Kinsley Equities II, LLP v. Hellam Twp. ZHB v. Hellam Twp. ( 2019 )


Menu:
  •          IN THE COMMONWEALTH COURT OF PENNSYLVANIA
    Kinsley Equities II, LLP, on behalf of :
    itself and Wayne H. and Susan N.       :
    Blessing and Robert N. and Agnes M. :
    Blessing,                              :
    Appellants         :
    :
    v.                             : No. 1164 C.D. 2018
    Hellam Township Zoning Hearing         : ARGUED: April 11, 2019
    Board                                  :
    :
    v.                             :
    :
    Hellam Township                        :
    BEFORE:     HONORABLE RENÉE COHN JUBELIRER, Judge
    HONORABLE P. KEVIN BROBSON, Judge
    HONORABLE ELLEN CEISLER, Judge
    OPINION NOT REPORTED
    MEMORANDUM OPINION
    BY JUDGE CEISLER                                          FILED: May 3, 2019
    In this matter, Appellants Kinsley Equities II, LLP (Kinsley Equities), on
    behalf of itself and Wayne H. Blessing, Susan N. Blessing, Robert N. Blessing, and
    Agnes M. Blessing (Appellants), appeals from the July 19, 2018, order issued by the
    Court of Common Pleas of York County (Trial Court). This order affirmed the
    Hellam Township Zoning Hearing Board’s (Zoning Board) August 22, 2017,
    decision denying Kinsley Equities’ application for a demolition permit, through
    which Kinsley Equities sought permission to demolish a cluster of buildings that are
    situated on a parcel of land known as “Lot 11.” Lot 11 is in Hellam Township,
    Pennsylvania (Township) and is owned by the Blessings. After thorough review, we
    affirm the Trial Court.
    Lot 11 was originally part of the Blessings’ larger, 153-acre property
    (Property), located at the intersection of Route 30 and Cool Creek Road in the
    Township. Zoning Board’s Decision, Findings of Fact (F.F.) ¶1. This Property
    contained, among other things, a historic residence known as the “Mifflin House,”
    which had been used as a waystation on the Underground Railroad, as well as a barn
    and several other farm-related structures. Reproduced Record (R.R.) at 830a-42a.
    At some point during 1997, the Blessings hired Kinsley Equities to assist with
    the Property’s development and, in furtherance of this goal, Appellants filed a
    preliminary subdivision plan (Preliminary Plan) with the Township for a project
    known as “Wright’s Crossing Business Park” (Wright’s Crossing) in early 1998.
    Zoning Board’s Decision, F.F. ¶3; R.R. at 696a; Appellants’ Br. at 4.1 This
    Preliminary Plan called for the Property to be subdivided into 13 separate lots,
    including Lot 11, which would contain each of the aforementioned buildings, and
    was submitted with a notation on the attached subdivision map stating “EXISTING
    FARM COMPLEX [on Lot 11] TO REMAIN.” R.R. at 699a. Appellants were aware
    at that time of the cultural, historical, and natural features of the Property, as it had
    to submit a “Natural and Cultural Features Impact Assessment Report” to the
    Township as part of its subdivision application paperwork. See R.R. at 809a-44a.
    Appellants subsequently filed a final subdivision plan (Final Plan), which
    contained the same notation regarding preservation of the buildings on Lot 11. 
    Id. at 717a,
    719a. Appellants’ engineering firm, LSC Design, Inc., presented both the
    1
    It is not exactly clear when planning of the Wright’s Crossing project began; however,
    the earliest documents in the record date to October 1997. See R.R. at 822a-25a, 827a-28a, 832a-
    33a.
    2
    Preliminary and Final Plans to the Township’s Planning Commission at a meeting
    held on September 24, 1998. 
    Id. at 26a-27a.
    Two of the Planning Commission’s
    members raised concerns during the course of this meeting regarding the Lot 11
    notation, questioning why it was not worded with more specificity and opining that
    it could “legally obligate [the] Blessing[s] to retain the marked buildings [on Lot
    11], rather than [allowing the Blessings] to demolish them at a later date.” 
    Id. at 27a.
    Ultimately, the Planning Commission recommended that both the Preliminary and
    Final Plans, with the language “EXISTING FARM COMPLEX TO REMAIN,” be
    approved by the Township’s Board of Supervisors. 
    Id. at 27a-28a.
    The Board of
    Supervisors subsequently approved both the Preliminary Plan and Final Plan, after
    which the Blessings recorded the Preliminary and Final Plans with the York County
    Recorder of Deeds on November 24, 1998, and August 3, 1999, respectively. 
    Id. at 696a,
    717a; Zoning Board’s Decision, F.F. ¶¶6-7.
    At least 8 additional land use plans involving parts of the Property were
    submitted to and approved by the Board of Supervisors over the course of roughly
    the next 18 years. R.R. at 1123a.2 None of these subsequent plans pertained
    specifically to Lot 11, in that none of them altered the physical bounds of Lot 11 in
    any manner. See Notes of Testimony (N.T.), 6/27/17, at 94-96. However, on each of
    these 8 plans, the buildings on Lot 11 were either marked by the notation
    “EXISTING FARM COMPLEX,” or were not referenced at all. R.R. at 746a-47a,
    750a-51a, 1033a-34a, 1123a.
    On March 28, 2017, Kinsley Equities filed a demolition permit application
    with the Township, through which they sought permission to demolish seven
    structures on Lot 11, including the Mifflin House. 
    Id. at 796a-98a;
    Appellants’ Br.
    2
    Appellants claim “there have been 12 subsequent approved plans that concern Lot 11,”
    though they offer no evidence supporting this assertion. See Appellants’ Br. at 23 n.1.
    3
    at 3-4. Rachel Vega, the Township’s Zoning Officer, replied via letter on April 6,
    2017, informing Kinsley Equities that its application could not be approved because
    of the “EXISTING FARM COMPLEX TO REMAIN” notation on the 1998 Final
    Plan, which Ms. Vega interpreted as “indicat[ing] the intention was to keep the farm
    complex as it is.” R.R. at 799a.
    Appellants appealed this denial to the Zoning Board on May 5, 2017, on the
    basis that they never intended, or were required, to restrict their ability to demolish
    these structures and, furthermore, that the Final Plan’s Lot 11 notation had been
    amended via the subsequently approved plans, which had removed whatever
    language could be deemed an impediment to Appellants’ proposed demolition.
    Appellants’ Br. at 4; R.R. at 1096a-98a.
    The Zoning Board then held a public hearing on June 27, 2017. Ms. Vega
    testified regarding her decision to deny Kinsley Equities’ demolition application,
    reiterating her opinion that the notation on the Final Plan evinced an intent to
    preserve Lot 11’s complex of buildings in perpetuity and, in addition, pointing out
    that this notation’s potential import had been discussed at the Planning
    Commission’s September 24, 1998, meeting. N.T., 6/27/17, at 20-27, 114-41.
    Timothy Kinsley, Kinsley Equities’ president, then gave a detailed recounting
    of his company’s involvement with Wright’s Crossing since that project’s inception,
    explaining that it was never Appellants’ intent to place a self-imposed preservation
    requirement upon Lot 11 and, furthermore, that Appellants always planned to
    eventually demolish Lot 11’s complex of buildings as they continued to develop
    Wright’s Crossing. 
    Id. at 35-63,
    75-100. To that effect, Mr. Kinsley stated:
    [“]To remain[”] was removed [from the subsequent plans]
    because, as we started to get users for [Wright’s Crossing],
    and started to see the development occurring, we knew
    that the time was soon coming where we would be needing
    4
    this land [i.e., Lot 11] as a building lot, and we no longer
    thought that the [complex of buildings] was going to be
    necessary for the continued farm operations. And we
    removed [“]to remain[”] because the intention was, and
    always had been, from day one, to eventually remove
    them.
    
    Id. at 61.
           Mr. Kinsley also fielded questions from a number of audience members,
    including June Evans, a Township resident who claimed she had contacted Mr.
    Kinsley while the original Preliminary and Final Plans were being considered by the
    Township. 
    Id. at 101.
    Ms. Evans said she had expressed to Mr. Kinsley her “grave
    concern about the future of the . . . historic [Mifflin H]ouse[,]” and had been told by
    him that “the [H]ouse was not going to be in danger[.]” 
    Id. Mr. Kinsley
    responded
    to Ms. Evans by denying that this exchange ever took place. 
    Id. at 101-02.
    Ms. Evans
    was subsequently called as a witness by Appellants’ attorney, whereupon she
    reiterated her recollection of her conversation with Mr. Kinsley in 1998, opining in
    part that she could not definitively speak to his intentions, but thought “he
    understood . . . our concerns about the historic nature of the [Mifflin H]ouse.” 
    Id. at 142-45.
           Representatives from several historical and preservation advocacy
    organizations, as well as several local residents, then gave statements in opposition
    to Kinsley Equities’ demolition application. Each of them focused, with varying
    degrees of specificity, upon the importance of preserving the Mifflin House and
    surrounding structures, due to their historical import. See 
    id. at 150-80.
    Most of these
    individuals spoke broadly, without specific reference to the Preliminary Plan or Final
    Plan. The exception was Katina Snyder, a representative from the Kreutz Creek
    Valley Preservation Society. Notably, Ms. Snyder was also a member of the
    5
    Township’s Planning Commission in 1998, when it reviewed the Wright’s Crossing
    plans. R.R. at 26a-29a.
    Ms. Snyder said her organization had always construed the Preliminary and
    Final Plans’ Lot 11 notation as protecting the aforementioned complex of buildings,
    including the Mifflin House:
    We, at the . . . Preservation Society, didn’t get real -- what
    should I say -- nervous about it because that statement was
    on the plan. So we figured that we’re safe, that it is going
    to remain. . . . But when they also talked about the later
    plans, as I think it’s been pretty much made clear, that they
    did not refer to Lot 11. So once again we thought, okay,
    they’re not talking about [Lot] 11, we’re still safe. And
    that’s why there wasn't a big to-do about, you know,
    anything that was done, because we didn’t think it was
    going to be demolished, not in any form. We have been
    involved, like I said, with this whole thing since kind of
    the beginning, because our letter is dated, let’s see -- in
    December 1997 we wrote a response to the L[S]C
    Agricultural Land Survey consultant because they
    requested our input about the Wright’s Crossing project.
    And we informed them that the house may have been used
    by previous owners Jonathan and Samuel Mifflin as an
    escape route for -- with the Underground Railroad. And
    so, again, we figured as long as that statement is on the
    plan, we’ll be doing okay.
    
    Id. at 172-73.
    The Zoning Board ended the hearing shortly thereafter without voting
    on Appellants’ appeal. 
    Id. at 186.
          On July 25, 2017, the Zoning Board convened another public hearing and
    voted unanimously to affirm Ms. Vega’s denial of Kinsley Equities’ demolition
    permit application. N.T., 7/25/17, at 7; Zoning Board’s Decision, Conclusions of
    Law (C.L.) ¶1.3 The Zoning Board found “that the credible testimony is that the
    3
    The Zoning Board issued its formal, written Decision on August 22, 2017. Tr. Ct. Op. at
    1.
    6
    Appellant[s] knowingly added a notation on the [Final P]lan, a notation which under
    the circumstances of this case was reasonable,” specifically referencing the
    statements made by both Ms. Evans and Ms. Snyder, as well as the concerns raised
    by members of the Planning Commission in 1998. Zoning Board’s Decision, F.F.
    ¶¶16, 24; C.L. ¶2. 4
    The Zoning Board concluded that any changes to the Lot 11 notation were
    purely descriptive in nature, rather than substantive, and did not remove the
    development restrictions that the Zoning Board found were in the Final Plan. 
    Id., F.F. ¶19.
    This was because the more recently approved land use plans pertained to
    other lots within the overall Wright’s Crossing property, and the Township’s
    Subdivision and Land Development Ordinance (SALDO) required identification of
    buildings on adjoining lots.5 
    Id. Consequently, the
    Zoning Board found that “no
    change[s] to the restrictions enumerated on [the Final Plan regarding] Lot 11 were
    4
    The Zoning Board also found that:
    20. The record . . . clearly establishes that the Appellant[s’]
    engineer, during the course of the review and approval
    period, that Mr. Kinsley was advised by his own engineer
    [sic] that he might be creating a permanent requirement [to
    preserve the structures on Lot 11].
    21. Mr. Kinsley, despite this warning, continued with the
    restricting notation [sic].
    Zoning Board’s Decision, F.F. ¶¶20-21. It is unclear how the Zoning Board determined that an
    unidentified engineer in Mr. Kinsley’s employ warned him about the possible implications of the
    Lot 11 notation, as the Zoning Board does not cite to any specific supporting evidence and the
    record appeared to be devoid of any evidence substantiating this assertion.
    The Trial Court directly quoted the Zoning Board’s finding that Mr. Kinsley had been made
    aware by his engineer of the potential implications of the Lot 11 notation. Tr. Ct. Op. at 6. Like
    the Zoning Board itself, the Trial Court does not cite to any evidence in the record supporting this
    finding. 
    Id. 5 The
    Zoning Board did not cite to a specific SALDO provision that supported this
    assertion. However, none of the parties dispute that the Township’s SALDO does contain such a
    requirement.
    7
    ever requested or approved” and concluded that the prohibition against demolishing
    the Mifflin House and nearby structures “runs with the land in perpetuity.” 
    Id., F.F. ¶17;
    C.L. ¶6. Appellants appealed the Zoning Board’s denial to the Trial Court on
    September 1, 2017. The Trial Court took no additional evidence and affirmed the
    Zoning Board on July 19, 2018. This appeal followed.
    Appellants argue, in essence, that they did not intend, through the Lot 11
    notation on the Preliminary and Final Plans, to restrict their future ability to demolish
    the Mifflin House and adjacent buildings. Rather, Appellants claim the notation
    merely marked existing physical features and memorialized that development of
    Wright’s Crossing would not affect those structures at that specific point in time.
    Appellants’ Br. at 15-23. In the alternative, Appellants maintain that, even in the
    event the Preliminary and Final Plans’ Lot 11 notation imposed a preservation
    requirement, the subsequently approved development plans relieved Appellants of
    this burden, due to the removal of the words “TO REMAIN.” 
    Id. at 23-25.
    On these
    bases, Appellants argue that the Zoning Board erred in affirming Ms. Vega’s denial
    of Kinsley Equities’ demolition permit application. 
    Id. at 25-27.
          Since the Trial Court took no additional evidence, our standard of review is
    restricted to determining whether the Zoning Board committed an abuse of
    discretion or an error of law. Valley View Civic Ass’n v. Zoning Bd. of Adjustment,
    
    462 A.2d 637
    , 639-40 (Pa. 1983). “We may conclude that the [Zoning] Board abused
    its discretion only if its findings are not supported by substantial evidence. . . . By
    ‘substantial evidence’ we mean such relevant evidence as a reasonable mind might
    accept as adequate to support a conclusion.” 
    Id. at 640
    (citations omitted).
    In light of this limited standard of review, we must avoid the inclination to
    measure and assess the multitude of factors and considerations that support a zoning
    8
    ruling, and “must exercise self-restraint as to substituting our opinions far removed
    from the particular zoning hearing for the well-considered decision of [the
    factfinder].” Cohen v. Zoning Bd. of Adjustment, 
    276 A.2d 352
    , 355 (Pa. Cmwlth.
    1971). “It is, after all, the sole function of the . . . fact finder to evaluate witness
    credibility and assign evidentiary weight.” Lower Allen Citizens Action Grp., Inc. v.
    Lower Allen Twp. Zoning Hearing Bd., 
    500 A.2d 1253
    , 1258 (Pa. Cmwlth. 1985)
    (punctuation omitted). Indeed, the “fact finder is the ultimate judge of credibility and
    resolves all conflicts in the evidence,” Eichlin v. Zoning Hearing Board of New Hope
    Borough, 
    671 A.2d 1173
    , 1175 (Pa. Cmwlth. 1996), and has “the power to reject
    even un-contradicted testimony if it finds it lacking in credibility.” Lower 
    Allen, 500 A.2d at 1258
    .
    The Pennsylvania Municipalities Planning Code6 allows a municipality to
    place conditions upon approval of a subdivision application. Doylestown Twp. v.
    Teeling, 
    635 A.2d 657
    , 660 (Pa. Cmwlth. 1993). “However, the municipality may
    approve subdivision plans subject to conditions only if the conditions are accepted
    by the applicant.” 
    Id. In practice,
    the preliminary plan approval process is
    frequently a process of contract negotiation between a
    developer and a municipality. In accepting a condition, a
    developer likely obtains a quid pro quo from the
    municipality, which quid pro quo may or may not be
    reflected in the approved preliminary or final plans. Once
    the thirty-day period to appeal from conditions imposed
    by the preliminary plan approval expires, the approved
    preliminary plan, including the conditions accepted by the
    developer, is essentially a binding contract between the
    municipality and the developer.
    6
    Act of July 31, 1968, P.L. 805, as amended, 53 P.S. §§ 10101-11202.
    9
    In re Busik, 
    759 A.2d 417
    , 422-23 (Pa. Cmwlth. 2000) (Freidman, J., concurring)
    (footnote omitted). “[A] subdivider’s failure to object to those conditions constitutes
    a waiver of the right to seek review[,]” thereby causing those conditions to “run[ ]
    with the land [and be] binding upon all subsequent purchasers.” 
    Teeling, 635 A.2d at 660
    . Even so, this does not prevent an applicant from then seeking and obtaining
    approval of additional subdivision plans that modify or remove a condition imposed
    by virtue of the original plan. See Capital Inv. Dev. Corp. v. Jayes, 
    373 A.2d 785
    ,
    788 (Pa. Cmwlth.1977)
    “[C]onditions contained in a recorded subdivision plan are enforceable even
    if the conditions are not specifically set forth in the deeds conveying the lots created
    by the subdivision.” 
    Teeling, 635 A.2d at 661
    . “Effect must be given to all the
    language of the instrument, and no part shall be rejected if it can be given a meaning.
    If a doubt arises concerning the interpretation of the instrument, it will be resolved
    against the party who prepared it.” Pennsylvania Game Comm’n v. Seneca Res.
    Corp., 
    84 A.3d 1098
    , 1107 (Pa. Cmwlth. 2014) (quoting Consolidation Coal Co. v.
    White, 
    875 A.2d 318
    , 326 (Pa. Super. 2005)).
    Applying this legal analysis to the instant matter, it is apparent that the
    Appellants included the notation “EXISTING FARM COMPLEX TO REMAIN” in
    the Preliminary and Final Plans to facilitate the approval of the Wright’s Crossing
    project. This language became part of the ultimate agreement they made with the
    Township (i.e., the Final Plan). See N.T., 6/27/17, at 44-47. The parties claim there
    have been between 8 to 12 subsequently approved land use plans involving Wright’s
    Crossing; however, only 2 of these plans are in the case record: 1 from 2000, which
    reverse subdivided Lots 1, 2, and 3, and another from 2007, which revised the lot
    10
    lines for Lots 10, 12, and 13. R.R. at 1205a-07a, 1209a-10a.7 In the subsequent plans
    that are part of the record, Lot 11 buildings are either not described at all or are
    described simply as “EXISTING FARM COMPLEX,” without the original two
    words “TO REMAIN.” Even so, none of the parties dispute that the exact words
    “EXISTING FARM COMPLEX TO REMAIN” are absent from all of the more
    recent Wright’s Crossing land use plans. More importantly, all parties agree that
    none of the newer plans specifically dealt with Lot 11 or caused substantive changes
    to Lot 11. See N.T., 6/27/17, at 81-84; R.R. at 746a-47a, 750a-51a, 1033a-34a,
    1123a.
    The language “EXISTING FARM COMPLEX TO REMAIN,” contained in
    the Final Plan, is at the heart of this dispute. The exact import of this phrase is open
    to interpretation, as it is unclear on its face whether it meant that Lot 11’s buildings
    would be preserved in perpetuity, or, as Appellants now argue, merely indicates that
    Appellants did not intend to demolish the Lot 11 structures during the specific time
    period when the original Preliminary and Final Plans were under consideration.
    Given this ambiguity, the Zoning Board properly considered additional evidence
    outside the bounds of the Final Plan, so that the Lot 11 notation could be placed in
    the proper context and have its true meaning ascertained. Indeed, though
    [i]t is well settled in Pennsylvania law that in the absence
    of fraud, accident or mistake, parol evidence as to
    preliminary negotiations or oral agreements is not
    admissible in evidence if it adds to, modifies, contradicts
    7
    Kinsley Equities and the Blessings also filed a “Declaration of Protective Covenants for
    Wright’s Crossing Business Park” (Declaration), which is in the record, with the York County
    Recorder of Deeds on February 5, 2001. R.R. 1286a-1309a. The Declaration pertains to the entire
    Wright’s Crossing development, but does not refer specifically to Lot 11, or any of the other lots,
    for that matter. 
    Id. Attached to
    this Declaration is a map of the entire, subdivided Wright’s Crossing
    development, which includes a notation on Lot 11 that says “EXISTING FARM COMPLEX.” 
    Id. at 1309a.
    11
    or conflicts with the written agreement between the
    parties. . . . However, it is equally well settled that this
    general rule does not apply where the agreement is
    ambiguous. In such a situation[,] parol evidence is
    admissible to explain the agreement and resolve
    ambiguities to ascertain the meaning of the parties.
    Daset Mining Corp. v. Indus. Fuels Corp., 
    473 A.2d 584
    , 592 (Pa. Super. 1984)
    (internal citations omitted). “Where a[n] . . . agreement . . . is obscure or ambiguous,
    the intention of the parties is to be ascertained in each instance not only from the
    language of the entire written instrument there in question, but also from a
    consideration of the subject matter and of the surrounding circumstances.” Com. v.
    Fitzmartin, 
    102 A.2d 893
    , 894 (Pa. 1954).
    As stated earlier, the evidence presented at the Zoning Board’s hearing
    included the Planning Commission minutes from 1998, the testimony of Ms. Snyder,
    a representative from the Kreutz Creek Valley Preservation Society, and Ms. Evans’
    recollection of her conversation with Mr. Kinsley about preservation of the Mifflin
    House. This evidence supports the Zoning Board’s conclusion that Appellants both
    intended to permanently preserve the structures on Lot 11 and freely elected to
    formalize that intent via this notation. Furthermore, it is undisputed that none of the
    subsequent approved plans made any substantive changes to Lot 11. As such, there
    is substantial evidence in the record which backs the Zoning Board’s determination
    that the phrase “EXISITING FARM COMPLEX TO REMAIN” placed a burden
    upon Appellants to perpetually preserve the Mifflin House and nearby structures on
    Lot 11, one which was not removed or materially altered by the aforementioned,
    more recent land use plans.
    12
    Therefore, as the Zoning Board did not commit an abuse of discretion or an
    error of law, we affirm the Trial Court’s July 19, 2018, order.
    __________________________________
    ELLEN CEISLER, Judge
    Judge Brobson concurs in result only.
    13
    IN THE COMMONWEALTH COURT OF PENNSYLVANIA
    Kinsley Equities II, LLP, on behalf of :
    itself and Wayne H. and Susan N.       :
    Blessing and Robert N. and Agnes M. :
    Blessing,                              :
    Appellants         :
    :
    v.                             : No. 1164 C.D. 2018
    Hellam Township Zoning Hearing         :
    Board                                  :
    :
    v.                             :
    :
    Hellam Township                        :
    ORDER
    AND NOW, this 3rd day of May, 2019, the Court of Common Pleas of York
    County’s July 19, 2018, order, which affirmed the Hellam Township Zoning Hearing
    Board’s August 22, 2017, decision denying Kinsley Equities II, LLP’s application
    for a demolition permit, is AFFIRMED.
    ELLEN CEISLER, Judge