IN THE COMMONWEALTH COURT OF PENNSYLVANIA
Borough of Parkesburg, :
Appellant :
:
v. : No. 1393 C.D. 2017
: ARGUED: November 15, 2018
Joseph M. Rzonca :
BEFORE: HONORABLE P. KEVIN BROBSON, Judge
HONORABLE MICHAEL H. WOJCIK, Judge
HONORABLE ELLEN CEISLER, Judge
OPINION NOT REPORTED
MEMORANDUM OPINION
BY JUDGE CEISLER FILED: December 17, 2018
The Borough of Parkesburg (Borough) appeals from the August 28, 2017
Order of the Court of Common Pleas of Chester County (Trial Court) dismissing the
Borough’s Complaint against Joseph M. Rzonca. For the reasons that follow, we
vacate the Trial Court’s Order and remand this matter for trial.
Background
On January 13, 2016, a Borough Code Enforcement Officer sent Mr. Rzonca
a notice (Enforcement Notice) informing him that his property located at 8 Chestnut
Street in the Borough (Property) was in violation of two provisions of the
International Property Maintenance Code of 2009 (Property Maintenance Code),1
1
Section 107.1 of the Property Maintenance Code provides in relevant part:
Whenever the code official determines that there has been a violation of this [C]ode
or has grounds to believe that a violation has occurred, notice shall be given in the
manner prescribed in Sections 107.2 and 107.3 [of the Property Maintenance Code]
to the person responsible for the violation as specified in this [C]ode. . . .
Property Maintenance Code § 107.1
which the Borough adopted and incorporated in Ordinance Number 486 (Ordinance
486).2 The Enforcement Notice stated:
This letter is to advise you that your [P]roperty located at 8
Chestnut St[reet] . . . in [the] Borough, is in violation of the [Property
Maintenance Code], enforced through [Ordinance] 486.
304.2 Protective Treatment - All exterior surfaces, including but not
limited to, doors, door and window frames, cornices, porches, trim,
balconies, decks and fences, shall be maintained in good condition.
Exterior wood surfaces, other than decay resistant woods, shall be
protected from the elements and decay by painting or other protective
covering or treatment. Peeling, flaking and chipped paint shall be
eliminated and surfaces repainted. All siding and masonry joints, as
well as those between the building envelope and the perimeter of
windows, door and skylights, shall be maintained weather resistant and
water tight. All metal surfaces subject to rust or corrosion shall be
coated to inhibit such rust and corrosion, all surfaces with rust or
corrosion shall be stabilized and coated to inhibit future rust and
corrosion. Oxidation stains shall be removed from exterior surfaces.
304.6 Exterior Walls - All exterior walls shall be free from holes,
breaks, and loose or rotting material; and maintained weatherproof [sic]
and properly surface coated where required to prevent deterioration.
You have 20 days from this notice ([until] February 2, 2016) to
apply for a building permit to properly weatherproof your structure.
Failure to correct this violation in the allotted time will cause the
2
The Borough adopted Ordinance 486 in April 2010. Section 1 of Ordinance 486 states
that the Borough adopted the International Property Maintenance Code of 2009 “as the Property
Maintenance Code of the Borough of Parkesburg . . . for regulating and governing the conditions
and maintenance of all property, buildings and structures . . . .” Ordinance 486, § 1. Ordinance
486 further provides that “each and all of the regulations, provisions, penalties, conditions and
terms of said Property Maintenance Code on file in the office of the Borough . . . are hereby
referred to, adopted, and made a part hereof, as if fully set out in this [O]rdinance, with the
additions, insertions, deletions and changes, if any, prescribed in Section 2 of this [O]rdinance.”
Id.
2
Borough to file a civil complaint in [Magisterial] District [C]ourt
[(District Court)].
You have the right to appeal this notice. If an appeal is desired[,]
the Notice of Appeal must be completed and filed with the Borough
within twenty (20) days after the decision, notice or order is served.
The fee to file an appeal is $500 and must be paid at the time of filing.
You can obtain a Property Maintenance Code Notice of Appeal form at
The Borough Office or on our website at www.parkesburg.org.
Enforcement Notice, 1/13/16, at 1. Mr. Rzonca neither corrected the violations nor
filed an appeal.
Thereafter, the Borough filed an action in District Court, seeking a civil
penalty against Mr. Rzonca for his unabated code violations.3 On March 31, 2016,
3
Section 106.4 of the Property Maintenance Code, as revised by Ordinance 486, states in
relevant part:
B. In addition to the enforcement of this [C]ode . . . as a Summary Offense as
identified previously, if an action is brought At Law or In Equity as identified in
Section 106.5 of this [C]ode, then any person who has violated or permitted the
violations of the provisions of this [C]ode, upon being found liable therefor in a
Civil Action commenced by [the] Borough, shall pay a Judgment of not less than
One Thousand Dollars ($1,000.00) per violation, plus costs and attorney’s fees
incurred by [the] Borough.
C. Each day any violation exists and continues shall constitute a separate offense.
D. If any . . . Civil Action brought pursuant to this [C]ode results in a final
determination without any appeal pending and if the violation still exists, then the
Borough . . . shall be and is hereby empowered to correct the violation by repair or
otherwise.
E. All costs, expenses and attorney’s fees incurred or expended by the Borough . .
. for any repair, etc., relative to a violation as is permitted in subsection D above,
together with an administrative charge of ten percent (10%) may be charged as a
Municipal Claim or Lien against the property at issue.
3
the District Court entered judgment in the Borough’s favor in the amount of
$1,284.18.
On April 12, 2016, Mr. Rzonca appealed to the Trial Court and demanded a
jury trial. On April 29, 2016, the Borough filed a Complaint in the Trial Court, after
which Mr. Rzonca filed an Answer and New Matter. In his Answer, Mr. Rzonca
alleged, inter alia, that he no longer owned the Property due to foreclosure,4 a
different Borough ordinance governed the enforcement matter, and the Borough was
harassing him and retaliating against him in violation of his civil rights. Rzonca’s
Ans. & New Matter, ¶¶ 2-3, 5.
The matter proceeded to arbitration in the Trial Court. On December 21,
2016, following a hearing, the Board of Arbitrators entered an award in the
Borough’s favor in the amount of $2,284.18.
Mr. Rzonca again appealed, and the Trial Court scheduled a de novo jury trial
for August 28, 2017.5 On August 23, 2017, the Borough filed a Motion in Limine,
asserting that because Mr. Rzonca failed to appeal the initial Enforcement Notice,
he was precluded from challenging validity of the Enforcement Notice in the Trial
Court. On August 28, 2017, the day of trial, Mr. Rzonca filed an Answer to the
Borough’s Motion in Limine, asserting that the Enforcement Notice failed to provide
adequate notice of the violations under the Property Maintenance Code.
Property Maintenance Code § 106.4(B)-(E). Section 106.5 of the Property Maintenance Code
provides: “The imposition of penalties herein prescribed shall not preclude the legal officer of the
jurisdiction from instituting appropriate action to restrain, correct or abate a violation . . . .” Id. §
106.5.
4
The record shows that in November 2016, title to the Property was transferred to Wells
Fargo Bank, N.A.
5
Mr. Rzonca was unrepresented by counsel in these proceedings until June 2017.
4
The parties appeared for trial on August 28, 2017. At the outset of the
proceeding, Mr. Rzonca’s counsel stated that his client wished to withdraw his
request for a jury trial and proceed without a jury. Notes of Testimony (N.T.),
8/28/17, at 3.6 After releasing the jurors from the courtroom, the Trial Court asked
both parties to present opening statements. Id. at 3-4, 6. During his statement, Mr.
Rzonca’s counsel asserted, inter alia, that the Borough’s Enforcement Notice did
not comply with the Property Maintenance Code’s notice requirements. Id. at 7-8.7
Specifically, Mr. Rzonca’s counsel argued: “The minimum notification
requirements are that the notice be in writing, include [a] description of real estate
identification, [a] statement of violation or violations and why the notice is being
issued. . . . [T]his [Enforcement Notice] simply cites two sections of the [Property
Maintenance C]ode. It does not contain any explanation as to in what way the
property is in violation of those two sections.” Id. at 8.
In response, the Borough’s counsel maintained that its Enforcement Notice
sufficiently notified Mr. Rzonca of his violations and the steps required to abate
those violations. The Borough’s counsel then engaged in an extensive discussion
with the Trial Court regarding the Property Maintenance Code’s notice requirements
and the content of the Enforcement Notice, during which the Trial Court reviewed
the parties’ pleadings and exhibits. Id. at 16-24. At the conclusion of this discussion,
the following exchange occurred:
6
Mr. Rzonca’s counsel stated: “In light of the many . . . legal questions that this case
presents[,] my client is willing, at this point, to submit the case to the [Trial] Court for a bench trial
and withdraws his request for a jury trial.” N.T., 8/28/17, at 3.
7
Mr. Rzonca’s counsel also argued that the Borough failed to properly serve the
Enforcement Notice on Mr. Rzonca. N.T., 8/28/17, at 7-8. However, the Trial Court did not find
improper service, and that issue is not before this Court.
5
THE [TRIAL] COURT [to the Borough’s counsel]: That is your view.
What’s [the] motion from the defense?
[MR. RZONCA’S COUNSEL]: Motion to dismiss.
THE [TRIAL] COURT: Granted.
Id. at 24.
The Borough’s counsel again stated his position:
During the course of this it was the [B]orough’s belief that the
[Enforcement N]otice was adequate for the purpose of putting Mr.
Rzonca on notice and the due process requirements were met and had
we been permitted to move forward with trial[,] we would establish that
there was an abatement problem, that there was communication
between Mr. Rzonca and the code enforcement officer asserting that he
didn’t want to put up siding that he felt he didn’t have to, that he didn’t
need a permit issued. That would have been addressed in an appeal in
front of the Appeal Board.
Since this is a civil action and we moved forward with full
pleadings, complaints alleging what the violations were and which,
essentially, admissions in it that says yes but or yes but. Mr. Rzonca
was candid, he did not own the [P]roperty, misstatement of fact and law
at the time this process was proceeded with. We are now at this point.
We were ready for a jury trial and ready to present before Your Honor.
But it’s a civil action which I don’t believe there has been any violation
of due process under the circumstances because communications and
understanding of photographs established that Mr. Rzonca [k]new fully
well that the problem was lack of siding on the wall.
Id. at 25-26.
The Trial Court rejected this argument, stating that counsel was “putting the
cart before the horse.” Id. at 26. The Trial Court then clarified its ruling:
6
I’m not doubting one minute that there were violations that
existed and I’m not doubting for one minute that during the course of
all of these proceedings back and forth that [Mr. Rzonca] knew what
those violations were. All I’m saying is that there is a process here and
the codes that you wish to enforce require certain conditions in the
proceedings and one of those conditions . . . is that the notice has to
require certain things in writing and what I’m suggesting is it fails to
do that. And you very easily could have done that.
Id.
The Trial Court determined that the Borough failed to provide adequate notice
of the violations to Mr. Rzonca pursuant to Section 107.2 of the Property
Maintenance Code.8 The Trial Court explained:
The [Enforcement N]otice received by [Mr. Rzonca], dated January 13,
2016, is attached hereto, and clearly failed to put [him] on notice of the
specific violations and why the [Enforcement N]otice was being issued.
The [Enforcement N]otice also failed to include a correction order
identifying the repairs or improvements required to bring the structure
into compliance. By way of example, the [Enforcement N]otice could
have simply added “the structure is missing or lacks siding and a
correction order that [Mr. Rzonca] has “x number of days to add or
replace the siding.” Instead, the [Enforcement N]otice merely
regurgitated the language of two parts of the [Property Maintenance
8
Section 107.2 of the Property Maintenance Code provides that a notice of violation shall:
1. Be in writing.
2. Include a description of the real estate sufficient for identification.
3. Include a statement of the violation or violations and why the notice is being
issued.
4. Include a correction order allowing a reasonable time to make the repairs and
improvements required to bring the dwelling unit or structure into compliance with
the provisions of this [C]ode.
5. Inform the property owner of the right to appeal.
6. Include a statement of the right to file a lien in accordance with Section 106.3.
Property Maintenance Code § 107.2.
7
C]ode without specifically identifying what was in violation and what
specifically needed to be repaired or improved.
Trial Ct. Order, 8/28/17, at 1 n.1.
In its subsequent Pa. R.A.P. 1925(a) Opinion, the Trial Court further stated
that “[t]he specific violations alleged, and the specific repairs necessary, are missing
from [the Enforcement N]otice.” Trial Ct. Op., 12/8/17, at 4. The Trial Court also
rejected the Borough’s claim that the doctrine of administrative finality foreclosed
Mr. Rzonca’s challenge to the validity of the Enforcement Notice, finding:
[The Borough] did not establish that the doctrine [of administrative
finality] was applicable to this [Property Maintenance C]ode violation
matter, and conspicuously absent from the [Enforcement N]otice sent
to [Mr. Rzonca] on January 13, 2016, was any statement advising [him]
that the failure to pay $500 and to appeal the matter within 20 days
would result [in Mr. Rzonca] being barred from any future challenge to
any further action by the [Borough] with regard to the violations
referred to in the [Enforcement N]otice.
Id. at 5 (emphasis in original). Therefore, because the Enforcement Notice “failed
to meet the mandatory criteria for a valid violation notice under [the Property
Maintenance] Code,” the Trial Court dismissed the Borough’s Complaint. Id.
The Borough timely filed a Post-Trial Motion, which the Trial Court denied
on September 7, 2017. The Borough now appeals to this Court.9
Issues
(1) Is Mr. Rzonca precluded from challenging the validity of the Enforcement
Notice under the doctrine of administrative finality because he failed to appeal the
initial Enforcement Notice within 20 days?
9
Our standard of review of an order denying a motion for post-trial relief is limited to
determining whether the Trial Court abused its discretion or committed an error of law. Koter v.
Cosgrove, 844 A.2d 29, 32 n.4 (Pa. Cmwlth. 2004).
8
(2) Was the language in the Enforcement Notice sufficient to put Mr. Rzonca
on notice of the violations, particularly where Mr. Rzonca acknowledged his
understanding of the violations?
Discussion
1. Administrative Finality
The Borough first argues that the doctrine of administrative finality foreclosed
Mr. Rzonca’s challenge to the validity of the Enforcement Notice. The Borough
contends that Mr. Rzonca’s failure to appeal the initial Enforcement Notice within
20 days precluded him from collaterally attacking it at the time of trial. We disagree.
The doctrine of administrative finality “precludes a collateral attack of an
administrative action where the party aggrieved by the action foregoes his statutory
appeal remedy.” Potratz v. Dep’t of Envtl. Prot., 897 A.2d 16, 19 (Pa. Cmwlth.
2006); see Dep’t of Envtl. Res. v. Wheeling-Pittsburgh Steel Corp., 348 A.2d 765,
767 (Pa. Cmwlth. 1975) (“It is settled both under common law and statute that where
an act creates a right or liability or imposes a duty and prescribes a particular remedy
for its enforcement such remedy is exclusive and must be strictly pursued.”).
We conclude that the doctrine of administrative finality does not apply in this
case because the Enforcement Notice was not an administrative adjudication. See
Section 101 of the Administrative Agency Law, 2 Pa. C.S. § 101 (defining
“adjudication” as “[a]ny final order, decree, decision, determination or ruling by an
agency affecting personal or property rights, privileges, immunities, duties,
liabilities or obligations of any or all of the parties to the proceeding in which the
adjudication is made”). The Borough has cited no case law, nor have we found any,
specifically applying the doctrine of administrative finality to a code enforcement
notice issued by a municipality pursuant to a local ordinance. See Trial Ct. Op.,
9
12/8/17, at 5 (finding that the Borough “did not establish that the doctrine was
applicable to this code violation matter”).
The Borough attempts to analogize this case to zoning enforcement matters
filed pursuant to the Pennsylvania Municipalities Planning Code (MPC), Act of July
31, 1968, P.L. 805, as amended, 53 P.S. §§ 10101-11202. In such cases, our Court
has held that a property owner’s failure to timely appeal an enforcement notice to
the zoning hearing board (ZHB) waives all defenses in a subsequent civil
enforcement action. See Lower Mount Bethel Twp. v. N. River Co., LLC, 41 A.3d
156, 161 (Pa. Cmwlth. 2012) (holding that “failure to appeal the Township’s
Enforcement Notice to the [ZHB] renders the Enforcement Notice unassailable”);
Moon Twp. v. Cammel, 687 A.2d 1181, 1184 (Pa. Cmwlth. 1997) (“The property
owner may appeal the notice of violation to the [ZHB]. Failure to do so makes it
conclusively to be a violation.”). However, in each of these cases, our Court relied
on Section 616.1(c)(6) of the MPC, which provides: “An enforcement notice shall
state . . . [t]hat failure to comply with the notice within the time specified, unless
extended by appeal to the [ZHB], constitutes a violation, with possible sanctions
clearly described.” Section 616.1(c)(6) of the MPC, 53 P.S. § 10616.1(c)(6)
(emphasis added).10
Here, Section 107.2 of the Property Maintenance Code does not contain such
an appeal requirement, and the Enforcement Notice did not inform Mr. Rzonca that
his failure to appeal within 20 days would result in the waiver of all defenses in a
subsequent civil action. See Trial Ct. Op., 12/8/17, at 5. Thus, we conclude that the
doctrine of administrative finality does not apply to the Borough’s Enforcement
Notice.
10
Section 616.1 of the MPC was added by the Act of December 21, 1988, P.L. 1329, No.
170.
10
2. Actual Notice
Next, the Borough asserts that the Trial Court erred in concluding that the
Enforcement Notice failed to comply with Section 107.2 of the Property
Maintenance Code. Section 107.2 of the Property Maintenance Code provides that
a notice of violation shall:
1. Be in writing.
2. Include a description of the real estate sufficient for
identification.
3. Include a statement of the violation or violations and why the
notice is being issued.
4. Include a correction order allowing a reasonable time to make
the repairs and improvements required to bring the dwelling unit
or structure into compliance with the provisions of this code.
5. Inform the property owner of the right to appeal.
6. Include a statement of the right to file a lien in accordance with
Section 106.3.
Property Maintenance Code § 107.2.
The Trial Court found that the Enforcement Notice failed to satisfy two of
these requirements, because it included neither a statement of Mr. Rzonca’s
violations nor a correction order allowing a reasonable time for Mr. Rzonca to bring
the Property into compliance.11 The Trial Court stated that although the Enforcement
Notice quoted two sections of the Property Maintenance Code, it did not explain in
any detail how the Property violated those two sections, nor did it advise Mr. Rzonca
11
In its appellate brief, the Borough concedes that the Enforcement Notice did not contain
the requisite statement regarding the Borough’s right to file a lien on the Property. Borough’s Br.
at 26 (citing Property Maintenance Code § 107.2). However, that omission was not the basis for
the Trial Court’s finding that Mr. Rzonca’s due process rights were violated. Further, the Borough
notes that its Enforcement Notice did not reference the right to file a lien “because in filing a civil
action[,] the Borough would only be able to obtain a lien if it obtained a civil judgment and
perfected same.” Id.
11
what he needed to do to bring the Property into compliance. Thus, the Trial Court
concluded that the Enforcement Notice was defective on its face.
While it appears that the Enforcement Notice may have been facially deficient
under Section 107.2 of the Property Maintenance Code, we agree with the Borough
that the record shows that Mr. Rzonca had actual notice of the violations at issue
and, therefore, his due process rights were not violated.
It is evident from Mr. Rzonca’s own pleadings, as well as the exhibits
appended thereto, that he knew the precise nature of the violations and how to correct
them. For example, Mr. Rzonca acknowledged that the Property had exposed wood
surfaces that required painting and that his incomplete exterior siding project needed
to be completed. In his Answer, Mr. Rzonca averred that “the Borough . . . informed
[Mr. Rzonca] that he needs to file for a permit to repair property which includes
painting and applying siding over top of existing wood siding (original siding was
not removed nor did it need repairs).” Rzonca’s Ans. & New Matter, ¶ 5. Mr.
Rzonca also averred that he “cannot fix alleged violations until [the] Code
Enforcement Officer understands the [Uniform Commercial Code,] which states that
no permit is needed for installing siding over [an] existing structure which is not in
need of any repairs and even so a permit is not needed for basic repairs. No structural
changes are needed and it falls under exclusions to install siding or paint structure .
. . .” Id., ¶ 10; see also id., Exs. B, D. In fact, the Trial Court acknowledged that
Mr. Rzonca had actual notice of the violations, stating, “I’m not doubting one minute
that there were violations that existed and I’m not doubting for one minute that
during the course of all of these proceedings back and forth that [Mr. Rzonca] knew
what those violations were.” N.T., 8/28/17, at 26 (emphasis added).
12
We find this Court’s decision in Commonwealth v. Nicely, 988 A.2d 799 (Pa.
Cmwlth. 2010), instructive here. In Nicely, a borough code enforcement officer sent
the property owner a notice stating that: (1) an unregistered vehicle in his driveway
violated the borough’s property maintenance code and its related ordinance; (2) he
had 30 days to remove the vehicle; and (3) his failure to remove the vehicle could
result in a citation. Id. at 801. The property owner neither responded to the notice
nor removed the vehicle. Id. at 802. Consequently, the borough issued a citation to
the property owner, and he was later convicted of a summary offense and ordered to
pay a fine and costs. Id.
On appeal, the property owner argued, inter alia, that the citation lacked the
specificity necessary to provide him with knowledge of the nature of the accusations
against him. Id. at 806. Our Court, however, rejected this claim. We first explained
that “the essential elements of a summary offense must be set forth in the citation so
that the defendant has fair notice of the nature of the unlawful act for which he is
charged.” Id. (quoting Com. v. Borriello, 696 A.2d 1215, 1217 (Pa. Cmwlth. 1997),
aff’d, 723 A.2d 1021 (Pa. 1999)).12 After reviewing the record and relevant law, we
affirmed the property owner’s summary conviction, concluding:
Here, the citation specifically states the section of the Ordinance
and the section of the Property Maintenance Code that [the property
12
Our Court also relied on Pennsylvania Rule of Criminal Procedure 109, which states:
A defendant shall not be discharged nor shall a case be dismissed because of a
defect in the form or content of a complaint, citation, summons, or warrant, or a
defect in the procedures of these rules, unless the defendant raises the defect before
the conclusion of the trial in a summary case . . . and the defect is prejudicial to the
rights of the defendant.
Pa. R. Crim. P. 109.
13
owner] was charged with violating for keeping an unlicensed and
unregistered vehicle on his property. The citation provided [him] with
sufficient information regarding the charges against him such that he
could properly defend himself and enable the trial court to determine
the sufficiency of the Borough’s evidence to support its conviction.
Moreover, [the property owner’s] rights were not prejudiced because
the citation, taken as a whole, prevented surprise as to the nature of the
summary offenses [he] was charged with and of which he was found
guilty. Thus, we conclude that there was no violation of [the property
owner’s] due process rights . . . .
Id. at 807 (emphasis added).
In its brief, the Borough relies on a more recent, unreported decision of this
Court, Commonwealth v. Comensky (Pa. Cmwlth., No. 1421 C.D. 2013, filed July
30, 2014),13 which involved the same type of due process claim as in Nicely. In
Comensky, the municipality filed a criminal complaint against a property owner for
violating certain provisions of its property maintenance code. The property owner
challenged the validity of both the violation notice and the criminal complaint,
arguing that the defects in notice deprived him of due process. On appeal, this Court
determined that the property owner had actual knowledge of the specific offenses
charged and the record showed that he understood them. Therefore, even though the
violations were poorly identified in the written notice, the property owner could not
claim a due process violation because he had both actual knowledge and an
opportunity to cure the problems.
We recognize that, unlike this case, both Nicely and Comensky involved a
criminal prosecution for violation of a municipality’s property maintenance code,
rather than a civil enforcement action. However, a criminal prosecution is subject
13
See Commonwealth Court Internal Operating Procedure § 414(a), 210 Pa. Code §
69.414(a) (stating that an unreported panel decision of this Court, issued after January 15, 2008,
may be cited for its persuasive value).
14
to stricter constitutional scrutiny and a higher burden of proof than a civil
enforcement matter. As such, we believe that our Court’s conclusion in these cases
– that a defect in the notice of a property maintenance code violation may be cured
by actual knowledge of the violation – likewise applies in a civil enforcement action,
where the penalty is monetary and there is no risk of a criminal conviction or a
deprivation of property.14
Here, Mr. Rzonca made several admissions in his pleadings that demonstrated
his apparent understanding of the violations, and the Trial Court found that Mr.
Rzonca was aware of the nature of the violations. See N.T., 8/28/17, at 26. Mr.
Rzonca also failed to demonstrate that he was prejudiced in any way by the deficient
notice, particularly in light of the fact that he waited until the day of trial to first
claim improper notice. At that point, Mr. Rzonca had already appeared before both
the District Court and the Trial Court’s Board of Arbitrators regarding his violations,
never once claiming improper notice. See Weaver v. Franklin Cty., 918 A.2d 194,
203 (Pa. Cmwlth. 2007) (“Fundamentally, due process affords an individual notice
and opportunity to be heard.”).
Because the Trial Court found that Mr. Rzonca was aware of the nature of the
Property Maintenance Code violations, and the record shows that he understood
them, we conclude that Mr. Rzonca was precluded from claiming a due process
violation based on improper notice. Therefore, the Trial Court erred in dismissing
the case on that basis.
14
This is not a situation where strict compliance with notice provisions is required to
comport with due process, such as when an individual may lose his or her property at a tax sale.
Cf. Citimortgage, Inc. v. KDR Invs., LLP, 954 A.2d 755, 758 (Pa. Cmwlth. 2008) (stating that the
“[n]otice provisions of the [Real Estate Tax Sale] Law are to be strictly construed, and there must
be strict compliance with such provisions to guard against deprivation of property without due
process of law”).
15
Conclusion
Accordingly, because we conclude that the Trial Court erred in dismissing the
Borough’s Complaint, we vacate the Trial Court’s Order and remand this matter for
trial.15
__________________________________
ELLEN CEISLER, Judge
15
In its brief, the Borough points out that the Trial Court never ruled on its Motion in
Limine before dismissing the case. Because we are vacating the Trial Court’s Order, which returns
the case to its pre-dismissal status, the Trial Court will have the opportunity on remand to rule on
the Borough’s pending Motion in Limine.
16
IN THE COMMONWEALTH COURT OF PENNSYLVANIA
Borough of Parkesburg, :
Appellant :
:
v. : No. 1393 C.D. 2017
:
Joseph M. Rzonca :
ORDER
AND NOW, this 17th day of December, 2018, the Order of the Court of
Common Pleas of Chester County, dated August 28, 2017, is hereby VACATED,
and this matter is REMANDED for further proceedings consistent with the
foregoing Opinion.
Jurisdiction relinquished.
__________________________________
ELLEN CEISLER, Judge