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Parise v. Commonwealth

Commonwealth Court of Pennsylvania
Jun 6, 1980
415 A.2d 153 (Pa. Cmmw. Ct. 1980)

Opinion

Argued March 13, 1980

June 6, 1980.

State Board of Funeral Directors — Retroactive application of regulations — Funeral Director Law, Act 1952, January 14, P.L. (1951) 1898 — Legislative interpretation — Due process — Taking of property — Police power — Preparation rooms — Highways.

1. An administrative agency may properly apply a regulation promulgated after the filing of an application with that agency to that application pending when the regulation was promulgated. [82]

2. A regulation of the State Board of Funeral Directors, interpreting the Funeral Director Law, Act 1952, January 14, P.L. (1951) 1898, and merely codifying a long-standing interpretation of the statute, may be applied to applications pending when the regulation was promulgated. [83]

3. A funeral director is not unconstitutionally deprived of his property without due process by a regulation properly promulgated in the exercise of the police power which would prohibit the construction of a preparation room across a public highway from a funeral establishment which would have necessitated the regular transport of bodies across such highways, as such regulation bears a reasonable relationship to public health, welfare, safety or morals of the community. [83-4]

4. A regulation of the State Board of Funeral Directors defining the premises of a funeral home as being property not intersected by any public highway or thoroughfare prohibits the establishment of a preparation room for a funeral home across a public highway from the funeral home, and the fact that one preparation room is properly located within the establishment is immaterial. [84]

Argued March 13, 1980, before Judges WILKINSON, JR., MENCER and MacPHAIL, sitting as a panel of three.

Appeal, No. 1184 C.D. 1979, from the Order of the State Board of Funeral Directors in case of Commonwealth of Pennsylvania v. Carmine J. Parise and Son Funeral Home, No. 76-FU-454.

Application with the State Board of Funeral Directors for approval of new preparation room. Application denied. Applicant appealed to the Commonwealth Court of Pennsylvania. Held: Affirmed.

Paul R. Mazzoni, with him James G. McDonough, II, Judd, Schnessel McDonough, for petitioners.

Mary R. Shehadi, Assistant Attorney General, with her Charles L. Ford, Chief Counsel and Edward G. Biester, Jr., Attorney General, for respondent.


Carmine J. Parise and Louis C. Parise, trading as Carmine J. Parise and Louis C. Parise Funeral Home (Parise) appeal from an order of the State Board of Funeral Directors (Board), which denied Parise's application for approval of a new preparation room. We affirm.

Parise owns a funeral establishment (which includes a preparation room) located at 89 Fairview Street in Carbondale. The preparation room for which approval was sought is located at 7 Forty-First Street, which is directly across the street from the funeral establishment. The street is a public thoroughfare. The Board, after a hearing, denied approval on the basis of 49 Pa. Code § 13.1, which defines premises as follows: "The property on which the funeral home is located which shall consist of a tract of land not intersected by any public highway or thoroughfare." This appeal followed.

Parise first argues that the Board erred in retrospectively applying this regulation, which was adopted on November 12, 1977, to its application, which was filed prior to that date. We disagree. In Ziffrin, Inc. v. United States, 318 U.S. 73, reh. denied, 318 U.S. 800 (1943), a petitioner applied for a permit to engage in contract carrier operations on February 4, 1936. The Interstate Commerce Commission, in denying the permit on May 29, 1941, relied upon an amendment to the motor carrier provisions of the Interstate Commerce Act, which amendment was enacted after the date of the application. Mr. Justice REED, speaking for a unanimous Court, upheld the action of the Commission:

Although it appears that Parise reapplied for approval sometime after October 1976, it is unclear whether this was a formal reapplication or merely an amendment to his original application of February 4, 1975. The Board took no formal action on the February 4, 1975 application, and the date of the reapplication or amendment does not appear in the record. Since the Board does not argue that the reapplication was made subsequent to the November 12, 1977 regulation, however, the exact date is unimportant for purposes of determining Parise's rights.

We are convinced that the Commission was required to act under the law as it existed when its order of May 29, 1941, was entered. . . . [A] change of law pending an administrative hearing must be followed in relation to permits for future acts. Otherwise the administrative body would issue orders contrary to the existing legislation. Id. at 78.

See also Citizens to Preserve Overton Park, Inc. v. Volpe, 401 U.S. 402 (1971); Thorpe v. Housing Authority of Durham, 393 U.S. 268 (1969); 51 Am.Jur.2d Licenses and Permits § 46, at 52 (1970). If it was not error for an administrative agency to apply a statute amended after the date of an application for a permit, a fortiori, it was not error for the Board to apply the regulation to Parise's application.

Moreover, it is undisputed that this 1977 regulation merely codified a long-standing interpretation by the Board of the Funeral Director Law, Act of January 14, 1952, P.L. (1951) 1898, as amended, 63 P. S. § 479.1 et seq., which was in effect prior to Parise's initial application for approval. Since this rule is an interpretative rather than a legislative rule, Uniontown Area School District v. Pennsylvania Human Relations Commission, 455 Pa. 52, 313 A.2d 156 (1973), and since "the meaning of the statute has been there from the time of its original enactment, then no problem of a retroactive interpretative rule can arise, for . . . that is what the statute has always meant." 1 K. Davis, Administrative Law Treatise § 509, at 347 (1958).

Parise argues, however, that application of the 1977 regulation would result in an unconstitutional taking of his property without compensation, in violation of his due process rights. Again, we disagree. The constitutionally ordained right of property is subject to the police power of the state to regulate or prohibit an owner's use of his property, Cleaver v. Board of Adjustment, 414 Pa. 367, 200 A.2d 408 (1964), and a proper exercise of the police power does not constitute a taking, regardless of any economic impact upon the property of the persons affected thereby. Commonwealth v. Barnes Tucker Co., 23 Pa. Commw. 496, 353 A.2d 471 (1976). Details of regulation are

'not subject to judicial rejection, unless so palpably unreasonable as to suggest that their "real object is not to protect the community, or to promote the general well-being, but, under the guise of police regulation, to deprive the owner of his . . . property, without due process of law" [Citing Mugler v. Kansas, 123 U.S. 623 (1887)]'

Grime v. Department of Public Instruction, 324 Pa. 371, 384, 188 A. 337, 342 (1936).

We do not believe that the regulation in question is palpably unreasonable. The Board is properly concerned about alleviating the trauma and disconcertment that will result if the public is continually subjected to the sight of human remains being transported across a public street on a stretcher. Moreover, the regulation will reduce the liklihood of traffic congestion and avoid potential accidents involving dead bodies. We conclude, therefore, that this regulation embodies a reasonable relationship to the public health, welfare, safety, or morals of the community and will sustain the regulation. See Grime v. Department of Public Instruction, supra; State Board of Funeral Directors v. Bennett, 41 Pa. D. C.2d 502 (C.P. Dauph. 1966).

Although the body itself would be covered by a sheet pursuant to 49 Pa. Code § 13.213, nevertheless there would be no doubt as to the contents of the stretcher. We do not believe that the sheet covering would reduce the impact of the sight upon the public.

Finally, Parise argues that the regulations do not prohibit a second preparation room that is separated from the funeral establishment. It is true that the regulations allow more than one preparation room. 49 Pa. Code § 13.171. The regulation in question, however, plainly defines premises as property "not intersected by any public highway or thoroughfare." 49 Pa. Code § 13.1. Thus, no matter how many preparation rooms are built, none can be separated from the funeral establishment by a public highway or thoroughfare. Adoption of Parise's interpretation would effectively embalm the regulation and permit Parise to circumvent its purpose.

Accordingly, we enter the following

ORDER

AND NOW, this 6th day of June, 1980, the order of the State Board of Funeral Directors, dated May 17, 1979, denying approval of a new preparation room to Carmine J. Parise and Louis C. Parise, trading as Carmine J. Parise and Louis C. Parise Funeral Home, is hereby affirmed.


Summaries of

Parise v. Commonwealth

Commonwealth Court of Pennsylvania
Jun 6, 1980
415 A.2d 153 (Pa. Cmmw. Ct. 1980)
Case details for

Parise v. Commonwealth

Case Details

Full title:Carmine J. Parise and Louis C. Parise, t/a Carmine J. Parise and Louis C…

Court:Commonwealth Court of Pennsylvania

Date published: Jun 6, 1980

Citations

415 A.2d 153 (Pa. Cmmw. Ct. 1980)
415 A.2d 153

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