IN THE COMMONWEALTH COURT OF PENNSYLVANIA
City of Philadelphia :
:
v. : No. 1763 C.D. 2014
: Submitted: May 1, 2015
Simeon Robinson, :
Appellant :
BEFORE: HONORABLE DAN PELLEGRINI, President Judge
HONORABLE P. KEVIN BROBSON, Judge
HONORABLE JAMES GARDNER COLINS, Senior Judge
OPINION BY JUDGE BROBSON FILED: August 27, 2015
Appellant Simeon Robinson (Robinson), pro se, appeals from an
order of the Court of Common Pleas of Philadelphia County (trial court). The trial
court’s order decreed that the City of Philadelphia (City) could sell Robinson’s real
property located at 618-620 Jefferson Street (Property) free and clear of all liens
and encumbrances based upon tax delinquencies, which, together with interest,
penalties, and other charges, the trial court deemed to be $9,333.78 at the time it
issued the order. The trial court also ordered that proceeds from the sale should be
distributed based upon priority of claims against the Property. We affirm the trial
court’s order.
On or about May 31, 2013, the City filed a petition for a rule to show
cause why the Property should not be sold free and clear of all liens and
encumbrances (Sale Petition). In the Sale Petition, the City asserted that it had
obtained tax liens for delinquent taxes and related costs including penalties,
interest, and attorneys’ fees, for the years 2003 through 2012 on the Property. The
City included in its filing a proposed rule returnable order with blanks for a
signature of the Court of Common Pleas’ administrative judge, a date for a hearing
on the rule returnable, and a date for the issuance of the order. Below the docket
entry for the City’s Sale Petition filing is a reference to a “rule upon all interested
parties” concerning the Property. At the end of this entry is the notation “EO-DIE
Petition filed . . . by the Court: Panepinto, J. 10/11/11.” Thereafter, an entry, also
made on May 31, 2013, provides “waiting to list rule returnable date.” An entry on
June 13, 2013, indicates “listed rule returnable date.”1
Although not included in the certified record, the City (as an exhibit to
its brief) and Robinson (as an exhibit to his July 2014 emergency motion to stay a
scheduled sheriff’s sale) provided a copy of a rule returnable order issued on
June 14, 2013, by Administrative Judge John W. Herron, which scheduled a
hearing on the Sale Petition for October 8, 2013, and directed the City to serve a
copy of the order on Robinson. The certified record contains (1) an affidavit of
service of the Sale Petition and rule returnable order upon Robinson by both
certified and first class mail at four separate addresses and (2) an affidavit of
posting on the Property. (Certified Record (C.R.) nos. 2-3.)
1
A docket entry dated September 24, 2013, captioned as a “corrective entry” provides:
Docket entry 5/31/13 . . . contained an error on the signature and
date as follows: . . . By the court: Panepinto, J. 10/11/11. Note:
Petition and Rule commenced on 5/31/13 should have current
administrative judge and current date. Problem reported and sent
to data processing for correction to electronic filing system
9/24/13.
Thus, the trial court appears to have identified a clerical or technological issue regarding the
issuance of administrative orders in general and noted a reported problem with the court’s
electronic filing system. Thereafter, it appears from the amending June 14, 2014 order that the
trial court corrected the problem with regard to the Sale Petition and rule returnable order
scheduling a hearing date.
2
On October 10, 2013, Robinson filed an answer and new matter in
response to the Sale Petition. (C.R. no. 4.) In his new matter, Robinson raised
questions relating to the Sale Petition on two primary grounds: (1) the potential
effect of his then-pending claim in the City’s Board of Revision of Taxes in which
he apparently claimed that the assessment of his property and/or the amount of
delinquent taxes was erroneous, and (2) the allegation that the Sale Petition
process, which would culminate in a sheriff’s sale, was flawed based upon the
initial May 31, 2013 order of the trial court which, as suggested above, contained
an erroneous order date of October 11, 2011 and was purported to have been
signed or issued by Judge Panepinto. The City did not file an answer to
Robinson’s new matter, and Robinson filed a “motion for an on the record
objection to [the City]’s failure to respond to [his] new matter.” (C.R. no. 7.)
After a number of continuances, the trial court conducted a hearing on
April 8, 2014. During the hearing, the trial court, the City, and Robinson engaged
solely in colloquy. Neither party submitted evidence, although the transcript
indicates that the City handed the trial court a document purporting to show the
City’s calculation of the delinquent taxes and other charges arising therefrom.
Additionally, the colloquy indicates that Robinson was challenging the amount of
the charges based in part upon separate proceedings he initiated before the City’s
Board of Revision of Taxes. The colloquy indicates that Robinson obtained some
relief from the tax delinquency charges, apparently totaling approximately $1,000.
The trial court directed Robinson to come to an agreement with the City regarding
the amount of delinquent taxes, and the City indicated that it had prepared an
agreement apparently for the purpose of an installment payment plan for Robinson
3
to avoid the sheriff’s sale, but that Robinson would have to come to the office of
the law firm representing the City before April 20, 2013.
Robinson stated to the trial court that he was asking the trial court “to
come to some kind of accuracy . . . [t]hat’s the problem.” (Notes of Testimony
(N.T.) at 16.) The trial court stated that it could not do that and that it was “going
to be moving this thing, this situation forward, but I’m going to have you and
counsel sit down and she’ll show you . . . . You’ll reconcile the numbers.” (Id. at
17.) After Robinson mentioned that he was pursuing an appeal with the “OPA,”
the trial court concluded the hearing by stating that it was “signing this order at this
point . . . . You have [counsel’s] name and number and you’ll schedule a time to
work out the numbers.” (Id. at 18.) As we noted above, the trial court’s
April 8, 2014 order declared that the City’s damages from Robinson’s delinquent
taxes totaled $9,333.78, plus future accruing interest, penalties, and other charges
on all unpaid taxes until the taxes are paid and decreed that the Property should be
sold by sheriff’s sale without further advertisement to the highest bidder free and
clear of all subordinate liens, encumbrances, claims, mortgages, ground rents,
charges, and estates.
Robinson filed a notice of appeal from that order and later, without an
order from the trial court, filed a statement of errors complained of on appeal. In a
later opinion, the trial court identified the following issues: (1) whether the City
properly served Robinson with the Sale Petition and rule; (2) whether the City was
required to respond to the new matter Robinson included in his answer to the Sale
Petition; (3) whether the clerical error contained in the May 31, 2013 rule
returnable order effected the validity of the Sale Petition; and (4) whether
“month-to-month property tax accounting fluctuations” Robinson identified
4
resulted from billing methods and do not mean that the calculations are erroneous.
The trial court found Robinson’s claims to be meritless.
In his brief to this Court in support of his appeal,2 Robinson’s claims
of error appear to relate to a few topics: (1) the manner of service of the Sale
Petition by first class mail and posting; (2) the erroneous content of and use of
“boiler plate” language in the initial administrative rule returnable order
purportedly signed by Judge Panepinto in 2011; and (3) the absence in the certified
record of various rule returnable orders. The City proposes two grounds for
perfunctory rejection of Robinson’s claims: (1) that Robinson has waived the
issues he raises in his brief because they are beyond the scope of the issues he
raised in his statement of errors complained of on appeal; and (2) that the Court
should quash the appeal based upon the City’s assertion that Robinson’s statement
of questions involved (in his brief) does not comply with Pa. R.A.P. 2116(a). We
reject the first objection regarding waiver based on Robinson’s statement of errors
complained of on appeal. Where a trial court directs a party appellant to file a
statement of errors complained of on appeal, under Rule 1925(b)(4)(vii) of the
Pennsylvania Rules of Appellate Procedure, “[i]ssues not included in the Statement
. . . are waived.” Here, the trial court never issued an order directing Robinson to
file a Rule 1925(b) statement. His statement, then, appears to be wholly gratuitous.
Because Robinson did not file the statement pursuant to a court directive under
Rule 1925(b), we will not apply that rule’s waiver provision. As to the City’s
2
Our review of a trial court’s order in a tax sale matter is limited to considering whether
the trial court erred as a matter of law, rendered a decision that is supported by evidence, or
abused its discretion. City of Allentown v. Kauth, 874 A.2d 164, 165 n.4 (Pa. Cmwlth. 2005),
appeal denied, 912 A.2d 838 (Pa. 2006).
5
second claim regarding Pa. R.A.P. 2116(a), we will address that contention as we
consider the three primary claims Robinson raises in the body of his brief.
We believe that the first issue Robinson discusses in his brief, relating
to service of the Sale Petition and rule, is sufficiently encompassed within his
statement of questions involved such that Robinson has not waived the issue under
Pa. R.A.P. 2116. In this regard, Robinson claims that the City did not strictly
comply with the requirements of what is commonly referred to as the Municipal
Claims and Tax Liens Act (the Act), Act of May 16, 1923, P.L. 207, as amended,
53 P.S. §§ 7101-7505, for service of the Sale Petition and rule. Under Section 31.2
of the Act,3 53 P.S. § 7283, when the City files a tax or municipal claim in
accordance with the Act, it has the power to file a petition in the court where it has
filed its tax claim, i.e., the Court of Common Pleas of Philadelphia County,
requesting the court to “grant a rule upon [the interested] parties . . . to appear and
show cause why [the court]” should not issue a decree “that the [P]roperty be sold,
freed and cleared of their respective claims, mortgages, ground rents, charges and
estates.”4
The Act contains two provisions that describe the requirements for
service of petitions to sell property free and clear. First, Section 31.2 of the Act
3
Added by the Act of March 15, 1956, P.L. (1955) 1274, as amended.
4
The Act does not require the City to obtain a formal judgment based upon tax claims it
has filed. Section 3(b) of the Act, 53 P.S. § 7106(b), provides generally that “any . . . tax claim
or tax lien, including interest, penalty and costs, imposed by a city of the first class, shall be a
judgment only against the said property when the lien has been docketed by the prothonotary.”
“The docketing of the lien shall be given the effect of a judgment against the said property only
with respect to which the claim is filed as a lien.” Id. In this matter, Robinson has never claimed
that the City did not file tax claim/liens or that the liens have not been docketed.
6
provides the court with the power to order such property to be sold at a sheriff’s
sale “[i]f upon hearing, the court is satisfied that service had been made of the rule
upon the parties respondent[, i.e., parties with an ownership interest in the
property,] in the manner provided in this act for the service of writs of scire facias
to obtain judgments upon tax and municipal claims.” (Emphasis added.)
Section 18 of the Act, 53 P.S. § 7186, specifically addresses service of writs of
scire facias for the purpose of obtaining judgments and requires personal service.
Section 39.2 of the Act,5 53 P.S. § 7193.2, however, specifically addresses the
manner of service of a sale petition and rule to show cause, providing, in pertinent
part, that the City post a sale petition and rule in the most prominent location on
the property and serve the petition and rule upon the registered owner by first class
mail.
In City of Philadelphia v. Manu, 76 A.3d 601 (Pa. Cmwlth. 2013), the
Court identified the conflict of these two provisions. While the Court was not
required to address the conflict, it noted that the timing of the adoption of
Section 39.2 of the Act after Section 18 of the Act indicated that the General
Assembly intended for service under Section 39.2 to apply. Moreover, after we
decided Manu, this Court issued its decision in City of Philadelphia v. F.A.
Investors Corp., 95 A.3d 377 (Pa. Cmwlth. 2014), where we applied Section 39.2
of the Act in addressing a claim that the City had failed to serve parties who had an
interest in the property at issue in that case. F.A. Investors, 95 A.3d at 382.
5
Added by Section 4 of the Act of December 14, 1992, P.L. 859, as amended, 53 P.S.
§ 7193.1.
7
We agree with the Court’s application of the later-enacted service
provision contained in Section 39.2 of the Act. Under that provision, service is
accomplished by (1) posting a petition for a rule to show cause (the Sale Petition in
this case) and the rule to show cause issued by the court in response to the petition
(the “rule returnable order” as captioned by the trial court, scheduling the hearing)
and (2) mailing the petition and rule to the owner by first class mail to the address
the owner registered under Section 39.1(a) of the Act.6
The certified record includes affidavits of service, indicating that the
City posted the Sale Petition and June 14, 2014 rule returnable order (scheduling a
hearing for October 8, 2014) on the Property. The certified record also indicates
that the City served Robinson with those same documents at four separate
addresses by first class mail and certified mail, return receipt requested. The
hearing on the Sale Petition was continued, and the City served Robinson with a
subsequent rule returnable order that scheduled the hearing for April 8, 2014, by
first class mail only. As indicated above, Section 39.2 of the Act requires posting
and first class mail service of “notice of a rule to show cause why a property
should not be sold free and clear . . . issued by a court pursuant to a petition” and
the rule issued by the trial court. Here, the City posted and mailed the Sale Petition
and the rule initially issued on June 14, 2014. That posting and service by first
class mail complied with Section 39.2 of the Act.7 When the hearing was
continued, the City served Robinson by first class mail with the new rule, setting
6
Added by the Act of December 14, 1992, P.L. 859.
7
Robinson claims that the City was required to have a sheriff post the Sale Petition and
rule on the Property. Section 39.2(a) of the Act, however, does not require a sheriff to perform
such posting.
8
April 8, 2014 as the hearing date on the Sale Petition. The Act is silent regarding a
situation in which an initial hearing date is continued to another date. The City
complied with the requirements of the Act when it first filed the Sale Petition. The
City posted and served both the petition and the trial court’s rule setting a hearing
date. The Act did impose upon the City an obligation to re-post and re-serve the
Sale Petition following its initial service. Moreover, Robinson appeared at the
hearing. Thus, we may presume that he received notice and was not prejudiced by
the form of service.8
In his brief, Robinson also objects to the May 31, 2013 docket
reference to a rule purportedly issued by Judge Panepinto in 2011.9 The Court of
Common Pleas acknowledged its mistake and Judge Heron, who was the
administrative judge of the trial court at that time, issued an amended order on
June 14, 2013, that the City posted and served upon Robinson by first class mail.
Robinson objects, contending that the original erroneous order constitutes a
misrepresentation by the City and invalidates the Sale Petition and the process that
followed. We disagree because the June 14, 2013 amending order correctly
references the Sale Petition and sets forth the initial date for hearing. Thus, the
erroneous May 31, 2013 order did not invalidate the Sale Petition and rule process.
8
Robinson also alleges that the City improperly served him with an order dated
June 24, 2014, regarding notice of a proposed sheriff’s sale of the Property. That order,
however, is not at issue in this appeal.
9
Although Robinson’s statement of the questions involved does not specifically refer to
this order, we perceive that when he challenged “the alleged improper usage of the boiler plate
text code” in his statement of questions involved, he was likely referring to this order. Thus, we
believe that Robinson has not waived this issue under Pa. R.A.P. 2116.
9
Robinson also objects to the trial court’s procedure in this matter
based upon the fact that the certified record does not include a copy of either the
initial June 14, 2013 rule returnable order or the March 26, 2014 rule order that
scheduled the April 8, 2014 hearing. Robinson contends that the failure of the trial
court to include copies of the rule orders in the certified record constitutes
non-compliance with the strict terms of the Act, and, thereby, renders the trial
court’s order invalid.10 Robinson claims this failure constitutes a
misrepresentation, but he does not provide any authority for the proposition that a
properly served rule returnable order that is not included in the certified record or
docket entries renders a final disposition following a hearing (during which the
objecting party participated without objection) non-compliant with the Act.
The lack of a docket entry and/or copy of the orders has not hampered
this Court’s review, because the parties have supplied copies of the orders in
various documents submitted either to the trial court or this Court. As Robinson
himself suggests at pages 26 through 29 of his brief, when a record appears to be
incomplete, an appellate court has the power to order the court below to
supplement the original record so that the appellate court may engage in proper
appellate review. An incomplete original record, however, is not a barrier to
appellate review where the appellate court is able to address all of the issues raised.
Additionally, this Court could exercise its powers of appellate review and direct
the trial court to supplement the certified record. In this case, however, we may
10
Because Robinson included in his statement of questions involved a reference to the
requirement that the City was required to comply strictly with the provisions of the Act, we
conclude that Robinson did not waive this issue under Pa. R.A.P. 2116.
10
take judicial notice of the orders attached as exhibits, and we need not ask the trial
court to supplement the record. Thus, we conclude that this argument lacks merit.
Finally, Robinson also argues that the trial court abused its discretion
during the hearing because it failed to address his claim that the City failed to
respond to the new matter he included in his answer to the Sale Petition. We
believe that Robinson has failed to preserve this issue because he did not raise it in
his statement of questions involved. Accordingly, we need not address it.11
By our assessment, we have addressed above the issues that Robinson,
a pro se appellant, has raised and preserved in this appeal. We would be remiss,
however, if we did not express our concern about other aspects of the proceedings
before the trial court. We acknowledge that the Act anticipates a narrow factual
inquiry when a party challenges a petition to sell property free and clear under the
Act. In this case, however, there does not appear to be any record evidence
adduced during a hearing that supports the trial court’s decision. Indeed, we find it
curious, if not troubling, that the City would proceed under the Act to sell real
property without attaching to its petition or introducing at hearing evidence of a
11
Although we will not address this issue on the merits because it has been waived, we
note that Robinson objected during the hearing to the fact that the City never responded to the
new matter he included in his response to the Sale Petition. The trial court opined that while the
failure of the City to respond to the new matter was “curious,” the City’s failure to respond did
not invalidate the Sale Petition. The City contends that a Sale Petition is not a “pleading” that
anticipates the types of answers typical in civil practice where a defendant may include new
matter in an answer to a complaint. Section 35 of the Act, 53 P.S. § 7189, however, provides
that “[a]ll petitions, answers, and replications shall be made under oath or affirmation” and that
“[a]nswers must be filed and served within fifteen days after service of the petition, and rules and
replications must be filed within fifteen days after service of the last of the answers.
Replications must be confined to a reply to new matter set forth in the answers.” (Emphasis
added.) Thus, the Act itself counsels the City to reply to new matter.
11
docketed tax lien(s) on the property in question. The trial court’s factual findings,
such as they are, appear instead to be based on a City-generated accounting of what
the City contended are the amounts of delinquent taxes and related charges owed
with respect to the Property. This document, however, was neither offered by the
City nor admitted into the record by the trial court as evidence in support of the
City’s Sale Petition. The trial court also appears to have given some consideration
to a post-hearing communication from the City that, too, was never offered or
admitted as evidence. None of these issues, however, have been raised by
Robinson. Accordingly, they are not grounds upon which we can reverse or
remand. In another appeal, however, perhaps one where the property owner is able
to afford and secure counsel, a similar record might not hold up on appeal.
Based upon our review of the issues we believe Robinson raised and
preserved, we are constrained to conclude that the trial court did not err or abuse its
discretion. Accordingly, we will affirm the trial court’s order.
P. KEVIN BROBSON, Judge
12
IN THE COMMONWEALTH COURT OF PENNSYLVANIA
City of Philadelphia :
:
v. : No. 1763 C.D. 2014
:
Simeon Robinson, :
Appellant :
ORDER
AND NOW, this 27th day of August, 2015, the order of the Court of
Common Pleas of Philadelphia County is AFFIRMED.
P. KEVIN BROBSON, Judge