954 A.2d 50
No. 1866 C.D. 2007.Commonwealth Court of Pennsylvania.Argued: May 6, 2008.
Filed: July 11, 2008. Reargument and or Reconsideration Denied: September 4, 2008.
Appeal from the Court of Common Pleas, Washington County, No. 2006-9508, Emery, J.
Jody Rosenberg, Pittsburgh, for appellants.
Colin E. Fitch, Washington, for appellee, Washington County Redevelopment Authority.
Thomas A. Lonich, Washington, for appellee, South Strabane Township.
Dusty E. Kirk, Pittsburgh, for amicus curiae, Tanger Properties Ltd. Partnership.
BEFORE: McGINLEY, Judge, and SMITH-RIBNER, Judge, and KELLEY, Senior Judge.
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OPINION BY Judge SMITHRIBNER.
Edward M. Mazur, Jeffrey D. Bull and Citizens Against Tax Increment Financing (Taxpayers) appeal from an order of the Court of Common Pleas of Washington County (trial court) that sustained preliminary objections and dismissed Taxpayers’ complaint seeking declaratory and injunctive relief against Washington County Redevelopment Authority (Redevelopment Authority) and South Strabane Township (Township) for lack of a ripe controversy. Taxpayers question whether the trial court abused its discretion and committed an error of law in ruling that they failed to allege adequate facts to present a ripe controversy.
I
In two opinions issued by Judge Katherine B. Emery, the trial court noted that the present case involves another legal challenge to the Tax Increment Financing Plan (TIF Plan) to construct the Victory Centre Development Project (Victory Centre) on approximately 333 acres at the intersection of Race Track Road and Interstate 79 in the Township. The $365,150,000 Victory Centre is to be anchored by two major developments, Tanger Outlets (Tanger) and Bass Pro Shops (Bass Pro), and will combine a Tanger Outlet Mall, a Bass Pro store, hotels, restaurants and a variety of entertainment opportunities. The Tanger development, at 517,000 square feet, is to cost approximately $77,800,000, and the Bass Pro development, at 866,000 square feet, is to cost approximately $287,350,000.
Victory Centre is to be funded in part through the mechanism created by the Tax Increment Financing Act (TIF Act), Act of July 11, 1990, P.L. 465 as amended, 53 P.S. §§ 6930.1 — 6930.13.[1] The governing bodies of Washington County, the Township and Trinity Area School District (taxing bodies) formed a TIF Committee. The Redevelopment Authority presented its proposal at a public meeting of the TIF Committee calling for each of the taxing bodies to allocate 80 percent of the tax increment to the Authority for payment of the TIF loan and 20 percent to each taxing district. The taxing bodies adopted the proposal, and the Township created the TIF District and declared it to be a “blighted” area as required by Section 5(a)(6)(iv)(H), 53 P.S. § 6930.5(a)(6)(iv)(H). The TIF Plan also provided for creation of a Neighborhood Improvement District (NID), under the Neighborhood Improvement District Act (NID Act), Act of December 20, 2000, P.L. 949, 73 P.S. §§ 831 — 840. The Authority planned to issue $27,210,000 in bonds: $14,462,115 in TIF funding and $12,747,885 in NID funding. The TIF Plan provides for debt on the bonds to be retired in 20 years by increased property tax revenues within the TIF District and increased business taxes
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within the NID.[2]
Taxpayers filed an amended complaint January 30, 2007 alleging that on December 28, 2006, the Redevelopment Authority issued bonds for the Tanger development of approximately $23,000,000 (2006 Bonds), or approximately 85 percent of the entire amount of available bond funding, and that as a result no tax increment revenues from the Bass Pro development would be available to pay debt service on the loans. Bass Pro was to be open for business in September 2007. From the delay in construction schedules and issuance of most of the bonds to Tanger, Taxpayers concluded that Bass Pro is not a definite component of Victory Centre and that, if it does not come to fruition, there will have been a “substantial deviation” from the TIF Plan, which would require an amendment under Section 5(a)(8) of the TIF Act, 53 P.S. § 6930.5(a)(8), and Mercurio v. Allegheny County Redevelopment Authority, 839 A.2d 1196
(Pa.Cmwlth. 2003).
The amended complaint alleged (1) that issuance of $23,000,000 in bonds to Tanger was an ultra vires act because the amount did not correlate to Tanger’s proportion of the total cost; (2) that the Redevelopment Authority may not issue bonds to the Tanger development alone; and (3) that the TIF Plan is invalid unless amended. Taxpayers requested a declaration that Victory Centre as it is currently progressing no longer reflects the TIF Plan and that issuance of the bonds was illegal and sought an injunction prohibiting the Redevelopment Authority from acting further. The defendants filed preliminary objections, including their assertions that Taxpayers lack standing and that the suit lacks a ripe controversy.
The trial court addressed the threshold issue of whether Taxpayers had standing based on their status as taxpayers in the TIF District. The defendants cited Application of Biester, 487 Pa. 438, 409 A.2d 848
(1979), for the general rule that taxpayers do not have standing to sue simply because they wish to prevent the waste of tax revenue. That case, however, provided a five-part test that applies only when taxpayers challenge obligations placed on the public or government emoluments, which was summarized in Consumer Party of Pennsylvania v. Commonwealth, 510 Pa. 158, 170, 507 A.2d 323, 329 (1986) (“1. the governmental action would otherwise go unchallenged; 2. those directly and immediately affected . . . are beneficially affected and not inclined to challenge the action; 3. judicial relief is appropriate; 4. redress through other channels is unavailable; and 5. no other persons are better situated to assert the claim”), abrogated in part on other grounds by Pennsylvanians Against Gambling Expansion Fund, Inc. v. Commonwealth 583 Pa. 275, 877 A.2d 383 (2005). The trial court concluded that Taxpayers met this test, and it ruled that they have standing.
On the objections asserting lack of ripeness, the trial court noted the purpose of the Declaratory Judgments Act “to settle and to afford relief from uncertainty and insecurity with respect to rights, status, and other legal relations. . . .” 42 Pa. C.S. § 7541(a). A declaratory judgment may be obtained only where there is a real
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controversy, Gulnac by Gulnac v. South Butler County School District, 526 Pa. 483, 587 A.2d 699 (1991), and it must not be employed to determine rights in anticipation of events that may never occur or for consideration of moot cases or for the rendition of an advisory opinion that may prove to be academic. City of Philadelphia v. Philadelphia Transp. Co., 404 Pa. 282, 171 A.2d 768 (1961). The trial court quoted Section 5(a)(4) of the TIF Act, 53 P.S. § 6930.5(a)(4), as to the information required to be included in a TIF Plan.[3] It noted that Section 5(a)(8), 53 P.S. § 6930.5(a)(8), provides: “The governing body of the municipality creating the tax increment district may at any time, subject to the provisions of section 6(c), adopt an amendment to a project plan which shall be subject to approval in the same manner as the original project plan.”
Taxpayers relied heavily upon Mercurio. The Court noted there that after the Department of Environmental Protection denied a permit to the developer of a project, an amended permit application was submitted that contained many changes from the TIF Plan, including an expansion of a state road from four to six or eight lanes, a new bridge and culvert, the elimination of a movie theatre, entertainment complex and self-storage facility and the addition of a hotel resulting in a three-year delay in construction. The Court held that, although Section 5(a)(8) regarding adoption of amendments is permissive, the directive to amend the TIF Plan should not be flouted. Without some type of check on a TIF Plan’s progress and evolution, informal modification could lead to “a situation where a developer submits a `pie in the sky’ proposal that promises the government entities that a project will generate greater increases in tax revenues.” Mercurio, 839 A.2d at 1205. After the project plan is approved the developer could build an entirely different project, which could generate less tax revenues. As the changes alleged might, if proved, amount to substantial changes, the Court reversed the sustaining of a preliminary objection on that point and remanded for further proceedings.
Taxpayers’ amended complaint made bald assertions that Bass Pro could be eliminated from Victory Centre, and they sought such an inference based on the lopsided bond issuance. The trial court cited Mazur v. Trinity Area School District, 926 A.2d 1260 (Pa.Cmwlth. 2007), appeal granted in part, ___ Pa. ___, 941 A.2d 1256 (2008), for the proposition that courts may not rule on the wisdom of legislative enactments (e.g., to create a TIF Plan), and thus the precise manner of carrying out the TIF Plan was not subject to review. No well-pleaded facts permitted a determination that Victory Centre had experienced the kind of drastic changes involved in Mercurio. The trial court concluded that there was no ripe controversy because only one of the TIF bonds had been issued and that it was too early in the construction process to determine whether a substantial deviation from the TIF Plan had occurred.[4]
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II
Taxpayers argue that if substantial changes are made to the TIF project after adoption of the TIF Plan in regard to any information required by Section 5(a)(4) of the TIF Act to be in the plan, then under Mercurio the governing body must adopt an amendment subject to approval in the same manner as the original plan. Construction of the Tanger and Bass Pro projects was to proceed concurrently. The TIF Plan allocated $14,400,000 of TIF funds to pay for infrastructure improvement, and, according to the TIF Plan, Tanger and Bass Pro proposed an NID that would provide an additional $12,700,000. In regard to TIF debt service only, the TIF Plan listed Tanger as ultimately providing $9,626,146 and Bass Pro as providing $13,655,016.
On December 28, 2006, the Redevelopment Authority issued bonds in the actual amount of $23,585,000. See 2006 Bonds, Supplemental Reproduced Record 40b. They represent 87 percent of the total bond funding contemplated by the TIF Plan, but they were issued to pay for construction and development of public infrastructure for the Tanger Outlet component alone. The indenture of trust refers to a possible future bond issuance, although the Improvement Area B Developer is defined as Bass Pro or any other developer who issues a funding agreement with the issuer, and the documents make clear that any tax revenues generated by Bass Pro will not be available for payment on the 2006 Bonds under any circumstance.
Taxpayers submit that the matter is ripe because the ultimate action authorized by the TIF Plan (issuance of TIF bonds) has occurred and has occurred in a manner inconsistent with the TIF Plan. They state that the Redevelopment Authority has bound the taxing bodies to pay the debt on this bond issuance from new tax revenues generated by Tanger alone. The trial court concluded that it was too early to know whether Victory Centre was proceeding reasonably as set forth in the TIF Plan or whether changes amounted to a substantial deviation, but Taxpayers contend that this goes to the merits of the case and not its ripeness.[5]
Taxpayers note that if projections for fiscal effects on the municipal tax base change, the taxing bodies must amend the TIF Plan to reflect the changes. The TIF procedure requires at least one public hearing on a proposed TIF Plan. Taxpayers cite Schultz v. Philadelphia, 385 Pa. 79, 122 A.2d 279 (1956), stating that the object of a public hearing is to enable the legislative body to ascertain preliminarily
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the views of the public in regard to proposed legislation and if those views are not sought after substantial amendment the purpose of the procedure is defeated. They submit that the changes to the TIF Plan are even more substantial than those in Mercurio and that they have alleged the elimination of a majority of the commercial development and a change in tax revenue projections. They note the “pie in the sky” reference i Mercurio and contend that the taxing bodies are “on the hook” to finance the bonds without any guarantee that Bass Pro will build.
The Redevelopment Authority recites a history of three other actions filed by Taxpayers, including their challenge to rezoning granted by the Township. It notes that Section 4 of the TIF Act, 53 P.S. § 6930.4, grants a redevelopment authority, in addition to all other powers conferred by law, the right to “exercise any powers necessary and convenient to carry out the purposes of this act,” including the power to issue tax increment bonds and notes and to enter into contracts or agreements as may be necessary to secure or to implement the provisions and effectuate the purposes of TIF plans.
The Redevelopment Authority first argues that Taxpayers lack standing to sue. In Biester the Supreme Court rejected a taxpayer’s petition to set aside the Attorney General’s application to summon a statewide investigating grand jury, stressing that in the absence of special circumstances the common interest of prevention of waste of tax revenues is the same interest that all citizens have in seeing that others comply with the law. In Boady v. Philadelphia Municipal Authority, 699 A.2d 1358
(Pa.Cmwlth. 1997), a disappointed bidder on an HVAC contract filed a suit claiming the city violated the law by substituting less expensive, lower quality equipment than was required by the contract. The Court applied the five-part test for taxpayer standing derived from Biester and affirmed dismissal for lack of standing, reasoning that government officials, not taxpaying members of the public, are charged with interpreting contracts.[6]
The Redevelopment Authority further argues that Taxpayers cannot satisfy the third prong of the Biester test, namely, showing that judicial relief is appropriate. It cites Schenck v. Pittsburgh, 364 Pa. 31, 70 A.2d 612 (1950), where an objecting property owner argued that mere certification of a parcel as blighted did not conclusively establish that it would be used for a public purpose, but the Supreme Court stated that in the absence of any indication that the agency acted in bad faith or was wholly arbitrary in certifying the area, a certification was not subject to judicial review. The Redevelopment Authority contends by analogy that Taxpayers are trying to impose their view of the propriety of the TIF project on the Authority. In Stilp v. Commonwealth, General Assembly, ___ Pa. ___, 940 A.2d 1227 (2007), where a
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citizen sought a declaratory judgment that the Auditor General had authority to audit the General Assembly, the Supreme Court ruled that the citizen lacked standing, citing as sufficient the fifth factor of th Biester test, because the Auditor General as an elected official was far better situated to bring a declaratory judgment action on that question. The Redevelopment Authority asserts that the taxing bodies are the equivalent here.
The Court concludes that the trial court was correct in its ruling on standing. As it noted, the government action would otherwise go unchallenged; those directly and immediately affected are affected beneficially and so are not likely to challenge; redress through other channels is unavailable and no other persons are better situated to assert the claim. As for the third factor, whether judicial relief is appropriate, the Court agrees that Mercurio certainly has established that judicial relief may be appropriate in a proper case. The Court has set the bar high and has not encouraged casual interference in the affairs of a TIF project; nevertheless, in a case involving proof of substantial changes from an approved TIF Plan, a judicial check is necessary and appropriate. Mercurio.
On the question of ripeness, the Redevelopment Authority argues that no actual controversy exists because the TIF Plan refers to TIF revenues and NID revenues, not the amount of bonds issued. Further, the TIF Plan contemplates two separate financings for Tanger and Bass Pro and contemplates that NID funds would be used to pay a portion of the debt financing for each. Taxpayers’ argument regarding the effect of the 2006 Bonds is clearly speculative. Also, until Tanger builds its project and is assessed for real estate tax purposes, no TIF revenue is generated and all debt service will be paid by the developers from NID revenues. As fo Mercurio, it notes that this Court’s decision did not address standing; further, there was a delay of three years and evidence of a denial of a permit resulting in a change in what could be built, and major elements such as a movie theater, entertainment complex and self-storage facility had been deleted.
The Township stresses Taxpayers’ present focus on the fact that bonds will be issued in two series and their statements that the Redevelopment Authority has foisted the risk that Bass Pro might not build on the taxing bodies and the taxpayers. The Township points out that the bonds provide in several places in all upper case and bolded text that they are not general obligations and are not backed by the taxing power of any of the government entities involved (other than TIF and NID revenues). Nothing precludes two bond issuances, and the $27,210,000 figure has not changed nor has the TIF portion of $14,462,000. Taxpayers’ assertions that Bass Pro’s participation is uncertain are speculative, and delay has been caused by Taxpayers’ actions. The President of Bass Pro, at a public hearing on August 15, 2006 as part of the creation of the NID, stated that Bass Pro would move forward as soon as there was a final resolution to legal challenges and certainty from the Department of Transportation as to completion of the interchange.
The Court ultimately concludes that the trial court did not err in deciding that this matter does not currently present a ripe controversy. Unlike the situation in Mercurio where substantial changes in the development from what was contained in the approved TIF Plan were alleged and were readily subject to proof upon remand, here Taxpayers have offered only speculation that Bass Pro might withdraw from the project. Taxpayers contend that the Redevelopment
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Authority issued bonds for Tanger alone, but the record shows that the TIF Plan remains in effect and that further bonds are intended to be issued to support the Bass Pro component of Victory Centre. If Bass Pro were to withdraw from participation in Victory Centre, and the Redevelopment Authority failed to seek an amendment to the TIF Plan, there would be a ripe controversy. At present, however, there are no allegations of the type of substantial changes to the TIF Plan that the Court held in Mercurio justified an amendment to the TIF Plan, secured through the means of judicial proceedings if necessary.[7]
Accordingly, the Court affirms the order of the trial court dismissing this action by Taxpayers for lack of a ripe controversy.
ORDER
AND NOW, this 11th day of July, 2008, the order of the Court of Common Pleas of Washington County is affirmed.
(2007). In determining whether a matter is ripe for judicial review, “courts generally consider whether the issues are adequately developed and the hardships that the parties will suffer if review is delayed.”Id., 593 Pa. at 485, 932 A.2d at 60.