[J-9-2020][M.O. - Donohue, J.]
IN THE SUPREME COURT OF PENNSYLVANIA
MIDDLE DISTRICT
SEDA-COG JOINT RAIL AUTHORITY, : No. 12 MAP 2019
:
Appellant : Appeal from the Order of the
: Commonwealth Court dated 5/3/18,
: reargument denied 6/28/18, at No. 617
v. : CD 2017 reversing the order of the
: Clinton County Court of Common Pleas,
: Civil Division, dated 5/11/17 at No.
CARLOAD EXPRESS, INC., : 2015-CV-933 and remanding for entry
SUSQUEHANNA UNION RAILROAD : of summary judgment
COMPANY, AND NORTHERN PLAINS :
RAILROAD, INC., :
:
Appellees : ARGUED: March 11, 2020
DISSENTING OPINION
CHIEF JUSTICE SAYLOR DECIDED: October 1, 2020
I agree with the common pleas court, Appellant, Appellee Susquehanna Union
Railroad Company, and the municipal and associational amici that the words “majority
of the members present,” in Section 5610(e) of the Municipality Authorities Act, requires
that all members physically present at a voting session must be counted in determining
the subset of members from which the majority necessary to a passing vote is
determined. 53 P.S. §5610(e).1
1 See, e.g., SEDA-COG Joint Rail Auth. v. Carload Express, Inc., No. 933-2015, slip op.
at 10, 2017 WL 9971334, at *5 (C.P. Clinton May 11, 2017) (“To find that the language
in §5610(e) actually means ‘present and voting’ would clearly change the meaning of
the voting language by adding another word, and, by extension, abrogate the intention
(continued…)
Along these lines, I credit the position that:
Being present and voting are two separate activities. One
can be present and not vote, see, e.g., Commonwealth ex
rel. Swartz v. Wickersham, 66 Pa. 134, 136 (Pa. 1870), just
as one can vote without being present.
Brief for Appellee Susquehanna Union R.R. Co. at 15; see also Brief for Appellant at 43-
44 (referencing an English grammar text for the proposition that “[t]he phrase those
members present . . . means the same thing as those members who were present, i.e.,
physically present at the time of the meeting” (quoting THOMAS EDWARD PAYNE,
UNDERSTANDING ENGLISH GRAMMAR: A LINGUISTIC INTRODUCTION 241 (Cambridge Univ.
Press 2010) (emphasis in original))).2 Notably, other jurisdictions have applied such a
plain-meaning to statutes and corporate documents containing similar language.3
(…continued)
of the Legislature in drafting the statute.”); Reply Brief for Appellant at 20 (“To hold the
majority unqualified would render the term ‘present’ null, contradicting the Statutory
Construction Act and this Court’s jurisprudence.”).
2 Appellee Susquehanna Union Railroad Company also highlights an incongruity
resulting from the majority’s interpretation. In this regard, the phrase “majority of the
members” appears twice in Section 5610(e), first in defining a quorum, see 53 Pa.C.S.
§5610(e) (“A majority of the members shall constitute a quorum . . .”), and second, in
prescribing for a controlling majority vote, see id. (“. . . and all action may be taken by a
majority of the members present . . ..”). The present-and-voting construction, however,
is being inconsistently superimposed only on the second iteration. See Brief for
Appellee Susquehanna Union R.R. Co. at 17-18; accord Brief for Appellant at 46 (“[T]he
Legislature plainly provided that, while a simple quorum may organize and conduct a
meeting, action may only be taken by the vote of a majority of the ‘members present.’”
(emphasis in original)).
3 See, e.g., Alvarez Family Trust v. Ass’n of Apt. Owners, 221 P.3d 452, 460-61 (Haw.
2009) (explaining that, when a majority vote is based on the number of members
present, an abstention or failure to vote has the same effect as a negative vote); City of
Hallandale v. Rayel Corp., 313 So.2d 113, 115 (Fla. Dist. Ct. App. 1975);
Mann v. Housing Auth. of City of Paterson, 89 A.2d 725, 727 (N.J. Super. 1952) (“[H]ere
the statute expressly requires the affirmative vote of the majority, but not less than
(continued…)
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From my point of view, the common-law rule is simply inapplicable where the
Legislature has explicitly selected a different voting regime. Accord Mann, 89 A.2d at
727 (holding that the common law presumption concerning abstentions doesn’t apply
where a statute requires an affirmative vote of majority of “commissioners present”). In
this regard, “a ‘majority of the members present’ vote requirement necessarily entails a
different result than an unqualified ‘majority vote.’” Brief for Appellee Susquehanna
Union R.R. Co. at 32-33.4
Regarding the majority’s observation that Appellant could have amended its
bylaws, in view of the straightforward language of Section 5610(e) and Appellant’s
consistent actions in conformity therewith, see Majority Opinion, slip op. at 21, based on
the above rationale I suggest that it may have discerned no impetus for doing so.
Finally, I also differ with the Commonwealth Court’s position that a plain-meaning
application of Section 56510(e) is absurd. See SEDA-COG Joint Rail Auth. v. Carload
Express, Inc., 185 A.3d 1232, 1239 (Pa. Cmwlth. 2018). I recognize that a members-
present approach is often considered undesirable, because it denies members the
ability to maintain a neutral result by abstaining, and since members who are present
but fail to vote through indifference may affect the result. See Alverez Family Trust, 221
P.3d at 460-61 (citing ROBERT’S RULES OF ORDER, NEWLY REVISED §44, at 390 (10th ed.
(…continued)
three, of the commissioners present.” (emphasis added)); Livesey v. Borough of
Secaucus, 97 A. 950, 951 (N.J. Super. 1916) (“We understand the rule to be . . . that a
majority vote of those present means what it says, notwithstanding some do not
participate in the vote.”).
4 Consistent with the above, I also respectfully differ with the majority’s discernment of a
common law rule treating “presence” and “voting” as synonymous. See Majority
Opinion, slip op. at 22. Instead, I don’t believe the common law’s requirement that two
different criteria were to be met should be taken as altering the plain meaning of either
criterion.
[J-9-2020][M.O. – Donohue, J.] - 3
2000)). Nevertheless, such a provision is not “uncommon or unlawful, and it requires
exactly what it says: a majority of those present rather than a majority of those voting.”
Rayel Corp., 313 So.2d at 115; accord id. at 116 (“There are circumstances in which it
may be more desirable to make decisions by a majority of those present rather than a
majority of those voting and we must assume that the drafters of the [applicable code]
preferred the former.”).
For the above reasons, I respectfully dissent in favor of a reversal of the
Commonwealth Court’s order.
Justice Mundy joins this dissenting opinion.
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