Court Opinion

ID: 9387968
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2023-04-19 15:07:53.047487+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T17:18:16.480273
License: Public Domain

[J-71-2022]
                     IN THE SUPREME COURT OF PENNSYLVANIA
                                 MIDDLE DISTRICT

        TODD, C.J., DONOHUE, DOUGHERTY, WECHT, MUNDY, BROBSON, JJ.

    DR. TIMOTHY AND DEBRA SHROM,                :   No. 21 MAP 2022
                                                :
                       Appellees                :   Appeal from the Order of the
                                                :   Commonwealth Court dated
                                                :   August 5, 2021, at No. 637 CD
                v.                              :   2020 Reversing and Remanding
                                                :   the June 22, 2020 Order of the
                                                :   Underground Storage Tank
    PENNSYLVANIA UNDERGROUND                    :   Indemnification Board at
    STORAGE TANK INDEMNIFICATION                :   No. UT19-03-015
    BOARD,                                      :
                                                :   ARGUED: October 25, 2022
                       Appellant                :

                                        OPINION

JUSTICE BROBSON                                              DECIDED: April 19, 2023
         This discretionary appeal concerns whether Dr. Timothy Shrom and Debra Shrom

(collectively, the Shroms) are eligible under the Storage Tank and Spill Prevention Act

(Act) 1 for payment from the Underground Storage Tank Indemnification Fund (Fund) for

costs they incurred in remediating contamination caused by fuel releases from

underground storage tanks (USTs or tanks) located on their property.         The Fund

concluded, and the Underground Storage Tank Indemnification Board (Board) ultimately

agreed, that the Shroms were ineligible for such payment because the subject USTs were

not registered with the Pennsylvania Department of Environmental Protection (DEP) as

required by Section 503 of the Act 2 and the registration fees (Section 503 registration

1   Act of July 6, 1989, P.L. 169, as amended, 35 P.S. §§ 6021.101-.2104.
2   35 P.S. § 6021.503.
fees) were not paid at the time of the fuel releases that gave rise to the Shroms’ claim for

remediation costs. The Commonwealth Court reversed the Board’s decision on appeal,

concluding that: (1) the Shroms were eligible to receive payment from the Fund for

remediation costs under the Act; (2) the Board’s holding relative to the timing of the

payment of the Section 503 registration fees constituted an unlawful de facto regulation;

and (3) contrary to the Board’s finding, payment of the Shroms’ claim did not appear to

pose any imminent risk to the Fund’s solvency. Discerning no error in the Commonwealth

Court’s decision, we affirm.

                                    I. BACKGROUND

                                     a. Relevant Law

       To provide better context for the current dispute, we set forth a brief summary of

the pertinent statutory and decisional law, beginning with the Act. The Act “is a remedial

statute” that was “created to protect the well-being of the citizenry of Pennsylvania.”

Centolanza v. Lehigh Valley Dairies, Inc., 658 A.2d 336, 406 (Pa. 1995); MH Davis Estate

Oil Co., Inc. v. Underground Storage Tank Indemnification Bd., 789 A.2d 398, 403 (Pa.

Cmwlth. 2001), appeal denied, 800 A.2d 935 (Pa. 2002). Indeed, the Act’s provisions

and attendant regulations are to “be liberally construed in order to fully protect the public

health, welfare and safety of the residents of this Commonwealth.” Section 109 of the

Act, 35 P.S. § 6021.109. As this Court has previously explained:
       [T]he Act is premised on the recognition that: Pennsylvania’s lands and
       waters “constitute a unique and irreplaceable resource from which the
       well-being of the public health and economic vitality of this Commonwealth
       is assured;” these resources have been contaminated by releases from both
       active and abandoned storage tanks of regulated substances;
       contamination of this sort threatens the well-being of affected residents and
       must be prevented through improved safeguards on storage tank
       construction and installation; complete restoration of contaminated
       resources is difficult; and corrective action, when required, is costly.
       [Section 102(a)(1)-(6) of the Act,] 35 P.S. § 6021.102(a)(1)-(6). In addition,
       the Act is founded on the General Assembly’s declaration that storage tank
       releases of regulated substances pose a threat to the public health and
       safety of the Commonwealth and that a legislative response geared toward

                                      [J-71-2022] - 2
       preventing, detecting, and providing for the prompt remediation of such
       releases is essential. Id. § 6021.102(b).
              To these ends, the . . . Act sets forth a scheme for the regulation of
       both aboveground [storage tanks] and [USTs] that hold regulated
       substances. See [Section 103 of the Act,] 35 P.S. § 6021.103 (“Storage
       tank” is “[a]ny aboveground [storage tank] or [UST] which is used for the
       storage of any regulated substance.”). In the Act, “[UST]” is a defined term,
       which means: “Any one or combination of tanks (including underground
       pipes connected thereto) which are used to contain an accumulation of
       regulated substances, and the volume of which (including the volume of the
       underground pipes connected thereto) is 10% or more beneath the surface
       of the ground.” Id.
Young’s Sales & Serv. v. Underground Storage Tank Indemnification Bd., 70 A.3d 795,

799 (Pa. 2013) (plurality opinion) (footnote omitted).

       In an effort to encourage remedial efforts whenever a release from a UST occurs,

the General Assembly, through the enactment of Section 704(a) of the Act, 35 P.S.

§ 6021.704(a), established the Fund and directed it to reimburse owners, operators, and

certified installers for the costs they incur in taking corrective action following a release

from a UST. See Section 704(a)(1) of the Act; Young’s Sales, 70 A.3d at 799. The Fund

mostly “consists of the fees that Section 705 of the Act[, 35 P.S. § 6021.705,] authorizes

the Board to assess against and collect from” owners, operators, and certified installers

(Section 705 fees). 3 Young’s Sales, 70 A.3d at 799; see also Section 704(a)(1) of the

Act. The Section 705 fees are “set on an actuarial basis in order to provide an amount

sufficient to pay outstanding and anticipated claims against the . . . Fund in a timely

manner.” Section 705(d)(1) of the Act. With respect to “heating oil, diesel fuel, [and] other

regulated substance[s],” the Section 705 fees are assessed “based on the gallon capacity

of the tank, regardless of the amount of product actually in the tank.” Section 705(d)(2) of

the Act; Young’s Sales, 70 A.3d at 796 n.2.

3 In addition to the fees assessed against owners, operators, and certified tank installers
under Section 705(d) of the Act, “monies flow into the Fund through the imposition of
penalties for non-payment of fees or fraudulent reimbursement claims, as well as
investment returns.” Young’s Sales, 70 A.3d at 799 n.5 (citing Section 704(a)(1) of the
Act).

                                      [J-71-2022] - 3
       In addition to assessing the Section 705 fees, “the Board [also] administers the

process by which claims for reimbursement from the Fund are made and paid.” Young’s

Sales, 70 A.3d at 799.       All claims that the Board determines to be eligible for

reimbursement from the Fund must “be paid upon receipt of information clearly showing

that reimbursable claim costs are reasonable, necessary and directly related to the

release from the storage tank that is the subject of the claim.” Section 705(b) of the Act.

“The Act imposes a heavy burden of proof on a claimant seeking coverage from the Fund”

for the costs incurred in remediating contamination caused by releases of regulated

substances from USTs.         Luther P. Miller, Inc. v. Underground Storage Tank

Indemnification Bd., 965 A.2d 398, 402 (Pa. Cmwlth. 2009). In that regard, a claimant

seeking payment from the Fund for remediation costs must satisfy the eligibility

requirements set forth in Section 706 of the Act, 35 P.S. § 6021.706, which provides:
             In order to receive a payment from the . . . Fund, a claimant shall
       meet the following eligibility requirements:
                     (1) The claimant is the owner, operator[,] or certified tank
         installer of the tank which is the subject of the claim.
                     (2) The current fee required under [S]ection 705 has been
         paid.
                     (3) The tank has been registered in accordance with the
         requirements of [S]ection 503.
                     (4) The owner, operator[,] or certified tank installer has
         obtained the appropriate permit or certification as required under
         [S]ections 108, 501 and 504 [of the Act, 35 P.S. §§ 6021.108, 6021.501,
         6021.504].
                     (5) The claimant demonstrates to the satisfaction of the
         [B]oard that the release that is the subject of the claim occurred after the
         date established by the [B]oard for payment of the fee required by
         [S]ection 705(d).
                     (6) Additional eligibility requirements which the [B]oard may
         adopt by regulation.
(Emphasis added.)       With respect to the third eligibility requirement—i.e., UST

registration—Section 503 of the Act provides, in pertinent part:
             (a) Requirements.--Every owner of [a UST], except as specifically
       excluded by policy or regulation of [DEP], shall register with [DEP] each

                                      [J-71-2022] - 4
      [UST] by completing and submitting the form provided by [DEP] and by
      paying the registration fee prescribed by [DEP] for each [UST] within three
      months of the effective date of this [A]ct. . . . It shall be unlawful for any
      owner or operator to operate or use, in any way, any [UST] that has not
      been registered as required by this section.
               (b) Prohibitions.--After 12 months from the effective date of this [A]ct,
      it shall be unlawful to sell, distribute, deposit or fill [a UST] with any regulated
      substance unless the [UST] is registered as required by this section. Any
      person who, on or after the effective date of this subsection, knowingly sells,
      distributes, deposits or fills any [UST] in violation of this subsection prior to
      the discovery of a release shall be liable for any release from the [UST], in
      addition to the remedies provided in [S]ection 1302 [of the Act, 35 P.S.
      § 6021.1302]. It shall be a defense to an enforcement action under this
      subsection regarding delivery to an unregistered tank that the tank in
      question had been registered in a prior year. Within 12 months of the
      effective date of this [A]ct, [DEP] shall have available for the general public
      an easily distinguishable visual system, such as a sticker, to identify tanks
      with a current sticker as part of enforcement by [DEP].
               (c) Use of registration fees.--Registration fees collected by [DEP]
      shall be used to fund the development and operation of the storage tank
      programs established by this [A]ct.
In sum, and most relevant here, there are two types of fees that must be paid for a

claimant to be eligible for reimbursement from the Fund under Section 706 for the costs

incurred in remediating contamination caused by releases of regulated substances from

USTs—Section 705 fees and Section 503 registration fees.

      Turning to the pertinent case law, there appears to be only four appellate court

decisions that address the payment of Section 705 fees or Section 503 registration fees

as an eligibility requirement for the payment of remediation costs under Section 706 of

the Act—Young’s Sales; MH Davis; J.D. Pickens v. Underground Storage Tank

Indemnification Board, 890 A.2d 1117 (Pa. Cmwlth. 2006); and Luther P. Miller. In

Young’s Sales, this Court considered whether the eligibility requirement set forth in

Section 706(2) of the Act, which requires the Section 705 fees to have been paid, applies

on a per tank basis. Young’s Sales, 70 A.3d at 796, 799. Stated another way, this Court

had to decide whether, in a situation where multiple USTs were located on the subject

property and the Section 705 fees had been paid on some but not all of those USTs, the

payment of the Section 705 fees on just those USTs involved in the release was sufficient

                                       [J-71-2022] - 5
to entitle the claimant to the payment of remediation costs under Section 706. See id.

at 796-98. Ultimately, in a plurality decision, this Court determined that “the tank fee

payment eligibility requirement [set forth] in Section 706(2) does not apply on a per tank

basis”—i.e., to be eligible for the payment of remediation costs under Section 706, the

Section 705 fees had to be paid on all of the USTs. Id. at 803. This Court further

concluded that, because the Section 705 fees had not been paid on all of the USTs

located on the subject property, the claimant did not meet the eligibility requirement set

forth in Section 706(2), and, therefore, the Fund’s denial of the claimant’s claim was

proper. Id.

       In MH Davis, the Commonwealth Court considered the question of when the

Section 705 fees had to be paid to satisfy the eligibility requirement set forth in

Section 706(2) of the Act—i.e., at the time of the discovery of the release of the regulated

substance from the UST or at the time of the submission of the claim. MH Davis, 789 A.2d

at 401-04.    After review, the Commonwealth Court held that, in order to meet the

Section 706(2) eligibility requirement, the Section 705 fees had to have already been paid

at the time that the release was discovered. Id. at 404. In so holding, the Commonwealth

Court explained:
               Assuming arguendo, that this [c]ourt accepted [the p]etitioners’
       interpretation of Section 706(2) . . . , the result would be that a claimant was
       eligible for retroactive coverage even where there was a failure to make one
       payment or no payments at all so long as all fees due and owing were paid
       at the time the claim was submitted. Such an outcome would countenance
       a situation where coverage is provided after loss is incurred and prior to
       payment of fees, allowing [UST] owners and operators to pay fees at their
       leisure. Clearly, the General Assembly did not intend such a result where
       it specifically mandated the participation of [UST] owners and operators in
       the . . . Fund and where failure to do so would compromise the financial
       stability of the . . . Fund.
Id. at 403-04.

       Following MH Davis, in J.D. Pickens, the Commonwealth Court was tasked with

determining whether “current fee,” as that phrase is used in Section 706(2) of the Act,

                                       [J-71-2022] - 6
included not only those Section 705 fees due and owing for the year in which the release

was discovered but also any Section 705 fees that remained unpaid from prior years.

J.D. Pickens, 890 A.2d at 1117-19. Ultimately, the Commonwealth Court held that the

phrase “current fee” included all Section 705 fees owed in connection with the subject

USTs, including any fees that were past due from prior years. Id. at 1120. In so holding,

the Commonwealth Court explained:
       [I]f before us was the interpretation of the bare term “current fee,” we would
       agree . . . that the term “current fee” only means the fee presently due and
       owing. However, Section 706(2) . . . does not just require that the “current
       fee” be paid, but also that “[t]he current fee required under [S]ection 705 has
       been paid.” What is a “current fee” then, is what is owed under Section 705.
                Along with providing who is responsible for the payment of fees and
       where the fees are to be paid, Section 705(e) of the . . . Act . . . also provides
       in relevant part:
            A person who fails or refuses to pay the fee or a part of the fee by
            the date established by the [B]oard may be assessed a penalty
            of 5% of the amount due which shall accrue on the first day of
            delinquency and be added thereto. Thereafter, on the last day of
            each month during which any part of any fee or any prior accrued
            penalty remains unpaid, an additional 5% of the then unpaid balance
            shall accrue and be added thereto.
                What Section 705(e) . . . does, much like a credit card account, is to
       require the amount of the past due fee to be “rolled over” with interest and
       have a penalty added each month when a [Section 705] fee is not timely
       paid, making “all fees,” a “current fee” owed to the Fund even though it
       represents the amount of fees assessed for previous years. Because
       Section 706(2) . . . conditions eligibility for reimbursement on the payment
       of the current fee required to be paid under Section 705(e), which makes
       “current” past due fees, the Board properly determined that the
       non-payment of [Section 705] fees for [prior] years . . . makes the [petitioner]
       ineligible for reimbursement of its remediation costs.
Id. at 1120.

       In Luther P. Miller, the Commonwealth Court considered, inter alia, whether

inactive USTs must be registered under Section 503 of the Act to be eligible for the

payment of remediation costs under Section 706 of the Act. Luther P. Miller, 965 A.2d

at 399. There, the subject USTs had been used to store gasoline from 1992 to 1999. Id.

at 400. When the claimant stopped using the USTs in 1999, it removed as much gasoline

                                       [J-71-2022] - 7
from the USTs as was practicable, but some gasoline residue, which was unfit for resale,

remained. Id. The claimant did not, however, file temporary closure paperwork with DEP,

and the USTs’ registration eventually expired on October 4, 2002. Id. Thereafter, on

January 13, 2006, while the USTs were being removed from the subject property, a

release was discovered. Id. at 401. At the time of such discovery, the USTs were not

registered, and the Section 503 registration fees were not paid. Id. Nevertheless, on

January 19, 2006, the claimant filed a claim for remediation costs with the Fund. Id.

Thereafter, on April 18, 2006, after receiving an enforcement letter from the Pennsylvania

Office     of   Attorney     General    (OAG),     the    claimant     paid   the    delinquent

Section 503 registration fees. Id. By letter dated September 6, 2006, the Fund denied

the   claim,    in   part,   “because    the     tanks    were   not    registered   and   the

[Section 503] registration fees were not paid.”          Id. The Board affirmed the Fund’s

determination, and the claimant appealed to the Commonwealth Court. Id. at 402.

         Before the Commonwealth Court, the claimant contended that it was eligible to

make a claim under Section 706 of the Act because “the key time period for the

registration of tanks and the payment of [Section 503 registration] fees to the Fund is

during the time the tanks are in operation.” Id. In other words, the claimant maintained

that, “once the product was removed from the tanks and the tanks were taken out of

service, they no longer needed to be registered under Section 503 of the Act because the

tanks were no longer ‘underground storage tanks’ as defined in the Act.” Id. at 403. The

Commonwealth Court rejected this “contorted interpretation of the Act,” holding that, to

be eligible for the payment of spill remediation costs under Section 706, the subject USTs

must be registered and the Section 503 registration fees must be paid regardless of

whether such USTs are actively in use. Id. at 405. As a result, the Commonwealth Court

“agree[d] with the Board that the tanks at issue . . . were required to be registered in

                                        [J-71-2022] - 8
accordance with Section 503,” and the claimant’s “failure to comply with the registration

requirements” rendered “it ineligible to make a claim for reimbursement from the Fund.”

Id.

                              b. The Matter Sub Judice

      Turning to the present matter, we derive the relevant facts—which are not in

dispute—from the parties’ joint stipulations as submitted in the proceedings below and

aptly summarized by the Commonwealth Court:
      The subject property is located at 435 West Fourth Street, Quarryville,
      Pennsylvania (the Property). Mrs. Shrom inherited the Property following
      the death of her mother in 2014. At that time, the Property was leased and
      operated as a convenience store, Subway franchise, and retail fuel sales
      facility. That lease was pursuant to an oral agreement between Mrs. Shrom
      and Edward Boornazian or his solely owned limited liability company,
      Quarryville Subway LLC (Tenant). When Mrs. Shrom inherited the
      Property, it contained five USTs situated side[-]by[-]side: three gasoline
      tanks, a diesel tank, and a kerosene tank. Prior to 2014, Jerome H. Rhoads,
      Inc., was registered with [DEP] as the owner and operator of the USTs,
      but[,] on October 16, 2014, that corporation transferred its interest in the
      [USTs] to Tenant.
             On February 3, 2015, Tenant submitted an amendment to the USTs’
      registration to . . . DEP, reflecting Tenant’s ownership thereof.
      Approximately one year later, in early 2016, Tenant ceased pumping fuel at
      the Property, and[,] on May 17, 2016, Tenant amended the USTs’
      registration with . . . DEP to reflect an out-of-service status. In April 2017,
      Tenant vacated the Property, leaving the USTs behind. On June 4, 2017,
      the registration for the USTs expired because the [Section 503] registration
      fee[s were] unpaid. . . . DEP sent letters to Tenant at the Property
      concerning the unpaid [Section 503] registration fee[s] in July, August, and
      September of 2017. On October 13, 2017, . . . DEP referred the debt to
      [OAG]. . . . OAG sent letters concerning the unpaid
      [Section 503 registration] fees to the Property in October and November
      of 2017. Neither . . . DEP’s nor . . . OAG’s letters were returned as
      undeliverable, but the Shroms did not reside at the Property and did not
      open mail addressed to Tenant. Thus, the Shroms did not read any of the
      notices concerning the unpaid [Section 503] registration fee[s]. Neither . . .
      DEP nor . . . OAG directly notified the Shroms of the unpaid
      [Section 503] registration fee[s].

                                     [J-71-2022] - 9
             In 2017, the Shroms engaged a contractor to remove the USTs. On
      September 12, 2017, the Shroms’ contractor submitted a tank system
      closure notification form to . . . DEP, which called for a complete system
      closure and the removal of all five USTs. Dr. Shrom signed the form as the
      tank system owner, although he later asserted that this was inadvertent
      because neither he nor Mrs. Shrom ever owned the USTs. Although the
      DEP permanent tank closure planning checklist calls for verification that the
      USTs are registered, no one registered the [USTs] at that time.
             On December 28, 2017, during the removal of the USTs, a diesel
      fuel release was discovered. On January 5, 2018, additional gasoline
      contamination was discovered on the Property. The Shroms’ contractor
      proceeded to remove the USTs and the contaminated soil. At the time that
      the release was discovered, all [Section 705 fees] payable to the Fund were
      current, because no such fees were required while the tanks were in
      out-of-service status. However, the [Section 503] registration fee[s]
      remained unpaid, and the [USTs] accordingly remained unregistered.
             On January 5, 2018, the Shroms’ environmental consultant reported
      the release to the Fund. The Fund assigned the claim to its third-party
      claims administrator . . . to investigate the Shroms’ eligibility for coverage
      from the Fund. During that investigation, the Shroms’ environmental
      consultant informed them that the [Section 503] registration fees had not
      been paid for 2017. The following day, the Shroms paid the outstanding
      [Section 503] registration fees to . . . OAG’s collection agent.
             In a letter dated May 16, 2018, the Fund denied coverage for the
      Shroms’ claim on the basis that the USTs were not registered, and the
      [Section 503] registration fee[s were] not paid, at the time that the release
      was discovered. The Shroms sought review of that decision with the Fund’s
      Executive Director, who affirmed the denial of coverage in a letter dated
      February 21, 2019. The Shroms then requested a formal administrative
      hearing, and a Presiding Officer was appointed to adjudicate the matter.
      The Presiding Officer agreed that the Shroms were ineligible for
      compensation from the Fund[] and submitted a Proposed Report and
      Recommendation [(Report)] to that effect with the Board.
Shrom v. Pa. Underground Storage Tank Indemnification Bd., 261 A.3d 1082, 1085-86

(Pa. Cmwlth. 2021) (footnotes omitted) (citations omitted).

      The Shroms filed exceptions to the Presiding Officer’s Report with the Board.

Upon consideration of that Report, the Shroms’ exceptions thereto, the Fund’s response,

and the underlying record, the Board issued an Adjudication and Order, which essentially

                                    [J-71-2022] - 10
denied the Shroms’ exceptions, adopted the Presiding Officer’s Report in full, and

affirmed the Fund’s denial of coverage for the Shroms’ claim. In so doing, the Board

relied upon Young’s Sales, MH Davis, J.D. Pickens, and Luther P. Miller, all of which the

Board deemed to be controlling of the issue before it—i.e., “whether the Shroms [were]

eligible for [Fund] benefits when the release giving rise to their claim was discovered

before the fees were paid to register the [USTs] situated on the . . . [P]roperty.”

(Reproduced Record (R.R.) at 280a.) Based upon its review and interpretation of those

decisions, the Board concluded that, in order for a claimant to be eligible for the payment

of remediation costs from the Fund under Section 706 of the Act, both the

Section 705 fees and the Section 503 registration fees had to be paid prior to the

discovery of the release giving rise to the claim. The Board further concluded that,

because the Section 503 registration fees for the subject USTs were not paid at the time

that the release was discovered at the Property, the Shroms were not eligible for the

payment of remediation costs from the Fund. The Shroms thereafter petitioned the

Commonwealth Court for review of the Board’s Adjudication and Order.

      In a unanimous, published opinion, a three-judge panel of the Commonwealth

Court reversed the Board’s Adjudication and Order. At the outset, the Commonwealth

Court observed that no resolution of the instant dispute could be found in existing

precedent, because, contrary to the Board’s opinion regarding the purportedly controlling

nature of Young’s Sales, MH Davis, J.D. Pickens, and Luther P. Miller, those decisions

concerned the payment of Section 705 fees, not Section 503 registration fees, and/or

were distinguishable.    In making that observation, the Commonwealth Court first

explained that the cases addressing Section 705 fees—namely, Young’s Sales, MH

Davis, and J.D. Pickens—were “noteworthy only inasmuch as they highlight a distinction

. . . in the statutory language used to refer to [S]ection 705 fees and

                                     [J-71-2022] - 11
[S]ection 503 registration fees.” Shrom, 261 A.3d at 1090. Moving on to Luther P. Miller,

the only case relied upon by the Board that concerned Section 503 registration fees, the

Commonwealth Court noted the factual similarities—i.e., in both this case and Luther P.

Miller the Section 503 registration fees were not paid until after the release giving rise to

the claim was discovered.         The Commonwealth Court, however, made a critical

distinction: Luther P. Miller did not address and/or analyze the timing of the payment of

the Section 503 registration fees because the claimant in that case centered its

arguments on the inactivity of the subject USTs at the time the release was discovered.

In other words, the fact that the Section 503 registration fees were not paid until after the

release giving rise to the claim was discovered was not the basis for the Commonwealth

Court’s decision in Luther P. Miller.

       Recognizing     that neither Luther P.         Miller,   nor the cases       addressing

Section 705 fees, were dispositive of the issue presented in this case, the Commonwealth

Court turned to the language of the Act itself. After acknowledging the remedial nature

of the Act, the Commonwealth Court noted that, unlike with respect to Section 705 fees,

“the eligibility criteria set forth in [S]ection 706 of the Act do not state expressly when the

registration requirements must be met, or [the Section 503] registration fee[s] paid,

relative to discovery of a release or the filing of a claim.” Id. at 1091 (emphasis in original).

In support, the Commonwealth Court explained that “Section 706 not only specifies that

the ‘current’ fee under [S]ection 705 must be paid, but it further requires ‘that the release

that is the subject of the claim occurred after the date established by the [B]oard for

payment of the fee required by [S]ection 705(d).’” Id. (alteration in original) (emphasis in

original) (quoting Section 706(5) of the Act). The Commonwealth Court determined that,

as a matter of statutory interpretation, these distinctions were important because, “if the

General Assembly intended to require [the S]ection 503 registration fees to be paid before

                                        [J-71-2022] - 12
the release giving rise to a claim, it would have expressly provided as much, as it did with

respect to [S]ection 705 fees.” Id. at 1092 (noting that, when applying principles of

statutory construction, courts must listen not only to what statute says but also what it

does not say and that, under doctrine of expressio unius est exclusio alterius, inclusion

of specific matters in statute implies exclusion of other matters).

       The Commonwealth Court continued that, despite Section 706 of the Act’s different

treatment of Section 705 fees and Section 503 registration fees, the Fund treated them

identically, thereby applying “an eligibility criterion to the Shroms’ claim that does not

appear on the face of the statute.” Id. The Commonwealth Court noted that the Board

admitted this fact by acknowledging in its Adjudication and Order that neither

Section 706 nor the Fund’s regulations expressly provide that the subject USTs had to be

registered before the discovery of the release giving rise to the claim.               The

Commonwealth Court pointed out, however, that the Board seemingly changed its

position before the Commonwealth Court and argued that “the subject USTs were not

registered and the required registration fee[s were] not paid at the time the releases were

discovered, as required by the clear and unambiguous language of the governing Act.”

Id. (emphasis in original) (quoting Board’s Commonwealth Ct. Br. at 7).                The

Commonwealth Court explained that, while it is “certainly . . . clear” that

Section 706 requires the subject USTs to be registered, “it is equally clear” that

Section 706 does not specify the sequence and timing of that registration or the payment

of the Section 503 registration fees. Id.

       Next, the Commonwealth Court turned its attention to the Shroms’ “overarching

contention” that their claim was denied pursuant to an unlawful, de facto regulation.

Id. at 1092-95. In addressing that contention, the Commonwealth Court noted that “[t]he

Fund’s rule governing the timing of the payment of [Section 503] registration fees has

                                      [J-71-2022] - 13
much in common with the permanent closure rule” that the Commonwealth Court

previously invalidated in Transportation Services, Inc. v. Underground Storage Tank

Indemnification Board, 67 A.3d 142 (Pa. Cmwlth. 2013) (holding that Fund’s rule requiring

Section 705 fees to be paid until permanent closure form was filed with DEP functioned

as regulation, not statement of policy, and, therefore, had to be promulgated in

accordance with what is commonly referred to as Commonwealth Documents Law, Act

of July 31, 1968, P.L. 769, as amended, 45 P.S. §§ 1102-1602, 45 Pa. C.S. §§ 501-907).

Id. at 1094. More specifically, the Commonwealth Court explained: (1) the timing rule,

like the permanent closure rule, “establishes a standard of conduct which the Fund

applies in all situations now and in the future” without any discretion to deviate therefrom,

which is indicative of a “binding norm;” (2) the timing rule, again like the permanent closure

rule, “is not based in the language of the Act or the regulations promulgated thereunder;”

and (3) the unambiguous language of Section 706(6) of the Act requires the Board to

adopt a regulation if the “Fund wishes to apply the same timing requirements to

[S]ection 503 registration fees that [S]ection 706(5) applies to [S]ection 705 fees.” Id.

(quoting/citing Transp. Servs., 67 A.3d at 155).

       The Commonwealth Court acknowledged that the Board attempted to explain its

failure to promulgate a regulation by highlighting Section 706(6)’s use of the word “may:”

“[t]he use of the word ‘may’ indicates recognition by the [General Assembly] that the Fund

should be afforded some degree of deference and discretion in deciding how best to

operate the [Fund] program, including when and whether to promulgate regulations” and

“the fact that [the Board] has not sought to promulgate an additional eligibility requirement

stating that a tank must be registered when the release is discovered . . . does not . . .

invalidate the basis underlying the denial of the Shroms’ claim.” Id. at 1094-95 (some

alterations in original) (quoting Board’s Adjudication and Order at 14).                 The

                                      [J-71-2022] - 14
Commonwealth Court opined, however, that this rationale was “problematic both as a

matter of administrative law and of statutory interpretation.”             Id. at 1095.    The

Commonwealth Court explained:
       Certainly, the [General Assembly’s] provision of authority to an agency to
       promulgate regulations entails a degree of trust in the wise use of the
       agency’s discretion to do so. However, the use of the word “may” in
       [S]ection 706(6) did not grant a license to adopt unwritten rules of exclusion
       from eligibility for payment from the Fund. The Board’s reading of
       [S]ection 706(6) would allow it to impose additional eligibility criteria that it
       may or may not adopt by regulation. However, under a plain reading of the
       statute, if the Board wishes to adopt “[a]dditional eligibility requirements,”
       such as the rule applied in the instant case, it has the authority and
       discretion to do so “by regulation.”
Id. at 1095 (some alterations in original) (citation omitted). For all of these reasons, the

Commonwealth Court concluded:
              The rule applied to the USTs on the Shroms’ Property, disqualifying
       them from eligibility for payment from the Fund, is not found in any statute,
       regulation, or court decision. However, it “operates as a binding norm, or
       standard of conduct, not an announcement of what the Fund intends for the
       future.” As such, it “must be promulgated as a regulation in accordance
       with the Commonwealth Documents Law.” “Because it was not, the rule is
       void and unenforceable.”
Id. (citations omitted) (quoting Transp. Servs., 67 A.3d at 156).

       The Commonwealth Court also rejected the Board’s position that Section 706 of

the Act is ambiguous and, therefore, its interpretation thereof must be given judicial

deference. In so doing, the Commonwealth Court explained that judicial deference was

not warranted because “[S]ection 706 . . . makes clear that [S]ection 705 fees are to be

treated differently than [S]ection 503 registration fees, inasmuch as it specifies that the

former must be paid before the ‘release that is the subject of the claim occurred,’ but is

silent as to the latter.” Id. (internal citation omitted). The Commonwealth Court further

explained that, “even if some portion of [S]ection 706 . . . could be deemed ambiguous,

there is a distinction between the mere interpretation of an ambiguous provision and the

                                      [J-71-2022] - 15
addition of extra-statutory requirements that require adoption by regulation” and “that any

deference that would be owed to the Board’s position is more than offset by the General

Assembly’s express direction that the Act ‘shall be liberally construed in order to fully

protect the public health, welfare and safety of the residents of this Commonwealth.’” Id.

(quoting Section 109 of the Act).

       The Commonwealth Court further emphasized that the facts of this matter serve

as an example as to why liberal construction of the Act is essential. It explained:
       The USTs on the Shroms’ Property have contaminated the “lands” of this
       Commonwealth, a “unique and irreplaceable resource from which the
       well-being of the public health and economic vitality of this Commonwealth
       is assured.” The Shroms have sought to remediate this contamination,
       and[,] as the General Assembly recognized, “the cost is extremely high.” By
       the time the Fund denied their claim, the Shroms had incurred costs
       of $170,745.50. Unsurprisingly given that figure, they do not plan to
       continue remediating the Property unless they can receive aid from the
       Fund. The Fund was established for the purpose of providing this aid. If
       the requirements for eligibility for payment from the Fund are read too
       strictly—or if unwritten requirements are superimposed thereon—those in
       the Shroms’ position may find themselves financially unable to remediate
       the damage caused by ruptures of USTs, posing “a grave threat to the
       health of affected residents.” In light of the importance of the Act’s express
       goals, and construing the Act liberally to protect public health, safety, and
       welfare, as we must, we will not read any additional eligibility requirements
       into [S]ection 706 [of the Act] that do not appear in the text thereof, or in the
       regulations duly promulgated thereunder.
Id. at 1096 (citations omitted).

       Lastly, the Commonwealth Court rejected “the Board's arguments concerning the

purported risk that a payment to the Shroms would pose to the Fund’s solvency.” Id. In

support thereof, the Commonwealth Court noted that there is an additional distinction

between Section 705 fees and Section 503 registration fees that it had not previously

discussed: Section 705 fees are used to pay claims, while Section 503 registration fees

are not. Id. It explained:

                                      [J-71-2022] - 16
       The fees specified under [S]ection 705 [of the Act] are “set on an actuarial
       basis in order to provide an amount sufficient to pay outstanding and
       anticipated claims against the [Fund] in a timely manner” and “to meet all
       other financial requirements of the [B]oard.”             By contrast, under
       [S]ection 503 [of the Act], tank registration fees are “collected by . . . [DEP]”
       and “shall be used to fund the development and operation of the storage
       tank programs established by this [A]ct,” but not directly to pay claims
       against the Fund. In light of this distinction, paying the Shroms’ claim would
       not appear to pose any imminent risk to the Fund’s solvency. The Board
       recognizes the distinction[] but argues that the Fund uses data provided to
       it by . . . DEP to maintain the contact information of tank owners, and if those
       tank owners do not maintain the registration at all times, . . . “DEP’s data
       would be skewed, leading to faulty fee revenue projections that could
       jeopardize [the Fund’s] ability to pay claims and maintain financial stability.”
       This may be true. However, if such consequences are likely to flow from
       the gap in the statute that we have discussed herein, then it would be a
       worthwhile endeavor to resolve the matter through a duly promulgated
       regulation, thereby placing the public on notice of the consequence that will
       follow from the failure to pay a [Section 503] registration fee within the time
       frame that the Fund prefers.
Id. at 1096-97 (some alterations in original) (citations omitted). 4

4 We would be remiss if we did not acknowledge that one of the eligibility requirements
for the payment of remediation costs from the Fund under Section 706 of the Act is that
“[t]he claimant is the owner, operator[,] or certified tank installer of the tank which is the
subject of the claim.” Section 706(1) of the Act. Throughout the underlying proceedings,
the Shroms repeatedly asserted that they were not the owners of the subject USTs.
Interestingly, however, the Shroms’ arguable failure to satisfy this eligibility requirement
was not the basis of the Fund’s denial of their claim, asserted by the Fund as an
alternative basis for its denial of their claim, and/or pursued by the Fund and/or the Board
on appeal. (See, e.g., R.R. at 284a-85a (“The owner/operator criterion was not . . . a
basis for the Fund’s denial of the Shroms’ claim[] and was not at issue in this appeal.”);
R.R. at 323a (noting that owner/operator eligibility requirement “was not applied by [the
Fund’s] third party . . . administrator or Executive Director in denying coverage for the
[Shroms’] claim[] and is not at issue in these proceedings”).) For these reasons, we will
not address the owner/operator eligibility requirement in any further detail in this opinion
but note that our decision today should in no way be read to establish that a claimant that
fails to satisfy the owner/operator eligibility requirement is somehow still entitled to receive
payment from the Fund for remediation costs under Section 706.

                                       [J-71-2022] - 17
                                        II. ANALYSIS

                                           a. Issues

      The Board filed a petition for allowance of appeal seeking this Court’s discretionary

review, which we granted to consider the following three issues as stated by the Board:
      a.        In a matter of first impression before this Court and of substantial
                public importance, did the Commonwealth Court err in reversing the
                decision of the [Board,] which correctly held that [the Shroms] failed
                to satisfy their heavy burden of establishing eligibility for the payment
                of remediation costs by the . . . Fund where it is undisputed that the
                [USTs] on the [Shroms’ P]roperty were not registered and the
                required registration fee was not paid at the time the release was
                discovered?
      b.        Did the Commonwealth Court’s [o]rder conflict with other relevant
                appellate court authority, particularly Luther P. Miller . . . , which is
                substantially factually identical to the instant case, and with other
                existing case, statutory, and regulatory law, in its characterization of
                the Board’s denial of the Shroms’ claim for remediation costs due to
                the failure to register the USTs as an unpromulgated, de facto
                regulation?
      c.        In a matter of substantial public importance due to its potential to
                result in the Fund’s insolvency, did the Commonwealth Court err in
                rejecting the Board’s finding that the Fund relies upon [DEP]
                registrations in billing the necessary fees to keep the Fund solvent?

Shrom v. Pa. Underground Storage Tank Indemnification Bd., 272 A.3d 1290 (Pa. 2022)

(per curiam).

                                   b. Standard of Review

      Appellate review of agency decisions “is restricted to determining whether there

has been a constitutional violation, an error of law, or a violation of agency procedure,

and whether necessary findings of fact are supported by substantial evidence.” Dep’t of

Labor & Indus. v. Workers’ Comp. Appeal Bd. (Crawford & Co.), 23 A.3d 511, 514

(Pa. 2011). Insofar as the issues raised herein implicate questions of law—particularly

by requiring us to engage in statutory interpretation—our standard of review is de novo

                                        [J-71-2022] - 18
and our scope of review is plenary. Sch. Dist. of Phila. v. Workers’ Comp. Appeal Bd.

(Hilton), 117 A.3d 232, 241 (Pa. 2015) (explaining that issues raised on appeal involved

statutory construction “and thereby constitute[d] questions of law over which our standard

of review is de novo and our scope of review is plenary”). To the extent this appeal

concerns whether there is substantial evidence to support the Board’s findings of fact,

“‘[s]ubstantial evidence’ means ‘such relevant evidence that a reasonable mind might

accept as adequate to support a conclusion.’”         Kerr v. Pa. State Bd. of Dentistry,

960 A.2d 427, 436 (Pa. 2008) (quoting Sell v. Workers’ Comp. Appeal Bd. (LNP Eng’g),

771 A.2d 1246, 1250 (Pa. 2001)).

                                  c. Parties’ Arguments

       The Board contends that its denial of the Shroms’ claim for the payment of

remediation costs from the Fund was consistent with existing statutory, regulatory, and

decisional law, and, therefore, the Commonwealth Court committed an error of law by

reversing that decision and concluding that the Fund’s rule regarding the timing of the

payment of the Section 503 registration fees constituted a de facto regulation. In support,

the Board sets forth three main issues/arguments. First, the Board argues that the

Commonwealth Court ignored the clear and unambiguous eligibility requirements set forth

in Section 706 of the Act. Relying upon Sections 245.41(a) and 245.42(b)-(c), (f)-(g) of

DEP’s regulations5 pertaining to the registration of USTs, the Board maintains that “[t]he

525 Pa. Code §§ 245.41(a), 245.42(b)-(c), (f)-(g). Section 245.41(a) of DEP’s regulations
provides: “Tank owners shall properly register each storage tank by meeting the
requirements in this section and paying the registration fee prior to registration certificate
expiration as required by § 245.42 (relating to tank registration fees).” 25 Pa. Code
§ 245.41(a). Section 245.42 of DEP’s regulations provides, in pertinent part:
       (b) Annual registration fees to be paid by owners of [USTs] are established
       under [S]ection 502 of the [A]ct (35 P.S. § 6021.502) as $50 for each [UST].
       (c) [DEP] will issue an invoice to the tank owner after receipt of a complete
       registration form under § 245.41(c) (relating to tank registration
(continued…)

                                      [J-71-2022] - 19
language of the Act is clear that, in order to receive payment from the Fund, the tank must

be registered in accordance with Section 503” of the Act and, “[i]n order to be registered

in accordance with Section 503, the registration fee must be paid no later than the

expiration of the certificate of registration.” (Board’s Br. at 14-15.) The Board, therefore,

suggests that, given that the subject USTs were not registered in accordance with

Section 503 at the time that the release was discovered, the Shroms were ineligible to

receive payment from the Fund under the plain language of Section 706 and the

associated regulations.    The Board maintains that the Commonwealth Court’s prior

decision in Bergey v. Foster, 604 A.2d 1209 (Pa. Cmwlth. 1992) (holding that individual

injured in motor vehicle collision was not eligible to receive benefits from Catastrophic

Loss Trust Fund (CAT Fund) because his motor vehicle was not registered in accordance

with Motor Vehicle Financial Responsibility Law, 75 Pa. C.S. §§ 1701-1799.7, and his

CAT Fund fee was not paid at time of motor vehicle collision), is instructive on this issue.

On that point, the Board contends that the Shroms advanced an argument similar to that

of the appellant in Bergey, but here, unlike in Bergey, the Commonwealth Court

“erroneously disregarded the plain meaning of the words of the Act in determining that

the Shroms are eligible for [Fund] coverage despite the undisputed fact that the USTs

were not registered in accordance with Section 503 of the Act.” (Id. at 17.)

       requirements). The tank owner shall remit the appropriate fee upon receipt
       of the invoice.
       ....
       (f) [DEP] will issue an annual invoice to the tank owner for the annual
       renewal of all regulated tanks at the owner’s facility once per year, at least
       60 days prior to the expiration of the certificate of registration.
       (g) Fees are payable no later than 60 days after the invoice date[] and will
       be considered delinquent 90 days after the invoice date.
25 Pa. Code § 245.42(b)-(c), (f)-(g).

                                        [J-71-2022] - 20
         The Board further maintains that the Commonwealth Court “erroneously conflated

the eligibility requirements at Sections 706(2) and 706(5) of the Act” as a means to

distinguish Section 705 fees from Section 503 registration fees. (Id. at 17.) In the Board’s

view, Section 706(2) “contains no language expressly requiring that the current fee be

paid prior to the discovery of a release,” yet the MH Davis court “held that those fees are

required to have been paid before the discovery of a release in order for a claimant to be

eligible.” (Id. at 18.) The Board, therefore, posits that, contrary to the Commonwealth

Court’s determination, Section 706(5) does not specify that the Section 705 fees must be

paid before the release is discovered. Rather, Section 706(5) simply requires a claimant

to demonstrate that the release occurred after the date established by the Board for the

payment of the Section 705 fees; it is the relevant appellate precedent that establishes

that Section 705 fees must be paid before the discovery of the release giving rise to the

claim.

         The   Board   also   suggests   that   the   “purported   express   provision”   of

Section 706(5) that the Commonwealth Court relied upon to apply the doctrine of

expressio unius est exclusio alterius and conclude that, “if the General Assembly intended

to require Section 503 registration fees to be paid before the release giving rise to the

claim, it would have expressly provided as much ‘as it did with respect to Section 705

fees,’” simply does not exist. (Id. at 19-20 (quoting Shrom, 261 A.3d at 1092).) The Board

maintains that, when construing the words and phrases of the Act and the associated

regulations according to rules of grammar and their common and approved usage, one

must conclude that “the term ‘has been registered’ means that the USTs at issue were

required to be registered at the time the release was discovered in order for the Shroms

to be eligible for [Fund] coverage.” (Id. at 20.) To that aim, the Board contends that the

Commonwealth Court’s construction of Section 706(3) “eviscerate[s] the plain meaning

                                     [J-71-2022] - 21
of [Section 706 of] the Act” by rendering the UST “registration requirement practically

meaningless.” (Id. at 20-21.)

       Second, the Board argues that the Commonwealth Court’s decision in this matter

“conflicts with relevant appellate court authority, particularly Luther P. Miller.” (Id. at 21.)

In that regard, the Board contends that the Commonwealth Court’s attempt to distinguish

Luther P. Miller—which it suggests has “essentially identical” facts to those presented

here—is based upon a faulty analysis. (Id. at 22-26.) In the Board’s opinion, “the timing

of [the] registration of the USTs in accordance with Section 503 [of the Act] was clearly at

issue in Luther P. Miller,” and “the arguments underlying why the USTs were not

registered and [why] the fee was not paid in Luther P. Miller are irrelevant to the instant

case.” (Id. at 24, 26 (emphasis omitted).) The Board suggests that the analysis under

Luther P. Miller is much simpler:
       Ultimately, the claimant in Luther P. Miller did not pay its
       Section 503 [registration] fee[s] or register its tanks until after the release
       was discovered and its claim had been submitted to [the Fund], and,
       therefore, coverage was denied. Likewise, in this case[,] the USTs were
       not registered when the releases were discovered, and the Shroms did not
       pay the Section 503 [registration] fee[s] until well after the releases were
       discovered and their claim had been submitted to [the Fund]. Accordingly,
       their claim was correctly denied by the Board, and the Board’s decision was
       erroneously reversed by the Commonwealth Court.
(Id. at 26.)

       The Board further maintains that the Commonwealth Court, based solely on the

distinction between Section 705 fees and Section 503 registration fees, disregarded

well-established precedent establishing that eligibility for the payment of remediation

costs from the Fund under Section 706 of the Act “is determined as of the time the release

is discovered.” (Id. at 22.) The Board contends that, in doing so, the Commonwealth

Court failed to apply the logic from its prior decisions in MH Davis and J.D. Pickens with

respect to the payment of Section 705 fees to the payment of Section 503 registration

                                       [J-71-2022] - 22
fees. The Board also argues that the Commonwealth Court erred by relying upon its prior

decision in Transportation Services to conclude that the Board’s rule regarding the timing

of the payment of Section 503 registration fees constituted a de facto regulation. In the

Board’s view, Transportation Services has no application here because the Fund

“properly denied the Shroms’ claim based upon the eligibility requirements of the Act and

regulations promulgated thereunder and the cases construing those eligibility

requirements, and not pursuant to any other purported [Fund] regulation or rule, de facto

or otherwise.” (Id. at 29 (emphasis omitted).) The Board also suggests that, “if the

Commonwealth Court’s decision is affirmed and a tank owner is permitted to pay the

[Section 503] registration fee[s] after discovering a release, it would be akin to a

homeowner purchasing insurance coverage for a fire loss after the fire has occurred” and

that, “[i]n essence, the Commonwealth Court’s decision . . . has turned the tank

registration obligation into a claim processing fee rather than a statutory requirement for

eligibility for coverage.” (Id. at 30-31.)

       Third, the Board argues that the Commonwealth Court “erroneously rejected the

Board’s finding that registration of USTs in accordance with Section 503 [of the Act] is

necessary to ensure [the Fund’s] financial integrity” and, in so doing, improperly rejected

the substantial evidence of record supporting that finding. (Id. at 32.) The Board explains:
       [A]lthough [the Fund] does not receive [the Section 503] registration fees, it
       relies upon tank owner and facility information provided by DEP pertaining
       to regulated USTs, which is used by [the Fund] to invoice UST owners.
       Importantly, this registration information promotes financial stability and
       allows tank owners and operators to comply with their financial
       responsibility requirements under the Act and the regulations. Indeed,
       failure to register the USTs and maintain correct contact information may
       harm [the Fund] financially.        Notably, the fees established under
       Section 705 [of the Act] are set on an actuarial basis and reviewed annually
       in order to provide an amount sufficient to pay outstanding and anticipated
       claims against [the Fund]. The fees are set by regulation and the monies
       collected are maintained in [the Fund] for the payment of eligible claims and

                                       [J-71-2022] - 23
       administrative expenses. [The Fund] depends on the payment of these fees
       in order to maintain its solvency.
               If tank owners were required to register their tanks only in the event
       of a release giving rise to a claim, DEP’s data would be skewed, leading to
       faulty fee revenue projections that could jeopardize [the Fund’s] ability to
       pay claims and maintain financial stability.
(Id. at 32-33 (citations omitted).) For these reasons, the Board maintains that “it was error

for the Commonwealth Court to reject the Board’s determination and to instead conclude

that, because [Section 503] registration fees are deposited with DEP rather than [the

Fund], a failure to comply with the registration requirement would not impact [the Fund’s]

solvency.” (Id. at 33.)

       In response, the Shroms argue that the Fund’s rule regarding the timing of the

payment of the Section 503 registration fees is an ultra vires, de facto regulation that “has

no discernable legal basis, addresses no public policy concern, and is in direct conflict

with the General Assembly’s stated aims.” (Shroms’ Br. at 16.) They suggest that the

Board’s “position [to the contrary] is not rooted in any statutory text, any codified

regulation, or any court decision,” but rather, “is rooted in something more primal—

deference and discretion.” (Id. at 3 (internal quotation marks omitted).) The Shroms point

out that, while the Board acknowledged in its Adjudication and Order that the Fund’s

denial of the Shroms’ claim was not based on any specific eligibility criteria set forth in

Section 706 of the Act or any associated regulation, the Board continues to maintain

before this Court, as it did before the Commonwealth Court, that the unambiguous

language of the statute must be given effect. In the Shroms’ view, however, the “clear

and unambiguous requirements of the Act and the regulations promulgated thereunder

do not contemplate disqualification of a claimant from Fund coverage if [the Section 503]

registration fee[s are] outstanding when the underlying release is discovered.” (Id. at 4

(internal quotation marks omitted).)

                                       [J-71-2022] - 24
       Turning to the Board’s reliance on DEP’s regulations pertaining to the registration

of USTs, the Shroms maintain that, contrary to the Board’s suggestion, they were in full

compliance with Sections 245.41 and 245.42 of DEP’s regulations at the time that the

release was discovered.      In that regard, the Shroms contend that “[t]he stipulated

evidentiary record establishes [that they] never received any ‘invoice’ or other notice that

[the Section 503] registration fee[s were] outstanding until after they had notified DEP

[that] they intended to remove the [USTs], after the release was discovered, and after

they submitted their claim to [the Fund]” and that they paid the Section 503 registration

fees immediately thereafter. (Id. at 5.) The Shroms further contend that, even if they did

violate Sections 245.41 and 245.42 of DEP’s regulations, the consequences thereof are

not disqualification from Fund coverage for remediation costs, but rather, pursuant to

Section 503(b) of the Act, an assessment by DEP for the costs incurred to remediate any

release.   The Shroms further highlight, however, that Section 503(b) provides an

owner/operator with a statutory defense, under which he/she/it can defend against any

such enforcement action by demonstrating that the USTs at issue were registered in a

prior year. The Shroms suggest that “[i]t surely would be odd for a claimant to defeat a

DEP assessment for remediation costs by invoking a prior tank registration . . . , only to

be ineligible for Fund coverage . . . anyway” and that, “[i]n that iteration of the universe,

no one [would be] responsible for remediation costs.” (Id. at 6.) The Shroms also take

issue with the Board’s reliance on Bergey, noting that Bergey “does not appear to have

been cited to by a single court, anywhere, ever,” that the statute analyzed under Bergey

was repealed in 1988, and that Bergey is “utterly irrelevant.” (Id. at 7.)

       The Shroms further argue that, while MH Davis may have answered the question

“as of when” the Section 705 fees must be paid in order to meet the eligibility requirement

set forth in Section 706(2) of the Act, MH Davis and this case “diverge in two crucial

                                      [J-71-2022] - 25
respects:” (1) the claimant in MH Davis did not raise a de facto regulation challenge to

the Fund’s authority to require Section 705 fees to be paid at the time that the release

was discovered; and (2) the core concern from MH Davis—i.e., the Fund’s solvency—is

absent in this case because Section 705 fees, unlike Section 503 registration fees, are

deposited into the Fund and are used to pay claims for the payment of remediation costs.

(Id. at 8.)

        The Shroms also maintain that, even if you consider the Fund’s rule regarding the

timing of the payment of Section 503 registration fees an agency interpretation that should

be afforded some amount of deference, such rule/interpretation still constitutes a “binding

norm [that] has no discernible legal foundation.” (Id. at 9.) They, therefore, contend that

it must be struck down as a de facto regulation without consideration of the Board’s policy

concerns relative to the Fund’s financial stability. The Shroms also suggest that, even if

this Court were inclined to consider the Board’s policy concerns about the Fund’s

solvency, such policy concerns are “illusory, speculative, belied by the [Board’s] own

language and inertia, and counterfactual.” (Id. at 15.) They explain:
               If the claimant is current on Section 705 [f]ees when the underlying
        release is discovered, there is no financial impact on the Fund because the
        Section 705 [f]ees are the “premiums” and the “coverage” is thus paid up as
        of the occurrence date. [Section 503 r]egistration fees cannot change that,
        and this case illustrates that is so.
              If, alternatively, the claimant is not current on Section 705 [f]ees
        when the underlying release is discovered, there is no financial impact on
        the Fund because the claimant is ineligible for coverage anyway.
        Registration fees cannot change that. . . .
               Either way, there is no financial harm to the Fund.
                And, as noted above, the text of the . . . Act echoes that reality. . . .
        [Section 503(b) of the Act] gives an owner or operator the ability to defeat a
        DEP assessment for remediation costs by relying on a tank registration for
        a “prior year.” That statutory text reflects the reality that, if a tank is
        registered even one time, DEP knows the tank exists, knows where the
        [t]ank is and will be located ([USTs] do not “move” too well), can account for

                                       [J-71-2022] - 26
       the tank, and knows where to send invoices for Section 705 [f]ees. By way
       of contrast, there is no curative provision in the . . . Act for late
       Section 705 [f]ees.
              Moreover, from a financial perspective, the solvency argument only
       goes so far. MH Davis was decided 21 years ago, 8 years after inception
       of the Fund. According to the [Fund’s] 2017 . . . Annual Report, during
       calendar year 2017, [the Fund] paid out approximately $33 million in
       remediation costs. Certainly, that is a massive number. Yet, during the
       6[-]month period from July through December of 2017 alone, [the Fund]
       generated $41.59 million in revenue. [The Fund] is a mature bureaucracy
       now, having been funded with billions of Pennsylvania taxpayer dollars.
             [The Board’s] tenuous policy argument is also betrayed by its own
       phrasing and its own inertia. As reflected by [the Board’s] use of speculative
       language (i.e., “may harm” and “could jeopardize”), the record does not
       support [the Board’s] policy argument. . . .
              And, if [the Board] is genuinely concerned about late
       [Section 503] registration fees impacting the solvency of the Fund, it is
       inexplicable why the [Board] has taken no steps whatsoever to formally
       regulate the issue since the Fund’s inception in 1994. . . .
              Not only is [the Board’s] policy argument hollow, it is counterfactual.
       In the Shroms’ case, the [Section 503] registration fee[s] had no effect
       whatsoever on the Fund. All Section 705 [f]ees were current when the
       release giving rise to the Shroms’ claim was discovered.
(Id. at 12-14 (emphasis omitted) (footnotes omitted) (citations omitted).) The Shroms

suggest that the real policy concern implicated in this case is the contamination of the

Commonwealth’s soils by the release of regulated substances from USTs, and that the

Fund’s rule regarding the timing of the payment of Section 503 registration fees is in direct

conflict with the General Assembly’s stated aims to remedy any such contamination.

       The Shroms further contend that the “materially distinguishable” case law upon

which the Board relies cannot “resuscitate [the Fund’s] ultra vires, de facto regulation.”

(Id. at 17.) The Shroms point out that, even if MH Davis, J.D. Pickens, and Luther P.

Miller were on point, those decisions do not bind this Court. That being said, with respect

to the applicability of Luther P. Miller, the Shroms maintain that the Commonwealth Court

is “perfectly capable of construing its own jurisprudence.” (Id. at 18.) They, therefore,

                                      [J-71-2022] - 27
mirror the Commonwealth Court’s reasoning as to why Luther P. Miller does not control

here—i.e., in Luther P. Miller, unlike here, the claimant did not challenge the Fund’s rule

that all Section 503 registration fees must be paid at the time that the release is

discovered. The Shroms further suggest, contrary to the Board’s criticism, that the

Commonwealth Court did address reasoning from both MH Davis and J.D. Pickens: “the

Commonwealth Court pointed out that [the Section 503] registration fees are not

deposited into the Fund, that paying the Shroms’ claim does not appear to pose any risk

to the Fund’s solvency given all Section 705 [f]ees [were] paid and that, even if [the

Fund’s] concern were [sic] legitimate in other cases, that concern must yield in this case

to the de facto regulation doctrine.” (Id. at 20.)

       The Shroms also take issue with the Board’s homeowners’ insurance analogy.

They explain:
       This situation is not “akin” to a homeowner purchasing insurance coverage
       for a fire loss after the fire has occurred. The truth, which [the Board] is
       obfuscating through a poorly conceived analogy, is that all
       Section 705 [f]ees—i.e.,       the    “premiums”—for     Fund      coverage
       were 100% paid when the release was discovered and when the Shroms
       submitted their claim. Thus, the “coverage” was purchased before the “fire.”
(Id. at 22 (emphasis omitted) (some internal quotation marks omitted).)

       Lastly, the Shroms argue that, while clever, the Board’s argument that the

Commonwealth Court somehow rejected the Board’s finding that UST registration and

the payment of Section 503 registration fees is necessary to maintain the Fund’s solvency

“is premised on a mischaracterization of the Commonwealth Court’s decision.” (Id. at 23.)

In support, they suggest that the Commonwealth Court assumed the finding was valid but

explained that, if the Fund was truly concerned about claims made in the face of unpaid

Section 503 registration fees, then it would be worthwhile for the Fund to promulgate a

regulation addressing its concerns.       The Shroms further contend that, even if the

                                      [J-71-2022] - 28
Commonwealth Court had rejected such finding, it was well within its authority to do so

because such finding is not supported by the record. 6

                                      d. Discussion

          As this appeal requires us to interpret Section 706(3) of the Act, we are guided

in our analysis by the Statutory Construction Act, which provides that the object of all

statutory interpretation “is to ascertain and effectuate the intention of the General

Assembly.” 1 Pa. C.S. § 1921(a). Generally, the plain language of the statute “provides

the best indication of legislative intent.” Miller v. Cnty. of Centre, 173 A.3d 1162, 1168

(Pa. 2017) (citing 1 Pa. C.S. § 1921(b)).         If the statutory language is clear and

unambiguous in setting forth the intent of the General Assembly, then “we cannot

disregard the letter of the statute under the pretext of pursuing its spirit.” Fletcher v. Pa.

Prop. & Cas. Ins. Guar. Ass’n, 985 A.2d 678, 684 (Pa. 2009) (citing 1 Pa. C.S. § 1921(b)).

6 In reply to the Shroms’ arguments, the Board makes twelve discrete points: (1) the Fund
in no way ambushed the Shroms with unpromulgated regulations; (2) the Shroms failed
to meet their heavy burden of establishing that they met the eligibility requirements set
forth in Section 706 of the Act; (3) the Board has consistently taken the position that the
eligibility requirement set forth in Section 706(3) of the Act is unambiguous but, in the
alternative, has argued that, if ambiguous, the Fund’s interpretation thereof is entitled to
strong deference; (4) the Shroms were not in full compliance with the UST registration
requirements at the time that the release was discovered because the subject USTs were
not, at that time, registered in accordance with Section 503 of the Act; (5) the Shroms
mischaracterize the very limited statutory defense set forth in Section 503(b) of the Act;
(6) the Shroms inappropriately dismiss the holding from Bergey; (7) the Shroms
misapprehend Luther P. Miller, MH Davis, J.D. Pickens, and Bergey, all of which establish
that eligibility under Section 706 is to be determined at the time that the release is
discovered; (8) neither the Fund nor the Board enforced a binding norm, but rather, they
applied the eligibility requirements set forth in Section 706 of the Act; (9) the General
Assembly’s requirement that the subject USTs be registered and that the
Section 503 registration fees be paid at the time that the release is discovered is not
superfluous; (10) the Shroms’ characterization that the Fund has been funded by billions
of taxpayer dollars is without any basis; (11) the Fund’s denial of the Shroms’ claim does
not contradict the General Assembly’s policy concerns as set forth in the Act; and (12) the
Shroms’ contention that the Board has taken liberties with the evidentiary record is
baseless.

                                      [J-71-2022] - 29
In this vein, “we should not insert words into [a statute] that are plainly not there.” Frazier

v. Workers’ Comp. Appeal Bd. (Bayada Nurses, Inc.), 52 A.3d 241, 245 (Pa. 2012). When

the statutory language is ambiguous, however, we may ascertain the General Assembly’s

intent by considering the factors set forth in Section 1921(c) of the Statutory Construction

Act, 1 Pa. C.S. § 1921(c), and other rules of statutory construction. See Pa. Sch. Bds.

Ass’n, Inc. v. Pub. Sch. Emps.’ Ret. Bd., 863 A.2d 432, 436 (Pa. 2004) (observing that

“other interpretive rules of statutory construction are to be utilized only where the statute

at issue is ambiguous”). Additionally, “[w]ords and phrases shall be construed according

to rules of grammar and according to their common and approved usage,” though

“technical words and phrases and such others as have acquired a peculiar and

appropriate meaning or are defined in [the Statutory Construction Act] shall be construed

according to such peculiar and appropriate meaning or definition.” 1 Pa. C.S. § 1903(a).

“We also presume that ‘the General Assembly does not intend a result that is absurd,

impossible of execution or unreasonable,’ and that ‘the General Assembly intends the

entire statute to be effective and certain.’” Berner v. Montour Twp. Zoning Hearing Bd.,

217 A.3d 238, 245 (Pa. 2019) (quoting 1 Pa. C.S. § 1922(1)-(2)).

       Additionally, the General Assembly, in the Act itself, instructed that the Act must

be “liberally construed in order to fully protect the public health, welfare and safety of the

residents of this Commonwealth.” Section 109 of the Act. With these principles in mind,

we begin our analysis by reiterating the statute that we are called upon to interpret.

Section 706(3) of the Act provides, in relevant part:
          In order to receive a payment from the . . . Fund, a claimant shall meet
       the following eligibility requirements:
       ....
                     (3) The tank has been registered in accordance with the
              requirements of [S]ection 503.

                                      [J-71-2022] - 30
In order to be “registered in accordance with the requirements of Section 503,” “[e]very

owner of [a UST] . . . shall register with [DEP] each [UST] by completing and submitting

the form provided by [DEP] and by paying the registration fee prescribed by [DEP] for

each    [UST]    within   three    months    of   the     effective   date   of   this   [A]ct.”

Sections 706(3) and 503(a) of the Act. Sections 245.41(a) and 245.42(c), (f)-(g) of DEP’s

regulations provide further guidance regarding when the Section 503 registration fees

must be paid to complete a UST registration or to keep a UST registration current or up

to date—e.g., upon receipt of the invoice issued after DEP’s receipt of a complete

registration form, prior to the expiration of the registration certificate, and within 60 days

of the date of DEP’s annual invoice. See 25 Pa. Code §§ 245.41(a), 245.42(c), (f)-(g).

       That said, the statutory and regulatory requirements governing the required timing

of the payment of the Section 503 registration fees are not, as the Board suggests,

dispositive of the issue presented in this case—i.e., when the UST registration must be

completed and when the Section 503 registration fees must be paid to meet the eligibility

requirement set forth in Section 706(3) of the Act. Section 503 of the Act and the

associated DEP regulations merely answer the question of what a UST owner must do to

complete a UST registration or to keep a UST registration current or up to date, not when

that UST registration must be completed to meet the eligibility requirement set forth in

Section 706(3) of the Act.        In other words, while the Board may be correct that

Section 503, when read in conjunction with the associated regulations, requires that the

Section 503 registration fees be paid by a certain time to complete a UST registration or

keep a UST registration current or up to date, there is simply no language within

Section 706(3) that requires that the UST registration be completed or the

Section 503 registration fees be paid at the time that the release giving rise to the claim

                                       [J-71-2022] - 31
is discovered for a claimant to be eligible to receive payment from the Fund for

remediation costs. Section 706(3) of the Act is completely silent on this issue.

       With respect to Section 705 fees, on the other hand, Section 706(2) and (5) of the

Act requires a claimant seeking payment from the Fund for remediation costs to establish

that the “current fee required under [S]ection 705 has been paid” and that “the release

that is the subject of the claim occurred after the date established by the [B]oard for

payment of the fee required by [S]ection 705(d).” The Commonwealth Court, upon

consideration of both of these subsections, interpreted Section 706 to require that the

Section 705 fees be paid at the time that the release was discovered for a claimant to be

eligible to receive payment from the Fund for remediation costs. See MH Davis, 789 A.2d

at 401-04. This interpretation is completely consistent with the clear and unambiguous

language of Section 706(2) and (5). Thus, as the Commonwealth Court aptly recognized

below, if the General Assembly intended for the Section 503 registration fees to be paid

at the time that the release was discovered for a claimant to be eligible to receive payment

from the Fund for remediation costs, the General Assembly could “have expressly

provided as much, as it did with respect to [S]ection 705 fees.” Shrom, 261 A.3d at 1092.

       The Board would, nevertheless, like this Court to blanketly apply the case law

addressing the eligibility requirements relative to the payment of Section 705 fees set

forth in Section 706(2) and (5) of the Act to the eligibility requirement for UST registration

and the payment of Section 503 registration fees set forth in Section 706(3). To do so,

however, we would have to ignore both the General Assembly’s distinctive treatment of

Section 705 fees and Section 503 registration fees in Section 706 and the fact that

Section 705 fees and Section 503 registration fees serve two totally different purposes.

See Section 704(a)(1) of the Act (explaining that Fund is funded by, inter alia,

Section 705 fees and that Fund is sole source of payment for claims under Act);

                                      [J-71-2022] - 32
Section 503(c) of the Act (explaining that Section 503 registration fees “shall be used to

fund the development and operation of the storage tank programs established by [the

A]ct”).

          The Board further suggests that the Commonwealth Court’s prior decision in

Luther P. Miller somehow controls our decision today. While we agree with the Board

that the facts presented in Luther P. Miller and the matter sub judice are substantially

similar—i.e., in both cases the subject USTs were not registered and the

Section 503 registration fees were not paid until after the releases giving rise to the claims

were discovered—we also agree with the Commonwealth Court that Luther P. Miller is

distinguishable. That is, in Luther P. Miller, the Commonwealth Court did not address the

precise issue raised herein—i.e., the required timing for the completion of the UST

registration and the payment of the Section 503 registration fees to satisfy the eligibility

requirement set forth in Section 706(3) of the Act. That was because, in Luther P. Miller,

the claimant focused its arguments on the inactivity of the subject USTs at the time that

the release was discovered. In other words, the Commonwealth Court’s analysis in

Luther P. Miller focused on whether registration of the subject USTs and the payment of

the Section 503 registration fees during the time that the USTs were actively in use

satisfied the eligibility requirement set forth in Section 706(3), not whether the subject

USTs had to be registered and the Section 503 registration fees had to be paid at the

time that the release giving rise to the claim was discovered or at some other later time. 7

7 Even if we were to conclude that Luther P. Miller conclusively determined that the
subject USTs had to be registered and the Section 503 registration fees had to be paid
at the time that the release was discovered for a claimant to be eligible for the payment
of remediation costs from the Fund under Section 706 of the Act, which we did not, that
decision is not binding on this Court. See Thomas Jefferson Univ. Hosps., Inc. v. Pa.
Dep’t of Labor and Indus., 162 A.3d 384, 394 (Pa. 2017) (noting that, “although the
Commonwealth Court generally must adhere to the binding language of its own opinions,
we, as the Supreme Court, are not so bound”).

                                      [J-71-2022] - 33
      For all of the above-stated reasons, we interpret Section 706(3) of the Act to

require that, in order for a claimant to be eligible to receive payment from the Fund for

remediation   costs,   the   subject    USTs    have    to   be   registered   and   the

Section 503 registration fees have to be paid at any time prior to the Fund’s eligibility

determination. This interpretation is consistent with both the clear and unambiguous

language of Section 706(3) and the General Assembly’s instruction to liberally construe

the Act “to fully protect the public health, welfare and safety of the residents of this

Commonwealth,” Section 109 of the Act, as it will ensure that the money paid into the

Fund—in part, the Section 705 fees—are available to remedy the contamination of the

Commonwealth’s soils that is caused by the release of regulated substances from USTs.

This interpretation is also consistent with DEP’s actions in this matter relative to the

unpaid Section 503 registration fees.    We simply cannot ignore that, following the

expiration of the subject USTs’ registrations due to Tenant’s failure to pay the

Section 503 registration fees, DEP sent multiple notices to Tenant at the Property

concerning the unpaid Section 503 registration fees, DEP referred the debt owed in

connection with the Section 503 registration to OAG, OAG sent multiple notices to the

Property concerning the unpaid Section 503 registration fees, the Shroms paid the

Section 503 registration fees to OAG’s collection agent the day after they learned that

they had not been paid, and OAG’s collection agent, acting on behalf of DEP, accepted

the Shroms’ payment of the delinquent Section 503 registration fees.

      Given that both the Board and the Fund have been acting under the faulty

presumption that Section 706(3) clearly and unambiguously requires a claimant to

establish that the subject USTs had been registered and the Section 503 registration fees

had been paid at the time that the release giving rise to the claim was discovered to

establish eligibility for the payment of remediation costs from the Fund under

                                    [J-71-2022] - 34
Section 706(3) of the Act, we must also conclude that the Fund’s rule in that regard

constitutes a unlawful, de facto regulation. See Transp. Servs., 67 A.3d at 153-56.

Therefore, to the extent that the Fund wishes to impose an eligibility requirement relative

to the timing of UST registration and the payment of Section 503 registration fees in the

future, the Board must adopt a regulation to that effect in accordance with the

Commonwealth Documents Law as it is permitted to do by Section 706(6).

      Lastly, we conclude that, contrary to the Board’s assertions, the Commonwealth

Court did not summarily reject the Board’s finding that the Fund relies on UST

registrations to bill the necessary fees that keep the Fund solvent.          Rather, the

Commonwealth Court, relying upon the differing uses for Section 705 fees and

Section 503 registration fees, simply rejected the notion that the Fund’s payment of the

Shroms’ claim would pose a risk to the Fund’s solvency. Importantly, Section 705 fees,

not Section 503 registration fees, are used to pay claims made to the Fund for the

payment of remediation costs under Section 706 of the Act.          See Sections 503(c)

and 704(a)(1) of the Act.

      In conclusion, given that the Shroms paid the Section 503 registration fees for the

USTs located on the Property before the Fund issued its eligibility determination, we hold

that the Shroms established that they met the eligibility requirement set forth in

Section 706(3) of the Act. Accordingly, we affirm the order of the Commonwealth Court.

      Chief Justice Todd and Justices Donohue, Dougherty and Wecht join the opinion.

      Justice Mundy files a concurring opinion.

                                     [J-71-2022] - 35