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Nevitt v. Board of Supervisors

Commonwealth Court of Pennsylvania
Nov 22, 1977
379 A.2d 1072 (Pa. Cmmw. Ct. 1977)

Opinion

Argued October 31, 1977

November 22, 1977.

Policemen and firemen — Residency requirement — Admission — Reasonable time for compliance — Arbitrary and capricious enforcement.

1. Sufficient evidence supports a determination that a police officer resides outside the township of his employment in violation of valid ordinance requirements when he is shown to have regularly used an address outside the township and admitted in correspondence to his superiors that he resided outside the township. [475-6]

2. An ordinance which requires police officers to reside in the municipality and which was enacted prior to the employment of a police officer is not invalid because it fails to give the officer who has moved out of the township a reasonable time within which to comply with the residency requirements. [476-7]

3. A township is not guilty of arbitrary and capricious enforcement of police residency requirements by dismissing a police officer, who is in clear violation of the requirements in choosing to live on his wife's property outside the township while permitting another officer to live outside the township while his home in the township was under construction. [477]

Argued October 31, 1977, before Judges WILKINSON, JR. and ROGERS, sitting as a panel of two.

Appeal, No. 2192 C.D. 1976, from the Order of the Court of Common Pleas of Blair County in case of Joseph A. Nevitt v. Board of Supervisors of Logan Township, Blair County, Pennsylvania, No. 475 June Term, 1976.

Police officer dismissed by the Board of Supervisors of Logan Township. Officer appealed to the Court of Common Pleas of Blair County. Action of dismissal affirmed. HABERSTROH, P.J. Officer appealed to the Commonwealth Court of Pennsylvania. Held: Affirmed.

Philip W. Savitz, with him Clyde O. Black, II, and Patterson, Evey, Routch, Black Behrens, for appellant. Bertram B. Leopold, Logan Township Solicitor, for appellee.


The appellant was dismissed by the Board of Supervisors of Logan Township from his position as a police officer for failure to comply with that township's residency requirements. The Court of Common Pleas of Blair County affirmed the action of the Board of Supervisors. We affirm.

The facts are not substantially in dispute. From the time of its inception on March 15, 1966, the Logan Township police force has had a residency requirement. The appellant joined the force in April of 1966, and at that time sold his home in Altoona in order to move to Logan Township. The appellant lived in Logan Township, at 501 South Dartmouth Lane, until about March 19, 1975. Due to marital difficulties, he then moved to R.D. #1, Box 960, Duncansville.

Charges were then brought against the appellant on April 10, 1975 for violation of the residency requirement. These charges were dropped when the appellant moved back to his prior address. In December of 1975, however, the appellant, having been divorced from his first wife, remarried and moved out of Logan Township to the home of his second wife in Williamsburg. On December 17, 1975, the appellant notified the Chief of Police that he had moved out of Logan Township. On December 18, 1975 the Chief responded that appellant was in violation of the residence requirement. This was followed by a meeting with the Chief and a lieutenant on December 22, 1975 when appellant was advised he would have to resume his residence in Logan Township not later than January 1, 1976. This was confirmed by letter on December 23, 1975. Notwithstanding, the appellant on January 1, 1976 listed his address as R.D. 1, Williamsburg on state and federal income tax withholding forms and filed them with Logan Township. While appellant offered some evidence that appears to be intended to show that he at all times was a resident of Logan Township, he cannot seriously contend this in face of the above. Any shred of doubt was removed by appellant's letter of December 30, 1975, wherein he made a "request for permission to reside outside the Township of Logan. My reason for making this request is that I have remarried and my present wife owns property at R.D. #1, Williamsburg, Penna. on which we live." (Emphasis supplied.)

The exact wording of the letter was:
December 17, 1975
Chief V. E. Rouzer:
Since my marriage on Saturday, December 6th, 1975, I have been living at my wife's residence in Williamsburg, Penna. We will remain there until we can relocate in the Altoona area.
Respectfully submitted,
Sgt. Joseph A. Nevitt

We find nothing in the present case that requires a result different from our decisions in Homan v. Civil Service Commission, 28 Pa. Commw. 426, 368 A.2d 883 (1977) and McCarthy v. Philadelphia Civil Service Commission, 19 Pa. Commw. 383, 339 A.2d 634 (1975), aff'd per curiam, 424 U.S. 645 (1976). The appellant's declarations of his intention to return to the township do not alter this result, indeed they support it, for by his own declaration his residence was then out of the township.

The appellant next contends that the township ordinance is invalid on its face for failure to comply with our Supreme Court's decision in Gagliardi v. Ambridge Borough, 401 Pa. 141, 163 A.2d 418 (1960). The appellant argues that this case stands for the proposition that an ordinance must allow any employee violating the residency requirement a reasonable time within which to comply. We disagree. The decision in that case merely held that the residency requirement established by the Borough of Ambridge for all its employees was not in conflict with the Borough Code and that that ordinance provided a reasonable time for employees who lived outside the township at the time the ordinance was passed to move into the township. The case in no way stands for the proposition advanced by the appellant.

As a final argument, appellant contends that his dismissal constituted a violation of the due process and equal protection guarantees of the fourteenth amendment due to the township's failure to dismiss other similarly situated officers for violation of the same residency requirement. Once again we must disagree. The record shows that one of these officers, a Lieutenant Reeder, moved from his own home in Logan Township due to marital difficulties to his uncle's home, which was also in Logan Township. With respect to the other officer, a Patrolman Haller, the record shows that he lived outside the township during the 90 day period following completion of his probation, which is specifically allowed by the ordinance in question. While Patrolman Haller apparently lived outside the township for some time after the 90 day period, this was attributable to the fact that his home in the township was still under construction. We find nothing in these two instances that compels the conclusion that the residency provisions of the ordinance have been applied in an arbitrary and capricious manner.

Accordingly, we will enter the following

ORDER

NOW, November 22, 1977, the decision of the Court of Common Pleas of Blair County, No. 475, dated November 18, 1976, is affirmed.


Summaries of

Nevitt v. Board of Supervisors

Commonwealth Court of Pennsylvania
Nov 22, 1977
379 A.2d 1072 (Pa. Cmmw. Ct. 1977)
Case details for

Nevitt v. Board of Supervisors

Case Details

Full title:Joseph A. Nevitt, Appellant v. Board of Supervisors of Logan Township…

Court:Commonwealth Court of Pennsylvania

Date published: Nov 22, 1977

Citations

379 A.2d 1072 (Pa. Cmmw. Ct. 1977)
379 A.2d 1072

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