Scholl v. Borough of Yeadon
Decision Date | 29 April 1942 |
Docket Number | 301-1941 |
Citation | 148 Pa.Super. 601,26 A.2d 135 |
Parties | Scholl v. Yeadon Borough et al., Appellants |
Court | Pennsylvania Superior Court |
November 20, 1941, Argued
Appeal from judgment of Q. S. Delaware Co., Misc. Q. S. Docket Z page 91, in case of William J. Scholl v. Borough of Yeadon et al.
Appeal by property owner from ordinance to court of quarter sessions.
The facts are stated in the opinion of the Superior Court.
Appeal sustained and ordinance declared invalid, opinion by McDonough, P. J., specially presiding. Defendants appealed.
Error assigned, among others, was the judgment of the court below.
Judgment affirmed.
E Leroy van Roden, for appellants.
Thomas J. Reilly, with him Albert H. Pearce, for appellees.
Before Keller, P. J., Cunningham, Baldrige, Stadtfeld, Rhodes, Hirt and Kenworthey, JJ.
This is an appeal from an ordinance [1] enacted by defendant borough on October 10, 1940, establishing "set-back building lines" on Church Lane under the authority of the Act of June 29, 1923, P. L. 957, § 1, 53 PS 15731. Cf. Borough Code of May 4, 1927, P. L. 519, art. XII, § 1202, cl. XXV, 53 PS 13337. The borough had previously enacted a zoning ordinance and a building code but the ordinance in question was the first attempt to establish building lines within the borough. It applies to but two parts of the business district of the borough along Church Lane, one between Guenther and Whitby Avenues and the other between Baily Road and Myra Avenue. [2] These two sections of the borough are not contiguous and there is no ordinance establishing building lines along Church Lane in the block north of Whitby Avenue to Longacre Boulevard nor in the block beyond, extending to Baily Road.
Of the 280 feet of land fronting on the east side of Church Lane between Whitby and Guenther Avenues plaintiff owned 196 feet. Between the south line of his land and Guenther Avenue, long before the ordinance, there were five store buildings with a total frontage of 84 feet, all uniformly set back about 10 feet from the streetline. Plaintiff had improved his corner lot extending southwardly from Whitby Avenue 100 feet as a gasoline service station with pumps on an "island" within 8 1/2 feet from the line of Church Lane. In July 1940 he had completed a market building adjoining the corner property and extending southwardly with a frontage of 72 feet. This building was set back but 3 feet from the line of Church Lane. He then proceeded to improve the remaining 24 feet of his vacant land immediately south of the market property. On September 30, 1940, he delivered a set of plans to the building inspector of the borough as an informal application for a building permit, followed by an application in writing on October 9, 1940. The plans called for a building set back 3 feet from Church Lane to conform with the building line of the market house adjoining it on the north. In the meantime the borough proceeded to enact the ordinance in question and it was finally passed on October 10, 1940. In it the borough established an applicable set-back building line at 10 feet from the streetline; plaintiff was refused a building permit. He as a party aggrieved had the right of appeal from the ordinance. Act of 1927, supra.
Set-back ordinances generally have received judicial sanction as lawful exercise of the police power, where the restriction has a substantial bearing on the health, safety, morals or general welfare of the public. (See note 53 A. L. R. 1222). The question whether an ordinance controls the owner's use of property for the public good is "largely legislative, with which courts only interfere to prevent an arbitrary abuse of power." Kerr's Appeal, 294 Pa. 246, 144 A. 81. Within these limitations legislative determination as to what is a proper exercise of the police power is subject to the supervision of the courts. Junge's Appeal (No. 2), 89 Pa.Super. 548. We are concerned therefore with the question whether the ordinance, in dealing with a recognized police purpose, went beyond proper bounds.
The issues in this appeal raise no new questions of law. In general an ordinance which without reason or necessity restricts one's use of his land or imposes a limitation which is oppressive, cannot be enforced. Bryan v. City of Chester, 212 Pa. 259, 61 A. 894; Kneedler v. Borough of Norristown, 100 Pa. 368. In DeBlasiis et al. v. Bartell & Oliveto, 143 Pa.Super. 485, 18 A.2d 478, a case where an owner violated a zoning ordinance by an addition to his building, President Judge Keller, in referring to the principle that such ordinance must be uniform in its application, said:
More specifically, in dealing with a zoning ordinance fixing set-back building lines, the Supreme Court in White's Appeal, supra, affirmed principles which rule the present appeal. It was there said: ...
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