Reese Brothers Coal & Clay Co. v. Commonwealth

420 A.2d 780, 54 Pa. Commw. 201, 1980 Pa. Commw. LEXIS 1767
CourtCommonwealth Court of Pennsylvania
DecidedOctober 7, 1980
DocketAppeal, No. 2129 C.D. 1979
StatusPublished

This text of 420 A.2d 780 (Reese Brothers Coal & Clay Co. v. Commonwealth) 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
Reese Brothers Coal & Clay Co. v. Commonwealth, 420 A.2d 780, 54 Pa. Commw. 201, 1980 Pa. Commw. LEXIS 1767 (Pa. Ct. App. 1980).

Opinion

Opinion by

Judge Craig,

This petition to review a decision of the Environmental Hearing Board (EHB), presented by Reese Brothers Coal & Clay Company (Reese), seeks a mining permit from the Pennsylvania Department of Environmental Resources (DER) without Reese submitting a written consent of the landowner (current ad[203]*203ministrative form entitled “Supplemental C”) under Section 4(a)(2)(f) of the Surface Mining Conservation and Reclamation Act1 which as amended by Act No. 133 of 19632 and Act No. 147 of 1971,3 reads:

Except where leases in existence on the effective date of this amending act do not so provide or permit, the application for a permit shall include, upon a form prepared and furnished by the department, the written consent of the landowner to entry upon any land to be effected by the operation by the operator or by the Commonwealth or any of its authorized agents within a period of five years after the operation is completed or abandoned for the purpose of reclamation, planting, and inspection or for the construction of any such mine drainage treatment facilities as may be deemed necessary by the secretary for the prevention of stream pollution from mine drainage. (Emphasis added.)

1. LEASE IN EXISTENCE

Because Reese holds under a lease first made, for fire clay only, in 1912, whereby the landowner granted the coal mining rights by a supplemental lease in 1919, Reese claims to have a lease which was ‘ ‘ in existence ’ ’ on or before January 1, 1964, the effective date of the 1963 amendment, and therefore also before January 1 of 1972, the effective date of the 1971 amendment.4

[204]*204The EHB here adopted a formal conclusion agreeing that leases in. existence before January 1, 1972 are exempt, stating that the “Surface Mining Conservation and Reclamation Act . . . specifically exempts from its coverage, leases in existence prior to January 1, 1972, the effective date of Act 147 of 1971, P.L. 554. ”5

Indeed, that view has constituted DER’s own administrative interpretation until recently. As the EHB decision also stated:

DER has not required a consent form, known as Supplemental ‘C’, to be signed by the lessor on prior applications where there was a lease which predated the effective date of Act 147 of 1972, P.L. 554, i.e., January 1, 1972. Based on a revision in its interpretation of the Supplemental ‘C’ requirement, sometime in 1979, DER began to deny permit applications which did not contain the lessor’s signature consenting to reentry of the premises by the operator for reclamation purposes for five years after termination of operations.

If the statutory section were ambiguous, that history of administrative interpretation by DER would have weight in resolving the ambiguity.® However, because we agree with the EHB that the language is not ambiguous, DER’s long-standing administrative interpretation, reflected also in the forms it prepared,7 is only confirmatory.

[205]*205Even though the words thus confirmed by EHB and DER are plain, we will nevertheless consider fully the new view now earnestly espoused by DER.

DER’s new administrative position is that the exempt class is not so broad as to embrace all leases in existence on January 1, 1972. One must agree with that statement because the exempt class clearly includes only those “leases in existence” on the effective date which, according to the meaning^ for which DER contends, “do not provide” for or “permit” any further written consent of the surface landowner to post-mining entry. (Emphasis added to indicate verbatim the expression put forth by DER in its brief.)

Reese’s lease, being entirely silent on the point, is incontestably one which, in the very terms on which DER insists, was in existence on the effective date of the act and does not provide for or permit any further written consent of the surface landowner to post-mining entry. In the exact words of the statutory section, with respect to “the written consent of the landowner to entry . . . for the purpose of reclamation,” this lease, “in existence on the effective date” of the amending acts, did “not so provide or permit.”

However, DER contends that we cannot read the words of the statute as they are written, urging judicial interpolation based upon the hypothesis that, because the reclamation requirement began with the 1963 amendment, no lease in existence before the commencement of debate over that 1963 amendment could possibly contain any reference to a landowner’s written consent to post-mining entry.

DER offers no proof or authority for the bald assertion of that negative proposition, which elsewhere in the brief is modified to the claim that there would [206]*206be “exceedingly few” such leases before 1963. DER has not shown any reason why a lease drawn up in any era could not contain some provision providing for a written consent to re-enter.

Thus DER is here asking for an interpretation tantamount to judicial legislation, to read the statute as exempting only

—leases negotiated with an awareness of the pendency of reclamation legislation
—and which, moreover, in DER’s words, are leases “specifically stating that no further consent of the surface landowner to reentry was required. ”

In other words, where the law exempts leases which “do not” provide for written landowner consent to reentry, DER wants us to construe the law as exempting leases which do provide for re-entry without a written consent being required.

In view of the sound purpose of the reclamation requirement, we might well wish that the exemption had been enacted as DER argues, exempting only those leases which do not require any further written consent of the landowner for the operator and the Commonwealth to gain entry for reclamation. But the statute essentially exempts leases which do not provide for re-entry consent, the virtual opposite of exempting those which do not require re-entry consent. Moreover, as the EHB stated, “such an exemption would change nothing and would also presuppose that the parties anticipated that a law would be passed with the requirements that appeared” in the amendments.

The courts have often held, as codified in the terms of 1 Pa. C. S. §1921 (b), that, when the words of a statute are clear and free from ambiguity, “the letter of it is not to be disregarded under the pretext of pursuing its spirit.” See City of Pittsburgh v. Royston Service, Inc., 37 Pa. Commonwealth Ct. 394, 390 A.2d [207]*207896 (1978). Well-intended judicial revision of legislative expression, as enacted by the elected lawmakers, obviously poses a real threat to predictability and uniformity of interpretation, putting us even farther away from the ideal of a government of laws.

DEBY last contention on this point is drawn from the legislative history, pointing out that the House of Representatives defeated an amendment to exempt all pre-act leases, i.e.,

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Related

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84 A.2d 495 (Supreme Court of Pennsylvania, 1951)
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390 A.2d 896 (Commonwealth Court of Pennsylvania, 1978)

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Bluebook (online)
420 A.2d 780, 54 Pa. Commw. 201, 1980 Pa. Commw. LEXIS 1767, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/reese-brothers-coal-clay-co-v-commonwealth-pacommwct-1980.