63 Pa. Commw. 472 | Pa. Commw. Ct. | 1981
Opinion by
This is an appeal by Western Pennsylvania Water Company (Water Company) from an order of the Court of Common Pleas of Allegheny County granting Mt. Lebanon School District’s (School District) petition to quash an appeal of a property assessment. We affirm.
On February 23,1976, the Water Company filed an appeal with the Board of Property Assessment, Ap
Before this Court, the Water Company raises two challenges to the lower court’s determination: (1) it was the School District’s burden to prove that notice of the Disposition had been received by the Water Company on or before November 5, 1979,
Whether an appeal has been timely filed is a question of law. Where, as here, the court below has held a de novo proceeding to resolve a question of law, this Court’s scope of review is limited to determining whether the necessary factual determinations are supported by substantial evidence and whether the law has been properly applied to those facts. Department of Transportation, Bureau of Traffic Safety v. Volmer, 41 Pa. Commonwealth Ct. 286, 398 A.2d 1098 (1979).
With respect to the first challenge herein, a thorough review of the record reveals the Water Company’s contentions to be wholly inappropriate. In its reply to the School District’s petition to quash the appeal, the’Water Company never denied the allegation that notice of the Disposition was received at the Cooke Lane address on November 5, 1979. Instead it stated, by way of defense, that November 6 or 7, 1979, should be treated as the effective date of notice as it was on one of those days that house counsel, the Water Company’s designated representative before the Board, first saw the notice, it having been forwarded to him at his 250 Mt. Lebanon Boulevard address. Thus, in its own pleading, the Water Company failed to make an issue of the date of receipt at Cooke Lane.
The Water Company’s challenge to the decision below that the sixty-day period within which to appeal the Disposition began to run with receipt of the notice of the Disposition by an office clerk on November 5, 1979, rather than with receipt by house counsel on November 6 or 7,1979, is also without merit. The crux of the Water Company’s argument is that, as a corporation, it can only acquire notice through an officer or agent and that its house counsel as designated representative before the Board was the first such party to see the notice. Rule VI, Section 2 of the rules and regulations governing appeals before the Board, however, specifically states that notice of a Disposition by the Board will be mailed “to the address of applicant appearing on the application.” (Emphasis added.) The address the Water Company gave on its application was 410 Cooke Lane. The Board was therefore correct in sending the notice of the Disposition by certified mail to that address rather than to the address of house counsel. At the Cooke Lane address, the notice of the Disposition was signed for by an office clerk. It is undisputed that this clerk’s duties included the receipt and distribution of such mail and, thus, he was clearly an agent of the Water Company for this purpose. Since notice to an agent is notice to a corporation when, as here, it is the duty of the agent to communicate it to the principal in the proper discharge of his duties as agent, A. Schulman, Inc. v. Baer Co., 197 Pa. Superior Ct. 429, 178 A.2d 794 (1962), we must affirm the trial court’s holding that the Water Company received notice of the Disposition with receipt by the office clerk on November 5,1979. Accordingly, the January 7, 1980, appeal was untimely and the trial court was correct in ruling that it was without juris
The Water Company at this time also appeals the trial court’s denial of a petition for an appeal nunc pro tunc which it filed as an alternative pleading and which was denied during the course of the hearing below. A petition for an appeal nunc pro tunc should be granted only where the party mating the request has shown that the delay in filing their appeal was engendered by extraordinary conditions involving fraud or a breakdown in the court’s operations through a default of its officers, which has resulted in injury to that party. Delmont Borough Annexation Case, 2 Pa. Commonwealth Ct. 496, 276 A.2d 549 (1971). Since the decision whether to grant an appeal nunc pro tunc is an equitable matter, this Court’s scope of review is limited to a determination of whether the trial court has abused its discretion or committed an error of law. Sergei v. Pittsburgh School District, 28 Pa. Commonwealth Ct. 576, 368 A.2d 1359 (1977).
We hold that the trial court committed no abuse of discretion
Accordingly, we enter the following
Order
And Now, December 30, 1981, the order of the Court of Common Pleas of Allegheny County in the above-captioned matter, No. GD80-00514, dated February 18,1981, is hereby affirmed.
Where the final day of an appeal period falls on a weekend, an appeal filed on the Monday immediately following is timely. Section 1908 of the Statutory Construction Act of 1972, 1 Pa. C. S. §1908. Therefore, for the Monday, January 7, 1980, filing date of .the appeal'herein to be timely, the Water Company must have received notice of the Disposition no earlier than November 6,1979.
Averments in a pleading not denied specifically or by necessary implication are admitted. Pa. R.C.P. 1029(b).
An abuse of discretion occurs only where, in reaching a conclusion, the court overrides or misapplies the law or exercises manifestly unreasonable judgment or the court’s decision is the product of partiality, prejudice, bias or ill will. Garrett’s Estate, 335 Pa. 287, 6 A.2d 858 (1939).