In re Condemnation by West Chester Area School District

50 Pa. D. & C.4th 449, 2001 Pa. Dist. & Cnty. Dec. LEXIS 417
CourtPennsylvania Court of Common Pleas, Chester County
DecidedJanuary 2, 2001
Docketno. 00-02751
StatusPublished

This text of 50 Pa. D. & C.4th 449 (In re Condemnation by West Chester Area School District) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Pennsylvania Court of Common Pleas, Chester County primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
In re Condemnation by West Chester Area School District, 50 Pa. D. & C.4th 449, 2001 Pa. Dist. & Cnty. Dec. LEXIS 417 (Pa. Super. Ct. 2001).

Opinion

MAHON, J.,

And now, January 2, 2001, on consideration of the preliminary objections interposed by the Township of East Bradford, Chester County, and by Michael Singer1 to the declaration of taking filed by the condemnor, the West Chester Area School District,2 on April 6, 2000 with respect to about 105 acres of a tract of land then titled in the name of condemnee Singer and located within East Bradford Township, on which tract the school district has proposed to construct a new high school;3 and on further consideration of the response of the condemnor school district and the record made by the parties pursuant to our orders of June 20 and August 25, 2000 and section 406(e) of the Eminent Domain Code4 and following an [451]*451evidentiary hearing and oral argument conducted on October 20, 2000 we enter the following:5

OPINION

On April 6, 2000, the school district filed with this court a declaration of taking with respect to a portion of the lands of Michael Singer located in East Bradford [452]*452Township,6 known as Timbertop Farms, aggregating some 172 acres (of which about 105 acres were taken), more particularly designated as Chester County tax parcels nos. 51-5-37 and 51-5-43, acquired by Singer in 1972, and lying between U.S. Route 3227 and Pennsylvania Route 1628 directly across Route 322 from and to the south of an existing educational facility of the school district. The township was also named as a condemnee on account of its interests in a portion of Singer’s lands for park and trail purposes which the township acquired on April 3, 2000, three days before the condemnation, in the form of an easement for a term of 15 years. The purpose of the condemnation was to permit the construction of a high school and related facilities including athletic fields and an athletic stadium.

The declaration of taking was filed at 9:45 a.m. on April 6,2000 following a meeting of the board of school directors specially scheduled and convened at 8 a.m. that morning. At noon that same day, April 6, 2000, the [453]*453township’s governing body convened a public meeting noticed and scheduled for the purpose of considering Singer’s February 29, 2000 application for inclusion of his lands in the township’s agricultural security area, a protected zone created by the township’s resolution of August 13, 1985 promulgated pursuant to the Agricultural Area Security Law, the Act of June 30, 1981, P.L. 1281, 3 P.S. §901 et seq. The school district, by its solicitor, attended the meeting of the township’s governing body and objected to any action with respect to Singer’s application on the ground that the filing of the declaration of taking several hours earlier had the immediate effect of transferring title in the condemned lands to the school district as condemnor9 and the school district desired to withdraw and did not consent to or join in the application for agricultural security area protection.

It is generally agreed that inclusion of Singer’s lands in the township’s agricultural security area would impede, if not prevent, the exercise by the school district with respect thereto of its power of eminent domain.10

[454]*454The township refused the school district’s request to withdraw Singer’s lands from consideration for agri[455]*455cultural security area protection and adopted11 Township Resolution no. 00-3 granting Singer’s application and including the lands at issue within the township’s agricultural security area.

These consolidated actions followed by which the condemnees objected preliminarily to the declaration of taking; the school district sought review of the township’s decision to include Singer’s lands in the agricultural security area, and both condemnees sought review under the Right-to-Know and Sunshine or open meeting statutes of the school district’s decision to authorize the filing of the declaration of taking.

The circumstances surrounding the action last described above and the identical preliminary objection, the condemnees’ Sunshine Act12 complaints, are as follows. As we indicated, the school district’s governing body met at about 8 a.m. on Thursday, April 6, 2000, to consider the Singer condemnation. The meeting was convened at the district’s Spellman Administration Building pursuant to a public notice published in the Daily Local News, a newspaper of general circulation in the district, on April 5, 2000.13

[456]*456The condemnees assert that the public notice given of the school district’s 8 a.m. meeting was legally insufficient in two respects, (1) that 24 hours’ notice was not provided inasmuch as few readers of the Daily Local News could have been .expected to have read the advertised notice 24 hours prior to the meeting, that is, by 8 a.m. on the day the particular edition of the paper was published; and (2) that no posted notice was provided.14 Both of these requirements are found, inter alia, in the Sunshine Act, 65 Pa.C.S. §709, which provides:

“Section 709. Public Notice

“(a) Meetings . .. An agency shall give public notice of each special meeting or each rescheduled regular or special meeting at least 24 hours in advance of the time of the convening of the meeting specified in the notice.”

The term “public notice” is defined in 65 Pa.C.S. §703 to require two separate and distinct acts: (1) “publication of notice of the place, date and time of a meeting in a newspaper of general circulation” and (2) “posting a notice of the place, date and time of a meeting prominently at the principal office for the agency holding the meeting or at the public building in which the meeting is to be held.”

With respect to the 24-hour requirement for advertised notice, the condemnees have offered no authority for their contention that publication in that issue of a [457]*457newspaper of general circulation published on the day preceding the noticed meeting is insufficient if some number of newspaper readers could not be expected to have obtained their copy of the periodical and to have reached and reviewed the classified notice section on or before a time 24 hours prior to the scheduled meeting. The reading habits or speed of actual or hypothetical readers cannot be the critical consideration.

The Pennsylvania Commonwealth Court considered an analogous contention in the decision reported as East Lampeter Township v. Pennsylvania State Horse Racing Commission, 704 A.2d 703, 705 (Pa. Commw. 1997). The applicable regulations required published notice on four consecutive days and the advertisement appeared in a newspaper of general circulation on August 31 and September 1, 2, and 3, 1995. Rejecting the municipality’s challenge to the notice as insufficient, the court wrote the following:

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50 Pa. D. & C.4th 449, 2001 Pa. Dist. & Cnty. Dec. LEXIS 417, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-re-condemnation-by-west-chester-area-school-district-pactcomplcheste-2001.