
    Charles T. Held, Appellant v. LaFrance Properties, Inc., Appellee.
    Argued December 7, 1983,
    before Judges Rogers, Williams, Jr. and Barbieri, sitting as a panel of three.
    
      Kenneth A. Clouse, Beatty, Young, Clouse S Linche, for appellant.
    
      Henry B. Fitzpatrick, Jr., Liebert, Short, Fitzpatrick $ Lavin, for appellee.
    February 8, 1984:
   Opinion by

Judge Rogers,

Haverf ord Township, in the person of its Code Enforcement Officer, has appealed from an order in mandamus of the Court of Common Pleas of Delaware County ¡directing the township to issue to the appellee, LaFrance Properties, Inc., permits to build, occupy and use an office building in the R-1A Residential zoning district where ¡only ¡single family detached dwellings and public utility uses are permitted. The appellee proposes to erect a new office building containing 10,200 square feet and 51 parking ¡spaces on the 42,247 .square foot (about one .acre) lot on which ■there presently is, .and, ¡as our examination of the record reveals will remain, a four-room, one story office building (about 1,000 .square fe.e,t) and .seven parking ¡spaces. The township refused the applications on the ground that commercial buildings ¡and uses were not permitted at the location.

Those premises were the 'Subject- of this ¡Court’s decision in Township of Haverford v. Spica, 16. Pa. Commonwealth Ct. 326, 328 A.2d 878 (1974). The facts of that case were -that the .owner of the property whose deceased husband had used .the existing four-room, one .story building as ¡an ¡accounting office, desiring to lease it to ¡another for the .same purpose, consulted the township building inspector who .suggested that she obtain zoning relief in the form of a variance or a special exception. .She then filed applications for a variance and ¡a special exception “[t]o continue to use as in past a one story .stone ¡building consisting of approximately 1,000 sq. feet as office ¡suits [.sic].”

The zoning hearing board refused the applications. The court of common pleas reversed the board, holding that the owner had acquired a vested right to continue to use the building as ¡she .sought. We affirmed, holding that although the facts did not warrant the issuance of .a variance o.r the granting ¡of a special exception, relief was appropriate because in 1938, the township had issued to the then owner of the property a building permit for the construction of the four-room, -one -story office building for use as a real estate office in violation of ¡the residential zoning restriction and because the township had for thirty-six years made no objection to the continuous and notorious commercial use of the .building as offices.

The appellee insists that we held in Spica that the appellee has a vested right to use the premises, that is, the entire lot for office purposes; that under our decision it may use not just the existing four-room, one story building but it may construct and use an additional and much larger office building. The township maintains that our decision in Spica established a vested right only in the continued commercial use of the existing four-room, one story structure for which the building permit had been issued in 1938 and that the court of common pleas erred in concluding that our decision had in effect rezoned the lot for unlimited office use.

The township, in our view, is correct. The owner in Spica did not seek a variance or special exception which would permit her to use the entire lot. She asked “[t]o continue to. use as in past a one story building. ...” The continued use of that building was the subject of that suit and the continued use of that building is what the lower court, and we by affirming, allowed.

The late Judge Harry A. Kramer, who wrote the opinion in Spica, seems to us to make it quite clear that the subject was the four-room, one story building and that the owner’s vested right, just as her request, was in the continued use of that building:

If the Township’s version of the facts is correct, then the Township not only permitted construction of a structure, the obvious use of which was in violation of the ordinance, but it also did the affirmative act of sanctioning the construction and use through the issuance of its own building permit. The Township was then silent for 36 years. In such circumstances, we believe the property owner is entitled to rely on the Township’s apparent acquiescence.
So that this opinion is not misinterpreted, we reiterate that our finding of a vested right in Spica follows from the existence of the 1938 building permit and the circumstances surrounding its issuance, from the exteremely long length of time which has passed since the non-conformance began, and from the obvious nature of the nonconformance.

Id. at 333-334, 328 A.2d at 882.

Order reversed.

Order

And Now, this 8th day of February, 1984,. the order of the Court of Common Pleas of Delaware County in the above-captioned matter is reversed. 
      
       The figures ¡ais ,to ibhe new building came from a plan which if was - stipulated shows the proposal submitted by the appellee. The plan ¡shows ¡the existing ¡building and the proposed 10,200 square feet new building -and 51 neiw parking spaces.
     