Ramey Borough v. Commonwealth

Dissenting Opinion by

Judge Kramer:

I respectfully dissent. I cannot agree that this Court is forced to preclude this small community from raising the defense of impossibility in a direct appeal from an order of the Environmental Hearing Board (Board) compelling construction of a sewage facility, the cost of which is over four times the total assessed valuation of the municipality. I do not believe that the cases cited by the majority, or common sense, necessarily compel such a result.

The majority relies on two appellate cases. The first of these is Sanitary Water Board of Commonwealth of Pennsylvania v. Wilkes-Barre, 199 Pa. Superior Ct. 492, 185 A. 2d 624 (1962), and reliance on it is not persuasive. In Wilkes-Barre the city was under an order which bears some resemblance to the one challenged in the instant case. Wilkes-Barre had been dumping large *608quantities of raw sewage into the Susquehanna River for years until the Sanitary Water Board ( predecessor of the Department of Environmental Resources) ordered the discontinuance of the discharge, and the construction of an expensive sewage treatment facility.

The municipality argued that the decision of the Sanitary Water Board was “discriminatory, unjust, unreasonable, inequitable, economically inadvisable, and constitutes a waste of the taxpayers’ money.” 199 Pa. Superior Ct. at 499, 185 A. 2d at 627. This argument denounces a host of sins, but still seems quite distinct from the assertion here that construction of the sewage treatment facility is impossible. At the time of its appeal Wilkes-Barre was a city of over 63,000 population, and it is reasonable to assume that its municipal government had at its disposal the financial resources one would expect to find in a city of that size. Its assessed valuation, in all likelihood, ran into the tens (or perhaps even hundreds) of millions of dollars.1 Wilkes-Barre’s argument seemed to reflect its unwillingness to expend large sums of money on sewage treatment, but did not say that construction of the plant was impossible. Thus a conclusion that the Wilkes-Bwrre decision “rejected” the defense of impossibilty is not accurate.2 The issue of impossibility was simply not before the Court in that case.

The second appellate case discussed in the majority opinion, and deemed to be controlling, is Commonwealth *609ex rel. Alessandroni v. Confluence Borough, 427 Pa. 540, 234 A. 2d 852 (1967). Confluence involved a mandamus action instituted by the Commonwealth to secure compliance with an order of the Sanitary Water Board directing construction of a sewage treatment facility. The municipality argued that while it was willing to comply with the order, it was unable to raise sufficient funds to pay for the construction. The Supreme Court held that this financial difficulty was not a defense to a mandamus action, but might be “a factor to be considered and evaluated by the court in any proceeding by the Commonwealth to enforce the judgment.” 427 Pa. at 544, 234 A. 2d at 854.

It is conceded that if one takes a broad view of the applicability of the Confluence decision, it could be considered dispositive of the case before us; but, from my point of view, the majority’s reliance on Confluence is unrealistic and leads to an impractical and unjust result.

The record in Confluence indicates that at the time of that litigation, the borough’s population was approximately 1,000. Its assessed valuation was $459,000.00 and the total cost of the construction ordered by the Sanitary Water Board was between $300,000.00 and $400,000.00. The majority opinion in Confluence indicates that the failure of the municipality to exhaust all possibilities for federal or state aid for the project was a factor of some importance to the Court.3 In what appears to be a key section of its opinion, the Confluence Court said: “The appellants’ allegation that it is not financially feasible at this time for them to construct *610sewage treatment works is not a sufficient basis to sustain tbeir contention that a judgment in mandamus would be a ‘futile act.’ There is no indication in the pleadings that appellants have exhausted every possible avenue in an effort to find some way of financing this sewage construction. The problem of water pollution has deeply troubled our federal and state governments for many years. In response to these problems there have been and will continue to be a number of governmental programs designed to alleviate these conditions. New methods of financing in this area are being developed constantly for those who heretofore have been unable to raise the necessary funds. Moreover, while we recognize that the procuring of suitable financing may be fraught with many difficulties, the appellants still have not demonstrated to our satisfaction that it would be a ‘futile act’ to require them to comply with the order of the court below.” 427 Pa. at 543-44, 234 A. 2d at 853-54. (Emphasis added.)

Bearing in mind that the total real estate tax base of Confluence Borough was $459,000.00 and the total cost of constructing the plant was only a maximum of $400,000.00, a comparison to the facts of the instant case yields a dramatic contrast.

The record in this case explicitly presents the dismal demographic and financial condition of Barney Borough (Barney), which is located in the heart of the economically depressed rural soft coal area of central Pennsylvania. In Barney’s approximate one square mile area, it has about 500 people living in about 203 homes. Barney has no industry, no public institutions and almost no employment. On the positive side of the ledger, Barney has two gasoline stations and a laundromat. There are 342 parcels of real estate with a total 1973 assessed valuation of $399,296.00. There are 334 persons on the per capita tax rolls with 204 owning realty. There are 37 people living on a fixed pension or social *611security. There are 42 widows or unmarried women working part-time elsewhere, or living on a fixed income. There are only 77 working residents who own property, and 37 of them are over 50 years of age. Population continues to decline, and 17 properties are unoccupied. Only 193 persons are on the wage tax rolls, and Ramey’s general budget for 1973 was only $8,019.96. With these record facts established, Ramey has been ordered to construct (and complete within 15 months) a sewage treatment facility estimated to cost $1,300-000.00. From my point of view, based on this record, the order of DER is unreasonable and presents a classic example of impossibility which this Court, at this stage in the pi'oceedings, should recognize.

It is important to note that the adjudication of the Board even suggested that performance may be impossible in this case. The Board noted that even with the possibility of grants of 75% from the state and federal governments, Ramey’s portion of the project cost would be a figui*e well in excess of the total assessed value of the entire borough. This fact prompted a response from the author of the Board’s adjudication, who, speaking for the Board, said:

“We have seen other cases where the total cost of a sewer system exceeds the total assessed valuation of a municipality . . . but this is the first case the writer recalls where the municipality’s 25% share of that cost was grater [sic] than the total assessed valuation of the municipality — meaning that the total cost is more than fowr times the total assessed valuation!” (Citations omitted.)
“The decisional law is clear that there is no judicial solution to Ramey Borough’s problem .... We therefore dismiss this appeal. On the other hand, given the cost and land value figures, we have some doubts whether Ramey will be able to get together the necessary money to actually be able to comply with the De*612partment’s Order.” (Reference omitted.) (Emphasis in original.)

The extreme facts of this case, pointed out above, make it distinguishable from the situation found in Confluence, and I believe that there is a reasonable basis for believing that the Supreme Court would consider the facts of this case as presenting a new question.

I have no reservation that the Legislature, under the police powers, may control or eliminate the discharge of polluting sewage into the waters of the Commonwealth; but these powers are not absolute. They are subject to judicial review. As laudable as the purposes of The Clean Streams Act are, they still must meet the test of reasonableness, under the facts of each case submitted for judicial review. It is still the law of this Commonwealth that “[A] law which purports to be an exercise of the police power must not be unreasonable, unduly oppressive or patently beyond the necessities of the case. . . .” Gambone v. Commonwealth, 375 Pa. 547, 551, 101 A. 2d 634, 637 (1954). In our shower of exuberance to clean the streams we should not wash away the tests of reasonableness and possibility of compliance. It is still the law of the land that one of the reasonableness tests is the balancing of the cost incurred against the benefit to be derived or the evil to be avoided. See Goldblatt v. Town of Hempstead, 369 U.S. 590 (1962); Lehigh Valley R. Co. v. Board of Public Utility Commissioners, 278 U.S. 24 (1928); Pyeatte v. Board of Regents of University of Oklahoma, 102 F. Supp. 407 (W.D. Okla. 1951), aff’d, 342 U.S. 936 (1952); Commonwealth ex rel. Allegheny County v. Toth, 189 Pa. Superior Ct. 552, 152 A. 2d 284 (1959). Counsel for DER, at the argument in the case before us, quite frankly stated that even if the sewer project for Ramey would cost an absolutely impossible ten million dollars, we should still affirm the Board. The majority agrees; I cannot. See Statutory Construction Act of 1972, 1 Pa. C.S. §1922(1).

*613It is difficult for me to believe that the Supreme Court would bar a municipality from raising the issue of clear impossibility at the onset of litigation when the allegations, if proven, show a total inability to perform. Under the majority’s application of Confluence, the municipality is totally precluded from raising any question of impossibility until after contempt proceedings are instituted. I believe a line should be drawn somewhere to avoid pointless legal proceedings and expense when a municipality alleges and proves a total and clear inability to comply with a pollution abatement order.

In Confluence the municipality cited Commonwealth ex rel. McLaughlin v. Erie County, 375 Pa. 344, 100 A. 2d 601 (1953), where the Court said: “It is a fundamental principle that mandamus will not issue, as a rule, where it is apparent that the writ will be futile or ineffectual by reason of the inability of the respondent to comply therewith.” 375 Pa. at 350, 100 A. 2d at 604. The Confluence Court distinguished Erie by noting that the fund in question was no longer in existence, and mandamus obviously could not compel the disbursement of monies from a nonexistent fund. It seems to me that inability to perform may result from many different types of circumstances. If the officials in Erie could not disburse funds that did not exist, how is this distinguishable from this case where Ramey cannot pay for a sewage plant because there are no funds with which to construct it? I see no distinction. While the line between hardship and impossibility may at times be hard to draw or to define, I believe Ramey’s situation demonstrates the latter.4

*614Justice Roberts, joined by Chief Justice Bell, filed a vigorous and persuasive dissent in Confluence. In response to the majority’s palliative statement that impossibility might be asserted in a subsequent contempt proceeding, Justice Roberts said: “I submit that to hold a defense valid in a contempt proceeding to enforce the same mandamus whose original issuance could not have been avoided by interposing that same defense would be absolute judicial folly.” 427 Pa. at 547, 234 A. 2d at 855. I agree. Whether in a mandamus action or in an enforcement proceeding, the procedure which the majority in the instant case seems to approve is unnecessarily wasteful in time, effort, and expense to the litigants, the courts, and, ultimately, to the taxpayers. A valid civil contempt cannot be sustained if the court finds that the act required for compliance is impossible for the alleged contemnor to perform, through no fault of his own. Commonwealth of Pennsylvania, Department of Environmental Resources v. Pennsylvania Power Company, 12 Pa. Commonwealth Ct. 212, 224-25, 316 A. 2d 96, 103 (1974).5 Just as the majority “can find no valid reason why, in such proceedings [the borough] should be. permitted to raise an issue of financial inability ... to perform,” I can find no sensible reason why Ramey should not be permitted to make a showing of impossibility to perform.6

*615Further, as the Board pointed out, “If the money cannot be obtained, the sewer system will not be built, regardless of what the law says. And if it is enough of a hardship, construction may be put off for a long time.”

In summary, I believe that Confluence, supra, is, at the very least, arguably distinguishable from the instant case. To deem it controlling here results in unnecessary waste and, in effect, probably postpones the day when a realistic solution will be found to the pollution emanating from Ramey Borough. If the facts are as Ramey would have us believe, any further litigation would be pointless. I believe Ramey should have been permitted to litigate the issue of impossibility in its appeal to the Board, and I would, therefore, remand this case back to the Board for findings and conclusions on the issue of impossibility.

A careful review of the record in Wilkes-Barre fails to reveal any data on this point.

The appellant’s brief in Wilkes-Barre is devoid of argument suggesting impossibility. The city’s primary contention was that mine subsidence in the general area made it unwise to construct the treatment plant, supporting pumping stations, and sewer lines. The brief articulates fears of excessive and regular damage from subsidence, with resultant high maintenance costs and loss of service for substantial lengths of time.

This seems to indicate an inconsistency within the Confluence opinion, since, if the Supreme Court really felt that impossibility was no defense, there seems to be no purpose served in discussing the merits of the impossibility claim. This inconsistency is noted by Justice Roberts, dissenting in Confluence. See 427 Pa. at 546, 234 A. 2d at 855.

Section 3(a) of Barney’s Notice of Appeal to the Board alleges that the order of the Department of Environmental Besources is “incapable of performance.” I am in no way commenting upon the final determination of Barney’s contention that compliance is impossible. My position is only that Barney should have been allowed *614to raise the issue before the Board, and the Board should have resolved it.

It is interesting to note that the Department of Environmental Resources in Pennsylvania Power Company, argued, contrary to its position in this case, that the issue of impossibility was not a justiciable issue in a contempt proceeding because the regulated company had not raised the issue of impossibility at the original hearing.

The principle of raising hardship (in an analogous situation) as a defense to the issuance of an Injunction is not without precedent. In Commonwealth of Pennsylvania v. Wyeth Laboratories, 12 Pa. Commonwealth Ct. 227, 315 A. 2d 648 (1974), the Commonwealth sought an injunction to prevent violation of The Clean Streams *615Daw, Act of June 22, 1937, P. D. 1987, as amended, 35 P.S. §691.1 et seq. This is the same statute involved in the instant case. It should also be noted that, for our purposes, the practical effect of a mandatory injunction is the same as the effect of a valid administrative abatement order. In Wyeth, we said: “The case law in Pennsylvania is clear that a landowner enjoys the right to use his own property in a lawful and natural manner even though damages occur as a result of the lawful and natural use. While, under certain circumstances, he may also have a corresponding duty to abate a nuisance created as a result of a lawful use, if the resulting damage to another because of the nuisance cannot be avoided, or only at such expense as would be practically prohibitive to a person in the enjoyment of his own land, he may not be required to abate the nuisance. Beecher v. Dull, 294 Pa. 17, 21, 143 A. 498, 499 (1928); McCune v. Pittsburgh & B. C. Co., 238 Pa. 83, 89, 85 A. 1102, 1104 (1913). This being the law, it was very proper for the court below to take the obvious step of retaining jurisdiction to inquire into whether the resulting damage could be avoided and whether the expense to abate would be practically prohibitive.” 12 Pa. Commonwealth Ct. at 236-37, 315 A. 2d at 653.

Thus, in Wyeth we sanctioned the lower court’s refusal to issue the injunction until after it determined the possibiliy of compliance with The Clean Streams Daw.