OPINION BY
Pasquele and Carol Peluso appeal an order of the Court of Common Pleas of the 26th Judicial District, Columbia County Branch (trial court) that dismissed their complaint for damages. The Pelusos seek damages from Hemlock Township and its former employee, Joseph W. Kistner, for the reduction in the value of their property that was occasioned by the Township’s refusal to reissue the Pelusos an on-lot sewage treatment permit. The trial court held that the Pelusos’ complaint was barred by the doctrine of governmental immunity. The Pelusos contend that the trial court erred because their complaint sought damages under a contract, not a negligence theory.
The facts pled in the complaint provide the factual background to this controversy. The Pelusos own Lot No. 1 in the Pine-brook Homes Development located in Bloomsburg, Pennsylvania. On March 21, 1995, the Township’s Sewage Enforcement Officer, Joseph W. Kistner, issued a per
If construction or installation of an individual sewage system ... has not commenced within three years after the issuance of a permit for such system, the said permit shall expire, and a new permit shall be obtained prior to the commencement of said construction or installation.
Complaint, Exhibit A at 1. Relying upon this 1995 permit, the Pelusos purchased Lot No. 1 for the purpose of building a house thereon. When they sought to renew the permit several years after it had expired, the Pelusos were informed by the Township’s current sewage enforcement officer that the permit could not be renewed because their lot was located on the flood plain. Without a sewage permit, the Pelusos cannot construct a house, which has caused the value of their lot to decline from $29,000 to $4,500. 2 The Pelusos seek damages from the Township and Mr. Kist-ner for the difference in value, i.e., $24,500.
The Township and Kistner (collectively, Township) filed preliminary objections in the nature of a demurrer asserting immunity under the statute commonly known as the Political Subdivision Tort Claims Act (Tort Claims Act), 42 Pa.C.S. §§ 8541-8542. The trial court agreed with the Township that the Pelusos’ claim for damages was barred by governmental immunity and dismissed their complaint. The Pelusos then appealed to this Court. 3
On appeal, the Pelusos argue that the trial court erred because their complaint presented a type of contract claim to which the Tort Claims Act is irrelevant. Specifically, they assert that the complaint states a claim for damages under a theory of detrimental reliance, which may be asserted against a municipality or its employee notwithstanding governmental immunity. In response, the Township argues that the Pelusos’ complaint sounds in negligence and points out that this Court has rejected attempts by plaintiffs to disguise a tort claim as a contract claim as a tactic for avoiding governmental immunity. The Township also argues that detrimental reliance is a type of defense but cannot sustain a separate cause of action.
We begin with a review of the principles of detrimental reliance, which this Court has explained “is another name for promissory estoppel.”
Travers v. Cameron County School District,
Promissory estoppel is an outgrowth of equitable estoppel but, unlike equitable estoppel, promissory estoppel may serve as an independent cause of action. Paul v. Lankenau Hospital,375 Pa.Super. 1 ,543 A.2d 1148 (1988). Pennsylvania has long recognized promissory es-toppel as a vehicle by which a promise may be enforced in order to remedy an injustice. See Fried v. Fisher,328 Pa. 497 ,196 A. 39 (1938).
Travers,
At the outset, therefore, the Township is wrong that detrimental reliance is an affirmative defense and not a cause of action. 5 The question, then, is whether the Pelusos have pled an action for detrimental reliance and whether their action is barred by governmental immunity.
To establish promissory estoppel, the plaintiff must prove that: (1) the promisor made a promise that would reasonably be expected to induce action or forbearance on the part of the promisee; (2) the promisee actually took action or refrained from taking action in reliance on the promise; and (3) injustice can be avoided only by enforcing the promise.
Crouse,
Here the Pelusos’ complaint fails to state a claim of promissory estoppel. The Pelusos’ complaint failed to contain a prerequisite element of promissory estoppel, a contract-like promise. The complaint alleges that the Pelusos relied upon a sewage permit issued to the prior owners of their lot that had lapsed before they made the purchase in question. A lapsed permit cannot be construed to convey a promise by the Township to the Pelusos that a permit will be reissued to them.
6
For these reasons, we affirm the decision of the trial court, albeit on other grounds.
Judge PELLEGRINI concurs in the result only.
ORDER
AND NOW, this 9th day of April, 2009, the order of the Court of Common Pleas of the 26th Judicial District, Columbia County Branch, is AFFIRMED on other grounds.
Notes
. According lo the Pelusos, Lot No. 1 has a value of $29,000 if it can be developed with construction of a home but a value of only $4,500 as a recreational lot. Complaint, ¶ 12.
. In reviewing a trial court’s decision on preliminary objections, we consider a pure question of law and as such our standard of review is plenary.
Hospital & Healthsystem Association of Pennsylvania v. Department of Public Welfare,
. It has been explained by our Supreme Court that equitable estoppel "does not create a cause of action at law....”
Department of Public Welfare v. School District of Philadelphia,
. For the contrary view, the Township relies upon
Gilius v. Board of Supervisors of Fairview Township,
. As a general rule, a sewage permit issued by a municipality illegally or under a mistake of fact does not confer a vested right in the permittee.
Turner v. Martz,
. Section 7(b)(6) provides in relevant part:
If the local agency determines that: (i) any change has occurred in the physical conditions of any lands which will materially affect the operation of the community sewage system or individual sewage system covered by any permit issued by the local agency under section 7 of this act, or (ii) one or more tests material to the issuance of the permit has not been properly conducted, or (iii) information material to the issuance of the permit has been falsified, or (iv) the original decision of the local agency otherwise failed to conform to the provisions of this act or the rules and regulations of the department, or (v) the permittee has violated the rules and regulations of the department under which the permit was issued, the permit shall be revoked. Such action shall be taken after notice and opportunity for hearing has been given to the permittee.
35 P.S. § 750.7(b)(6).
. The trial court relied upon
Schreck v. North Codorus Township,
Here, by contrast, there are no allegations that the Township was negligent in performing its responsibilities when it issued the permit to the prior owners of the Pelusos' lot. Schreck is inapposite.
