The City of Philadelphia (City) and the School District of Philadelphia (School District) (collectively, Appellants) appeal from the order of the Court of Common Pleas of Philadelphia County (common pleas court) affirming, by stipulation of the parties, a decision of the Tax Review Board of Philadelphia (Board). The Board’s decision, also entered by the stipulation of the parties, granted petitions for review and petitions for refund of twenty-eight beer distributors from use and occupancy tax (U & 0 tax) assessments imposed by the City. Appellants stipulated to the decisions against them because this Court had conclusively determined that beer distributors are not subject to the City’s U & O tax in
Wissinoming Bottling Co. v. School District of Philadelphia,
In Wissinoming, the City and School District appealed consolidated orders from the common pleas court that held that Appellants may not impose U & 0 taxes upon importing distributors of brewed and malt beverages because the tax was preempted by the Commonwealth’s pervasive regulation and taxation of such beverages. Appellants argued before this Court that the common pleas court erred because: (1) the legislature did not intend, through regulation of the alcoholic beverage industry to preempt the imposition of the U & 0 tax on malt and brewed beverage distributors, and (2) the legislature did not intend to preempt school districts from imposing taxes designed to support public education, since school districts are agents of the Commonwealth charged with fulfilling the constitutional mandate of educating children. These are, in essence, the same arguments Appellants raise in this appeal.
In
Wissinoming,
we initially discussed the role of the City and the School District with regard to the imposition of the U & O tax. We noted that the Commonwealth had granted the City, not the School District, the
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power to levy, assess, and collect taxes. The City was further authorized to impose taxes for the benefit of the School District. Thus, the U & 0 tax was created by a City ordinance for the benefit of the School District. The tax itself is imposed upon individuals or entities that use or occupy real estate in the School District for commercial purposes. It is assessed against the value of the real estate for that portion used or occupied for commercial purposes. It has been defined as a tax on the privilege of using real estate for business purposes.
Wanamaker v. Philadelphia School District,
We determined in
Wissinoming
that the U & O tax may not be assessed against distributors of malt and brewed beverages because of our Supreme Court’s decision in
Commonwealth v. Wilsbach Distributors, Inc.,
The regulatory scheme now under review controls a state-run monopoly, maintained for the health, welfare, and safety of the citizens of this Commonwealth and upon which the Commonwealth depends for substantial revenues. Such pervasive control over all phases of the liquor industry, along with the extensive taxation and fees imposed, indicates the legislature’s intent to control this industry and to receive all benefits inherent by regulating the industry, including raising revenues through regulation to the exclusion of all local attempts to interfere with the state regulation by imposing taxes on a local level.
We conclude that the legislature has adopted a scheme of regulation so pervasive over the entire alcoholic beverage industry, that it has ‘pre-empted the field’ to the exclusion of all interference from subordinate legislative bodies. Such pre-emption by the legislature bars local legislative control by regulation or taxation.
Wilsbach,
Based on this holding, we determined in Wissinoming that the U & 0 tax, as a tax on the privilege of using real estate for business purposes in the School District, was preempted by the Commonwealth. We held:
A malt and brewed beverages distributorship cannot be operated at all unless it occupies and uses real estate. A distributor must operate in a location and on real estate approved by the Commonwealth, and approval of the premises used for such distributorship is an integral part of the licensing process.... The U & 0 tax, thus, directly impacts on [a distributor’s] privilege to operate a distributorship. Therefore, because the privilege of operating a malt and brewed beverages distributorship is granted by the Commonwealth and cannot be taxed or regulated by the City, we hold that the City’s U & 0 tax is preempted by the Liquor Code and by the taxes of alcoholic beverages enacted by the Commonwealth....
Wissinoming,
We declined to accept Appellants’ argument that we should not follow
Wilsbach
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because it is a plurality opinion.
2
We noted that a majority of the justices in
Wilsbach
agreed that the General Assembly has preempted local regulation of the alcoholic beverages industry. We also found that the lead opinion in
Wilsbach
was “highly persuasive.”
Wissinoming,
We also rejected Appellants’ argument that it is inappropriate to preempt the U & 0 tax because the School District is a state agency charged with the constitutional mandate to provide and fund public schools. We first noted that it is the City who levied the tax not the School District, which lacks the authority to levy and collect taxes. We then noted that although “school districts are agencies of the Commonwealth, the City has not cited, nor has our research revealed, any authority showing that school districts are the equivalent of the Commonwealth for the purpose of levying taxes.”
Wissinoming,
In the present appeal, Appellants argue that beer distributors are not entitled to a “special implied” exemption from local taxation for several reasons. First, Appellants argue that Wilsbach is of limited applicability, that it did not forbid all local taxation of beer distributors, and that it in fact provided that each tax is to be examined on its own merits to determine whether the tax has been preempted. With regard to the latter point, Appellants contend that the U & 0 tax is a “neutral” and “non-discriminatory” tax based on the commercial use of real estate that has no greater effect than a basic real estate tax, and that general real estate taxes may be imposed upon distributors of malt and brewed beverages pursuant to Wilsbach. Next, Appellants argue that more recent law has undercut the argument that all local taxes on beer distributors are preempted. Finally, Appellants argue that it is inappropriate to presume that the General Assembly intended to create a special implied exemption from local taxes designed to benefit a school district, particularly in light of the current difficulties the School District faces in deriving adequate funding. Aside from the issue concerning more current law, all of these issues have been either directly or indirectly disposed of in Wissinoming, which Appellants argue is erroneous and should be overturned.
This Court’s scope of review of a local agency decision, where the common pleas court takes no additional evidence, is limited to a determination of whether constitutional rights were violated, an error of law was committed, or the Board’s findings of fact were supported by substantial evidence. Section 754(b) of the Local Agency Law, 2 Pa.C.S. § 754(b);
Insinger Machine Co. v. Philadelphia Tax Review Board,
165 Pa. Cmwlth. 344,
The rule of stare decisis declares that for the sake of certainty, a conclusion reached in one case should be applied to those which follow, if the facts are substantially the same, even though the parties may be different.
Commonwealth v. Tilghman,
The compelling reasons to disregard Wis-sinoming stated by Appellants are that the ease was wrongly decided and that subsequent case law has cast doubt upon its validity. Appellants proceed with their argument as if the Supreme Court has not held that the General Assembly intended to preempt local taxation of malt and brewed beverage distributors in Wilsbach and has not affirmed our Court’s adherence to this principle in Wissinoming. Rather, Appellants argue that the beer distributors in this case had not established their entitlement to a “special exception” from the U & 0 tax and then proceed to argue that such an “exemption” is not logical, in accordance with law, or supportive of the constitutional requirement that the School District provide for appropriate public education. These arguments have nothing to do with whether the Commonwealth has preempted local regulation and taxation from the field, however. The beer distributors in this case established their “exemption” simply by reference to the standing law of the Commonwealth. We turn, then, to more recent law that Appellants argue undercuts both Wissinoming and Wilsbach.
Appellants first argue that the validity of
Wilsbach
has been cast into doubt by a 1994 amendment to the Liquor Code. Section 8 of the Act of October 5, 1994, P.L. 522, added 47 P.S. § 4-493.1 to the Liquor Code, providing: “Nothing in this act shall be construed to preempt the right of any municipality to regulate zoning and enforce any other local ordinances and codes dealing with health and welfare issues.” This provision, however, is silent concerning local taxation, and there is nothing in the section that indicates that the term “health and welfare issues” is to be construed so broadly as to include taxation. In light of
Wilsbach
and
Wissinoming,
had the legislature intended that local bodies may assess local taxes against distributors of malt and brewed beverages it would have so plainly stated. Indeed, Justice Zappala, concurring in
Wilsbach,
expressed his trust that that the General Assembly would correct any erroneous interpretation of its intent to preempt a field.
Wilsbach,
Appellants also argue that two decisions of this Court also undercut the validity of
Wissinoming: Provident Mutual Life Insurance Co. v. Tax Review Board of the City of Philadelphia,
*722 Accordingly, the order of the common pleas court must be affirmed.
ORDER
AND NOW, this 10th day of June, 1998, the order of the Court of Common Pleas of Philadelphia County in the above-captioned matter is hereby affirmed.
Notes
. Act of April 12, 1951, P.L. 90, as amended, 47 P.S. §§ 1-101 — 8-803.
. Justice Papadakos’s opinion in Wilsbach was joined by one justice, three justices concurred, and two justices dissented.
.
Dean v. City of Harrisburg,
. Moreover,
Provident Mutual
actually reaffirms the principle that the Commonwealth has preempted local regulation and taxation of the liquor industry based not only upon the Commonwealth's pervasive regulation and taxation, but public policy considerations as evidenced by the passage of the Eighteenth and then the Twenty-First Amendments to the United States Constitution.
See
