1 Pa. Commw. 486 | Pa. Commw. Ct. | 1971
Opinion by
In May 1966, Allan (Allen) N. Lashner, Inc. and the Commonwealth of Pennsylvania, Department of Highways, entered into a contract providing for the demolition of certain premises within the right-of-way line of the Delaware Expressway in the City of Philadelphia. Implementing the contract were certain “General Specifications” and “Department of Highways Specifications, Form 408” of 1960. These provided, inter alia, that the demolition contractor is to obtain title to all machinery and equipment on the demolition site as salvage; that no claim would be entertained by the Board of Arbitration of Claims unless the claim was made within three months of the notice date of the Commonwealth’s final computation of payment due; and, that the time limitation governing submission of claims to the Board would commence with the notice of the final computation.
On August 10, 1967, less than one month from the notification of payment due, Lashner filed a claim with the Board averring that on July 5, 1966, the Commonwealth sold at public auction several items of machinery which in fact were salvage items belonging to Lashner. There is no dispute that the equipment which was sold for three thousand eight hundred dollars was located upon the demolition site (right-of-way). The conflict which is presented to us arose when the Commonwealth claimed that a shear which was sold for ten thousand dollars was not located on the demolition site. More
“The Board shall have no power and exercise no jurisdiction over a claim asserted against the Commonwealth unless the claim shall have been filed within six months after it accrued.” 72 P.S. 4651-6.
Curiously, the Board held that it did not have jurisdiction, finding that the claim did in fact accrue July 5, 1966, but nevertheless proceeded to make findings of fact based upon the evidence before it that the shear was not located on the demolition site but rather it was located on a landlocked area retained by the prior owner of the entire site. The Board, on the basis of these findings, denied the Lashner claim. This appeal followed.
I — Jurisdiction in the Board
The Board’s conclusion of law that Lashner’s “claim or cause of action, if any, accrued on the date of the public auction sale” was erroneous. Under Section 6 of the Act of 1937 the jurisdictional period begins to run from the time the cause of action accrues; that is, from, the time when the injured party is first able to litigate his claim. Philadelphia, B. & W. R. Co. v. Quaker City Flour Mills Co., 282 Pa. 362, 127 A. 845 (1925).
Lashner has alleged that under his contract with the Commonwealth part of the consideration was his salvage rights to the equipment in question, and that under the terms of the contract there was no breach of the contract until that point in time when the Common
The fact that an action for replevin or other like non contract action may have accrued at the time the Commonwealth sold the equipment is of no moment. Lashner has elected to consider the sale a breach of his contract and to seek recovery on that basis. Since the contract provided that the action for the breach did not accrue until notification of. computations, Lashner’s action, brought within a month thereafter, was proper. Accordingly, the conclusion by the Board that it was without jurisdiction was erroneous.
II — Disposition of Claims
The Commonwealth has agreed that three thousand eight hundred dollars worth of equipment belonging to Lashner under the contract was sold at auction. We therefore direct the Board to order payment of this sum in compliance with Section 9 of the Act of 1937, 72 P.S. §4651-9.
As to the claim for the shear, the Board found as fact that the shear was not located on the contract
The case before us presents a most unusual factual situation. The Commonwealth had condemned most of an industrial site owned by S. I). Bichman Sons, Inc., leaving ownership of a small landlocked parcel with Bichman. Included in the taking was equipment located on the condemned parcel only. This is what the Commonwealth sold at auction. Benjamin Bichman, the prior owner, repurchased this equipment at the auction, including the shear in question. At no time has he contested the Commonwealth’s title to the shear prior to the auction. However, at the hearing he appears as the only witness for the Commonwealth to testify that the shear was not located on the condemned parcel. Counsel for Lashner attempted to question this witness on the subject of the status of the property which gave the Commonwealth the right to sell it at auction but the Board, without reason or justification, excluded the testimony.
ORDER
And Now, this 22nd day of March, 1971, the order of the Board of Arbitration of Claims, made August 18, 1971, is reversed and the claim of Allan N. Lash-ner, Inc. is remanded to the Board for further disposition in accordance with the opinion of this Court.