Dechert LLP v. PA DCED

CourtCommonwealth Court of Pennsylvania
DecidedJune 23, 2020
Docket442 M.D. 2019
StatusPublished

This text of Dechert LLP v. PA DCED (Dechert LLP v. PA DCED) 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
Dechert LLP v. PA DCED, (Pa. Ct. App. 2020).

Opinion

IN THE COMMONWEALTH COURT OF PENNSYLVANIA

Dechert LLP, : Petitioner : : v. : No. 442 M.D. 2019 : Argued: February 12, 2020 Pennsylvania Department of : Community and Economic : Development, : Respondent :

BEFORE: HONORABLE MARY HANNAH LEAVITT, President Judge HONORABLE RENÉE COHN JUBELIRER, Judge HONORABLE P. KEVIN BROBSON, Judge HONORABLE PATRICIA A. McCULLOUGH, Judge HONORABLE MICHAEL H. WOJCIK, Judge HONORABLE ELLEN CEISLER, Judge HONORABLE J. ANDREW CROMPTON, Judge

OPINION BY JUDGE CROMPTON FILED: June 23, 2020

Before us is Dechert LLP’s (Dechert) dual jurisdiction petition for review (Petition) challenging the Department of Community and Economic Development’s (DCED) construction of the Keystone Opportunity Zone, Keystone Opportunity Expansion Zone and Keystone Opportunity Improvement Zone Act (KOZ Act),1 denying tax benefits to a business relocating from an expired KOZ to an active KOZ within the City of Philadelphia. In the interest of expeditious resolution of this matter, this Court considers the merits of Dechert’s request for declaratory relief in our original jurisdiction. The appellate jurisdiction part of the Petition is dismissed. Based on the submissions, we grant declaratory relief to Dechert, concluding that DCED’s construction of the KOZ Act to preclude movement between an expired

1 Act of October 6, 1998, P.L. 705, as amended, 73 P.S. §§820.101-820.1308. zone and a zone in a different geographical area, albeit in the same city, was contrary to the plain language of the KOZ Act. Because DCED’s construction is unsupported by the statutory language, DCED lacks the authority to enforce that construction. Therefore, DCED shall construe the KOZ Act in accordance with this decision.

I. Background A. Statutory Overview The General Assembly enacted the KOZ Act in 1998 as a measure to encourage business development and employment in certain distressed areas. Under the KOZ Act, geographic areas of varying size may be designated as one of three types of opportunity zones, Keystone Opportunity Zones (KOZs), Keystone Opportunity Expansion Zones (KOEZs) and Keystone Opportunity Improvement Zones (KOIZs) (collectively, Zones). KOZ subzone properties are exempt from local property taxes and a qualified business within a Zone “shall be entitled to all tax exemptions, deductions, abatements or credits set forth in this act for a period not to exceed 15 years ….” Section 301(b) of the KOZ Act, 73 P.S. §820.301(b). By their nature, KOZ tax benefits are temporary since the active status of a Zone has a specific end date. See Section 102(3) of the KOZ Act, 73 P.S. §820.102(3).

DCED is the Commonwealth agency that administers the KOZ Act through the KOZ programs. DCED designates areas in the Commonwealth as KOZs and KOEZs and may designate a limited number of subzones within KOZs and KOEZs, see 73 P.S. §§820.301, 820.301a,2 820.301d,3 and grant applications to extend the duration of or enhance the size of a subzone, 73 P.S. §820.301(e), (f). In addition,

2 Section 301.1 of the KOZ Act, added by the Act of December 20, 2000, P.L. 841. 3 Section 301.4 of the KOZ Act, added by the Act of July 10, 2008, P.L. 1014.

2 DCED administers the program for KOIZs, which are designated by the Governor. See Section 301.2 of the KOZ Act, 73 P.S. §820.301b.4 The Governor’s designation of a KOIZ “shall specify a period of time, not to exceed 15 years.” 73 P.S. §820.301b(b).

DCED did not promulgate regulations regarding relocation restrictions. DCED also did not issue policy statements or other guidance documents limiting a business’s movement from an expired zone into an active zone.

B. Relevant Facts Dechert leases space from Brandywine Realty Trust (Brandywine) in the Cira Centre located at 2929 Arch Street in Philadelphia, next to the 30th Street Station. Cira Centre is an office complex within a now expired KOIZ (Expired Zone). Qualified businesses like Dechert received tax benefits under the KOZ Act during the active term of the Zone, from 2004 to its expiration on December 31, 2018. During its tenancy at the Cira Centre, Dechert received almost 15 years of KOZ tax benefits. However, the KOZ tax benefits available to Cira Centre tenants correspond to the KOZ status of the Zone, and so ended when that status expired.

Dechert plans to end its lease in the Cira Centre and lease space in a new office complex under construction by the same landlord in a different Zone. Brandywine’s new construction is at 3001 JFK Boulevard, “JFK Towers,” located in the Schuylkill Yard KOEZ (Active Zone). Dechert anticipates that upon relocating, it will lease 100,000 square feet in JFK Towers. Regardless of whether it relocates to JFK Towers, Dechert intends to move at least some of its workforce from the Expired Zone to another location, which may be outside the Commonwealth.

4 Added by the Act of December 9, 2002, P.L. 1727.

3 Dechert was required to give notice to Brandywine in 2019 as to whether it will leave its space at the Cira Centre when its lease expires on March 18, 2021. Dechert subsequently received an extension of its lease renewal deadline.

In April 2019, Dechert requested a letter ruling from DCED regarding the availability of tax benefits should it move its location from the Cira Centre located in the Expired Zone to JFK Towers in the Active Zone.5 Dechert maintained that its move from the Expired Zone to the Active Zone should not affect its eligibility for KOZ tax benefits in the Active Zone, despite receiving almost 15 years of KOZ benefits while located within the Expired Zone.

In a letter dated July 11, 2019, the Secretary of DCED responded to Dechert stating that its interpretation of the KOZ Act precludes a beneficiary of tax benefits of an expired zone to receive full benefits should it relocate to an active zone (Letter Ruling). See Reproduced Record (R.R.) at 3a-5a. In its Letter Ruling, the Secretary explained that the KOZ program is designed to encourage businesses to locate in economically distressed communities; to become economic anchors of the communities; and to re-enter the state and local tax rolls at the end of the KOZ term. Consequently, DCED “denie[d] Dechert’s request for Tax Benefits at a new Zone.” See DCED’s Prelim. Objs. ¶6.

Section 307(b) of the KOZ Act, relating to “Relocation,” sets forth certain eligibility requirements for businesses that relocate from “outside” a zone. 73 P.S. §820.307(b). Relevant here, the provision is silent on how to treat a business

5 DCED refers to the relocation from one zone to another as “zone hopping.” See DCED’s Br. at 6 n.3, 8, 14 n.6, 16 and 17.

4 seeking to relocate from an expired Zone to an active Zone. Significantly, DCED conceded that Section 307(b) lacks guidance regarding movement from one Zone to another. DCED “interpret[ed] this omission, in conjunction with the legislative intent of providing temporary tax relief,” as prohibiting businesses from obtaining tax breaks when they move “from one zone to another, whether such zone is active or expired.” R.R. at 5a. In its Letter Ruling, DCED raised concerns that an alternate construction of the KOZ Act would result in a mass exodus from one zone to another in an attempt to retain tax exemptions, and thus frustrate the purpose of the statute.

C. Procedural Posture Dechert filed the instant Petition challenging DCED’s construction of the KOZ Act to preclude movement from the Expired Zone into the Active Zone, appealing the Letter Ruling in Count I and seeking a declaration of the meaning of the KOZ Act and a determination that DCED’s construction was invalid in Count II. The parties filed various applications concerning procedure. DCED filed preliminary objections to the original jurisdiction part of the Petition predicated on our appellate jurisdiction.

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Dechert LLP v. PA DCED, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/dechert-llp-v-pa-dced-pacommwct-2020.