Opinion by
Skippack Community Ambulance Association, Inc. (Association) appeals from an order of the Court of Common Pleas of Montgomery County granting a preliminary injunction in favor of the Township of Skippack (Township).
Until this litigation, the Association, a Pennsylvania non-profit corporation, had been providing ambulance service to the Township since at least 1965. The Skippack Ambulance Corps (Corps) is the operational division of the Association, consisting of about thirty volunteers who staff and operate the ambulances.
On January 28, 1985, an ongoing dispute between the Associations board of directors and the individual Corps members culminated in the members relinquishing their equipment and keys to the ambulance building. Shortly thereafter, on January 30, the Association changed the locks on the ambulance building, effectively locking out the dissident members of the Corps. Talks among the Association, the members of the Corps and the Township failed to resolve the dispute.
The Township, fearing that the dispute would cause the Association to be unable to render adequate emergency ambulance service to the Township residents, filed a complaint in equity on February 7, 1985 in the court of common pleas seeking an injunction requiring the Association to provide new keys to members of the Corps, to return all equipment to Corps members, and to return Corps members to the status they held on January 28, 1985. The next day, the court of common pleas entered a temporary restraining order and, after a hearing, issued a preliminary injunction on February 28, 1985 granting the above-requested relief. The Association appeals. We find it necessary to consider only one issue raised by the Associations appeal. Since we hold that the Township lacked standing to seek an in *517 junction, we do not consider any of the Association’s other contentions.
With regard to the standing issue, the Township contends that it has standing here by virtue of Section 702, cl. XLVII, of the Second Class Township Code (Code), Act of May 1, 1933, P.L. 103,
as amended,
53 P.S. §65747, which gives the Township the power “[t]o take all needful means for securing the safety of persons or property within the township.” The contention of the Township is incorrect. Section 702, cl. XLVII, has never been interpreted as affording a second class township an express or implied mandate granting it capacity to sue generally for the betterment or protection of its citizens. Rather, “[a]n examination of Section 702 indicates that its language is most inappropriate and inadequate to evidence any intent on the part of the legislature to delegate to second class townships vast and extensive police powers.”
Commonwealth v. Ashenfelder,
Moreover, it is well settled that townships, political subdivisions of the Commonwealth, possess only such powers as have been granted to them by the legislature, either in express terms or which arise by necessary implication or are incident to powers expressly granted or are essential to the declared objects and purposes of the townships.
Id.
at 521,
Since the Township lacks any statutory mandate,
express
or implied, to sue generally for or on behalf of its citizens, the Township therefore must possess a sufficient “interest” in its own right under the general principles of law relating to standing.
Township of Upper Moreland v. Department of Transportation,
The Township asserts it satisfies these standards in part by relying on this Courts decision in
Township of North Fayette v. Commonwealth,
Our decision in
North Fayette
must be read in light of the holding in
William Penn
that a litigant must hold a direct, substantial and immediate interest
in the subject matter of the dispute. William Penn,
*521 Accordingly, the order granting the preliminary injunction, the only matter before us on appeal, is reversed and the case returned for disposition by the court of common pleas. See Pa. R. A.P. 2573.
Order
Now, December 8, 1987, the Order of the Court of Common Pleas of Montgomery County, Civil Division No. 85-01999, dated February 28, 1985, is hereby reversed.
Notes
The trial court found that the township contributed “between $15,000 and $20,000 per year to [The Association] for maintenance and operation of ambulance service.” See Section 702, cl. XLVI of *519 the Code, 53 P.S. §65746. The president of the Associations board testified that in 1984, of the $20,000 allocated, $15,000 went to the Association and $5,000 went to the corps members; in 1985 all $20,000 was allocated to the Corps Members.
See Section 601 of The Pennsylvania Workmen's Compensation Act, Act of June 2, 1915, P.L. 736, as amended, 77 P.S. §1031 (a)(2). Section 601 was added by Section 15 of the Act of December 5, 1974, P.L. 782.
The Townships position in this case relies heavily upon our decision in
Township of North Fayette v. Commonwealth,
The Township aptly distinguishes North Fayette from the instant case, noting that the issue of state pre-emption of local government power addressed in North Fayette is not present in a case where, as here, the legislature neither imposes statutory provisions regulating the operation of emergency ambulance services in a second class township nor gives such regulatory power to an administrative agency. The Township, therefore, contends it has a duty to *520 protect its citizens from inadequate ambulance service and, because the state has not pre-empted its power in the field, has standing to do so. Although the Township argument is novel, it is, nonetheless, unpersuasive.
In the four years immediately preceding the suit, the Township contributed to the Ambulance Association. When the controversy erupted between the directors and some of the Corps members, the Township held back $5,000 (of the $20,000 appropriated) and gave that amount to the members. The Townships suit was filed in February of 1985; in that year it gave all $20,000 to the corps members and none to the Association. All of the funds however, came from the federal government; there were no local tax dollars involved. The Township applied for these funds at the behest of the Association.
Second Class Townships are, of course, permitted to contribute to many non-profit associations or corporations, such as community nursing services, 53 P.S. §65757; organizations to acquire and maintain historical properties, 53 P.S. §65760; urban common carrier mass transportation authorities, 53 P.S. §65764a; tourist promotion agencies, 53 P.S. §65770; non-profit art corporations, 53 P.S. *521 §65773; etc. Although the Townships would have a legitimate interest in all of these endeavors, that interest alone would not grant them standing and party status, so as to inject themselves into disputes which are more properly litigated in Orphans’ Court between the competing factions.
