Opinion by
Judge Craig,Several Philadelphia City Council members and other taxpayers and residents of Philadelphia (plaintiffs)1 appeal a Philadelphia Common Pleas Court order sustaining the preliminary objections of Mayor Wilson Goode, City Council President Joseph Coleman, other council members and city officials, and Rollins Cablevision of Philadelphia, Inc. (Rollins). We reverse and remand the case for further proceedings.
On November 14, 1982, the Mayor approved Ordinance No. 341, which was enacted by the city council pursuant to its powers under Section 2.2-200 of the Philadelphia Home Rule Charter. By this ordinance, city council awarded Rollins a cable television franchise for designated Area III of the city. Section 2 of Ordinance No. 341 provides, in pertinent part:
*532The award of this franchise is subject to all of the terms of the Franchising Ordinance. . . . More particularly, the award is subject to the execution, and ratification by Council resolution, of a formal franchise agreement setting forth the terms and conditions for the operation of the Area III CATV system between ROLLINS CABLEVISION OF PHILADELPHIA, INC. and the city of Philadelphia. . . .
(Emphasis added.)'
Pursuant to the terms of the ordinance, City Council Resolution No. 534, which approved the franchise agreement between the city and Rollins, was certified by the Council President.
The plaintiffs filed a complaint in equity seeking injunctive relief and charging that the approving resolution was adopted in the absence of a quorum and was therefore of no effect.
The Mayor, Council President and Rollins preliminarily objected on the ground, among others, that as a duly certified and filed resolution, the bill was entitled to a conclusive presumption of validity under the “enrolled bill doctrine.” Field v. Clark, 143 U.S. 649 (1892). The common pleas court held that the resolution was valid and dismissed the complaint.
Preliminary objections are not to be sustained unless it is clear that the law will not permit the recovery being sought. County of Allegheny v. Commonwealth, 507 Pa. 360, 490 A.2d 402 (1985). Moreover, preliminary objections in the nature of a demurrer admit all well-pleaded facts as true. E-Z Parks, Inc. v. Larson, 91 Pa. Commonwealth Ct. 600, 498 A.2d 1364 (1985), aff'd, 509 Pa. 496, 503 A.2d 931 (1985). Consequently, we must proceed on the assumption that the council adopted the ratifying resolution without a quorum of members present.
*533The defendants preliminarily objected to the plaintiff’s complaint on three grounds which we will analyze individually: (1) the plaintiffs lack standing to question the legitimacy of a council resolution; (2) the enrolled bill doctrine affords the ratifying resolution a conclusive presumption of validity; and (3) the plaintiff’s challenge is nonjusticiable because the plaintiff-council members failed to follow council procedures for challenging the resolution.
1. Standing
Our Supreme Court outlined the general principles of standing as follows:
The core concept, of course, is that a person who is not adversely affected in any way by the matter he seeks to challenge is not ‘aggrieved’ thereby and has no standing to obtain a judicial resolution of his challenge. In particular, it is not sufficient for the person claiming to be ‘aggrieved’ to assert the common interest of all citizens in procuring obedience to the law.
William Penn Parking Garage, Inc. v. City of Pittsburgh, 464 Pa. 168, 192, 346 A.2d 269, 280-81 (1975).
The plaintiffs in this action may be categorized in three groups: (1) council members; (2) taxpayers and residents of the City of Philadelphia generally; and (3) taxpayers and residents of designated Area III of the City of Philadelphia. We shall consider the last two groups first.
In averment 28 of the complaint, the plaintiffs contend that they are “aggrieved” as follows:
(a) Plaintiffs’ voice in City Government, through the power of their elected representatives, is being diluted by a minority of the City Council;
*534(b) Plaintiffs’ rights as taxpayers of the City of Philadelphia are being violated by binding the City of Philadelphia to, a contract with potential. liability through the actions of a minority of the City Council without fair representation;
(c) Plaintiffs’ right to fair representation under the Philadelphia Home Rule Charter and the Rules of City Council are being violated by a minority of the City Council; and
(d) Plaintiffs have been disenfranchised by the illegal actions of the City Council.
Because the Area III residents aver no special injury other than that suffered by other taxpayers generally, we shall treat the non-council member plaintiffs uniformly.
The first issue presented is whether city taxpayers have standing to challenge a city council resolution authorizing the Mayor’s execution of a cable franchise contract.
The injury which the taxpayers allege is the lack of lair representation with regard to the ratification of the Area III cable television contract. Essentially, their concern is equivalent to “the common interest of all citizens [of Philadelphia] in procuring obedience to the law,” which is insufficient to support standing under William Penn Parking Garage, Inc.
Our Supreme Court has granted standing to taxpayers to challenge the award of a public contract to a contractor other than the lowest bidder. Lutz Appellate Printers v. Commonwealth, Department of Property and Supplies, 472 Pa. 28, 370 A.2d 1210 (1977). The plaintiff’s complaint, however, does not challenge the council’s choice of contractors—merely the ratification process of the negotiated contract.
In Application of Biester, 487 Pa. 438, 409 A.2d 848 (1979), our Supreme Court held that:
*535In the absence of special circumstances . . . and in the absence of an effect on the amount of tax paid by the plaintiff-taxpayer . . . the prevention of a waste of tax revenue has been correctly held to be an interest which is not immediate because the detriment to the taxpayer is too remote since he is not directly or specially affected by the loss.
Id. at 444, 409 A.2d at 851.
Because these plaintiff-taxpayers aver only the common interest in city councils adherence to quorum requirements when voting on resolutions, and because they fail to aver special circumstances, an effect on the amount of tax they must pay, or even a waste of tax revenue, we must conclude that the plaintiff-taxpayers are not truly aggrieved and, therefore, lack standing to challenge the ratifying resolution.
Regarding the plaintiff-council members, however, we find this case analogous to Zemprelli v. Thornburgh, 47 Pa. Commonwealth Ct. 43, 407 A.2d 102 (1979), in which we concluded that a State Senator had standing to compel the Governor to submit nominations for vacant state official positions. The reason for our conclusion in Zemprelli was that the Senator was granted a right by statute to vote on certain nominations which the Governor had to submit to the Senate within 90 days of the first day of the vacancy. The Senator thereby had a legal interest which he could enforce, under this courts original jurisdiction, to compel the Governors submission of the delinquent nominations.
Similarly, we note that the plaintiff-council members, as council members, have a legal interest, granted by the home rule charter, in having a quorum present to vote on council resolutions. Because, on preliminary objections, we must assume that a quorum of council members was not present to ratify the negotiated con*536tract, the conclusion must be that the plaintiff-council members are “aggrieved” and have standing to vindicate their legal interests in this action.
2. The Enrolled Bill Doctrine
The enrolled bill doctrine provides that a failure of the legislature to follow a certain procedure does not present a justiciable question nor impair the validity of a duly certified enactment. Mikell v. Philadelphia School District, 359 Pa. 113, 58 A.2d 339 (1948).
While admitting that the question of whether the doctrine applies to the Philadelphia City Council is one of first impression, the trial court found “no reason why the enrolled bill rule should not be applicable” to city council because, under the Philadelphia Home Rule Charter, the city council acts as the legislative body of the City of Philadelphia.
Our Supreme Court has held, however, that the enrolled bill doctrine does not apply to legislative bodies of a third class city or a borough. See Altoona City v. Bowman, 171 Pa. 307, 33 A. 187 (1895), and Mixell v. Hellertown Borough Council, 374 Pa. 412, 97 A.2d 822 (1953), respectively.
The trial court distinguished these cases from the case at bar and held that the enrolled bill doctrine applies to the Philadelphia City Council on the basis that a first class city is not “restricted by any particular procedural restrictions enacted by the state—restrictions which were involved in the Altoona and Heller-town cases.” Implicit in this holding is that trial courts view that a first class city has more expansive powers of self-government than lower-classified cities.
Our Supreme Court has rejected this argument in another context. See Greenberg v. City of Bradford, 432 Pa. 611, 248 A.2d 51 (1968). In Greenberg, the court rejected the contention that although Philadelphia *537could, by local regulation, supersede statewide statutes affecting the personnel and administration of offices local to Philadelphia, third-class cities, which have adopted optional charter forms of government, could not supersede state-wide statutes which also affect non-optionally chartered third class cities. In so deciding, the court held that:
The constitutional provision authorizing home rule for cities does not in any way distinguish Philadelphia from the other cities of the Commonwealth. Moreover, . . . Constitutional Amendments expand the home rule concept by permitting all units of local government regardless of "size’ to adopt home rule charters.
Id. at 615, 248 A.2d at 53.
We therefore must conclude that no basis exists for distinguishing Philadelphia from other cities in the Commonwealth with respect to the applicability of the enrolled bill doctrine.
Moreover, even if the doctrine were to apply to the Philadelphia City Council, we could not apply it to the present case because the ratifying resolution does not constitute legislation. Section 2.2-200 of the charter requires that legislative acts be done by ordinance. The stated purpose of this charter provision is to abandon the “confusing practice of enacting some kinds of legislation by ordinance and others by resolution.” Thus, the charter expressly recognizes that legislative action can only take place by ordinance.
The plaintiffs contest only the validity of the resolution ratifying the franchise award which, by the council’s own definition, is not legislation. Nothing in the council’s action indicates that it intended the agreement approval to be subject to the stricter requirements of a legislative ordinance. If council wished the safeguards provided in section 2-200 to apply to the approval of the *538franchise contract, it could have specified in the awarding ordinance that approval was to be by a subsequent ordinance. However, council, by its own action, committed approval to the more flexible and less formal resolution procedures.
We conclude, therefore, that the trial court erred in holding that the enrolled bill doctrine applies to the Philadelphia City Council and that the resolution was “legislation” protected under that doctrine.
3. Council Rules of Procedure
In their demurrer, the defendants contend that the complaining council members have presented no justiciable question because they did not follow the councils rules for questioning the presence of a quorum and do not challenge the validity of the rules.
The rules of council, embodied in Resolution No. 1, 1984-1988, and adopted pursuant to .the councils authority under the home rule charter, provide for the introduction of resolutions and notice to members of resolutions being considered for passage.
The council rules also provide that the Council President is responsible for determining the existence of a quorum and that, if a quorum question is raised, the president must take a roll call and summon the absent members when necessary. Rules, section 1(3).
The defendants maintain that the procedure for questioning the lack of a quorum outlined in section 1(3) is the exclusive means of making such a challenge. In other words, a council member must be present at the time of the sub-quorum vote in order to object to the lack of quorum.
Careful scrutiny of the averments in the complaint, and the council minutes attached, does not reveal whether the complaining members were present or ab*539sent; therefore, neither alternative can be assumed for the purpose of considering preliminary objections.
Although we are not at liberty to inquire into the validity of councils internal operating rules in the absence of any challenge to them, we cannot agree that a rule requiring a quorum objection to be made by an attending member can logically provide the sole method of objecting to lack of a quorum.
If the council rules provide no way by which a member can challenge action taken without a quorum in his absence, then a court challenge to the validity of the council resolution must be available as a remedy. Although a court in equity could not grant relief to a complainant averring a procedural violation by a municipal body where the complainant has himself failed to employ a sufficient remedy in the same rules of procedure, the plaintiff-council members, under these council rules, have not had an opportunity to object to illegal council proceedings taken in their absence. We cannot, then, view the plaintiffs as having come into the common pleas court with unclean hands in this matter.
At the very least, dismissal of the complaint on the ground of waiver, through a failure to object at the meeting, is premature until the record shows whether the plaintiffs were present or absent.
We note that Rollins contends, in its brief, that the council later approved the journal of the session at which the ratifying resolution was adopted without objection to the lack of a quorum, but the pleadings contain no averment to that effect, and we may therefore not consider it on preliminary objections. That point provides additional need for fact-finding by the trial court before this matter can be resolved.
Accordingly, the defendants’ preliminary objections to the plaintiff-taxpayers’ lack of standing are sustained and the dismissal of the complaint is affirmed as to *540plaintiffs Morris, Smith, O’Farrell, Byron, Lindsey, Miller and Berry. The order of the Philadelphia Court of Common Pleas is reversed to the extent that the preliminary objections are overruled in all other respects, and the case is remanded for the filing of an answer and further proceedings.
Order
Now, July 22, 1987, the order of the Philadelphia Court of Common Pleas entered at No. 484, October Term, 1985, on December 23, 1985, is affirmed insofar as the complaint is dismissed as to plaintiffs Morris, Smith, O’Farrell, Byron, Lindsey, Miller and Berry, for lack of standing.
The order is reversed as to plaintiffs Beloff, Krajewski, Rafferty, Hughes and O’Neill, and the case is remanded for further proceedings consistent with this opinion.
Jurisdiction relinquished.
Plaintiffs are John P. Morris, James E. Smith, William O’Farrell and Thomas P. Byron, who filed their equity complaint as individual Philadelphia taxpayers; Gwen Lindsey, Randolph Miller and Ronald Berry, as residents of the designated area to be franchised; and Leland M. Beloff, Joan L. Krawjewski, Francis Rafferty, Patricia A. Hughes and Brian J. O’Neill, council members who claimed to have been disenfranchised and prevented from exercising their voting duties by the council presidents action.