Philadelphia v. Sam Bobman Department Store Co.

149 A.2d 518, 189 Pa. Super. 72
CourtSuperior Court of Pennsylvania
DecidedMarch 18, 1959
DocketAppeal, 11
StatusPublished
Cited by24 cases

This text of 149 A.2d 518 (Philadelphia v. Sam Bobman Department Store Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Superior Court of Pennsylvania primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Philadelphia v. Sam Bobman Department Store Co., 149 A.2d 518, 189 Pa. Super. 72 (Pa. Ct. App. 1959).

Opinion

Opinion by

Woodside, J.,

This is an appeal from an order of the Municipal Court of Philadelphia dismissing a motion of the City of Philadelphia for judgment on the pleadings in its suit in assumpsit to collect a delinquent tax claim.

The defendant, a Pennsylvania corporation, filed tax returns for the years 1953 and 1954, and paid the mercantile license tax which it admitted on its returns to be due. Thereafter, the city, upon audit of the defendant’s records, assessed an additional tax against it in the amount of $774.13, plus interest and. penal *74 ties. The defendant received notice of the additional assessment on or about. May 31, 1955. It did not petition the Tax Review Board for review.

The city filed a complaint in assumpsit against the defendant oh September 16, 1957, to collect the $774.13 tax with interest, penalty and costs. The defendant answered the complaint by alleging that it correctly set forth in its returns, and paid, the tax which was due, and that the additional tax assessed by the city was not due. The city then filed a motion for judgment on the pleadings, contending that the answer failed to allege that the defendant had raised the issue by petition to the Tax Review Board, as required by the ordinance. The city contends that by failing to exhaust its administrative remedy, the defendant had no right to question the correctness of the additional assessment in its answer to the complaint in assumpsit.

The court below concluded that the defendant could raise the question of the amount of tax due in its answer to the city’s complaint in assumpsit, and dismissed the city’s motion. The city appealed to this Court.

The Philadelphia Home Rulé Charter created the Tax Review Board as an administrative agency to hear and determine petitions for the review, inter alia, of assessments of the Philadelphia mercantile tax. Sections 3-100(f) and 6-207.

Pursuant to section 6-207 of the charter, which provides that the Tax Review Board shall perform such duties as may be imposed by council, the Ordinance of September 9, 1953 (p. 478, now incorporated, as amended, in Philadelphia Code §§19-1701, 19-1706), was adopted.

The! Ordinance provided as follows:

*75 “Section 4. Powers and Duties of the Tax Review Board.
“(a) The Tax Review Board shall have the following powers and duties:
“(1) To hear and determine petitions for review of any decision of an administrative officer Of the City fixing the amount of any tax, water or sewer rent, license fee or other charge or interest or penalties thereon payable by such petitioner.
* * *
“Section 6. Petitions for Review.
“(a) Every petition for review of a decision of an administrative officer of the City fixing the amount of any tax, water or sewer rent, license fee or other charge, or interest or penalties thereon payable by any petitioner shall be filed with the Tax Review Board within sixty (60) days after the mailing of a notice of amount due or a demand for payment by the Department of Collections or within sixty (60) days after the effective date of this ordinance, whichever is later. The filing of such petition shall not stop the accrual of interest otherwise due.”
“Section 10. Appeals from Tax Review Board.
“Findings of fact and decisions of the Tax Review Board on compromises shall be final and conclusive and may not be the subject of further review by any court. Any other decision by the Tax Review Board cmay be appealed to any court of competent jurisdiction on jurisdictional, procedural or legal grounds within thirty (30) days after the mailing of notice of such decision or action to the petitioner or his attorney by the Tax Review Board.”

Section 10, supra, was replaced by section .19-1706 of the Philadelphia Code of General Ordinances which became effective February 29, 1956. It provided:

“(1) Decisions of the Tax Review Board pertaining *76 to compromises and waiver of interest or penalty shall be final and conclusive and shall not be the subject of further review by any court.
“(2) Other decisions of the Tax Review Board may be appealed to any court of competent jurisdiction within 30 days after the mailing of notice of such decision or action to the petitioner or his attorney by the Tax Review Board.”

The question here presented is whether a taxpayer who fails to petition the Tax Review Board as provided in the above ordinance is thereby precluded from raising the correctness of the assessment of his mercantile license tax by way of answer to the city’s complaint in assumpsit.

Whether the taxpayer had the right of appeal to the court from the Tax Review Board is important to the determination of this question.

The taxpayer received notice of the reassessment on May 31, 1955. Whether section 10 or section 19-1706, supra, would have governed an appeal from the board would have depended upon the time when the appeal was taken from the board, which in turn would have depended upon the time involved in the taking of the appeals to and from the board, and the time taken by the board in hearing and disposing of the case.

The compromise provisions of the two sections can be ignored because this case does not involve a compromise, and because a true compromise operates in the nature of municipal grace and is without prejudice to the tax payer. See Sharps v. Revenue Commissioner, 10 D. & C. 2d 463, 475, 476 (1956).

Paragraph 2 of section 19-1706 of the code makes no effort to limit the jurisdiction of the court of appeals. Regardless of whether any limit on court jurisdiction wás intended by section 10 of the Ordinance *77 of 1953, supra, we are of the' opinion that--the appellee here could have, raised. the same* question: on - appeal from, the board as he attempted to raise in the answer to the action inassumpsit. See Sharps v. Revenue Commissioner, supra, pages-474-477.

As we shall hereafter demonstrate, both the "Philadelphia City 'Charter'and ordin'anceg' passed under it, have, within limits-, the 'effect of Statutes." A sovereign can by statute limit the right to appeal. It does not necessarily follow, however, that a municipality, even one* operating undér a home rule charter with constitutional sanction, can by its own ordinances deny the' right of appeal from its ad'mihistrative agencies. We need hot pas's upon this,' 'however," as wé'conclude section 10, supra, gave the taxpayer'in tldS case the right to Appeal from the board to the court had he first petitioned the board and been refused rélief.

In Dole v. Philadelphia, 337 Pa. 375; 11 A. 2d 163 and 167 (1940) the legality of a'-former Philadelphia ordinance imposing the wage tax was attacked'on' the ground that there was no right of Appeal provided in the ordinance.

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Bluebook (online)
149 A.2d 518, 189 Pa. Super. 72, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/philadelphia-v-sam-bobman-department-store-co-pasuperct-1959.