Skonieczny v. Department of Community & Economic Development

853 A.2d 1172, 2004 Pa. Commw. LEXIS 543
CourtCommonwealth Court of Pennsylvania
DecidedJuly 20, 2004
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 853 A.2d 1172 (Skonieczny v. Department of Community & Economic Development) 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
Skonieczny v. Department of Community & Economic Development, 853 A.2d 1172, 2004 Pa. Commw. LEXIS 543 (Pa. Ct. App. 2004).

Opinion

OPINION BY Judge

PELLEGRINI.

Patricia J. Skonieczny (Skoniec-zny), Barbara A. Baldwin (Baldwin) and Kathleen T. McGuire (McGuire) appeal pro se from an order of the Department of Community and Economic Development (Department) dismissing each of their individual complaints challenging the debt proceedings of Economy Borough (Borough) under the Local Government Unit Debt Act (Debt Act), 53 Pa.C.S. §§ 8001-8271.1

[1174]*1174On July 23, 2003, the Borough enacted an ordinance authorizing the incurrence of lease rental indebtedness pursuant to the Debt Act. On August 1, 2003, the Borough submitted the ordinance along with an application to the Department for Approval and Exclusion Proceedings of Proposed Increase of Lease Rental Indebtedness as self-liquidating in the amount of $11,850,000 for the Economy Borough Municipal Authority’s (Authority) 2003 Guaranteed Sewer Revenue Bonds. The Borough intended to guaranty a bond issued by the Authority whose stated purpose was to refund a portion of the Authority’s line of credit notes (the Pennsylvania Infrastructure Investment Authority loan, a/k/a the Pennvest Loan)2 from Sky Bank (Bank Notes) and fund capitalized interest during the period of construction of the Authority’s new wastewater treatment plant, pump stations and extensions to its sanitary collection and treatment system (Phase II Sewer System project). The Bank Notes were not a debt guaranteed by the Borough, and the debt service related to them was not governed by the Act. Skonieczny, Baldwin and McGuire individually filed complaints with the Department to challenge the legality of these debt proceedings. Because there is very little overlap in their contentions, we will address each appeal separately.

I. Skonieczny’s Complaint

In her nine-count complaint, Skonieczny alleged, inter alia, that the Borough was incurring debt above its statutory limit; the Borough did not obtain realistic cost estimates because the preliminary cost estimates for the Phase II Sewer System (submitted to the Department in connection with the Pennvest Loan in 2002) were not consistent with the preliminary cost estimates submitted with the debt proceedings; the official action taken by the Mayor of the Borough to sign the ordinance did not take place at a meeting open to the public as required by the Debt Act; and the Authority and the Borough were attempting to defraud the taxpayers by its submissions in the debt proceedings. In response, the Borough filed an answer and a motion to dismiss Skonieczny’s complaint.

The Department granted the Borough’s motion for the following reasons: first, it found that Skonieczny was misinterpreting 53 Pa.C.S. § 8022 (relating to limitations on incurring of other debt). Although she argued that the Debt Act did not allow a local government unit to incur debt above its statutory debt limit even if it was simultaneously applying for an exclusion of the same amount, the Department stated that 53 Pa.C.S. § 8022 did allow for a simulta[1175]*1175neous incurrence and exclusion of debt (after subtracting the amount of debt covered by the exclusion) as long as the net result did not leave the net non-electoral debt above the local government’s debt limit. In this ease, the Department determined that the Borough filed an application for exclusion of the full amount of the expected debt and submitted the Report on Self-Liquidating Debt (a/k/a “the Engineer’s Report”) with the debt proceedings. Upon the Department’s approval of the debt and exclusion, there would not bé any increase to the Borough’s net non-electoral debt. Based on that decision, the Department determined that Skonieczny failed to raise any genuine issue of material fact.

Regarding her allegation that the Borough did not obtain realistic cost estimates, the Department found that “[e]s-tablished law grants the Department limited discretion in determining what is ‘realistic’ with regard to § 8006 of the Debt Act. Administrative and judicial authorities will neither invade nor supplant the legislative competence of the local government unit, absent a showing of fraud or abuse. Borough of Brentwood v. D.C.A., 657 A.2d 1025. Absent well plead [sic] allegations of fraud the Department lacks the ability to inquire beyond the four corners of [the local government unit’s debt proceeding] submissions. See County of Northampton v. Department of Cmty. And Economic Dev., 785 A.2d 1082, 1086 (Pa.Cmwlth. 2001).” (Department’s February 19, 2004 LGUDA-94 decision at 12a-13a.) The Department then found that the Borough did not need to submit the preliminary cost estimates with its debt proceedings because the Department did not require cost estimates for the stated purpose of the Authority 2003 Bonds which was. a refunding project.

As to Sk'onieczny’s allegation that' the official action taken by the Mayor of the Borough to sign the ordinance did not take place at a meeting open to the public as required by the Debt Act, the Department, unsure, as to whether it even had subject matter jurisdiction to address this alleged violation, found that the Borough Code did not require the Mayor to sign the ordinance during a “public meeting,” but only that it be returned during a “regular meeting of council.” Because the Mayor signed the ordinance during a regular meeting of the Borough Council on July 23, 2003, the Department dismissed Skonieezny’s argument as non-persuasive.

Finally, Skonieczny made the following allegations of fraud: the Borough made a fraudulent submission when it submitted a revised debt service schedule with its supplemental materials and when it failed to include the Sky Bank debt in the Engineer’s Report; and the Engineer’s Report was fraudulent and incomplete. The Department found that these allegations were meritless because: (1) there was no evidence to support allegations of fraudulent intent regarding the submission of a revised debt service schedule, and the Department routinely sent comments regarding errors in debt proceedings to local government units and accepted revised documents; and (2) the Borough’s answer indicated that the consulting engineer’s projection of revenue within the Engineer’s Report contemplated that the Bank Notes would be satisfied prior to payment of any debt service, and this explanation was consistent with the ordinance’s stated purpose of the Authority 2003 Bonds. Further, Skonieczny had not pled any specific facts to counter this explanation other than her conjecture that the Borough would not satisfy the Bank Notes as indicated. Last, but not least, in response to Skonieezny’s allegation that the Engineer’s Report was not in compliance with 53 Pa. C.S. §§ 8025 and 8026 because it failed to [1176]*1176show that the revenues would be sufficient to pay for the operating expenses and debt service when the debt service became due, and it was already due, the Department found that she was misapplying the statute. 53 Pa.C.S. § 8025 applied to only exclusions of self-liquidating debt evidenced by “revenue bonds or notes, and by definition in the Debt Act, guaranties endorsed on an instrument issued by an authority are not bonds or notes. Therefore, this section did not apply. Further, her allegation that the revenues would not be sufficient were also without merit because 53 Pa.C.S. §

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Bluebook (online)
853 A.2d 1172, 2004 Pa. Commw. LEXIS 543, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/skonieczny-v-department-of-community-economic-development-pacommwct-2004.