Golden Dawn Shops, Inc. v. Philadelphia Redevelopment Authority

282 A.2d 395, 3 Pa. Commw. 314, 1971 Pa. Commw. LEXIS 351
CourtCommonwealth Court of Pennsylvania
DecidedOctober 8, 1971
DocketAppeal No. 52 C.D. 1971
StatusPublished
Cited by16 cases

This text of 282 A.2d 395 (Golden Dawn Shops, Inc. v. Philadelphia Redevelopment Authority) 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
Golden Dawn Shops, Inc. v. Philadelphia Redevelopment Authority, 282 A.2d 395, 3 Pa. Commw. 314, 1971 Pa. Commw. LEXIS 351 (Pa. Ct. App. 1971).

Opinions

Opinion by

Judge Rogers,

The Redevelopment Authority of the City of Philadelphia (Authority) filed its declaration of taking of a number of properties in the City of Philadelphia, including premises 1232-40 Market Street which the appellant, Golden Dawn, Inc., occupies as a tenant. The Declaration was authorized by a resolution of the Authority, attached as an exhibit to the Declaration and not here challenged, which recited that Authority had been authorized by Ordinance of City Council to proceed with the redevelopment of an area known as the Market Street East Urban Renewal Area and that the power of eminent domain was conferred by Section 12 of the Urban Redevelopment Law, Act of May 24, 1945, P. L. 991, 35 P.S. 1701. The said Ordinance of City Council, also not here challenged, contains a metes and bounds description of the Market Street East Urban Renewal Area. This area is characterized in the Declaration as blighted and as subject to replanning and redevelopment for commercial, public and other new uses as provided in the proposal and plan approved by City Ordinance. The premises 1232-40 Market Street is within the Market Street East Urban Renewal Area. Also attached to the Declaration was Authority’s bond without surety conditioned for the payment of damages to the owners of the properties condemned.

The appellant filed preliminary objections to the taking pursuant to Section 406 of the Eminent Domain Code, Act of 1964, June 22, P. L. 84, 26 P.S. 1-201, as follows:

[317]*317I. That an area called Parcel 2 described in the Declaration, containing 1.8469 acres and including 1232-40 Market Street, sought to be condemned, is not blighted and has never been designated by any governmental agency as blighted.

II. That the purpose of the condemnation was not, as expressed in the complaint, to replan a blighted area but that the purpose was to acquire commercial land for development by certain private business corporations.

III. That the bond of the Authority did not secure just compensation but is in fact inadequate, insufficient and valueless.

Almost four months after appellant’s preliminary objections were filed, the Authority filed preliminary objections to appellant’s preliminary objections requesting an order of dismissal. The court below dismissed appellant’s preliminary objections apparently on the ground that they lacked specificity. It is from this order that the instant appeal is taken.

Appellant argues that the issues raised by their Section 406 preliminary objections were factual, that it should have been permitted to produce evidence in support thereof, that it was entitled to a judicial determination of its assertions of lack of power to condemn and insufficiency of the security and that assuming that its pleading lacking specificity, it should have been permitted to amend. The appellant advances the. subsidiary argument that the Authority’s preliminary objections should be dismissed because the Eminent Domain Code does not provide this pleading as a means of attacking Section 406 preliminary objections. Section 406 limits preliminary objections to challenges of the power or right of condemnation, the sufficiency of the security, the procedure, followed by the condemnor or the declaration of taking. The Act plainly implies that there should be some means of speedy disposition [318]*318of preliminary objections raising matters beyond those limitations or otherwise lacking merit. Although the Authority’s pleading is called preliminary objections, its prayer is for dismissal of the appellant’s objections. Essentially, it places in issue the legal sufficiency of appellant’s preliminary objections. Since this is an issue which the condemnor is entitled to raise, we deem it immaterial that this particular pleading was titled preliminary objections.

Appellant’s objection based upon the assertion that a small area, called Parcel 2 in the Declaration, is not and has not been designated blighted was properly dismissed by the court below. A careful examination of the Declaration discloses that the blighted area is referred as “described in Exhibit ‘A’.” That Exhibit is the resolution of the Authority which recites that the Authority is about to proceed with the redevelopment of the Market Street East Urban Renewal Area, and that it is necessary to acquire title to land in that area. A description of that area is contained in City Council’s Ordinance of September 16, 1969 to which specific reference is made in the Authority’s resolution. That description, as previously noted, is of a large area including Parcel 2. Appellant’s denial that Parcel 2 is blighted does not raise the issue of the power of the Authority to condemn the larger area of which it is a part. As Mr. Justice O’Bkien wrote in Crawford v. Redevelopment Authority, 418 Pa. 549, 554, 211 A. 2d 866, 868 (1965),

“The power of discretion over what areas are to be considered blighted is solely within the power of the Authority. The only function of the courts in this matter is to see that the Authority has acted not in bad faith; to see that the Authority has not acted arbitrarily ; to see that the Authority has followed the statutory procedures in making its determination; and, fi[319]*319nally, to see that the actions of the Authority do not violate any of our constitutional safeguards. . . .

“The first issue, raised hy the plaintiff, is that the Authority acted arbitrarily in including the property south of the unnamed alley in the Redevelopment Plan. In support of this contention, the plaintiff produced several real estate experts who testified that in their opinion the area south of the unnamed alley did not meet the standards for being blighted as called for in the Urban Redevelopment Law. . . .

“These experts conceded that the area north of the unnamed alley was blighted, but that the Crawford property, which constituted a large part of the property south of the unnamed alley, was not blighted. . . . However, the entire city of Uniontown was the subject of a comprehensive study by a professional planning organization. Their conclusions were submitted to the Urban Redevelopment Board, the City Planning Commission, and the City Council, which determined that the Avhole area had taken on the character of blight. The legislature has decreed that blighted areas be restored to healthy and prosperous urban areas. If urban areas had been kept in the same condition as the Crawford property, there would be no need for an Urban Redevelopment Law. . . . Comprehensive planning requires that areas be considered in their entirety and not in their unsever able parts.”

The averments of the Declaration relating to what area has been designated as blighted lack ideal precision. They do, however, name that area as the Market Street East Urban Renewal Area, and refer to the Ordinance of City Council where a detailed description appears. Appellant’s preliminary objection asserting only that a small portion of that area including the property in which it has a leasehold interest is not blighted, [320]*320does not negative the Authority’s power. The Declaration did in our view sufficiently apprise appellant, and its astute and learned counsel, that in order to attack the proceédings on the ground of absence of blight, his objection should have been directed to the condition of the Market Street East Urban Renewal Area, not Parcel 2.

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Bluebook (online)
282 A.2d 395, 3 Pa. Commw. 314, 1971 Pa. Commw. LEXIS 351, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/golden-dawn-shops-inc-v-philadelphia-redevelopment-authority-pacommwct-1971.