OPINION BY
Judge LEAVITT.1
Robert McGaffic (as executor of his mother’s estate and in his own right) and George Love (collectively, Condemnees) appeal an order of the Court of Common Pleas of Lawrence County (trial court) that denied Condemnees’ contract claim against the City of New Castle. Con-demnees are the prior owners of the Centennial Building, a commercial building in downtown New Castle, Pennsylvania, which lost its value in the course of New Castle’s urban renewal program. Accordingly, Condemnees successfully obtained a judgment against the Redevelopment Authority of New Castle for a de facto condemnation of their property. The Redevelopment Authority cannot pay the judgment, and Condemnees seek to hold the City responsible for its payment under a contract between the City and the Redevelopment Authority by which the City assumed financial responsibility for certain claims against the Redevelopment Authority. Condemnees argue that their de facto condemnation judgment is one of those claims. We agree and reverse the contrary construction of the contract reached by the trial court.
Background
In 1966, the Redevelopment Authority developed a plan for the redevelopment of downtown New Castle, known as the Central Area Urban Renewal Project. This plan called for, inter alia, the - Redevelopment Authority’s acquisition and demolition of the Centennial Building. In November 1968, the Redevelopment Authority filed this plan with the Lawrence County Recorder of Deeds. The Redevelopment Authority applied for and received funding for the project from the United States Department of Housing and Urban Development (HUD) under the Neighborhood Development Program.
[308]*308In accordance with the recorded plan, the Redevelopment Authority notified existing and potential tenants of the Centennial Building that the building was expected to be demolished in 1970 and that the Authority would pay for only one move by a tenant. By April 12, 1973, when the Redevelopment Authority contracted with a developer to rebuild downtown New Castle, including a replacement for the Centennial Building, Condemnees did not have rental income sufficient to pay taxes, insurance or utilities; the Centennial Building was rendered useless. McGaffic v. Redevelopment Authority of the City of New Castle (Law. Cnty. Ct. of C.P., No. 160-1978 M.D., filed October 8, 1986), slip op. at 21, aff'd, McGaffic v. Redevelopment Authority of the City of New Castle, 120 Pa.Cmwlth. 199, 548 A.2d 653 (1988).
In July of 1977, the City and the Redevelopment Authority executed a so-called Closeout Agreement to transfer responsibility for the Central Area Urban Renewal Project from the Authority to the City, as required by HUD.2 As part of that transfer, the City assumed broad financial responsibility for the Redevelopment Authority’s actions. Paragraph 4 of the Closeout Agreement states:
Any costs or obligations incurred in connection with the said [renewal] program with respect to claims which are disputed, contingent, unliquidated or unidentified, and for the payment of which insufficient program funds have been reserved, as set forth in the next above paragraph, shall be borne by the [City],
Reproduced Record at 1014 (R.R_) (emphasis added).3 The City’s assumption of this responsibility was required as a condition of HUD’s continuing financial support for the urban renewal of New Castle. In 1978, the Centennial Building was officially removed from the renewal plan, and shortly thereafter Condemnees filed a de facto condemnation action against the City and the Redevelopment Authority. The City’s application to be removed as a defendant was granted in 1980.
Condemnees’ suit instituted decades of litigation, which has involved four prior appeals to this Court by the Redevelopment Authority and by the City. In each [309]*309appeal the Condemnees have prevailed.4 It has been definitively established, in fact and in law, that the Redevelopment Authority’s actions destroyed the value of the Centennial Building as of April 12, 1973. In 1994, a board of viewers valued the Centennial Building at $184,000 as of April 12, 1973, and that award has been augmented by delay damages. McGaffic, 732 A.2d 663. In June 2008, the judgment was revived for a total amount of $2,035,210.53.
In February 1998, Condemnees filed the instant contract claim seeking payment of their de facto condemnation judgment from the City under Paragraph 4 of the Closeout Agreement. The City sought summary judgment on the theory that Condemnees’ action was barred by the City’s governmental immunity and by the statute of limitations. The City lost. McGajfic, 973 A.2d 1047. Condemnees’ contract claim then went to trial on the merits. The City defended on two theories. First, the City contended that Con-demnees were not third-party beneficiaries of the Closeout Agreement and, thus, lacked standing to enforce the City’s promise in Paragraph 4. Second, the City contended that Condemnees’ action was untimely under the doctrine of laches.
At trial, the City presented testimony from Edward Gamble, the attorney for the Redevelopment Authority, and Richard Flannery, a member of City Council. They testified that the Closeout Agreement was not intended to benefit the owners of the Centennial Building. Gamble testified that Exhibit A of the Closeout Agreement listed all the properties that [310]*310were going to be acquired under the 1968 renewal plan.5 The Centennial Building was not on that list.
However, other evidence presented at trial established that the Redevelopment Authority acquired properties not listed on Exhibit A. The Redevelopment Authority acquired the Clara Thomas property by de facto condemnation on September 8, 1977, after the Closeout Agreement was executed. The Redevelopment Authority acquired the David McBride property in June of 1978, one year after the Closeout Agreement was executed. In 1995, the Redevelopment Authority acquired the Centennial Building, pursuant to a stipulation, for a payment of $106,666.66. McGaffic, 732 A.2d at 667. None of these three properties were listed in Exhibit A.
The trial court concluded that Con-demnees were not intended third-party beneficiaries of the Closeout Agreement because Condemnees filed their de facto condemnation action after the Closeout Agreement was executed.6 The trial court credited the testimony of Gamble and Flannery that there was no intention to acquire the Centennial Building when the City and Redevelopment Authority signed the Closeout Agreement.7 The trial court found it noteworthy that the Centennial Building was not named in Exhibit A, which it construed to contain the universe of properties to be acquired under the renewal plan. In accordance with these conclusions, the trial court entered judgment in favor of the City, and Condemnees appealed to this Court.8
Appeal
In their appeal, Condemnees present two principal issues for our consideration. First, they contend that the trial court erred in holding that Condemnees lacked standing to enforce the Closeout Agreement; this error was based upon the trial court’s misunderstanding of the law on third-party beneficiary rights. Second, they contend that the trial court abused its discretion by accepting testimony, not the [311]*311actual language of Paragraph 4 of the Closeout Agreement, to reach the conclusion that Condemnees’ claim did not fall within the category of “disputed, contingent, unliquidated or unidentified” claims that became the City’s responsibility by reason of Paragraph 4. In effect, both issues turn on a single question, ie., whether Condemnees may enforce the City’s promise given in Paragraph 4 of the Closeout Agreement to cover shortfalls in the Redevelopment Authority’s funding.
For its part, the City focuses on the fact that the Closeout Agreement does not specifically name Condemnees or the Centennial Building or use the term “third-party beneficiary.” The City claims that this type of explicit expression is a necessary precondition to Condemnees’ ability to enforce Paragraph 4 because the parties to the Closeout Agreement were government agencies. The City also argues that the Redevelopment Authority breached another related contract, called the Cooperation Agreement, by not obtaining the City’s approval of the Redevelopment Authority’s de facto condemnation of the Centennial Building. Because of this breach, the City cannot be held to its promise to the Redevelopment Authority set forth in Paragraph 4. Alternatively, the City contends that Condemnees’ action is untimely.
Third-Party Beneficiary Law
We begin with a review of the law regarding third-party standing in Pennsylvania. The general rule is that a contract must express an intention to confer standing on a third-party beneficiary. Scarpitti v. Weborg, 530 Pa. 866, 370, 609 A.2d 147, 149 (1992). In Marsteller Community Water Authority v. P.J. Lehman Engineers, 413 Pa.Super. 387, 605 A.2d 413 (1992), for example, it was held that a contract between a redevelopment authority and an engineering firm to upgrade a water system owned by a water authority expressed an intention to make the water authority a third-party beneficiary of the contract.9
In Guy v. Liederbach, 501 Pa. 47, 59-60, 459 A.2d 744, 751 (1983), our Supreme Court adopted Section 302 of the Restatement (Second) of Contracts (1979), which allows a third-party to enforce a contractual promise even though the contract does not explicitly express that intention. Section 302 states:
Intended and Incidental Beneficiaries
(1) Unless otherwise agreed between promisor and promisee, a beneficiary of a promise is an intended beneficiary if recognition of a right to performance in the beneficiary is appropriate to effectuate the intention of the parties and either
(a) the performance of the promise will satisfy an obligation of the prom-isee to pay money to the beneficiary; or
[312]*312(b) the circumstances indicate that the promisee intends to give the beneficiary the benefit of the promised performance.
(2) An incidental beneficiary is a beneficiary who is not an intended beneficiary.
Restatement (Second) of CONTRACTS § 802 (1979) (emphasis added). Our Supreme Court has explained that under Section 302
a party becomes a third party beneficiary only where ... the circumstances are so compelling that recognition of the beneficia'ry’s right is appropriate to effectuate the intention of the parties, and the performance satisfies an obligation of the promisee to pay money to the beneficiary or the circumstances indicate that the promisee intends to give the beneficiary the benefit of the promised performance....
Scarpitti, 530 Pa. at 372-73, 609 A.2d at 150-51 (emphasis added) (citations omitted). Stated otherwise, the “compelling circumstances,” or first prong, “sets forth a standing requirement,” and the second prong defines the type of claim to be presented by a third-party beneficiary. Id. at 371, 609 A.2d at 150. Notably, the named promisee’s inability or lack of incentive to enforce a contractual promise will support the third-party’s standing to enforce the promise. Id.
In sum, whether a contract contemplates enforcement by third-parties is a matter of contract construction. Parties may explicitly state that a contract provision is intended to create third-party beneficiary rights and identify, by name, the holder of those rights. Parties may explicitly state that a contract is not intended to create third-party beneficiary rights or identify the specific persons who do not hold these rights, as noted in Section 302(1) of the Restatement (Second) of Contracts. Most contracts are not explicit, and in that case the principles set forth in Section 302 are employed to ascertain the intention of the parties.
The heart of this appeal is whether Condemnees may enforce the City’s promise, which is given in Paragraph 4 of the Closeout Agreement, to cover shortfalls in funding needed by the Redevelopment Authority to pay Condemnees’ de facto condemnation judgment.
Paragraph 4 of the Closeout Agreement
The contract language determines the existence and scope of third-party beneficiary rights. Paragraph 4 is the critical contract provision in that inquiry, and it states as follows:
Any costs or obligations incurred in connection with the said [renewal] program with respect to claims which are disputed, contingent, unliquidated or unidentified, and for the payment of which insufficient program funds have been reserved, as set forth in the next above paragraph, shall be borne by the [City],
R.R. 1014 (emphasis added). In Paragraph 3, the “next above paragraph,” the City agreed “to fully and completely liquidate any deficiency.”10 Id. In short, the [313]*313City agreed to bear the cost of claims incurred “in connection -with the said program” by the Redevelopment Authority that, at the time of the contract’s execution, were “unidentified.” Condemnees’ de facto condemnation award against the Authority fits this definition: when the Closeout Agreement was executed, Con-demnees’ de facto condemnation award against the Authority was an “unidentified” “cost or obligation” “incurred in connection with the said program.” Because program funds were “insufficient” to pay the award when it became final, Con-demnees’ condemnation award is a “cost” to be “borne by the City” under Paragraph 4. R.R. 1014.
This straightforward read of Paragraph 4 is consistent with our most recent opinion in this litigation saga, wherein we noted that by this contract provision, the City assumed liability for any eminent domain award resulting from the Redevelopment Authority’s actions. We explained as follows:
[U]nder the terms of the Closeout Agreement, the City was required to pay eminent domain liabilities of [the Authority] ... [and] City Council expressly accepted the City’s responsibility to satisfy potential shortfalls in [the Authority’s] funds.
McGaffic v. City of New Castle, 973 A.2d at 1053-54. Forty years after the Redevelopment Authority effected its de facto taking of the Centennial Building in 1973, it has ceased to exist and has no assets to attach. Were it otherwise, the Redevelopment Authority would be making a demand on the City under Paragraph 4 of the Closeout Agreement for the funds needed to satisfy Condemnees’ award.
In short, Paragraph 4 states an express intention to provide for the City’s payment of claims of third-parties where the Redevelopment Authority lacks the funds to do so. This expressly stated intention satisfies the so-called “general rule.”
The City argues that a government contract does not create third-party beneficiary rights unless the contract specifically names that beneficiary. In support, it re.lies upon Drummond v. University of Pennsylvania, 651 A.2d 572 (Pa.Cmwlth.1994).
In Drummond, a group of plaintiffs, which ranged from civic groups to putative students, sought to enforce a contract between the City of Philadelphia and the University of Pennsylvania that provided for 125 full-tuition scholarships to residents of Philadelphia. The plaintiffs believed, inter alia, that the contract was intended to award 125 scholarships for each entering class. The City and University believed the contract was intended to cover 125 students total, all classes combined. This Court held that the plaintiffs lacked standing to sue the City, noting that “[w]hen a governmental contract is at issue, the test for whether a member of the public is a third-party beneficiary must be strictly applied.” Drummond, 651 A.2d at 578 (citing Clifton v. Suburban Cable TV Company, Inc., 434 Pa.Super. 139, 642 A.2d 512 (1994)).11 Notably, this Court [314]*314also held that the contract expressed an intention not to create any third-party beneficiaries to the contract.
Drummond is distinguishable because it stated an intention to exclude third-party beneficiary rights. By contrast, the Closeout Agreement does not express such an intention. Paragraph 4 states the opposite. It provides funding for third-parties, unnamed, with a claim for money damages caused by the Redevelopment Authority. It is the kind of contract clause that expressly creates rights in persons that suffer damages as a result of the actions taken under a contract between other parties. See Keefer, 376 Pa. at 369-70, 102 A.2d at 696.
The trial court believed that the City’s obligation in Paragraph 4 was to cover only those claims presented by property owners whose properties were scheduled for acquisition under the renewal plan. Setting aside whether Paragraph 4 can be read that way, the Centennial Building was, in fact, scheduled to be acquired under the recorded plan until 1978. Further, as noted by Condemnees, that recorded plan could not be changed without a public hearing; agreement by the development stakeholders; and a public vote by City Council. Changes could not be effected by a contract between the City and Redevelopment Authority. It was an abuse of the trial court’s discretion to take testimonial evidence to refute the public record that showed that the Centennial Building was scheduled for acquisition at the time the Closeout Agreement was executed. Alternatively, the trial court capriciously disregarded this public record of the Redevelopment Authority’s intention to acquire the Centennial Building.12 Nevertheless, [315]*315whether the City and the Redevelopment Authority intended to acquire the Centennial Building when the Closeout Agreement was executed is irrelevant.
First, in a de facto condemnation, there is no intention to acquire a property.13 As we have explained:
A de facto taking is not the physical seizure of property; rather, it is an interference with one of the rights of ownership that substantially deprives the owner of the beneficial use of his property.
Adams Outdoor Advertising, LP v. Zoning Hearing Board of Smithfield Township, 909 A.2d 469, 480 (Pa.Cmwlth.2006) (quoting Visco v. Department of Transportation, 92 Pa.Cmwlth. 102, 498 A.2d 984, 985 (1985)). A de facto condemnation is similar to action for trespass or an action for negligent interference with a property interest.14 Where the injury is a direct result of intentional action by an entity clothed with the power of eminent domain, that entity will be held liable in a de facto condemnation action. Central Bucks Joint School Building Authority v. Rawls, 8 Pa. Cmwlth. 491, 303 A.2d 863, 866-67 (1973). Here, the Redevelopment Authority’s actions, such as its notice to the tenants of the Centennial Building of its impending demolition, were intentional, and they deprived Condemnees of the beneficial use of their property.
Second, Paragraph 4 does not express an intention to limit the City’s liability to a specifically named or type of claimant. Paragraph 4 obligates the City to fund “unidentified claims” for which the Redevelopment Authority lacks the funds. Stated otherwise, the claim can be presented by any person, not just those who own property scheduled for acquisition.
The 1975 Cooperation Agreement, which is incorporated into the Closeout Agreement, required the Redevelopment Authority to obtain the City’s approval before negotiating an acquisition price above $50,000. The City argues that this means it had the right to pre-approve any condemnation, even a de facto condemnation. We disagree that the Cooperation Agreement is even relevant.
First, Paragraph 4 did not limit the City’s liability to cover “costs” and “obligations” of the Redevelopment Authority to those specifically approved by the City. Second, the Redevelopment Authority did not promise, in any of the operative documents, that it would not cause an injury in [316]*316excess of $50,000. The costs covered by Paragraph 4 are those incurred as a result of claims against the Redevelopment Authority, whether known or unknown, intentional or unintentional. If the Redevelopment Authority had negligently caused the wrong building to be demolished, the City would have been required to fund judgment against the Redevelopment Authority by reason of Paragraph 4.15
Essentially, the City argues that it cannot be liable for the wrongs of the Redevelopment Authority because it did not pre-approve the Redevelopment Authority’s commission of those wrongs. This reasoning extends the meaning of the City’s contractual right to pre-approve the Redevelopment Authority’s negotiations to the breaking point. Further, the City’s reasoning cannot be reconciled with the language of Paragraph 4, which specifically covers claims that are “unidentified.” If a claim is unidentified, necessarily it cannot be pre-approved by the City.
The minutes of a meeting of the Redevelopment Authority on July 15, 1977, contemporaneous with the signing of the Closeout Agreement, confirm that Paragraph 4 obligated the City to cover shortfalls in the Redevelopment Authority’s funds. At that meeting, the Authority’s attorney, Gamble, stated, in relevant part, as follows:
(8) The financial Statement evidences the capacity to pay for the expenses set forth; if the funds are inadequate, the City agrees to liquidate any deficit that may arise. If there is an excess in monies, the City gets the excess. (A probability over a period of time.)
(4) If there are any expenses which are disputed, contingent, unliquidated or unidentified, the City will also bear these costs.
R.R. 1297-1298. The September 21, 1977, minutes of City Council confirm the City’s express acceptance of the responsibility to cover potential shortfalls in the Redevelopment Authority’s funds. See McGaffic, 973 A.2d at 1054.
Finally, the Closeout Agreement, including Paragraph 4, was a form contract drafted by HUD, no doubt to protect itself; the City and Redevelopment Authority simply filled in the blanks. The parties had to sign the Closeout Agreement in the HUD-prescribed form. Walter Haglund, an expert witness for the City, affirmed that HUD would not permit the City or Redevelopment Authority to stray from the specific language in the Closeout Agreement. And without the Closeout Agreement, HUD would have stopped the flow of federal dollars needed to complete the demolition of downtown New Castle. The testimony of Gamble and Flannery was incompetent to illuminate what the federal government, the scrivener of the Closeout Agreement, meant in Paragraph 4.
The Redevelopment Authority has not demanded the City to cover the shortfall that makes it unable to pay Condemnees. After 35 years of litigation, the judgment has grown to $2 million; the Redevelopment Authority is out of business; and it has no incentive to make any demands of the City. A critical consideration in whether to grant third-party standing is whether the original promisee lacks the ability or the incentive to enforce the promisor’s agreement. See Scarpitti, 530 Pa. 366, 609 A.2d 147; Guy, 501 Pa. 47, 459 A.2d 744. The Redevelopment Authority has no incentive to enforce the City’s promise; [317]*317Condemnees do have the incentive. This is enough to confer third-party beneficiary status on Condemnees with respect to the City’s obligation under Paragraph 4. Id.16
In sum, Paragraph 4 expresses an intention to make Condemnees third-party beneficiaries of the City’s promise to cover shortfalls in the Redevelopment Authority’s ability to pay “disputed, contingent, unliquidated or unidentified claims.” This language satisfies the “general rule” for recognizing third-party beneficiary status. In any case, the circumstances here also satisfy the principles of Section 302 of the Restatement (Second) of Contracts. The performance of the City’s promise satisfies its obligation “to pay money” to the Redevelopment Authority, and the circumstances for doing so are compelling. Scarpitti, 530 Pa. at 372-73, 609 A.2d at 150-51. They are compelling because private property has been taken by government, a matter with constitutional implications. Recognition of Condemnees’ status as an intended beneficiary of Paragraph 4 “effectuates the intention of the parties.” Restatement (SECOND) OF CONTRACTS § 302 (1979).
Laches
The City offers alternative grounds for affirming the trial court. It contends that even if Condemnees can enforce the City’s promise given in Paragraph 4, their action is barred by the doctrine of laches. The City contends that Condemnees waited two decades to bring this action against the City, and this delay has prejudiced the City because it did not secure federal funding to pay Condemnees’ de facto condemnation award. The City lost its claim that Condemnees’ contract action was barred by the statute of limitations for assumpsit actions. However, the City argues that using third-party beneficiary rights is an equitable remedy that allows the City to assert laches as a defense.
A party asserting the doctrine of laches must first show that there was a delay caused by the other party’s failure to exercise due diligence, and second, prejudice from that delay. Bullock v. Bullock, 432 Pa.Super. 643, 639 A.2d 826, 828 (1994). Laches is based on “some change in the condition or relations of the parties which occurs during the period the complainant unreasonably failed to act.” Id. at 829 (quoting Patten v. Vose, 404 Pa.Super. 426, 590 A.2d 1307, 1309 (1991)).
In the most recent litigation between these parties before this Court, McGaffic, 973 A.2d 1047, this Court held that Con-demnees did not violate the statute of limitations for filing their breach of contract action because the statute did not begin to run until the City refused to honor its obligation under the Closeout Agreement. Id. at 1053. That refusal took place in September of 1997, and Condemnees commenced their suit in 1998, well within the statute of limitations. A one-year pause does not show a failure by Condemnees to exercise due diligence.
From the onset of this drawn-out litigation, the City has known that it could be held financially responsible for a de facto condemnation award to Condemnees should one be established. Indeed, the City was so advised by the trial court when it granted the City’s request to be dismissed from Condemnees’ 1978 de facto [318]*318condemnation petition. McGaffic v. Redevelopment Authority of the City of New Castle (Law. Cnty. Ct. of C.P., No. 160-1978 M.D., filed April 25, 1980), slip op. at 14; R.R. 923.
Further, the City and the Redevelopment Authority were aware of the potential for de facto condemnation claims arising from the redevelopment project. In July of 1975, Gamble alerted the Redevelopment Authority in a written memo that its actions could expose it to de facto condemnation claims. R.R. 2059-60. Indeed, at the time of the execution of the Closeout Agreement, one de facto condemnation claim, the Clara Thomas property, had already been asserted against the Redevelopment Authority and was settled shortly after the Closeout Agreement. R.R. 1770.
The City asserts that the delay has caused prejudice because it did not obtain HUD funding to pay the de facto condemnation award to Condemnees. First, the City cites no authority for its premise that HUD would have funded de facto condemnation judgments. Second, it was the City that chose not to set up a reserve for claims such as that of Condemnees out of the block grant it did receive from the federal government. Instead, it allowed the Redevelopment Authority to litigate and drive up the ultimate judgment. The City has not made out a claim of prejudice.
It is doubtful that laches is even a defense. The underlying claim is for breach of contract, i.e., an action at law, and lach-es is a defense to a suit in equity. Freeman v. Lawton, 353 Pa. 613, 46 A.2d 205 (1946). The City argues that because third-party beneficiary status requires an inquiry into what is “appropriate,” it implicates equitable principles. The City conflates the court’s exercise of discretion with equity, and the City does not cite to precedent to support its theory that third-party beneficiary contract claims are equitable, not legal, actions.
We reject the City’s argument that the trial court’s decision can be upheld on the basis of laches.
Breach of Closeout Agreement
The City offers a second alternative ground to affirm the trial court. It argues that the Redevelopment Authority breached the Cooperation Agreement, and this breach bars the Redevelopment Authority’s ability to enforce Paragraph 4 of the Closeout Agreement. It follows that Con-demnees, who step into the shoes of the Redevelopment Authority with respect to enforcement of Paragraph 4, are also barred. The City claims that the Redevelopment Authority’s failure to obtain the City’s approval of the acquisition of the Centennial Building by de facto condemnation violated the Cooperation Agreement.17
First, the Cooperation Agreement was executed on May 16, 1975, after the Redevelopment Authority had effected its April 1973 de facto condemnation of the Centennial Building. It is difficult to see how the Redevelopment Authority could have broken a promise two years before it was made.
Second, the City’s breach of contract argument relies on the provisions in the Cooperation Agreement that govern the “procedures to be followed by the [Redevelopment Authority] in acquiring [properties] .... ” R.R. 1753. Those procedures, inter alia, obligate the Redevelopment Authority to obtain appraisals; to notify the City within 10 days of valuing a property; and to obtain the City’s approval “before [319]*319any negotiation” on properties with an appraisal in excess of $50,000. R.R. 1754. The City does not relate these provisions to the Redevelopment Authority’s de facto condemnation of the Centennial Building. The City cannot make this relationship because the procedures in the Cooperation Agreement cited by the City cover intentional acquisitions of real property, not a de facto condemnation. The Cooperation Agreement says nothing whatsoever about de facto condemnation, and it imposes no duties upon the Redevelopment Authority with respect thereto.
We reject the City’s contention that the Redevelopment Authority’s alleged breach of the Cooperation Agreement bars Con-demnees’ action. Paragraph 4 covers any “unidentified claims” brought against the Redevelopment Authority. That provision does not limit the City’s responsibility to cover shortfalls in any way, let alone for costs incurred where the Redevelopment Authority’s actions may have violated some other agreement between the City and the Redevelopment Authority.18
Conclusion
For the above-stated reasons, the order of the trial court is reversed.
ORDER
AND NOW, this 22nd day of July, 2013, the order of the Court of Common Pleas of Lawrence County dated February 6, 2012, in the above-captioned matter is hereby REVERSED.