Penn Galvanizing Co., Appellant, v. Philadelphia.
Supreme Court of Pennsylvania
March 29, 1957
388 Pa. 370
Perhaps we will never know whether the tragic accident in this case resulted from a failure by Clarence Thomas to heed the truck driver‘s signal, or whether the truck driver failed to display a signal. But we do know that Mary Anne Thomas did not receive the jury trial to which she was entitled, and the record will show that this Court, having an opportunity to salvage something from the wreck of a salutary rule on the highway of the law, passed it by, thereby inviting wrecks of other rules, as well as other judicial usurpations and other acts of injustice.
Abraham Shapiro, for appellant.
James L. Stern, Deputy City Solicitor, with him David Berger, City Solicitor, and Gordon Cavanaugh
OPINION BY MR. JUSTICE CHIDSEY, March 29, 1957:
This is an appeal from the order of the Court of Common Pleas of Philadelphia which sustained the preliminary objections of the City and dismissed the plaintiff‘s bill in equity.
Plaintiff is the owner of two commercial properties in the City of Philadelphia, and was a user of water supplied by the City in the years prior to 1952. The water meters measuring this use did not operate properly and failed to register the water consumed at each property during parts of 1948 and 1949. This situation was not unique. A great many meters throughout the City fell out of repair during the war, and, due to shortages of material, many were not repaired until long after its conclusion. The practice of the City during that period was to remove the meters for repair, and, after their reinstallation, to estimate the water used during the period that the meters were defective on the basis of the amount subsequently consumed. This situatiоn was largely remedied by the City after 1952 through its universal water metering program under which it adopted more stringent inspection practices and under which it replaced defective meters immediately with properly registering ones, rather than waiting until the defective meters were repaired.
On January 3, 1951 the City estimated the excess water consumed at one of plaintiff‘s prоperties for the period during which its meter was defective, and billed the plaintiff accordingly. This bill was promptly paid on January 12, 1951.
On March 31, 1952 the City‘s Department of Collections rendered a bill to the plaintiff for the excess
The complaint then goes on to refer to an ordinanсe enacted by the Council of the City of Philadelphia on October 12, 1955, the provisions of which are: “Section 1. No excess water and sewer charge shall be made on bills originally issued in 1955 in connection with water consumed for any period prior to January 1, 1952, during which the water meter was removed by the City for repairs, or during which the water meter failed to register water consumption through no fault of the owners or occupiers of the premises wherein the meter is situate; the charges for the use of City water and sewers during such period shall be limited to the minimum charges for such uses. Section 2. (a) The Revenue Commissioner is hereby authorized and directed to make refunds to persons who have paid excess water meter and sewer reset bills originally issued in 1955, and any interest or penalty thereon, for a period prior to January 1, 1952, during which period the water meter was removed by the City for repairs, or during which period the water meter failed to register water consumption through no fault of the owners or occupiers of the premises wherein the meter is situate. The approval of the Tax Review Board shall not be required with respect to such refunds. (b) Such refunds shall not be made unless a written request is filed therefor with the Department of Collections on
Thereafter the complaint avers that the plaintiff has requested the Department of Collections to refund the sum paid on January 12, 1951, and that it has requested cancellation of so much of the bill rendered on March 31, 1952 as is based on estimates of earlier consumption. This the Revenue Commissioner of the City has refused to do, claiming that the ordinance applies only to those consumers of water used prior to January 1, 1952 who first received bills therefor in 1955, and not to those who, like plaintiff, received their bills at an earlier date.
Thereupon, “Plaintiff avers that such a construction is unfair, inequitable and discriminatory against the plaintiff and others similarly situated.“, and prays (1) that the City be enjoined from enforcing any claim against plaintiff based on estimates of excess water consumed prior to January 1, 1952; (2) that the Revenue Commissioner be directed to cancel so much of the March 31, 1952 bill as is bаsed on an estimate of water consumed prior to January 1, 1952; (3) that the City be directed to refund the amount paid on January 12, 1951; (4) that the City “. . . be enjoined from making any refunds to any consumers of water prior to January 1, 1952, whose payments were made based on estimates of such consumption.“; and (5) that the City “. . . be enjoined and restrained from cancelling any charges based on estimated consumption of water prior to January 1, 1952, by any consumers, regardless of the dates on which said estimated consumption was first billed.“.
The City filed preliminary objections to the complaint in equity alleging that the bill stated no cause of action; that the ordinance of October 12, 1955 did not apply to plaintiff; that plaintiff has no standing
The court below found that in so far as it pertained to the water rent paid by the plaintiff or to the excess water rent billed to the plaintiff, the complaint failed to state a cause of action, and also that the plaintiff had not exhausted the administrative remedy of appeal to the Tax Review Board as provided by the City Ordinance of September 9, 1953. As an additional ground for its decision, the court considered the position of the plaintiff to be “in the alternative in the nature of a taxpayer‘s suit“, and in this sense it reviewed the validity of the Ordinance of October 12, 1955, and found the Ordinance to be valid. The court thereupon sustained the City‘s preliminary objections and dismissed the plaintiff‘s complaint.
The first three of plaintiff‘s prayers for relief go to the bills rendered to plaintiff itself by the City on January 3, 1951 and March 31, 1952, the former having been paid on January 12, 1951, and the latter never having beеn paid. As to these prayers we think it unquestionable that plaintiff is barred from equitable relief because it had the administrative remedy of appeal to the Tax Review Board created by the Ordinance of September 9, 1953, Ordinances of the City of Philadelphia of 1953, p. 478,
But the court below went on to treat this case as a taxpayer‘s suit and considered the validity of the questioned ordinance, аpparently on the basis of the plaintiff‘s last two prayers for relief. This it should not have done for the complaint could not properly be considered a class or taxpayer‘s bill.
In the first place, the complaint is neither styled nor pleaded as a class or taxpayer‘s action. In a class action the complaint should be so titled and the pleadings sо framed as to identify it as a class action and to give some indication of the class being represented, Wilson v. Blaine et al., 262 Pa. 367, 105 A. 555. As is pointed out in 4 Anderson Pennsylvania Civil Practice 351 in the comment on plaintiff‘s pleading under
Secondly, assuming that the complaint was properly framed as a class action, the relief prayed for in those portions of the complaint which might be construed as being made on behalf of a class, would in no way benefit the class plaintiff seeks to represent. So far as we can determine, it appеars that plaintiff seeks to represent those who, like himself, have paid or are obliged to pay bills rendered before 1955 based on estimated water consumed prior to 1952. This
Lastly, if, rather than as a suit for the benefit of a speсified class, the proceeding is treated as a taxpayer‘s action, it must fail because the interest of the plaintiff taxpayer is not sufficiently representative of the common interest of all the taxpayers in the community to allow plaintiff alone to prosecute a taxpayer‘s action in their collective behalf. In Schlanger v. West Berwick Borough, 261 Pa. 605, 104 A. 764, where a property ownеr brought a taxpayer‘s bill in equity to enjoin the borough from collecting an assessment against him to pay for paving a street upon which his property abutted, because the borough council had already created a fund to pay for such improvements from tax and debt sources, this Court held that a demurrer to that bill was properly sustained, saying, at p. 607: “A taxpayer‘s bill is essentially a class bill and can be filed only in the common interest of all the taxpayers of the municipality, to prevent the wrongful
Moreover a taxpayer‘s action in the circumstances of the instant case will not be entertained because a
The real nub of plaintiff‘s position is that it wishes to be included within the coverage of the ordinance, despite the unequivocal language excluding it. This is a quarrel which it might pursue before the legislative organ which enacted the ordinance, but certainly the courts should not be called uрon to aid it toward that end.
For the reasons stated, we are of the opinion that appellant had no standing to attack the Ordinance of October 12, 1955 as the representative of a class and that its complaint was properly dismissed because of the adequacy of remedy at law.
Order affirmed, costs on appellant.
DISSENTING OPINION BY MR. JUSTICE BELL:
I dissent.
The lower Court properly considered the appellant‘s cоmplaint as alternatively constituting a taxpayer‘s bill. The ordinance provided, inter alia, that rebates and refunds were to be restricted to those cases in which the claim concerned water consumed prior to January 1, 1952, but only where the bills therefor were originally issued in 1955. The ordinance makes the right to a rebate and/or refund dependent not on the period during which the water was used, but on the date when the bill was rendered—promptly or negligently by a city clerk.
This favored class—with no reasonable or justifiable basis for their classification—were thus to receive
“A city has a wide range of discretion in classifying the service, but the classification must be a reasonable one, based on considerations as to quantity, time of use or manner of service, or other matters which present a substantial difference as ground fоr distinction. A classification based on a particular business or use for a special purpose will not, without more, justify classification or discriminatory rates. We do not intimate in Barnes Laundry Co. v. Pittsburgh, supra, that a classification can be made whereby one of the classes receives water free of cost. On the contrary, we state that a ‘city operating a legalized monоpoly, in the nature of a water plant, cannot give undue or unreasonable preference or advantage to, or make unfair discrimination among customers, any more than a private corporation similarly situated;’ to give water away to a manufacturing plant is a discrimination.”
If this ordinance is sustained, certain special water consumers will escaрe liability, not because of the
It is clear that such a classification is arbitrary, unreasonably discriminatory, and therefore unconstitutional. American Aniline Products, Inc. v. Lock Haven, 288 Pa. 420, supra; cf. also Lord Appeal, 368 Pa. 121, 81 A. 2d 533; Allentown School District Mercantile Tax, 370 Pa. 161, 87 A. 2d 480; Commonwealth v. Budd Co. and Commonwealth v. Westinghouse Electric Corp., 379 Pa. 159, 108 A. 2d 563.
