Opinion by
Judge Rogers,
William G. Albright, Simon Rhoads, Issac W. Albright and Claude M. Basler have appealed from an order of the Court of Common Pleas of Dauphin County dismissing their preliminary objections attacking the lawfulness of the taking by the Lower Dauphin School District of land containing one and six tenths of an acre in Derry Township for school purposes.
The preliminary objections raised a number of questions, the disposition of which by the court below are not contested by the appellants here. Those still advanced are: (1) whether the appellee School District sought approval of the Department of Education before condemning the tract in question, (2) whether the appellants have standing to object to the taking on the asserted ground that the School District did not comply with regulations of the Department of Education, and (3) whether the failure of the School District to obtain prior approval by the Department of Education of the condemnation was a violation of departmental regulations rendering the District powerless to condemn.
[421]*421Since the lower court found, as the appellants contended, that the District in fact did not seek prior departmental approval we need not discuss the first question.1 As for the second question concerning standing, we merely observe that, as the quoted portion of the lower court’s opinion hereinafter reproduced demonstrates, the order below was not based on a determination that the appellants lacked standing. It was grounded rather on the Court’s negative answer to the third question here posed — whether under the law the School District’s power to condemn was vitiated by its failure to obtain the prior approval of the Department. Judge Dowling correctly disposed of this question and we adopt the following portions of his opinion as an extremely able and very thorough consideration of the subject:
“We must now consider what effect the failure to seek approval has on the school district’s right to condemn the tract; it already having been decided that such condemnation was for lawful school purposes. The condemnor argues that such regulations which condemnees claim were not complied with deal solely with approval required for school site acquisition and construction if a school district desires monetary reimbursement for such site acquisition. When the school district sought approval in August, 1969, Regulation 3-4506 was in effect. This [422]*422was supplemented by regulations issued September 11, 19707.
“Both place responsibility for acquiring the land on the Board of School Directors and while they speak of acquisition approval, the penalty for failing to secure it is specifically spelled out in the 1970 regulation ‘approval of the Department of Education prior to purchase is prerequisite to qualifying for reimbursement.’
“There is a scarcity of legal authority or interpretation of such [administrative] regulations; however, a review of the statutory provisions regarding site acquisition aids substantially in interpreting the regulations of the Department of Public Instruction. Sections 7-701 and 7-702 of the Public School Code of 1949, as amended in 1970, state:
[423]*423‘The board of school directors of each district shall provide the necessary grounds and suitable school building to accommodate all the children between ages of 6 and 21 years, in said district, who attend the school. Such building shall be constructed, furnished and equipped and maintained in a proper manner as herein provided. . . .
‘The location and amount of any real estate required by any school district for school purposes shall be determined by the board of school directors of such district, by a vote of the majority of all the members of such board. No school building shall be erected without a proper playground being provided therefor.’
“With regard to condemnation, Section 7-721 reads as follows:
‘Whenever the Board of school directors of any district cannot agree on the terms of its purchase with the owner or owners of any real estate that the board has selected for school purposes, such board of school directors, after having decided upon the amount and location thereof, may enter upon, take [424]*424possession of, and occupy such land as it may have selected for school purposes, whether vacant or occupied, and designate and mark the boundary lines thereof, and thereafter may use the same for school purposes according to the provisions of this act. . .
“Thus, neither do these aforequoted sections of the Public School Code, nor do any other sections of the Public School Code in existence in 1969 and 1970, place any affirmative statutory duty upon the board of school directors to obtain approval of the Commonwealth or the Department of Public Instruction prior to such obtainment of real estate. The judgment, discretion and choice for the acquisition of real estate is placed solely upon the board of school directors. The legislature amended June 1, 1972, Section 7-703 of the Public School Code to include the underlined following language:
‘In order to comply with the provisions of this act, and subject to the conditions thereof, the board of school directors of each district is hereby vested with the necessary power and authority to acquire, in the name of the district, by purchase, lease, gift, devise, agreement condemnation, or otherwise any and all schools and real estate, either vacant or occupied, including lands theretofore occupied by streets and alleys which have been vacated by municipal authorities, and to acquire by purchase, lease, gift or devise, other buildings approved for school tese by the Department of Education as the board of school directors may deem necessary to furnish school buildings or other suitable sites for proper school purposes for said district or to enlarge the grounds of any school property held by such district, and to sell, convey, transfer, dispose of, or abandon the same, or any part hereof, as the board of school directors may determine. As amended 1972, June 1, P.L. .., No. 89, §2, imd. effective.’
“Thus, not until 1972 did the legislature, in fact, make any prior Department of Education approval in the [425]*425Public School Code regarding a site acquisition, and this approval related not to unimproved sites but specifically the purchase by a district of ‘other buildings for school use.’
“It therefore appears that the school district’s failure to obtain approval of the site in question goes to its right to obtain state financial reimbursement and not to the legal effect of its power to condemn.
“Finally, we seriously question the condemnees standing to contest that the Lower Dauphin School District did not comply with the rules and regulations of the Department of Public Instruction, now the Department of Education.
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Opinion by
Judge Rogers,
William G. Albright, Simon Rhoads, Issac W. Albright and Claude M. Basler have appealed from an order of the Court of Common Pleas of Dauphin County dismissing their preliminary objections attacking the lawfulness of the taking by the Lower Dauphin School District of land containing one and six tenths of an acre in Derry Township for school purposes.
The preliminary objections raised a number of questions, the disposition of which by the court below are not contested by the appellants here. Those still advanced are: (1) whether the appellee School District sought approval of the Department of Education before condemning the tract in question, (2) whether the appellants have standing to object to the taking on the asserted ground that the School District did not comply with regulations of the Department of Education, and (3) whether the failure of the School District to obtain prior approval by the Department of Education of the condemnation was a violation of departmental regulations rendering the District powerless to condemn.
[421]*421Since the lower court found, as the appellants contended, that the District in fact did not seek prior departmental approval we need not discuss the first question.1 As for the second question concerning standing, we merely observe that, as the quoted portion of the lower court’s opinion hereinafter reproduced demonstrates, the order below was not based on a determination that the appellants lacked standing. It was grounded rather on the Court’s negative answer to the third question here posed — whether under the law the School District’s power to condemn was vitiated by its failure to obtain the prior approval of the Department. Judge Dowling correctly disposed of this question and we adopt the following portions of his opinion as an extremely able and very thorough consideration of the subject:
“We must now consider what effect the failure to seek approval has on the school district’s right to condemn the tract; it already having been decided that such condemnation was for lawful school purposes. The condemnor argues that such regulations which condemnees claim were not complied with deal solely with approval required for school site acquisition and construction if a school district desires monetary reimbursement for such site acquisition. When the school district sought approval in August, 1969, Regulation 3-4506 was in effect. This [422]*422was supplemented by regulations issued September 11, 19707.
“Both place responsibility for acquiring the land on the Board of School Directors and while they speak of acquisition approval, the penalty for failing to secure it is specifically spelled out in the 1970 regulation ‘approval of the Department of Education prior to purchase is prerequisite to qualifying for reimbursement.’
“There is a scarcity of legal authority or interpretation of such [administrative] regulations; however, a review of the statutory provisions regarding site acquisition aids substantially in interpreting the regulations of the Department of Public Instruction. Sections 7-701 and 7-702 of the Public School Code of 1949, as amended in 1970, state:
[423]*423‘The board of school directors of each district shall provide the necessary grounds and suitable school building to accommodate all the children between ages of 6 and 21 years, in said district, who attend the school. Such building shall be constructed, furnished and equipped and maintained in a proper manner as herein provided. . . .
‘The location and amount of any real estate required by any school district for school purposes shall be determined by the board of school directors of such district, by a vote of the majority of all the members of such board. No school building shall be erected without a proper playground being provided therefor.’
“With regard to condemnation, Section 7-721 reads as follows:
‘Whenever the Board of school directors of any district cannot agree on the terms of its purchase with the owner or owners of any real estate that the board has selected for school purposes, such board of school directors, after having decided upon the amount and location thereof, may enter upon, take [424]*424possession of, and occupy such land as it may have selected for school purposes, whether vacant or occupied, and designate and mark the boundary lines thereof, and thereafter may use the same for school purposes according to the provisions of this act. . .
“Thus, neither do these aforequoted sections of the Public School Code, nor do any other sections of the Public School Code in existence in 1969 and 1970, place any affirmative statutory duty upon the board of school directors to obtain approval of the Commonwealth or the Department of Public Instruction prior to such obtainment of real estate. The judgment, discretion and choice for the acquisition of real estate is placed solely upon the board of school directors. The legislature amended June 1, 1972, Section 7-703 of the Public School Code to include the underlined following language:
‘In order to comply with the provisions of this act, and subject to the conditions thereof, the board of school directors of each district is hereby vested with the necessary power and authority to acquire, in the name of the district, by purchase, lease, gift, devise, agreement condemnation, or otherwise any and all schools and real estate, either vacant or occupied, including lands theretofore occupied by streets and alleys which have been vacated by municipal authorities, and to acquire by purchase, lease, gift or devise, other buildings approved for school tese by the Department of Education as the board of school directors may deem necessary to furnish school buildings or other suitable sites for proper school purposes for said district or to enlarge the grounds of any school property held by such district, and to sell, convey, transfer, dispose of, or abandon the same, or any part hereof, as the board of school directors may determine. As amended 1972, June 1, P.L. .., No. 89, §2, imd. effective.’
“Thus, not until 1972 did the legislature, in fact, make any prior Department of Education approval in the [425]*425Public School Code regarding a site acquisition, and this approval related not to unimproved sites but specifically the purchase by a district of ‘other buildings for school use.’
“It therefore appears that the school district’s failure to obtain approval of the site in question goes to its right to obtain state financial reimbursement and not to the legal effect of its power to condemn.
“Finally, we seriously question the condemnees standing to contest that the Lower Dauphin School District did not comply with the rules and regulations of the Department of Public Instruction, now the Department of Education. Although a condemnee always has an interest in seeing that all the proper legal procedures are followed if he is to lose valuable property interest, the condemnees have presented no claims nor allegations that the Board of School Directors of the Lower Dauphin School District have not fully complied with the relevant sections of the Public School Code of 1949 relating to acquisition and condemnation of land..In point of fact, condemnees claim only that condemnor did not fully comply with certain non-statutory regulations. It would seem that the Department of Education is the only party to complain or possibly be adversely affected if its regulations are not fully complied with. The purpose of the regulations is not to protect the interest of potential condemnees but to promote the interest of the efficient and adequate development of the public school system. It should further be noted that condemnees admit that they made no investigation with the Department as to the school district’s interest in the tract when they purchased it in April of 1973. This is not a situation where a condemnee made an investigation and relied upon the school district’s failure to comply with certain regulations before purchasing the property.”
Order affirmed.