Case ID: pa-commw_44/html/0629-01.html
Source: Caselaw Access Project
Author: {"author": "Judge Mencer,", "license": "Public Domain", "url": "https://static.case.law/"}
Date Created: 2024-08-24T03:29:51.129683

Lena Fineberg et al., Appellants v. Urban Redevelopment Authority of Pittsburgh, Appellee.
    
      Argued May 10, 1979,
    before Judges Crtjmlish, Jr., Mencer and Craig, sitting as a panel of three.
    
      Thomas R. Rolomich, with him Rothman, Gordon, Foreman and Groudine, P.A., for appellants.
    
      Marion E. Popiel, for appellee.
    August 8, 1979 :
   Opinion by

Judge Mencer,

On November 3, 1971, the Urban Redevelopment Authority of Pittsburgh (Authority) filed a declaration of taking condemning certain real estate, described by metes and bounds, owned by Lena Fine-berg, Arnold Fineberg, Ethel Insler, Ralph Fineberg, Rosie Malhmood, a/k/a Rosie Malanmd, Jeannette Berman, and Cecelia Sharp (appellants) and located in the Third Ward of the City of Pittsburgh. On May 3, 1976, the Authority filed a petition for the appointment of viewers and attached thereto as exhibit A the metes-and-bounds description set forth in the declaration of taking.

On November 16, 1977, tbe report of viewers was filed, and an award was made to tbe appellants in tbe amount of $11,900. Tbe Authority was to be allowed a credit for tbe payment of $7,000 made to appellants on December 21, 1971, tbe date on which delay compensation would be calculated.

Tbe Authority filed an appeal from tbe award of viewers, and tbe appellants filed a motion to quash tbe appeal. The motion to quash presented to tbe Court of Common Pleas of Allegheny County tbe contention that tbe Authority’s appeal from tbe award of viewers failed to satisfy tbe requirement of Section 516(a)(2) of tbe Eminent Domain Code, Act of June 22, 1964, Spec. Sess., P.L. 84, as amended, 26 P.S. §l-516(a)(2). Tbe court below denied tbe appellants’ motion to quash but granted tbe Authority 10 days to file a more detailed description and identification of tbe property than had been included in tbe appeal. This appeal followed.

Initially, we must determine whether tbe order appealed from here is interlocutory and, as such, not appealable. Although tbe order is interlocutory, it determined tbe jurisdiction question of whether tbe appeal by tbe Authority was properly taken from tbe viewers’ award to tbe Court of Common Pleas. Exxon Corp. v. Department of Transportation, 10 Pa. Commonwealth Ct. 301, 312 A.2d 121 (1973). Section 1 of the Act of March 5, 1925, P.L. 23, as amended, formerly 12 P.S. §672, repealed (effective June 27, 1980) by Section 2(a) [1069] of tbe Judiciary Pepealer Act, Act of April 28, 1978, P.L. 202, provides that interlocutory order's involving jurisdictional questions are appealable. Miller Estate v. Department of Highways, 424 Pa. 477, 227 A.2d 679 (1967). The order of the court below under challenge here was appealable.

Accordingly, we now address the question of whether the Authority’s appeal satisfied the requirement of Section 516(a)(2) of the Eminent Domain Code, which reads as follows:

(a) The appeal shall set forth:
(2) A brief description or identification of the property involved and the condemnee’s interest therein.

The Authority’s appeal, in pertinent part, stated that the Authority appealed “from the Viewers’ Report in the above entitled case filed on November 16, 1977. ” appeai identified the property involved as being “located in the Third Ward of the City of Pittsburgh, County of Allegheny and Commonwealth of Pennsylvania.” Further, the appeal set forth that “ [t]he interest of the condemnees in the aforesaid property is ownership in fee simple. ’ ’

Simply stated: Did appellants’ identification of the property set forth in the appeal satisfy Section 516(a)(2)? We would first note that subsection (a)(2) is satisfied by either a description or identification. Here the Authority did not describe the property as it had previously done when filing its declaration of taking and petition for appointment of viewers. The Authority attempted to identify the property involved, and we conclude that it did so.

Surely the appellants were not prejudiced or misled as to the property involved since reference was made to the “above entitled case” in which the property was described by metes and bounds in both the declaration of taking and the petition for appointment of viewers. In addition, the property was specified as being located in the Third Ward of the City of Pittsburgh.

We are of the view that the facts here fall within the ambit of our holding in Erb v. Department of Transportation, 11 Pa. Commonwealth Ct. 111, 312 A.2d 467 (1973), where we held that a misdescription of the docket numbers and the address of the condemned property was not fatal to a challenge when the proper deed book number and location at the proper street corner were described and the condemnee was not misled by reason of the information contained in the appeal papers.

Although the identification of the property involved as set forth in the appeal could well have been more detailed, we conclude that it contained sufficient information to allow appellants to determine that the property involved in the appeal was the same tract described in detail in the report of viewers.

Therefore, we will affirm the order of the court below in denying appellants’ motion to quash the appeal to the Court of Common Pleas of Allegheny County.

Order affirmed.

Order

And Now, this 8th day of August, 1979, the order of the Court of Common Pleas of Allegheny County, dated January 24, 1978, denying appellants’ motion to quash the appeal filed by the Urban Redevelopment Authority of Pittsburgh, is hereby affirmed. 
      
       The description of the property in question, as set forth in the declaration of taking and petition for the appointment of viewers is as follows :
      ALL that certain lot or piece of ground situate in the Third (formerly Eleventh) Ward, City of Pittsburgh, County of Allegheny and Commonwealth of Pennsylvania, situate on the northerly side of Wylie Avenue, fronting on said Avenue 21.9 feet, and running back 130 feet and bounded and described as follows to wit:
      BEGINNING on the northerly side of Wylie Avenue at the corner of Smith Roberts Heirs lot; thence along said Avenue 21.9 feet to the corner of Castner’s lot; and thence extending back about 130 feet more or less.
      HAVING erected thereon a 2-story brick with a 1-story frame addition commercial and apartment party wall building, and a 2-story brick 2-family party wall dwelling situate at 1819 Wylie Avenue.
      BEING designated as Block 9-S, Lot 274, in the Deed Registry Office of Allegheny County, Pennsylvania.
      BEING part of the same property which Ethel Insler et vir. by deed dated December 28, 1943, recorded in Deed Book Volume 2788, page 371, conveyed to Jacob Fineberg. Jacob Fineberg died February 8, 1955 and by his Will, of record in Will Book 323, page 176, devised the residue of his estate to his six children, named in the Will as follows: Arnold Fineberg, Ethel Insler, Ralph Fineberg, Rosie Malamud, Jeannette Fineberg and Cecilia Sharp. Lena Fine-berg, widow of Jacob Fineberg, elected to take against his Will. See also decree of distribution at No. 773 of 1955, particularly Schedule B of the decree, recorded in Deed Book Volume 4061, page 632, whereby the Court decreed a 1/3 interest to Lena Fineberg and 1/9 each to Arnold Fineberg, Ralph Fineberg, Jeannette Fineberg, Cecelia Sharp, Ethel Insler and Rosie Malhmood. The said Jeannette Fineberg is now Jeannette Berman, Rosie Malhmood, so named in the decree, is the same person as Rosie Malamud named in the Will.
      
        Parties in interest
      
      Lena Fineberg, 1/3; Arnold Fineberg, Ethel Insler, Ralph Fineberg, Rosie Malhmood a/k/a Rosie Malamud, Jeannette Berman (formerly Jeannette Fineberg) and Cecelia Sharp, each a 1/9 interest, or any other persons found to have an interest in the property.
     
      
       The case was captioned or entitled by the names of the appellants and the Authority and by No. GD 76-9495, Sur No. 1318 January Term, 1972, an Eminent Domain Action in the Court of Common Pleas of Allegheny County, Pennsylvania, Civil Division.
     
      
       Our resolution of this case does not require us to address the issue of whether or not the court below, after denying the motion to quash, was correct in allowing an amendment to the appeal to afford the Authority an opportunity “to include a more detailed description and identification of the property involved in these proceedings.”
      
        See Westmoreland v. Commonwealth, 36 Pa. D. & C. 2d 463 (1964), where an amendment was allowed, and E. Snitzer, Pennsyl
        
        vania Eminent Domain §516-2 (1965), where this aiithor suggests that less than strict compliance with Section 516(a)(1), (2) or (3) of the Emineut Domain Code should not produce the harsh result which would occur if the appeal were quashed. See also Lasher v. Allegheny County Redevelopment Authority, 211 Pa. Superior Ct. 408, 236 A.2d 831 (1967).