Clair D. v. Commonwealth

515 A.2d 356, 101 Pa. Commw. 1, 1986 Pa. Commw. LEXIS 2558
CourtCommonwealth Court of Pennsylvania
DecidedSeptember 24, 1986
DocketAppeal, No. 184 Miscellaneous Docket No. 4
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 515 A.2d 356 (Clair D. v. Commonwealth) 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
Clair D. v. Commonwealth, 515 A.2d 356, 101 Pa. Commw. 1, 1986 Pa. Commw. LEXIS 2558 (Pa. Ct. App. 1986).

Opinion

Opinion by Judge Colins,

Clair D. and Vicki Hardy et al. (petitioners) appeal an order of the Environmental Hearing Board (Board), which denied their application for attorneys’ fees pursuant to the Act of December 13, 1982, P.L. 1127, 71 P.S. §§2031-2055 (Costs Act or Act).

Petitioners are property owners in Hill-N-Dale Estates, a seven lot subdivision in Carroll Township (Township), York County. This subdivision had not been incorporated into the official Township Sewage Facilities Plan and, after their existing sand-lot septic system malfunctioned,1 petitioners requested that the Department of Environmental Resources (Department) compel the Township to amend the official plan and provide [3]*3for effective sewage disposal.2 On June 2, 1983, petitioners were notified by the Department that the Township had retained an engineering firm to seek a “cost effective and environmentally sound solution to [their] sewage problems” and to “prepare a revision” to the official Township plan. Petitioners appealed this decision to the Board.

On June 8, 1984, while the appeal was pending, the Department ordered the Township to revise its official sewage plan so as to adequately address the current and future needs of petitioners’ subdivision. The Department moved to dismiss the appeal as moot and petitioners, admitting that the Department’s order effectively satisfied their initial request for revision, agreed to withdraw their appeal.

Petitioners then filed an application for an award of attorneys’ fees pursuant to the Costs Act, which petition, as we have indicated, was denied by the Board. In its decision, the Board determined that: (1) any Department action appealable to the Board, as is the denial of a private request to revise an official sewage facilities plan, constitutes an adversary adjudication, as defined in the Act, but that (2) the Act applies only to those adversary adjudications initiated by the Department, namely, to those cases in which an agency, upon its own initiative, takes some action against a party. The Board concluded that the Costs Act did not apply to these proceedings because the Department had not initiated the action.

[4]*4We must determine whether petitioners are entitled to an award of counsel fees, pursuant to the Costs Act, where the Department defers action on a petition to compel revision of an official sewage disposal plan. We believe an interpretation of the Costs Act is a matter of first impression for this Court.3

In enacting the Costs Act, the legislature intended to “diminish the deterrent effect of seeking review of or defending against administrative agency action” and “deter the administrative agencies of this Commonwealth from initiating substantially unwarranted actions against individuals, partnerships, corporations, associations and other nonpublic entities.” Section 1 of the Act, 71 P.S. §2031(c).

Section 3 of the Act, 71 P.S. §2033(a), provides that:

a Commonwealth agency that initiates an adversary adjudication shall award to a prevailing party, other than the Commonwealth, fees and other expenses incurred by that party . . . unless the adjudicative officer finds that the position of the agency, as a party to the proceeding, was substantially justified or that special circumstances made an award unjust. (Emphasis added.)

[5]*5In defining “adversary adjudication”, the Act adopts the definition of adjudication found in 2 Pa. C. S. §101: “any final order, decree, decision, determination or ruling by an agency affecting personal or property rights, privileges, immunities, duties, liabilities or obligations of any or all of the parties to the proceeding in which the adjudication is made.”4

Petitioners concur in the Boards determination that the Departments letter of June 2, 1983 constituted an adversary adjudication under the Act but contend upon appeal that the Department initiated such adjudication when it denied their request for revision, thus rendering the Act applicable to this proceeding.

The Departments denial of a private request for revision is an action appealable to the Board, 25 Pa. Code §71.17(d), and as such, is clearly encompassed within the Acts broad definition of adversary adjudication, as the Board so found. However, we cannot agree with petitioners’ argument that such denial by the Department initiates an adversary adjudication so as to render the costs incurred recompensable. We take petitioners’ argument to mean that costs incurred in appealing any action of the Department would be recompensable under the Act. In our view, such an interpretation belies the express language and stated purpose of the Act.

[6]*6We are, of course, constrained to construe statutory language according to its common and approved usage. 1 Pa. C. S. §1903(a). Webster’s Ninth New Collegiate Dictionary (1983) defines initiate as “to cause or facilitate the beginning of.” We fail to see how the Department “caused or facilitated the beginning of” this adjudication. We believe that petitioners began this action in their private request for revision directed at the Department.

We are supported in our interpretation by the presumption that the legislature intended the “entire statute to be effective and certain,” 1 Pa. C. S. §1922(2); requiring that “every statute shall be construed, if possible, to give effect to all its provisions,” 1 Pa. C. S. §1921(a).

Petitioners’ interpretation renders the statutory term “initiates”, as found in “initiates an adversary adjudication,” 71 P.S. 2033(a), mere surplusage. We must construe a statute to give effect to every word, if possible, Commonwealth v. Driscoll, 485 Pa. 99, 401 A.2d 312 (1979), and we cannot avoid the import of the legislature’s inclusion of that term in the Act.

The Costs Act was adopted from Section 504 of the federal Equal Access to Justice Act, 5 U.S.C. §504,5 with certain notable modifications. In Section 3 of the Act, 71 P.S. §2033(a), providing for an award of fees and costs, our legislature substituted the term “initiates” for the term “conducts” as found in the analogous subsection of the federal statute. 5 U.S.C. §504(a)(1).6 More[7]*7over, our legislature employed the term “initiate” in that section of the Act defining the purpose of the statute. See 71 P.S. §2031(c)(2). Such repetition by our legislature lends credence to our determination that the term “initiate” as used in the Costs Act is not mere surplus-age and that the Boards narrow application of the Act to those cases in which an agency, upon its own initiative, takes some action against a party, is correct.

Our construction is consistent with the expressed two-fold purpose of the Act as intended to “diminish the deterrent effect of seeking review of or defending against administrative action” and to “deter administrative agencies from initiating substantially unwarranted actions against individuals. ...” 71 P.S. 2031(c)(2).

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Bluebook (online)
515 A.2d 356, 101 Pa. Commw. 1, 1986 Pa. Commw. LEXIS 2558, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/clair-d-v-commonwealth-pacommwct-1986.