Scott v. Bristol Township Police Department

669 A.2d 457, 1995 Pa. Commw. LEXIS 582
CourtCommonwealth Court of Pennsylvania
DecidedDecember 22, 1995
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 669 A.2d 457 (Scott v. Bristol Township Police Department) 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
Scott v. Bristol Township Police Department, 669 A.2d 457, 1995 Pa. Commw. LEXIS 582 (Pa. Ct. App. 1995).

Opinion

SMITH, Judge.

David Scott appeals from an order of the Court of Common Pleas of Bucks County (trial court) that quashed his appeal from an order of the Civil Service Commission (Commission) of the Township of Bristol (Township) upholding the decision to terminate Scott as a Township police officer. The question Scott presents is whether the trial court erred in finding that Scott did not timely file his appeal and petition for review from the decision of the Commission.

In April 1993 Scott was afforded a predetermination healing, following which the chief of police sent him a notice of disciplinary action. In June Scott received a letter advising him that the Township Council had voted to terminate him. Scott requested a hearing before the Commission, which was conducted over several days in the fall of 1993. The Commission denied Scott’s appeal and upheld his termination by order of November 24, 1994. On December 23, 1994, Scott filed a notice of appeal with the trial court, along with a “Rule to File Complaint,” requesting that the court enter rule on the defendants “to file a complaint within twenty (20) days, or non pros. sec. reg., with respect to damages and judgment of possession.” Both of these filings named as defendants the Police Department, the Township, the Township Council and Herb Phillips, individually and as Captain in the Township Police Department (Township Respondents).

The Township Respondents, on February 28, 1994, filed a petition to strike the notice of appeal and the rule to file complaint, to dismiss the additional parties and to quash the appeal. On March 4, 1994, Scott filed an amendment to his notice of appeal styled a “Petition for Review of Finding of Fact Determination of the Bristol Township Civil Service Commission.” This filing was in numbered paragraph form; however, the several objections to the Commission’s decision listed in Paragraph 5 were all of a general nature: “A. The Finding of Fact is in violation of the constitutional rights of the Petitioner; B. The Finding of Fact is not supported by substantial evidence; C. The Finding of Fact is not in accordance with applicable law;” and so forth.

The trial court granted the petition of the Township Respondents. In the later opinion in support of the order, the trial court quoted from Section 645 of The First Class Township Code,1 relating to hearings on dismissals and reduction, which provides in part:

In the event the commission shall sustain the charges and order the suspension, removal or reduction in rank, the person ... shall have immediate right of appeal to the court of common pleas of the county and the ease shall there be determined as the court deems proper.... Such appeal shall be taken within sixty days from the date of entry by the commission of its final order and shall be by petition.[2]

The trial court noted that Scott ignored the clear requirement of Section 645 by filing a notice of appeal and rule to file complaint. As for the petition for review Scott filed later, the trial court observed that it was devoid of substantive allegations and contained only “boiler-plate” contentions. The court concluded that the improperly filed notice of appeal, and even the attempted amendment of it in the petition for review, were so deficient as to constitute no proper petition for review of the Commission’s determination at all.

Before this Court, Scott initially acknowledges that he mistakenly sought review of the Commission’s determination by filing a [459]*459notice of appeal and rule to file complaint. He contends, however, that the prothonotary properly accepted the filing papers as an improvident appeal and treated the matter as a petition for review, in accordance with Pa. R.A.P. 1503, relating to improvident appeals or plenary actions:

If an appeal is taken from an order of a government unit, or if a complaint in the nature of equity, replevin, mandamus, or quo warranto, or a petition for a declaratory judgment or for a writ in the nature of certiorari or prohibition is filed against a government unit or one or more of the persons for the time being conducting its affairs, as such, objecting to a determination by any one or more of them, this alone shall not be a ground for dismissal, but the papers whereon the improvident matter was commenced shall be regarded and acted upon as a petition for review of such governmental determination and as if filed at the time the improvident matter was commenced. The court may require that the papers be clarified by amendment.

The Township Respondents respond to the merits of this argument, citing various provisions of Chapter 15 of the Pennsylvania Rules of Appellate Procedure, including the technical requirements of a petition for review set forth in Pa.R.A.P. 1513, in particular the requirement of a general statement of the objections to the order or other determination sought to be reviewed.

This Court observes, however, that Pa. R.A.P. 103, relating to scope of rules, provides: “These rules govern practice and procedure in the Supreme Court, the Superior Court and the Commonwealth Court, including procedure in appeals to such courts from .lower courts and the procedure for direct review in such courts of determinations of government units.” The Court has held that this provision means that the Rules of Appellate Procedure do not apply to proceedings in common pleas courts. McNeilis v. Department of Transportation, 119 Pa.Cmwlth. 272, 546 A.2d 1339 (1988). In the absence of some local rule of procedure expressly incorporating the Appellate Rules, and none has been cited by the parties, the Appellate Rules do not apply, and Scott’s contention that he filed an improvident appeal under Rule 1503 must fail.

Scott cites Miller v. Unemployment Compensation Board of Review, 505 Pa. 8, 476 A.2d 364 (1984), where the Supreme Court noted the provision in Pa.R.A.P. 105(a) and Pa.R.C.P. No. 126 that the Appellate and Civil Rules shall be liberally construed and stated that the court had long refused to give overly technical and restrictive readings and that dismissals are particularly disfavored. Scott also relies upon Peace v. Department of Public Welfare, 93 Pa.Cmwlth. 300, 501 A.2d 1164 (1985), where this Court concluded that the petitioner substantially complied with the requirements of Pa.R.AP. 1513, despite the petitioner’s failure to set forth specifically the basis for the Court’s jurisdiction, where it was possible to ascertain the basis for jurisdiction from the language of the petition for review. Scott asserts that his timely notice of appeal and rule to file complaint, coupled with his more extensive petition for review filed shortly after receipt of the Township Respondents’ petition to strike and to quash the appeal, were sufficient to preserve his appeal in the trial court.

In Miller, the Supreme Court reversed this Court’s quashing of a petition for review as untimely, where the prothonotary actually received the petition three days after the appeal period, but the record clearly showed that the petition was timely mailed before the deadline, and the timeliness of mailing could be determined from the court records, without an evidentiary hearing. In Peace

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
669 A.2d 457, 1995 Pa. Commw. LEXIS 582, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/scott-v-bristol-township-police-department-pacommwct-1995.