City of Pittsburgh v. Kronzek

280 A.2d 488, 2 Pa. Commw. 660, 1971 Pa. Commw. LEXIS 501
CourtCommonwealth Court of Pennsylvania
DecidedAugust 2, 1971
DocketAppeal No. 11 Tr. Dkt. 1971
StatusPublished
Cited by11 cases

This text of 280 A.2d 488 (City of Pittsburgh v. Kronzek) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Commonwealth Court of Pennsylvania primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
City of Pittsburgh v. Kronzek, 280 A.2d 488, 2 Pa. Commw. 660, 1971 Pa. Commw. LEXIS 501 (Pa. Ct. App. 1971).

Opinions

Opinion by

President Judge Bowman,

Appellants, Srul and Eva Kronzek,1 are owners of numerous deteriorating and dilapidated rental buildings in the City of Pittsburgh which are the subject of this litigation. Between October 24, 1967 and November 27,1968, the Director of the Pittsburgh Department of Public Safety, on the basis of visual inspections of the premises by departmental inspectors, issued six2 notices of condemnation as to structures owned by the Kronzeks. The inspectors, on the basis of their observations, had determined the subject buildings to be dan[662]*662gerous and a safety hazard to the public health and welfare. The notices were issued pursuant to City Ordinance No. 76, approved March 3, 1966, which provides in relevant part:

“Sec. 210-A. All unsafe buildings as herein defined are declared to be public nuisances and shall be repaired, vacated or demolished, pursuant to the notice and order of the Superintendent under Sec. 210 or Sec. 211 of this Ordinance, in accordance with the following standards, or as otherwise provided in this Ordinance :
“(d) If the unsafe building, whether or not vacant, has not been repaired in accordance with the Notice and Order of the Superintendent, and if it is in such condition as to make it dangerous to the health, safety, morals or general welfare of its occupants or of the public, and the vacation of the building would not eliminate such condition, it shall be ordered to be demolished.”

The vacancy of all the buildings is undisputed as is the fact that they are uninhabitable in their present decayed condition. However, the conclusion that they are in such disrepair as to require demolition under a constitutional exercise of the municipal police power is in serious dispute.

The property owners dispute only the reasonableness of the exercise of the police power under the above ordinance and do not argue that they were denied the basic requisites of notice and hearing constituting due process of law. Each notice of condemnation contained the following clause after cataloguing the nature of the conditions rendering the structure unsafe and dangerous to the public.3 “Any owner, agent, or occupant [663]*663interested, who may feel himself aggrieved by an order of the said department, which requires a substantial alteration or repair, or the removal of any substantial portion or portions, of any building, may, within thirty days after the service of the order as hereinafter provided, present his petition to the court of common pleas of the county wherein the city is situated, having first notified the said department of his intention so to do; and the court shall then fix a time for a hearing, within five days thereafter, and may suspend such order pending hearing; and thereafter, at the time fixed for the healing, a judge of said court shall hear and determine the said appeal, and make such order as right and justice may require.” [citing an excerpt from the Act of May 13, 1915, P. L. 297, section 3, 53 P.S. §25094.]

Appellant cannot and does not argue that such timely notice and opportunity for a full judicial hearing deny him his constitutional rights to due process. Kronzek in fact took timely appeals from each notice and eventually the six cases were consolidated for hearing and argument before the Court of Common Pleas of Allegheny County in December 1969 and June 1970. After considerable expert testimony offered by both the City and Kronzek as to the actual condition of each of the structures, the lower court ruled by opinion and order dated August 7, 1970 that the City had acted properly within its constitutionally delegated police powers in issuing the demolition notices.

An appeal was taken to the Supreme Court and subsequently transferred to the Commonwealth Court [664]*664pursuant to the Appellate Court Jurisdiction Act of July 31, 1970, P. L. (Act No. 223), as amended, 17 P.S. §211.101 et seq.

On appeal, the property owners advance three arguments, all of which were discussed and decided by the lower court in its opinion. First and most important, Kronzek argues that the demolition orders of the City are. an unreasonable and therefore unconstitutional exercise of the police power so as to require the Court to declare Ordinance No. 76 invalid.. Second, appellant argues that even , if the questioned ordinance is valid that there is insufficient evidence to declare the dilapidated structures, “unsafe and dangerous”. Third, appellant contends that the constitutional prohibition against unreasonable searches, requires at least a search warrant before entrance into these admittedly open and vacant buildings.... . ■ .

We agree with the, lower court in its dismissal of each of these , arguments and. affirm its decision as to the reasonableness and propriety of the City’s acts and activities with respect to these long unoccupied and deteriorated structures. We shall, however, discuss each of appellant’s-points briefly giving our reasons for affirming the City’s demolition .directives in this case.

I

The City of Pittsburgh draws its power to issue notices of demolition from the Act of May 13, 1915, supra.

. “To provide for inspection of buildings and premises

“In addition , to the powers, heretofore granted to cities of the second class, as provided for in an act, entitled An Act for the government of cities of the second class,’ approved the seventh day of March, one thousand nine hundred and one, and the supplements thereto, every city of the second class, in its corporate capacity, in order to decrease and prevent fire, the [665]*665spread of fire, and fire waste, loss of life from fire, and loss of life or damage to property from unsafe or improper construction or design of buildings, is authorized and empowered, by ordinance,—

“To provide for the inspection of the inside and outside of all buildings and premises at any time. 1915, May 13, P. L. 297, §l(a).” 53 P.S. §25081.

This enabling legislation gives to the City the authority to enact ordinances deemed necessary to guard and protect the public health, safety, morals and general welfare. It was pursuant to this enabling authority that Ordinance No. 76 was enacted to provide for the repair, or demolition in appropriate cases, of buildings that are found to be public nuisances in fact.

Of course the power of the City to declare structures which are not in fact dangerous to the public to be such nuisances would be an abuse of the delegated authority. This Court has recently ruled that a second class township having similar regulatory authority under its delegated police powers cannot enact ordinances which unreasonably or arbitrarily categorize certain activities or conditions as nuisances per se without adequate factual support and provisions for procedural due process in such ordinance. In striking down an ordinance requiring confiscation of “abandoned cars”, this Court adopted the well-reasoned opinion of the lower court which said in part: “ ‘The intent of the legislature in passing the above Act seems clear. Second-class townships were thereby given the right to prohibit nuisances, which in a given case might include the storage of abandoned or junked automobiles. The legislature, however, did not declare or define such storage as a nuisance per se. Nor did it give the townships the power so to do.

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Bluebook (online)
280 A.2d 488, 2 Pa. Commw. 660, 1971 Pa. Commw. LEXIS 501, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/city-of-pittsburgh-v-kronzek-pacommwct-1971.