Opinion by
The appellee, The Delaware County Institution District, the owner of 210 acres of land located in the appellant Townshiр of Middletown, desires, with the approval of the Commonwealth Departments of Public Welfare and Labor and Industry, to erect on less than an acre of its land an urgently needed geriatric care center. The proposed new facility would be 14 stories and 197 feet in height. The Township of Middletown has imposed by zoning ordinance a maximum height limitation of 65 feet upon any building in the township. The nаrrow question before us is whether the Institution District may construct its 197 feet high building -without a variance from the zoning limitation of 65 feet. Although, at the rеquest of township supervisors and in a spirit of cooperation, the County Commissioners as the administrative and executive offiсers of the Institution District kept the township informed of their plans and eventually applied for a special exceptiоn for a nursing home
We affirm. The court below correctly based its judgment upon Section 702, cl. LXII of Thе Second Class Township Code, Act of May 1, 1933, P. L. 103, added by the Act of August 27, 1963, P. L. 1280, §1, 53 P.S. §65762, providing in part: “No ordinance, bylaw, rule or regulation shall be adopted which in any manner restricts, interferes with, hinders or affects the operation of any other political subdivision or instrumentality of the Commonwealth of Pennsylvania.” Nothing could be clearer than that this statute controls this case. The Institution District is an instrumentality of the Commonwealth, Chester County Institution District v. Commonwealth,
The appellants make a number of arguments for reversal with which we will occupy ourselves briefly.
They argue that the court below violated their due process rights because their preliminary objections were dismissed without affording them the opportunity to file a brief in their support and because the hearing upоn the motion for summary judgment was heard upon only six days notice. A municipal subdivision appears indeed to be entitled to procedural due process. Nelson v. Garland,
The appellants further argue that a regulation of the Department of Welfare for homes of the kind here
Thе further point is made that the absence in the Pennsylvania Municipalities Planning Code, 53 P.S. §10101, et seq., of an exclusion of state agencies from the effect of local zoning regulations implies their subjection thereto. How this could be in the face of Section 702, cl. LXII of The Second Class Township Code, 53 P.S. §65762, is unexplained. Repeal of a statute by a later enactment by implication is nеver found in the absence of a positive repugnancy between the two statutes. Herman v. Mutual Life Ins. Co. of New York,
Finally, the appellants rely upon School District of Philadelphia v. Zoning Boаrd of Adjustment,
Affirmed.
Notes
The special exception was sought although a County Home had been located on the property for more than 100 years, apparently because the zoning ordinance provided for institutional use only by special exception.
