DITHRIDGE H. ASS'N v. PennDER.

541 A.2d 827, 116 Pa. Commw. 24
CourtCommonwealth Court of Pennsylvania
DecidedMay 6, 1988
Docket1402 C.D. 1987
StatusPublished

This text of 541 A.2d 827 (DITHRIDGE H. ASS'N v. PennDER.) 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
DITHRIDGE H. ASS'N v. PennDER., 541 A.2d 827, 116 Pa. Commw. 24 (Pa. Ct. App. 1988).

Opinion

116 Pa. Commonwealth Ct. 24 (1988)
541 A.2d 827

Dithridge House Association, Petitioner
v.
Commonwealth of Pennsylvania, Department of Environmental Resources, Respondent.

No. 1402 C.D. 1987.

Commonwealth Court of Pennsylvania.

Argued March 22, 1988.
May 6, 1988.

Argued March 22, 1988, before Judges CRAIG, DOYLE and PALLADINO, sitting as a panel of three.

*25 Henry E. Rea, Jr., Brandt, Milnes & Rea, for petitioner.

Katherine S. Dunlop, Assistant Counsel, for respondent.

OPINION BY JUDGE CRAIG, May 6, 1988:

Dithridge House Association (Dithridge), the governing body of a condominium complex known as Dithridge House, appeals from a decision of the Environmental Hearing Board (board) affirming a decision of the Department of Environmental Resources (DER) which (1) rejected Dithridge's request to withdraw its application for a public bathing place permit for the condominium's swimming pool, (2) held that a permit was required, and (3) denied a permit for that pool as constructed.

The issues presented are (1) whether Dithridge should be precluded from arguing that a 1979 amendment to the Public Bathing Law, Act of June 23, 1931, P.L. 899, as amended, 35 P.S. §§672-680d, eliminates the permit requirement in regard to this pool, because of Dithridge's failure to appeal from a 1973 DER denial of a permit or a 1974 closure order issued by DER; (2) if Dithridge is not so precluded, whether DER has the *26 authority, under the Public Bathing Law as it now exists, to deny a permit to Dithridge based on the lack of a four-foot wide deck on all sides of the pool, and (3) if not, whether DER has authority under the Administrative Code of 1929 to deny this permit.

History

The facts are not in dispute. In 1971 Dithridge built a swimming pool inside its condominium complex. The contractor who built the pool applied for a public bathing place permit for it in 1973. DER denied the application because the pool does not comply with the requirement of section 2.6.8 of DER's Bathing Place Manual that "[t]here shall be provided, completely around every swimming pool, a clear unobstructed paved walk or deck not less than four feet wide, extending from the pool side edge or lip of the coping of the pool ...."[1] The contractor did not appeal that denial. On June 3, 1974, DER ordered the pool closed until a bathing place permit was obtained. Neither the contractor nor Dithridge appealed from that order.

In 1979 the legislature amended the Public Bathing Law to exclude condominium pools from the definition of "public bathing place" except with respect to certain enumerated matters. In 1985 Dithridge submitted another application to DER for a permit for this pool. Dithridge later requested permission to withdraw that application because it had received a legal opinion to the effect that the 1979 amendment exempted the pool from the permit requirement. DER denied the request to withdraw the application, based on its view that the permit requirement still applied, and it denied the application *27 because the pool still lacked a four-foot wide deck around all sides. Dithridge appealed that decision to the Environmental Hearing Board. The board granted summary judgment in favor of DER on the bases of its conclusions (1) that the provisions of the Public Bathing Law, including the permit requirement, still applied to this pool after the amendment of the law, and (2) that, "because Dithridge did not appeal DER's June 3, 1974 permit denial [meaning, apparently, the 1974 closure order, which was based on the findings of the 1973 permit denial], it is now estopped from challenging the findings set forth in that order." Dithridge has appealed from the board's decision.

Preclusion

DER contends that the doctrine of finality of administrative decisions precludes Dithridge from challenging the factual or legal basis for DER's earlier permit denial or closure order in this appeal of a subsequent permit denial, because Dithridge did not appeal from those earlier orders. The Pennsylvania Supreme Court applied this doctrine in Department of Environmental Resources v. Wheeling-Pittsburgh Steel Corp., 473 Pa. 432, 375 A.2d 320, cert. denied, 434 U.S. 969 (1977), when a steel maker sought to challenge the constitutionality of certain DER regulations relating to particulate matter emissions. The court held that, because the company did not appeal from DER's initial order directing that it comply with the regulations by a specified date, the company was "precluded from attacking the validity or content of either the order or the underlying regulations in the instant enforcement proceeding." 473 Pa. at 443, 375 A.2d at 325.

The doctrine of administrative finality focuses upon the failure of a party aggrieved by administrative action to pursue his statutory appeal remedy. This court explained *28 the rationale and policy basis for the doctrine in its decision in Department of Environmental Resources v. Wheeling-Pittsburgh Steel Corp., 22 Pa. Commonwealth Ct. 280, 284, 348 A.2d 765, 767 (1975):

We agree that an aggrieved party has no duty to appeal but disagree that upon failure to do so, the party so aggrieved preserves to some indefinite future time in some indefinite future proceedings the right to contest an unappealed order. To conclude otherwise would postpone indefinitely the vitality of administrative orders and frustrate the orderly operations of administrative law. This principle was expressed in Philadelphia v. Sam Bobman Department Store Company, 189 Pa. Superior Ct. 72, 78, 149 A.2d 518, 521 (1959), in which Judge WOODSIDE stated:
`It is settled both under common law and statute that where an act creates a right or liability or imposes a duty and prescribes a particular remedy for its enforcement such remedy is exclusive and must be strictly pursued. This means that one who fails to exhaust his statutory remedies may not thereafter raise an issue which could have and should have been raised in the proceeding afforded by his statutory remedy.
....
... This is particularly true of special statutory appeals from the action of administrative bodies.' (Emphasis added.)

In Nemacolin, Inc. v. Department of Environmental Resources, 115 Pa. Commonwealth Ct. 462, 541 A.2d 811 (1988), argued at the same time as the present case, this court held that preclusion based on administrative finality did not apply when DER instituted proceedings to close a swimming pool after an earlier unappealed *29 permit denial, because the later proceeding was an enforcement of a general obligation to operate with a permit if one were required by law, not an enforcement of any particular obligation arising out of the permit denial.

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Related

Nemacolin, Inc. v. Commonwealth
541 A.2d 811 (Commonwealth Court of Pennsylvania, 1988)
Clark v. Troutman
502 A.2d 137 (Supreme Court of Pennsylvania, 1985)
Philadelphia v. Sam Bobman Department Store Co.
149 A.2d 518 (Superior Court of Pennsylvania, 1959)
Commonwealth v. Wheeling-Pittsburgh Steel Corp.
348 A.2d 765 (Commonwealth Court of Pennsylvania, 1975)
Dithridge House Ass'n v. Commonwealth
541 A.2d 827 (Commonwealth Court of Pennsylvania, 1988)

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Bluebook (online)
541 A.2d 827, 116 Pa. Commw. 24, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/dithridge-h-assn-v-pennder-pacommwct-1988.