DVR Philly, LLC v. Philadelphia Regional Port Auth. a/k/a PhilaPort (Board of Claims)
74 C.D. 2023
Pa. Commw. Ct.Jan 9, 2024Background
- DVR Philly, LLC (DVR) leased 125 acres from the Philadelphia Regional Port Authority (PhilaPort) under a 2016 lease agreement, amended in 2020.
- The amended lease required PhilaPort to provide DVR certain rent credits and rebates beginning in May/June 2020, which PhilaPort delayed until September/October 2020.
- DVR sought interest at 6% on late payments totaling $27,212.50, claiming entitlement to compensation for the delay.
- DVR first filed directly with PhilaPort's Executive Director, who denied the claim; DVR then filed with the Pennsylvania Board of Claims.
- PhilaPort filed preliminary objections (demurrer), arguing that, as a Commonwealth instrumentality, it is not liable for prejudgment interest absent a contract or statute.
- The Board dismissed DVR's claim with prejudice, citing statutory authority under Section 1751 of the Procurement Code, but not addressing PhilaPort's asserted immunity.
Issues
| Issue | Plaintiff's Argument | Defendant's Argument | Held |
|---|---|---|---|
| Whether the Board erred by sua sponte raising Sec. 1751 of the Procurement Code | Board should not raise issues not briefed by the parties | Board's authority not at issue; only lack of liability for prejudgment interest | Board erred; it should have limited its ruling to issues actually raised |
| Whether Sec. 1751 bars prejudgment interest claims | Statute and case law do not prevent Board from awarding pre-claim interest based on contract breach | Sec. 1751 prohibits interest awards before claim filed with contracting officer | Sec. 1751 allows only post-claim interest; Board cannot award pre-claim interest |
| Board's jurisdiction to adjudicate the dispute | Board has jurisdiction based on the nature of the contract with PhilaPort | Did not contest jurisdiction, but claimed no liability for prejudgment interest | Board has jurisdiction; Sec. 1751 is not jurisdictional but limits relief |
| Whether PhilaPort is immune from interest liability | General Assembly waived immunity by statute, PhilaPort is not fully immune | Immunity from such liability without statutory/contract authority | Not reached; court remanded for proper analysis of this issue |
Key Cases Cited
- Battiste v. Borough of E. McKeesport, 94 A.3d 418 (Pa. Cmwlth. 2014) (addresses neutrality and scope of administrative adjudication)
- Blackwell v. State Ethics Comm’n, 567 A.2d 630 (Pa. 1989) (subject matter jurisdiction can be raised at any stage or by the tribunal sua sponte)
- Roethlein v. Portnoff Law Assoc., 81 A.3d 816 (Pa. 2013) (proper construction of statutory text depends on full context, not isolated words)
- Sch. Dist. of Zerbe Twp. v. Thomas, 44 A.2d 566 (Pa. 1945) (jurisdiction vs. power distinction in courts and agencies)
