indicated further that none of the cash investors that he
    works with would touch the Property for residential purposes. (Id. at 130a.) He also
    stated that as far as rehabbing the Property, the floor plan of the Medical Office
    10
    Building is “weird” for the residential marketplace, and you would not be able to
    obtain financing to perform any rehab. (Id. at 130a-31a.) Netzel, therefore, believed
    that the only value and potential future use of the Property would require the
    buildings to be demolished. (Id. at 131a.)2
    On August 26, 2016, the ZHB rendered its decision, denying
    Appellants’ Application. Sometime thereafter, the ZHB issued findings of fact and
    conclusions of law in support of its decision, wherein the ZHB made the following
    relevant conclusions of law:3
    44.    Section 27-905 of the [Ordinance] sets forth the
    uses that are permitted in the Township’s
    R-1 [Zoning] District. Pursuant to Section 27-905
    of the [Ordinance,] “retail stores” are not permitted
    in an R-1 [Zoning] District.
    45.    Pursuant to Section 27-905 [of the Ordinance], the
    following uses are permitted in the R-1 [Zoning]
    District: Single-Family Detached[,] Residential
    Day      Care    Facility[,]      Group      Home[,]
    Forestry/Logging[,] No Impact Home Business[,]
    and Residential Accessory Structure. Permitted by
    Conditional Use include: [Planned Residential
    Development (PRD)], Place of Worship, School,
    Day Care Facility, Public Recreational Facility,
    Private Recreational Facility, Golf Course,
    Emergency and Municipal Facility, Home
    Occupation, Accessory Office, and Temporary
    Structure. Permitted by Special Exception are:
    Public Utility Building and Storage Yard,
    2
    The Board also heard statements from members of the public in opposition to Appellants’
    Application and the proposed commercial development of the Property. (R.R. at 134a-56a.)
    3
    Although not dated, it appears that the ZHB issued its findings of fact and conclusions of
    law after Appellants filed their appeal with Common Pleas. All further references and citations to
    the ZHB’s decision shall be considered to be references to the ZHB’s findings of fact and
    conclusions of law.
    11
    Windmill, Parabolic or Satellite Dish Antennas, and
    Wireless Communications Antennas or Towers.
    46.   The [Property] is in an R-1 Zoning District in the
    [Township].
    47.   The proposed use is a 13,225 square foot building
    with 50 proposed parking spaces, to be accessible
    from Rochester Road and Perry Highway, and is not
    permitted in the Township’s R-1 Zoning District as
    “Retail Stores” are not permitted in the
    R-1 [Zoning] District under Section 27-905 of the
    [Ordinance].
    ....
    51. Regarding the first hardship alleged by
    [Appellants], the ZHB concludes that the [Property]
    is not surrounded by dissimilar and incompatible
    commercial, institutional, and industrial uses, due to
    alleged rezoning of individual parcels and use
    variances, and does not create a substantial hardship
    for residential reuse of the site, and states:
    a.     [The Township’s] first comprehensive
    plan was adopted in 1971, which was
    followed by a strategic plan
    implemented by the Township in
    1995;
    b.     Despite the 1995 strategic plan of [the
    Township], in 2011, [the Township]
    Board of Commissioners denied
    Eidson’s request to rezone the
    [Property] from R-1 to C-3, by a vote
    of 0-9;
    c.     In 2015, [the Township] through its
    Board of Commissioners adopted a
    new comprehensive plan; and,
    d.     Before the ZHB, [Appellants] argued
    that the use of the [Property] as a CVS
    store would be consistent with the
    Township’s Comprehensive Plan for
    pedestrian      connection       between
    neighborhoods        and     commercial
    districts, but [Appellants] have not
    12
    filed an application for rezoning of the
    [Property] to        the    Board     of
    Commissioners, based upon that
    Comprehensive Plan.
    52.   [Appellants] also claimed a second hardship, that
    the Perry Highway and Rochester Road is a major
    regional intersection that has created a de facto
    mixed commercial and residential use zoning
    district, that is not conducive to single[-]family
    residential use. The ZHB rejected this claim for the
    following reasons:
    a.     Section 27-905 and Section 27-906 [of
    the Ordinance] provide many
    permitted uses in the R-1 [Zoning]
    District and [Appellants] did not
    provide sufficient evidence that the
    [Property] could not be used for a use
    permitted in the R-1 [Zoning] District,
    . . . including, but not limited to:
    Single-Family Detached or Residential
    Day Care Facility, or Group Home;
    b.     The testimony and evidence presented
    revealed that Eidson has never
    attempted to sell the [Property] for a
    residential use;
    c.     The testimony and evidence presented
    demonstrated that Eidson’s asking
    price for the [Property] has always
    been $2.5 [million]; and,
    d.     Evidence and testimony presented
    revealed that Eidson has used the
    [Property] for residential purposes, as
    her residence since 2011, a use
    permitted in Section 27-905 of the
    [Ordinance].
    53.   The ZHB rejected [Appellants’] clam [sic] of a third
    hardship, that the physical conditions of the
    buildings on the [Property] constitute substantial
    hardship, and provide the following reasons:
    13
    a.      The presence of the parking lot on the
    [Property] and the commercial lighting
    fixtures lining the main driveway and
    parking lot do not limit the [P]roperty
    to use as a retail pharmacy;
    b.     The evidence and testimony presented
    revealed that the current deplorable
    condition of the [Property] is due to
    Eidson’s failure to maintain and
    preserve the buildings on the
    [Property];
    c.     The Allegheny County assessed value
    of the [Property] has continued to
    increase     despite    its   “unsound
    condition;” and,
    d.     The evidence and testimony reveals
    that Eidson has been living at the
    [Property] since 2011, and has made
    no effort to use or maintain the
    [Property] as a medical office.
    54.   The ZHB rejected [Appellants’] fourth claim that
    the size of the [Property] creates a unique hardship
    warranting the grant of a use variance as
    [Appellants] did not provide sufficient evidence that
    the [Property] could not be used as another use
    permitted in an R-1 [Zoning] District under
    Section 27-905 [of the Ordinance], other than a
    single-family residence.
    55.   Before the ZHB, [Appellants] argued that the
    development of a CVS Pharmacy allows for
    badly-needed and highly-desired sidewalk
    construction to take place at and around an
    intersection that they opine is heavily travelled and
    is not conducive to residential use.
    56.   The ZHB concludes that a CVS Pharmacy, a
    building of 13,225 square foot [sic] with
    50 proposed parking spaces, is not tantamount to a
    neighborhood pharmacy that pedestrians from the
    neighborhood could walk to and from, and would
    change the character of the neighborhood.
    14
    57.    Finally, if a variance would otherwise be warranted,
    a CVS Pharmacy in a[n] R-1 [Zoning] District does
    not represent the least modification of the
    R-1 [Zoning] District regulation at issue.
    (ZHB Decision at 5-8 (emphasis in original).) Appellants appealed the ZHB’s
    decision to Common Pleas. By order dated May 4, 2017, Common Pleas affirmed
    the ZHB’s decision. Appellants then appealed to this Court.
    II. ISSUES ON APPEAL
    On appeal,4 Appellants have raised seven issues for our consideration.
    For purposes of discussion and disposition, we have condensed the cognizable issues
    as follows: (1) whether the ZHB abused its discretion and/or committed an error of
    law by concluding that there was no unnecessary hardship associated with the use of
    the Property for residential purposes; (2) whether the ZHB abused its discretion and
    committed an error of law by concluding that Eidson created any unnecessary
    hardships that may exist with respect to the residential use of the Property;
    (3) whether the ZHB abused its discretion and/or committed an error of law by
    concluding that the use variance will not alter the essential character of the
    neighborhood or be detrimental to the public interest; and (4) whether the ZHB
    abused its discretion or committed an error of law by denying Appellants’ request
    for dimensional variances to reduce the number of required parking spaces.
    III. DISCUSSION
    First, we address Appellants’ argument that the ZHB abused its
    discretion and/or committed an error of law by concluding that there was no
    4
    “Where a trial court takes no additional evidence in an appeal from a decision of the
    [ZHB], this Court is limited to considering whether the [ZHB] erred as a matter of law or abused
    its discretion.” German v. Zoning Bd. of Adjustment, 
    41 A.3d 947
    , 949 n.1 (Pa. Cmwlth. 2012).
    “A [ZHB] abuses its discretion if its findings are not supported by substantial evidence.” Arter v.
    Phila. Zoning Bd. of Adjustment, 
    916 A.2d 1222
    , 1226 n.9 (Pa. Cmwlth.), appeal denied,
    
    934 A.2d 75
    (Pa. 2007).
    15
    unnecessary hardship associated with the use of the Property for residential
    purposes. More specifically, Appellants argue that the substantial evidence of record
    demonstrates the existence of 4 unnecessary hardships associated with the residential
    use of the Property: (1) the Property is located in an area that the Township
    previously designated a “Primary Commerce Corridor” and is surrounded by a
    “patchwork” of dissimilar and incompatible commercial and non-single-family
    residential uses; (2) the Property is located at an intersection that is not conducive to
    single-family residential use; (3) the Property’s commercial history and the current
    condition of the Original Building, the Garage, and the Medical Office Building;
    and (4) the Property’s physical features and size.
    “It is well-established that substantial evidence is such relevant
    evidence as a reasonable person might accept as adequate to support a conclusion.”
    Adams Outdoor Adver., Ltd. v. Dep’t of Transp., 
    860 A.2d 600
    , 605 n.8
    (Pa. Cmwlth. 2004), appeal denied, 
    887 A.2d 1242
    (Pa. 2005). “When performing
    a substantial evidence analysis, this Court must review the evidence in a light most
    favorable to the party who prevailed before the fact finder.” 
    Id. This Court
    “may
    not substitute its interpretation of the evidence for that of the [ZHB].” Vanguard
    Cellular Sys., Inc. v. Zoning Hearing Bd. of Smithfield Twp., 
    568 A.2d 703
    , 707
    (Pa. Cmwlth. 1989), appeal denied, 
    590 A.2d 760
    (Pa. 1990). Assuming the record
    contains substantial evidence, we are bound by the ZHB’s findings that result from
    “resolutions of credibility and conflicting testimony rather than a capricious
    disregard of evidence.” 
    Id. The ZHB,
    as the fact-finder, is free to reject even
    uncontradicted testimony it finds lacking in credibility. 
    Id. A variance
    is a departure from the exact provisions of a zoning
    ordinance. Brennen v. Zoning Bd. of Adjustment of the City of Connellsville,
    16
    
    187 A.2d 180
    , 182 (Pa. 1963). Pursuant to Section 27-605(1) of the Ordinance, the
    ZHB may grant a variance if it finds that all of the following conditions exist, where
    relevant:
    A.    That there are unique physical circumstances or
    conditions, including irregularity, narrowness, or
    shallowness of lot size or shape, or exceptional
    topographical or other physical conditions peculiar
    to the particular property and that the unnecessary
    hardship is due to such conditions and not the
    circumstances or conditions generally created by
    the provisions of this chapter in the neighborhood
    or district in which the property is located[;]
    B.    That because of such physical circumstances or
    conditions, there is no possibility that the property
    can be developed in strict conformity with the
    provisions of this chapter and that the authorization
    of a variance is therefore necessary to enable the
    reasonable use of the property[;]
    C.    That such unnecessary hardship has not been
    created by the applicant[;]
    D.    That the variance, if authorized, will not alter the
    essential character of the neighborhood or district in
    which the property is located, nor substantially or
    permanently impair the appropriate use or
    development of adjacent property, nor be
    detrimental to the public welfare[; and]
    E.    That the variance, if authorized, will represent the
    minimum variance that will afford relief and will
    represent the least modification possible of the
    regulation in issue.
    With respect to the Ordinance’s first requirement for a variance—i.e.,
    unique physical circumstances or conditions of the subject property constituting an
    unnecessary hardship—this Court has explained:
    Whether an applicant is seeking a use or a dimensional
    variance, the applicant must, at a minimum, demonstrate
    that an unnecessary hardship will result if a variance is
    17
    denied and that the proposed use will not be contrary to
    the public interest. In the context of a use variance, an
    applicant must establish that an unnecessary hardship
    attends the land with evidence that: (a) the physical
    conditions of the property are such that it cannot be used
    for a permitted purpose; or (b) the property can be
    conformed for a permitted use only at a prohibitive
    expense; or (c) the property is valueless for any purpose
    permitted by the zoning ordinance. While an unnecessary
    hardship can be established by demonstrating that the
    hardship falls squarely within one of these three
    categories, in practice the evidence presented often does
    not fit neatly in one category or another but overlaps.
    When evaluating an unnecessary hardship, use of adjacent
    and surrounding land is relevant. Once an applicant has
    demonstrated that the property is subject to an unnecessary
    hardship, the party must also demonstrate that the
    conditions are unique to the property; where the hardship
    is present in the district as a whole or in a portion of the
    district, the proper remedy is re-zoning rather than a
    variance.
    Nowicki v. Zoning Hearing Bd. of the Borough of Monaca, 
    91 A.3d 287
    , 292
    (Pa. Cmwlth. 2014) (citations omitted).
    With respect to their first allegation of unnecessary hardship,
    Appellants argue that they presented substantial evidence to the ZHB that establishes
    that any residential use of the Property is impractical because “there are
    nearly 120 non[-]residential uses within a ¾ mile radius of the Property.”
    (Appellants’ Br. at 44-45.) Appellants argue further that the Township’s history of
    spot zoning and granting of use variances “has created a de facto mixed commercial
    and residential use zoning district” where the Property is located. (Appellants’ Br.
    at 43.) In response, the ZHB argues that Appellants failed to establish that the area
    surrounding the Property is a de facto mixed-use zoning district that contains
    dissimilar and incompatible commercial, institutional, and industrial uses or that any
    such de facto mixed-use zoning district created a substantial hardship for the
    18
    residential use of the Property. The ZHB argues further that it properly rejected
    Schwartz’s testimony regarding the creation of a mixed-use zoning district because:
    (1) while Schwartz provided a list of several non-residential uses surrounding the
    Property, he did not provide a similar list for residential uses; and (2) Schwartz did
    not identify which of the surrounding non-residential uses were located in the
    Township and which were located in West View, a neighboring municipality.5
    The ZHB’s conclusion that Appellants failed to demonstrate that the
    area surrounding the Property is a de facto mixed-use zoning district that contains
    dissimilar and incompatible commercial, institutional, and industrial uses or that any
    such de facto mixed-use zoning district has created a substantial hardship for the
    residential use of the Property is supported by substantial evidence of record.
    Schwartz testified that within ¾ of a mile of the Property, there are
    approximately 96 non-residential,              commercial,          and        industrial       uses.
    (R.R. at 39a-40a.) Schwartz admitted, however, that he did not identify which of
    those uses were located within the Township and which of those uses were located
    within the neighboring municipality of West View. (Id. at 40a.) In addition, it
    appears that in his analysis of the surrounding uses, Schwartz ignored the residential
    uses surrounding the Property, as there are no residential uses identified in
    Appendix 2 of his report. (See 
    id. at 410a-11a.)
    Thus, Appellants failed to present
    a clear picture of the Property’s surrounding uses so that the ZHB could effectively
    5
    In its brief, the ZHB indicates that Appellants offered testimony relative to the
    Township’s 1995 Strategic Plan and 2015 Comprehensive Plan and a 2011 attempt to rezone the
    Property in support of their first allegation of unnecessary hardship. In their reply brief, Appellants
    essentially respond that Schwartz’s testimony on these matters was for background purposes only
    and that by highlighting these facts, the ZHB is attempting to deflect the Court’s attention from
    the actual bases for their first allegation of hardship. We do not believe that a discussion of these
    matters is necessary to dispose of Appellants’ arguments on appeal, and, therefore, we will not
    address these arguments in any further detail.
    19
    consider whether the Property is located within a de facto mixed-use zoning district.
    Furthermore, even if the Property is located within a de facto mixed-use zoning
    district, Appellants have not shown how the Property’s location in such a de facto
    mixed-use zoning district creates an unnecessary hardship that is unique to the
    Property and separate and distinct from any hardship to other residential properties
    located within the same de facto mixed-use zoning district.                 Under those
    circumstances, all residential properties will be subject to the same hardships. For
    these reasons, we conclude that the ZHB did not abuse its discretion or commit an
    error of law by rejecting Appellants’ first allegation of hardship.
    With respect to their second allegation of unnecessary hardship,
    Appellants argue that they presented substantial evidence to the ZHB that establishes
    that the intersection upon which the Property is located is not conducive to
    single-family residential use due to high traffic volumes and the arterial character of
    Perry Highway and Rochester Road. Appellants argue further that “with a volume
    of 22,000 daily trips and 12 turning lanes of traffic[,] . . . the [s]ubject [i]ntersection
    . . . has been effectively rendered obsolete for its original residential use.”
    (Appellants’ Br. at 45.) Appellants also argue that the hardship created by the
    subject intersection is unique to the Property because it is the only property located
    within an R-1 Zoning District that contains driveways accessible by both Perry
    Highway and Rochester Road. In response, the ZHB argues that Appellants failed
    to establish that the subject intersection “is a major regional intersection that is not
    conducive to single[-]family residential use” or that the subject intersection created
    a substantial hardship for the residential use of the Property. (ZHB’s Br. at 21.)
    The ZHB’s conclusion that Appellants failed to demonstrate that the
    intersection of Perry Highway and Rochester Road is not conducive to single-family
    20
    residential use and, therefore, has not created an unnecessary hardship is supported
    by substantial evidence of record. Schwartz testified that 22,000 vehicles at an
    intersection in a single-family residential area “is an extreme number.”
    (R.R. at 58a-59a.) Schwartz also testified that if the zoning map was reworked, he
    would not recommend low-density residential at the subject intersection.
    (Id. at 66a.) Similarly, Wooster explained that people want to live on local roads,
    not arterial highways like Perry Highway and Rochester Road.              (Id. at 79a.)
    Likewise, Netzel stated that the commercial nature of the subject intersection affects
    the marketability of the Property. (Id. at 110a.) Appellants did not, however, present
    any evidence or testimony that because of the subject intersection there is no
    possibility that the Property can be developed for residential purposes or for any
    other purpose permitted in an R-1 Zoning District—i.e., Appellants’ witnesses
    appear to have stopped short of this conclusion. Furthermore, while Pennsylvania
    courts have “upheld the grant of a variance where no evidence of an attempt to sell
    the property was submitted . . . evidence of the owners’ inability to sell his property
    has unquestionable probative value.” Valley View Civic Ass’n v. Zoning Bd. of
    Adjustment, 
    462 A.2d 637
    , 642 (Pa. 1983). The ZHB noted, however, that Eidson
    did not establish that she attempted to sell the Property for residential purposes;
    rather, she only established that she attempted to sell the Property for an inflated
    price tag of $2.5 million. Thus, the ZHB gave no weight to Eidson’s “effort” to sell
    the Property.
    In addition, Appellants have not established how the intersection of
    Perry Highway and Rochester Road creates an unnecessary hardship that is unique
    to the Property and separate and distinct from any hardship to other residential
    properties located at or around such intersection.          Contrary to Appellants’
    21
    allegations, the fact that the Property has driveways accessible by both Perry
    Highway and Rochester Road does not necessarily make the hardship unique to the
    Property. Arguably, having a second driveway access to Rochester Road could put
    the Property in a better position than other residential properties located on Perry
    Highway. For these reasons, we conclude that the ZHB did not abuse its discretion
    or commit an error of law by rejecting Appellants’ second allegation of hardship.
    With respect to their third allegation of unnecessary hardship,
    Appellants argue that they presented substantial evidence to the ZHB that the
    Property is practically valueless for residential purposes and that any future use of
    the Property will require demolition of the existing structures due to the unsound
    condition of the Original Building and the Garage and the uninhabitable condition
    of the Medical Office Building. Appellants argue further that the non-conforming
    commercial nature of the Medical Office Building and the existence of the
    commercial grade parking lot and the commercial lighting fixtures in and of
    themselves create a substantial hardship for the residential use of the Property. In
    response, the ZHB argues that Appellants failed to establish that the physical
    condition of the Property created a substantial hardship for the residential use of the
    Property. The ZHB argues further that the record does not support a conclusion that
    the presence of the commercial grade parking lot and the commercial lighting
    fixtures prevent the Property from being used for a permitted use—i.e., a group
    home, a residential care facility, or multiple single-family dwellings. The ZHB also
    argues that the record does not demonstrate that the Property would be almost
    valueless without the grant of a use variance or that developmental costs rendered
    the Property impractical for any residential use.
    22
    The ZHB’s conclusion that Appellants failed to demonstrate that the
    physical condition of the Property constitutes a substantial hardship for the
    residential use of the Property is supported by substantial evidence of record.
    Mitchell testified that he did not believe that the Property could be used without
    demolishing the existing structures. (R.R. at 27a.) Schwartz testified that the
    Medical Office Building, which the Court notes is attached to the residence in which
    Eidson resides on the Property, was “a purpose-built commercial building” and
    converting it to residential use would be a hardship. (Id. at 68a.) Netzel testified
    that the buildings on the Property would need to be demolished for the Property to
    have value. (Id. at 131a.) Although the ZHB did not set forth its credibility
    determinations in writing, we can infer that the ZHB did not find Mitchell’s,
    Schwartz’s, and Netzel’s testimony in this regard to be credible. Rather, it appears
    that the ZHB relied on the fact that DiCola used the Property solely as her residence
    from December 31, 1990 through October 2000 and Eidson has been living at the
    Property since 2011, as a basis to conclude that the physical condition of the Property
    and the commercial purpose of the Medical Office Building do not preclude the
    Property’s use for residential purposes.6 The ZHB also appears to rely on the fact
    that Appellants did not consider other potential permitted uses for the Property.
    While we acknowledge that “an applicant for a variance for a legally
    non-conforming property [need not] eliminate every possible permitted use[,]” it
    does not appear from the record that Appellants considered any permitted use other
    than single-family residential.         Marshall v. City of Phila., 
    97 A.3d 323
    , 332
    6
    Appellants suggest that “the ZHB’s finding that no hardship exists because [Eidson]
    currently resides at the [Property] is tantamount to a death sentence[,]” because Eidson is of very
    limited means and lives in the residential portion of the Medical Office Building out of necessity.
    (Appellants’ Br. at 48.) Appellants, however, have not identified where in the record these facts
    can be found. Thus, we will not consider such facts for the purposes of this appeal.
    23
    (Pa. 2014).   This evidence and testimony supports the ZHB’s conclusion that
    Appellants failed to demonstrate that the physical condition of the Property
    constitutes a substantial hardship for the residential use of the Property. For these
    reasons, we conclude that the ZHB did not abuse its discretion or commit an error
    of law by rejecting Appellants’ third allegation of hardship.
    With respect to their fourth allegation of unnecessary hardship,
    Appellants argue that they presented substantial evidence to the ZHB that the
    Property is “too large to attract interest from potential buyers who are looking to
    construct a single-family home” and “too small to attract interest from modern-day
    home developers, who seek significantly (and increasingly) larger acreages of land
    to subdivide and develop.” (Appellants’ Br. at 52.) Appellants argue further that it
    was improper for the ZHB to reject the Property’s size as a hardship on the basis that
    the Property could potentially be used for another permitted use. In response, the
    ZHB argues that Appellants failed to establish that the Property’s size created a
    substantial hardship for the residential use of the Property because: (1) Appellants
    did not provide evidence that the Property could not be used for another permitted
    use; and (2) an aerial photo of the area demonstrated that the size of the Property is
    consistent with surrounding properties that are being used for residential purposes.
    The ZHB’s conclusion that Appellants failed to demonstrate that the
    Property’s size created a substantial hardship preventing the residential use of the
    Property is supported by substantial evidence of record. Schwartz testified that the
    Property is difficult to sell for residential purposes because it is larger than what
    people are looking for in a single-family residential lot and it is too small to
    subdivide into more than 3 single-family lots. (R.R. at 64a-66a.) Again, while the
    ZHB did not set forth its credibility determinations in writing, it can be inferred that
    24
    the ZHB rejected Schwartz’s testimony in this regard. In addition, Common Pleas
    noted that “[a]n aerial view of the area shows that the size of the Property is
    consistent with the surrounding properties and other lots are used for residential
    purposes[,]” thus establishing that the Property’s size does not create a unique
    hardship that is separate and distinct from other neighboring residential properties.
    (Common Pleas’ Op. at 5; see also Supplemental Reproduced Record (Supp. R.R.)
    at 1b.) As a result, we conclude that the ZHB did not abuse its discretion or commit
    an error of law by rejecting Appellants’ fourth allegation of hardship.
    For all of the reasons set forth above, we conclude that the ZHB did not
    abuse its discretion or commit an error of law by concluding that there was no
    unnecessary hardship associated with the use of the Property for residential
    purposes.7 Because the ZHB did not abuse its discretion or commit an error of law
    in this regard, Common Pleas did not err in affirming the ZHB’s decision and order.
    IV. CONCLUSION
    Accordingly, we affirm Common Pleas’ order.
    P. KEVIN BROBSON, Judge
    Judge Fizzano Cannon did not participate in the decision of this case.
    7
    Given our disposition above, we need not address Appellants’ remaining arguments on
    appeal, because, without establishing an unnecessary hardship, Appellants cannot obtain the
    requested use and dimensional variances.
    25
    IN THE COMMONWEALTH COURT OF PENNSYLVANIA
    Pamela Eidson and                         :
    J.C. Bar Properties, Inc.,                :
    Appellants   :
    :
    v.                           :   No. 714 C.D. 2017
    :
    Ross Township Zoning                      :
    Hearing Board and                         :
    Township of Ross                          :
    ORDER
    AND NOW, this 12th day of March, 2018, the order of the Court of
    Common Pleas of Allegheny County is hereby AFFIRMED.
    P. KEVIN BROBSON, Judge