Marcellus Shale Coalition v. DEP, Aplts. ( 2023 )


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  •                             [J-55-2022] [MO:Donohue, J.]
    IN THE SUPREME COURT OF PENNSYLVANIA
    MIDDLE DISTRICT
    THE MARCELLUS SHALE COALITION,                :   No. 69 MAP 2021
    :
    Appellee                    :   Appeal from the Order of the
    :   Commonwealth Court at No. 573
    :   MD 2016 dated August 12, 2021.
    v.                                 :
    :   ARGUED: September 15, 2022
    :
    DEPARTMENT OF ENVIRONMENTAL                   :
    PROTECTION OF THE                             :
    COMMONWEALTH OF PENNSYLVANIA                  :
    AND ENVIRONMENTAL QUALITY BOARD               :
    OF THE COMMONWEALTH OF                        :
    PENNSYLVANIA,                                 :
    :
    Appellants                  :
    CONCURRING AND DISSENTING OPINION
    JUSTICE WECHT                                                    DECIDED: April 19, 2023
    My views of this case align with much of the Lead Opinion’s thoughtful reasoning.
    Nonetheless, I am unable to agree with certain analytical choices that it has elected to
    make along the way. Specifically, I disagree with the categorical rejection of ejusdem
    generis. Instead of applying this familiar principle, the Lead Opinion chooses to favor an
    assumption that the General Assembly, in using the term “public resources” in Section
    3215(c) of Act 13, 1 necessarily intended to incorporate all “public natural resources” within
    the meaning of the Environmental Rights Amendment to the Pennsylvania Constitution. 2
    1       58 Pa.C.S. § 3215(c). See Act of February 14, 2012, P.L. 87, No. 13 (“Act 13”).
    2      PA. CONST. art. I, § 27 (the “ERA”) (“The people have a right to clean air, pure
    water, and to the preservation of the natural, scenic, historic and esthetic values of the
    environment. Pennsylvania’s public natural resources are the common property of all the
    (continued…)
    The scope of legislative rulemaking authority provided to the Department of
    Environmental Protection and the Environmental Quality Board should be assessed
    through ordinary principles of statutory construction and by reference to our existing
    administrative law jurisprudence, rather than through invocation of the ERA. 3
    Additionally, with regard to one sub-issue—the regulatory incorporation of a database
    through which protected species may be added in the absence of formal rulemaking
    procedures—my views align with those expressed by Justice Mundy. Accordingly, I
    concur in part and dissent in part.
    In numerous previous decisions, I have expressed my long-held view that judicial
    interpretation of statutes should not be controlled by “deference” to the readings
    suggested (much less demanded) by administrative agencies. 4 The question presented
    here is of a different shade. Here, we are not so much concerned with the Agencies’
    interpretation of Act 13, or any purported need to defer thereto, but rather with the
    substantive validity of properly promulgated “legislative” rules. 5 It is well-established that,
    people, including generations yet to come. As trustee of these resources, the
    Commonwealth shall conserve and maintain them for the benefit of all the people.”).
    3       Herein, I refer to the Department of Environmental Protection as “the Department”
    and to the Environmental Quality Board as “the EQB,” and I refer collectively to these
    entities as “the Agencies.”
    4       See Woodford v. Ins. Dep’t, 
    243 A.3d 60
    , 86-87 (Pa. 2020) (Wecht, J., concurring);
    SEDA-COG Joint Rail Auth. v. Carload Express, Inc., 
    238 A.3d 1225
    , 1248-49 (Pa. 2020)
    (Wecht, J., concurring); Crown Castle NG E. LLC v. Pa. Pub. Util. Comm’n, 
    234 A.3d 665
    ,
    686-95 (Pa. 2020) (Wecht, J., concurring); Harmon v. Unemployment Comp. Bd. of Rev.,
    
    207 A.3d 292
    , 310-11 (Pa. 2019) (Wecht, J., concurring); Cnty. of Butler v. CenturyLink
    Commc’ns, LLC, 
    207 A.3d 838
    , 853-54 (Pa. 2019) (Wecht, J., concurring); Snyder Bros.,
    Inc. v. Pa. Pub. Util. Comm’n, 
    198 A.3d 1056
    , 1083 (Pa. 2018) (Wecht, J., concurring).
    5      As this Court has explained:
    Commonwealth agencies have no inherent power to make law or otherwise
    bind the public or regulated entities. Rather, an administrative agency may
    do so only in the fashion authorized by the General Assembly, which is, as
    (continued…)
    [J-55-2022] [MO: Donohue, J.] - 2
    “when an agency adopts a regulation pursuant to its legislative rule-making power . . . it
    is valid and binding upon courts as a statute so long as it is (a) adopted within the agency’s
    granted power, (b) issued pursuant to proper procedure, and (c) reasonable.” 6 In my
    previous writings on administrative law matters, I likewise have distinguished the
    application of deference to agencies’ statutory interpretation from “agency rulemaking
    power, which is robust, and which is entitled to a healthy judicial respect.”7
    In the present matter, there is no dispute that the Agencies promulgated the
    challenged regulations pursuant to the proper notice-and-comment procedures
    prescribed by the Commonwealth Documents Law, the Regulatory Review Act, and the
    Commonwealth Attorneys Act. 8 Accordingly, the validity of the regulations hinges upon
    a general rule, by way of recourse to procedures prescribed in the
    Commonwealth Documents Law, [45 P.S. §§ 1102-1602; 45 Pa.C.S.
    §§ 501–907,] the Regulatory Review Act, [71 P.S. §§ 745.1-745.14,] and
    the Commonwealth Attorneys Act[, 71 P.S. §§ 732-101-732-506]. When an
    agency acts under the general rule and promulgates published regulations
    through the formal notice, comment, and review procedures prescribed in
    those enactments, its resulting pronouncements are accorded the force of
    law and are thus denominated “legislative rules.”
    Nw. Youth Servs., Inc. v. Dep’t of Pub. Welfare, 
    66 A.3d 301
    , 310 (Pa 2013).
    6     Tire Jockey Serv., Inc. v. Dep’t of Env’t Prot., 
    915 A.2d 1165
    , 1186 (Pa. 2007).
    Although this legal standard predates this Court’s decision in Tire Jockey, both the
    Agencies and several of our previous opinions refer to it as the “Tire Jockey test.” I do
    the same herein.
    7       Snyder Bros., 198 A.3d at 1083 (Wecht, J., concurring) (citing Bucks Cnty. Servs.,
    Inc. v. Phila. Parking Auth., 
    195 A.3d 218
    , 242 (Pa. 2018) (Wecht, J. concurring)).
    8      As noted by both the Lead Opinion and Justice Mundy, and as discussed further
    below, one facet of the challenge to the regulatory definition of “other critical communities”
    involves a contention that the definition runs afoul of the Commonwealth Documents Law
    by effectively adding substantive material without going through the proper notice-and-
    comment procedure. But it is undisputed that the definition is contained in a regulation
    that was properly promulgated.
    [J-55-2022] [MO: Donohue, J.] - 3
    the first and third prongs of the Tire Jockey test—to wit, whether they were “adopted within
    the agency’s granted power” and whether they are “reasonable.” 9
    I. Scope of the Agencies’ Granted Power
    A central challenge in evaluating the validity of a regulation is determining whether
    its provisions fall “within the agency’s granted power.” 10 As the Lead Opinion notes, this
    is the “key question” at the heart of the instant dispute. 11 In answering similar questions,
    this Court’s precedents have tended to focus principally upon the existence of an enabling
    statute 12 that authorizes or directs an agency to promulgate regulations, in conjunction
    with an analysis of whether the regulations are consistent with the statute that the agency
    seeks to implement. Several of our past cases concerning the validity of legislative
    regulations are instructive.
    Pennsylvania Human Relations Commission v. Uniontown Area School District 13
    concerned the authority of the Pennsylvania Human Relations Commission to promulgate
    a regulation defining “de facto segregation” as used in the Pennsylvania Human Relations
    Act. 14    This Court concluded that the agency’s authority derived from its delegated
    legislative, rather than interpretive powers, and that the agency’s enabling statute
    evidenced a “legislative intent to empower the Commission to do a good deal more than
    9         Tire Jockey, 915 A.2d at 1186.
    10        Id.
    11        Lead Op. at 26.
    12     An “enabling statute” is “law that permits what was previously prohibited or that
    creates new powers; esp., a congressional statute conferring powers on an executive
    agency to carry out various delegated tasks.” Enabling statute, BLACK’S LAW DICTIONARY
    (11th ed. 2019).
    13        
    313 A.2d 156
     (Pa. 1973) (plurality).
    14        Act of October 27, 1955, P.L. 744, as amended, 43 P.S. §§ 951-63.
    [J-55-2022] [MO: Donohue, J.] - 4
    merely interpret” the governing statute. 15     The agency’s power emanated from the
    statutory language authorizing the agency to “adopt, promulgate and rescind rules and
    regulations to effectuate the policies and provisions of [the] act,” and to “formulate policies
    to effectuate the purposes of [the] act.”16 In light of this language, and because the
    agency’s definition was consistent with the policies expressed in the statute, we upheld
    the regulation “as within the legislative powers conferred” by the General Assembly. 17
    In Eagle Environmental II, L.P. v. Department of Environmental Protection, 18 we
    considered, inter alia, whether the EQB was empowered to adopt a “harms/benefits” test
    as part of the permitting process for waste disposal facilities—a test not directly imposed
    by statute. Because the agency’s test was consistent with the purposes of the Solid
    Waste Management Act 19 and the Municipal Waste Planning, Recycling and Waste
    Reduction Act, 20 we held that the regulation was “authorized by the general grant of
    authority” provided to EQB by the agency’s enabling provisions, which empowered it “to
    establish rules and regulations to accomplish the purposes” of those acts. 21 And although
    we subsequently discussed the ERA and the statutes’ reference thereto among their
    statements of purpose, we also made clear that the harms/benefits test “would be within
    15     Uniontown Area Sch. Dist., 313 A.2d at 170.
    16     Id.
    17     Id.
    18     
    884 A.2d 867
     (Pa. 2005).
    19     Act of July 7, 1980, P.L. 380, as amended, 35 P.S. §§ 6018.101-6018.1003.
    20     Act of July 28, 1988, P.L. 556, as amended, 53 P.S. §§ 4000.101-4000.1904.
    21     Eagle Env’t, 884 A.2d at 878 (citing 35 P.S. § 6018.105; 53 P.S. § 4000.302).
    [J-55-2022] [MO: Donohue, J.] - 5
    the authority granted by the Acts even without reference to implementation of Article 1,
    Section 27.” 22
    In Slippery Rock Area School District v. Unemployment Compensation Board of
    Review, 23 this Court considered whether the Department of Labor and Industry could, by
    regulation, define the undefined statutory term “reasonable assurance” that a substitute
    teacher would return to work the following academic year as having been offered a
    position “substantially economically equivalent in terms of wages, benefits, and hours to
    the previous year’s position.” 24 In finding that the agency was so authorized, we relied
    primarily upon the statutory enabling language providing that it “shall have power and
    authority to adopt, amend, and rescind such rules and regulations . . . as it deems
    necessary or suitable.”25 This enabling provision indicated that the scope of the agency’s
    authority was “broad and encompasses the delegated legislative power to define by
    regulation terms otherwise undefined by the statute.” 26
    More recently, in Bucks County Services, this Court addressed a challenge to
    numerous regulations promulgated by the Philadelphia Parking Authority concerning the
    operation of partial rights taxicabs within the City of Philadelphia. 27 Although our primary
    focus was upon the “reasonableness” prong of the Tire Jockey test, we noted that the first
    prong—the scope of the agency’s power—was “satisfied because [the agency] is
    22     Id. at 879.
    23     
    983 A.2d 1231
     (Pa. 2009).
    24     
    Id.
     at 1235 n.4 (citing 
    34 Pa. Code § 65.161
    ).
    25     Id. at 1239 (quoting 43 P.S. § 761(a)).
    26     Id.
    27     See Bucks County Services, 195 A.3d at 233-39.
    [J-55-2022] [MO: Donohue, J.] - 6
    authorized by [53 Pa.C.S. § 5722] to promulgate regulations relating to taxicab service in
    the City.”28
    In each of these decisions, this Court analyzed the scope of an agency’s authority
    to adopt a given regulation by highlighting the existence of an enabling statute, and by
    further ascertaining whether the regulation was generally consistent with the overarching
    statutory scheme that the agency sought to implement. Although the enabling statutes
    occupied a position of primacy in the analysis, that latter criterion is likewise critical. And
    necessarily, this requires some degree of judicial interpretation of the statutes that the
    agency is charged with administering. As this Court stated in Slippery Rock Area School
    District:
    Clearly the legislature would not authorize agencies to adopt binding
    regulations inconsistent with the applicable enabling statutes. See 1
    Pa.C.S. § 1922(1) (“the General Assembly does not intend a result that is
    absurd, impossible of execution or unreasonable”). Indeed, all regulations,
    whether legislative or interpretive “must be consistent with the statute under
    which they were promulgated.” Popowsky v. Pennsylvania Pub. Util.
    Comm’n, 
    910 A.2d 38
    , 53 (Pa. 2006). 29
    And as the Supreme Court of the United States more recently (and more pithily) put it:
    “Agencies have only those powers given to them by Congress, and ‘enabling legislation’
    is generally not an ‘open book to which the agency [may] add pages and change the plot
    line.’” 30
    A balance must be struck. A court reviewing the validity of regulations necessarily
    must engage in its own statutory interpretation analysis in order to determine whether the
    28       Id. at 237.
    29       Slippery Rock Area Sch. Dist., 983 A.2d at 1241 (citation modified).
    30    W. Virginia v. Env’t Prot. Agency, 
    142 S. Ct. 2587
    , 2609 (2022) (quoting Ernest
    Gellhorn & Paul Verkuil, Controlling Chevron-Based Delegations, 20 CARDOZO L. REV.
    989, 1011 (1999)).
    [J-55-2022] [MO: Donohue, J.] - 7
    regulations are “consistent with the statute under which they were promulgated.”31 Yet,
    an agency empowered to implement a statute through its legislative rulemaking
    prerogative must be allowed the flexibility to do so without fear that a court may strike
    down its properly promulgated regulations merely because the court differs with the
    agency on some minor point of statutory interpretation. 32        As we previously have
    explained, “substantive rulemaking is a widely used administrative practice, and its use
    should be upheld whenever the statutory delegation can reasonably be construed to
    authorize it.” 33 This does not mean that we must afford unqualified “deference” to an
    agency’s statutory interpretation—a jurisprudential shortcut of which I continue to
    disapprove. 34 But it does mean that, in conducting our own statutory construction, we
    must maintain a “healthy judicial respect” for the intent of the General Assembly to imbue
    the agency with rulemaking authority, as expressed in the enabling statute. 35 In practice,
    when a statute is equally amenable to two constructions—one that would permit the
    agency’s regulation and one that would not—any “deference” to the agency effectively
    should take the form of a “tiebreaker,” rather than any substantive limitation upon the
    court’s duty and prerogative to independently interpret the statute. 36
    31     Slippery Rock Area Sch. Dist., 983 A.2d at 1241.
    32     Accord Tire Jockey, 915 A.2d at 1186 (“To demonstrate that the agency has
    exceeded its administrative authority, ‘it is not enough that the prescribed system of
    accounts shall appear to be unwise or burdensome or inferior to another. Error or lack of
    wisdom in exercising agency power is not equivalent to abuse.’” (quoting Hous. Auth. of
    Cnty. of Chester v. Pa. State Civil Ser. Comm’n, 
    730 A.2d 935
    , 942 (Pa. 1999)).
    33     Eagle Env’t, 884 A.2d at 877.
    34     See supra n.4 and the cases cited therein.
    35     Snyder Bros., 198 A.3d at 1083 (Wecht, J., concurring).
    36    See id. (Wecht, J., concurring) (“Statutory interpretation is an important part of the
    work that we do. We do not subcontract that interpretive enterprise to administrative
    agencies.”).
    [J-55-2022] [MO: Donohue, J.] - 8
    Turning to the instant case, as the Lead Opinion details, we are asked to determine
    whether the Agencies were empowered to add certain items to the list of “public
    resources” identified in Section 3215(c) of Act 13, 37 and to provide a definition for one of
    the undefined terms in that list. As our previous cases teach, the analysis begins with the
    enabling statute. Section 3274 provides that the “Environmental Quality Board shall
    promulgate regulations to implement this chapter.” 38       Unquestionably, this provision
    grants the EQB regulatory authority over the chapter in which Section 3215(c) appears. 39
    Critically, Section 3215(c) provides that the relevant “public resources” include, but
    are not limited to, those identified in the statutory list. 40    This is an unambiguous
    37     58 Pa.C.S. § 3215(c).
    38     58 Pa.C.S. § 3274.
    39     As the Lead Opinion highlights, another subsection of Section 3215 also
    specifically directs the EQB to “develop by regulation criteria” for the Department to utilize
    when “conditioning a well permit based on its impact to the public resources identified
    under subsection (c) and for ensuring optimal development of oil and gas resources and
    respecting property rights of oil and gas owners.” 58 Pa.C.S. § 3215(e)(1); see Lead Op.
    at 29.
    40     Although the Lead Opinion twice reproduces the Section 3215(c) list of public
    resources in its Opinion, see Lead Op. at 3-4 & 28 n.10, I likewise include it here for ease
    of reference:
    (c) Impact.--On making a determination on a well permit, the department
    shall consider the impact of the proposed well on public resources,
    including, but not limited to:
    (1) Publicly owned parks, forests, game lands and wildlife areas.
    (2) National or State scenic rivers.
    (3) National natural landmarks.
    (4) Habitats of rare and endangered flora and fauna and other critical
    communities.
    (5) Historical and archaeological sites listed on the Federal or State
    list of historic places.
    (continued…)
    [J-55-2022] [MO: Donohue, J.] - 9
    expression of the General Assembly’s intent that the list it provided is nonexclusive. 41
    And as Section 3274, the enabling statute, vests in the EQB the authority to promulgate
    regulations to implement Section 3215, it is clear that the EQB is the entity empowered
    to add items, through its rulemaking power, to the nonexclusive statutory list.
    This much is uncontroversial, and I discern no basis for disagreement between the
    Lead Opinion and myself up to this point in the analysis. Where I part ways with the Lead
    Opinion is in its identification of “the factor” that it deems “decisive in ascertaining
    legislative intent.”42 The Lead Opinion, echoing a comment made by the Commonwealth
    Court below, concludes that the General Assembly’s reference to “public resources” in
    Section 3215(c) is “rooted in” the ERA. 43 Although the Lead Opinion concedes that the
    “ERA’s conception of ‘public resources’ . . . is broad and undefined,”44 and indeed
    suggests that it is “perhaps impossible” to “definitively resolve what would qualify as a
    ‘public resource’” under the ERA, 45 the Lead Opinion nonetheless finds that the General
    Assembly clearly intended to incorporate into Section 3215(c) all that this (purportedly)
    constitutional phrase is meant to encompass.
    (6) Sources used for public drinking supplies in accordance with
    subsection (b).
    58 Pa.C.S. § 3215(c)(1)-(6) (emphasis added).
    41     See Dep’t of Env’t Prot. v. Cumberland Coal Res., LP, 
    102 A.3d 962
    , 976 (Pa.
    2014) (“[I]t is widely accepted that general expressions such as ‘including,’ or ‘including
    but not limited to,’ that precede a specific list of included items are to be considered as
    words of enlargement and not limitation.”).
    42     Lead Op. at 31.
    43     
    Id.
    44     Id. at 36.
    45     Id. at 33.
    [J-55-2022] [MO: Donohue, J.] - 10
    The principal problem with this rationale is that, despite its repeated invocation of
    “the ERA’s conception of ‘public resources,’” 46 the Lead Opinion glosses over the fact
    that the ERA does not, in fact, refer to “public resources.” Rather, the ERA speaks of
    “public natural resources.” 47     This reveals an obvious flaw in the Lead Opinion’s
    reasoning. Its attempt to find symmetry between the statute’s use of the phrase “public
    resources” and the ERA’s use of the phrase “public natural resources” fails to account for
    the General Assembly’s inclusion of plainly “non-natural” resources within Section
    3215(c).    Specifically, among the “public resources” listed in Section 3215(c) are
    “[h]istorical and archaeological sites listed on the Federal or State list of historic places.”48
    To appreciate just how “non-natural” many of the items which fall into this category
    are, one need only consult the National Register of Historic Places, as maintained by the
    National Park Service. 49 As just a very small sampling of such historic sites located in
    Pennsylvania, consider whether the following constitute public natural resources within
    the meaning of the Environmental Rights Amendment: the Smithfield Street Bridge in
    Pittsburgh; the Ajax Metal Company Plant in Philadelphia; the Hampden Fire House in
    Reading; the King of Prussia Inn in King of Prussia; the Stegmaier Brewery in Wilkes-
    Barre; or the Merion Cricket Club in Haverford. It appears to me that these places are
    not of the sort intended to be protected under the ERA, which speaks of our citizens’ right
    46     Id. at 34, 36, 41.
    47     See PA. CONST. art. I, § 27 (emphasis added); supra n.2.
    48     58 Pa.C.S. § 3215(c)(5).
    49      See National Register of Historic Places, National Register Database and
    Research, https://www.nps.gov/subjects/nationalregister/database-research.htm (last
    visited April 14, 2023).
    [J-55-2022] [MO: Donohue, J.] - 11
    to “clean air,” “pure water,” and the “natural, scenic, historic and esthetic values of the
    environment.” 50
    The Lead Opinion identifies a similar example but does not acknowledge this
    inconsistency.     In its effort to demonstrate the error in the Commonwealth Court’s
    conclusion that Section 3215(c) cannot include items of “purely private property,” the Lead
    Opinion points to Fallingwater, Frank Lloyd Wright’s feat of architectural design in Fayette
    County. 51   Because Fallingwater is owned by a private nonprofit conservation
    organization, yet clearly is encompassed within Section 3215(c)(5)’s reference to
    federally listed historic places, the Lead Opinion concludes that items falling within the
    Section 3215(c) list need not be publicly owned. 52 I wholly agree. But what the Lead
    Opinion fails to acknowledge is that the inclusion of Fallingwater—an impressive
    manmade structure—just as persuasively demonstrates that items falling within Section
    3215(c) also need not be “natural.”53 Necessarily, then, such items need not be “public
    natural resources” within the meaning of the ERA. 54
    50      PA. CONST. art. I, § 27. See also Robinson Township v. Commonwealth, 
    83 A.3d 901
    , 955 (Pa. 2013) (plurality) (stating that the ERA’s “concept of public natural resources
    includes not only state-owned lands, waterways, and mineral reserves, but also resources
    that implicate the public interest, such as ambient air, surface and ground water, wild
    flora, and fauna”).
    51     Lead Op. at 34.
    52     
    Id.
     (concluding that the Section 3215(c) list “does not neatly break down into ‘purely
    private’ and ‘purely public’ categories”).
    53     The Lead Opinion expresses shock that I might suggest that Fallingwater is not a
    “natural resource” within the meaning of the ERA. Id. at 35-36. Heretic though I may be,
    it cannot escape my notice that Fallingwater is a house. It is a beautiful house, indeed,
    but scenic beauty does not transform a house into a “natural resource.”
    54     The Lead Opinion contends that the constitutional meaning of “public natural
    resources” is not “cabined by natural or man-made categories.” Id. at 35. It is puzzling,
    to say the least, to suggest that “natural resources” need not be “natural.”
    [J-55-2022] [MO: Donohue, J.] - 12
    Put simply, equating Section 3215(c) with the ERA is underinclusive. It fails to
    explain the General Assembly’s inclusion of items within Section 3215(c) that would not
    fall within the ERA. 55 Although the Lead Opinion refers to the “ERA’s conception of ‘public
    resources’” (omitting the word “natural”) as “embracing ‘broadly defined values of the
    environment,’” and stresses that those include “historic and esthetic values,” 56 I doubt
    that anyone would believe that such values of the environment, however broadly defined,
    would encompass a steel truss bridge, a metal plant, or a country club.              Yet, as
    demonstrated above, these and many more such “non-natural” structures nonetheless
    fall within Section 3215(c)(5).
    After stuffing Section 3215(c) into the ERA’s ill-fitting clothes, the Lead Opinion
    takes the next major analytical step with which I differ. It declares that the statutory
    construction doctrine of ejusdem generis “plays no role in the statutory analysis.” 57 This
    follows from its previous conclusion, the Lead Opinion explains, because the term “‘public
    resources’ already has a defined meaning within the statutory framework of the Oil and
    Gas Act: public resources as understood by the ERA.” 58, 59 The Lead Opinion jettisons
    55     To be clear, I do not, as the Lead Opinion surmises, suggest that the ERA has
    absolutely nothing to do with the items listed in Section 3215(c). See id. I recognize that
    protection of natural resources “secured by the Constitution of Pennsylvania” is one of
    the legislative purposes specified in Act 13. 58 Pa.C.S. § 3202(4). Where I differ with
    the Lead Opinion is that I merely recognize that Section 3215(c) is broader than the ERA,
    because it clearly contains items that are not, in any sense, natural resources.
    56     Lead Op. at 34 (quoting Robinson Twp. 83 A.3d at 951).
    57     Id. at 39.
    58     Id. at 40.
    59      Even under the Lead Opinion’s account of Section 3215(c) and the ERA, the utility
    of its approach is questionable given its acknowledgment that the constitutional term
    “public . . . resources” is “broad and undefined” and perhaps incapable of comprehensive
    definition. PA. CONST. art. I, § 27; Lead Op. at 33, 36. If the constitutional standard is too
    broad to effectively define, then query what is gained by incorporating this purportedly
    “defined meaning” into Section 3215(c). Lead Op. at 40.
    [J-55-2022] [MO: Donohue, J.] - 13
    the ordinary tools of statutory interpretation in favor of the importation of a constitutional
    standard that, as I have explained above, fails to account for all of the items listed in
    Section 3215(c).
    I would not be so quick to discard ejusdem generis. It is true that we have held
    that the doctrine “must yield in any instance in which its effect would be to confine the
    operation of a statute within narrower limits than those intended by the General Assembly
    when it was enacted.” 60 This caveat is well-taken; however, we must remember that
    doctrines such as ejusdem generis are merely tools that we employ to ascertain
    legislative intent in the first place. 61 And as many of our precedents indicate, ejusdem
    generis is the preferred tool when we seek to determine whether a given item may be
    added to an “including but not limited to” list, like the one found in Section 3215(c). 62,   63
    The Lead Opinion states that Section 3215(c) contains “six specific items that do
    not share any obvious commonalities.” 64 Although this is perhaps true if one seeks to
    60     Friends of Danny DeVito v. Wolf, 
    227 A.3d 872
    , 889 (Pa. 2020).
    61     
    Id.
     (describing ejusdem generis as a “useful tool of statutory construction” which is
    “used for the sole purpose of determining the intent of the General Assembly”).
    62     See Cumberland Coal Res., 102 A.3d at 976.
    63     In its effort to reject ejusdem generis, the Lead Opinion makes an additional
    comment that could prove perilous for future cases, and from which I must distance
    myself. It cites Cumberland Coal Resources for the proposition that ejusdem generis
    applies to “definitional” sections, and rejects its use here because “[t]his is not a situation
    where Section 3215(c) can plausibly be interpreted as a definitional section . . . .” Lead
    Op. at 40. But the application of ejusdem generis, to my knowledge, has never been
    limited strictly to statutory language that defines a term. Rather, the doctrine applies
    “where general words follow the enumeration of particular classes of persons or things,”
    such that additional items must be “of the same general nature or class as those
    enumerated.” McClellan v. Health Maint. Org. of Pennsylvania, 
    686 A.2d 801
    , 806 (Pa.
    1996). Such “enumeration” need not be in the form of a definition, and the Lead Opinion’s
    suggestion of the contrary poses a risk of introducing substantial confusion into our
    statutory construction jurisprudence.
    64     Lead Op. at 33.
    [J-55-2022] [MO: Donohue, J.] - 14
    find one single commonality that all six items share, I do not view this as precluding an
    ejusdem generis analysis. It is true that the items listed in Section 3215(c) defy universal
    categorization as “public” or “private,” as the Lead Opinion aptly explains. And as I have
    shown above, they likewise cannot all be understood to be “natural resources” within the
    meaning of the ERA. But the doctrine of ejusdem generis expressly instructs us to view
    the statutory enumeration with a level of generality—that we must consider the “general
    nature or class” of the items enumerated. 65 As our Superior Court explained well over a
    century ago:
    But in applying this principle of construction, and in determining what things
    are ejusdem generis, regard must be had to the general subject to which
    the act relates. Things which plainly belong to the same class when one
    subject is being considered might belong to an entirely different class when
    considered with reference to another subject. The rule would be absurd if
    under the head “other” no thing can be included in the construction of the
    act which is not exactly the same in every particular as the thing specified.
    Nor has it been so applied. 66
    Moreover, I have found no precedent indicating that a court applying ejusdem generis
    necessarily must reduce a statutory list to a single commonality. Indeed, to do so may,
    in some circumstances, obscure the General Assembly’s true intent by prioritizing
    superficial similarities over meaningful classifications. There is no requirement that the
    General Assembly confine its legislative efforts to precisely one category or class per
    statutory list.   It follows that, where the statutory language so suggests, a court
    undertaking an ejusdem generis analysis may recognize that a statutory enumeration
    contains multiple classes of items, and may determine whether additional items are
    permissible by ascertaining whether they fall within one of the enumerated categories,
    65     Cumberland Coal Res., 102 A.3d at 976; McClellan, 686 A.2d at 806.
    66     Weiss v. Swift & Co., 
    36 Pa. Super. 376
    , 386-87 (Pa. Super. 1908).
    [J-55-2022] [MO: Donohue, J.] - 15
    i.e., that they are “similar to those listed by the legislature and of the same general class
    or nature.” 67
    This brings me to the challenged definitions contained within the regulations at
    issue. The Marcellus Shale Coalition (“MSC”) challenged: the Agencies’ inclusion of
    “common areas on a school’s property” and “playgrounds” as “public resources”; the
    Agencies’ definition of the statutory term “other critical communities”; and the Agencies’
    definition of “public resource agencies” as including “municipalities” and “playground
    owners.” 68 As the Lead Opinion explains, these definitions are a part of the Agencies’
    regulatory scheme for implementing Section 3215(c). Under the regulations, an applicant
    proposing to drill an unconventional gas well within a specified distance of one of the
    listed “public resources” is obligated to provide notice to the “public resource agency”
    responsible for managing that public resource, as well as to the Department, which will
    consider, inter alia, the comments and recommendations of the “public resource agency”
    in connection with the application. 69
    As it concerns the definition that the Agencies provided for “other critical
    communities,” 70 as that term appears in Section 3215(c)(4), the question of the Agencies’
    67     Cumberland Coal Res., 102 A.3d at 976.
    68     See 25 Pa. Code §§ 78a.1, 78a.15(f)-(g).
    69     See 25 Pa. Code § 78a.15(f)-(g).
    70     The regulatory definition of “other critical communities” is:
    Other critical communities --
    (i) Species of special concern identified on a [Pennsylvania National
    Diversity (“PNDI”)] receipt, including plant or animal species:
    (A) In a proposed status categorized as proposed endangered,
    proposed threatened, proposed rare or candidate.
    (B) That are classified as rare or tentatively undetermined.
    (continued…)
    [J-55-2022] [MO: Donohue, J.] - 16
    statutory authority is straightforward. This is a term that the General Assembly included
    within Section 3215(c), but did not define. As highlighted above, Section 3274 gives the
    EQB authority to promulgate regulations to implement, inter alia, Section 3215(c). 71 This
    enabling provision is “broad and encompasses the delegated legislative power to define
    by regulation terms otherwise undefined by the statute.” 72 Plainly, providing a definition
    for such an undefined term is “within the agency’s granted power.” 73
    With regard to “common areas of a school’s property” and “playgrounds,” my views
    substantially align with the thoughtful Concurring and Dissenting Opinion authored in a
    previous iteration of this case, where this Court upheld a preliminary injunction that the
    Commonwealth Court issued to enjoin the challenged portions of the regulations. 74
    Importantly, the regulations define both “common areas of a school’s property” and
    “playgrounds” such that only areas which are open to the “general public for recreational
    purposes” are included. 75 As discussed above, our task is, at least in part, to determine
    whether these items are consistent with the “public resources” listed in Section 3215(c).
    By ejusdem generis, we may conclude that “common areas of a school’s property” and
    “playgrounds” are of the same general nature or class as at least one of the items listed
    (ii) The term does not include threatened and endangered species.
    25 Pa. Code § 78a.1.
    71     58 Pa.C.S. § 3274.
    72     Slippery Rock Area Sch. Dist., 983 A.2d at 1239.
    73     Tire Jockey, 915 A.2d at 1186.
    74    See Marcellus Shale Coal. v. Dep’t of Env’t Prot., 
    185 A.3d 985
    , 1009-11 (Pa.
    2018) (MSC II) (Donohue, J., concurring and dissenting).
    75     See 25 Pa. Code § 78a.1 (defining “common areas of a school’s property,” in
    relevant part, as “[a]n area on a school’s property accessible to the general public for
    recreational purposes”); id. (defining “playground,” in relevant part, as “[a]n outdoor area
    provided to the general public for recreational purposes”).
    [J-55-2022] [MO: Donohue, J.] - 17
    in Section 3215(c)—that of “publicly owned parks.” 76 As the minority opinion cogently
    explained in MSC II, these “resources share common characteristics, as the general
    public utilizes them in precisely the same way (for recreation).”77 To this I would add that
    other places listed in Section 3215(c) are commonly used by the public for recreation as
    well, namely publicly owned “forests,” “game lands,” and “scenic rivers,” which the public
    uses for outdoor recreational activities such as hiking, camping, hunting, fishing, and
    boating. 78 Accordingly, inclusion of additional outdoor public recreational spaces falls
    within the Agencies’ granted power to expand upon the nonexclusive list provided in
    Section 3215(c), as signaled through the phrase “including, but not limited to.”79
    And finally, the Agencies possessed the power to define a “public resource
    agency” as including “playground owners” and “municipalities.”80 As the Lead Opinion
    explains, the conclusion that the Agencies were authorized to include “playground
    owners” within the definition of a “public resource agency” follows from the determination
    that the Agencies were authorized to define “playgrounds” as “public resources.” 81 With
    76     58 Pa.C.S. § 3215(c)(1).
    77     MSC II, 185 A.3d at 1009 (Donohue, J., concurring and dissenting).
    78     See 58 Pa.C.S. § 3215(c)(1) (including publicly owned “forests” and “game lands”);
    id. § 3215(c)(2) (including “National or State scenic rivers”).
    79     58 Pa.C.S. § 3215(c).
    80     See 25 Pa. Code § 78a.1 (defining “public resource agency” as “[a]n entity
    responsible for managing a public resource identified in § 78a.15(d) or (f)(1) (relating to
    application requirements) including the Department of Conservation and Natural
    Resources, the Fish and Boat Commission, the Game Commission, the United States
    Fish and Wildlife Service, the United States National Park Service, the United States
    Army Corps of Engineers, the United States Forest Service, counties, municipalities and
    playground owners.”) (emphasis added).
    81    See Lead Op. at 59 (“[O]ur determination that a ‘playground’ is a valid public
    resource effectively resolves this legal challenge because the ‘owner’ of that resource is
    responsible for it.”).
    [J-55-2022] [MO: Donohue, J.] - 18
    regard to the inclusion of “municipalities,” MSC’s argument goes that, because this Court
    in Robinson Township struck down Section 3215(d), 82 which stated that the Department
    “may” consider the comments of municipalities in connection with a well permit (because
    such consideration was facially optional rather than mandatory), the regulation’s provision
    mandating such consideration now lacks statutory authority. But the Agencies’ power to
    promulgate binding regulations does not emanate from that now-invalidated subsection.
    Rather, the Agencies’ power derives from the enabling provision, Section 3274. It is
    undisputed that the Agencies had the power to define “public resource agencies” to
    include, e.g., the Department of Conservation and Natural Resources, the Fish and Boat
    Commission, the Game Commission, the United States Fish and Wildlife Service, etc. 83
    The Agencies’ authority to include these entities in the definition of a “public resource
    agency” follows from their general authority to implement the statute, which calls upon
    the Department to “consider the impact of the proposed well on public resources.”84
    Soliciting the comments of these entities is merely the mechanism by which the Agencies
    seek to comply with this mandate. And just as the Agencies are empowered by the
    general grant of rulemaking authority to include the above-listed entities in the definition
    82     Section 3215(d) provided:
    (d) Consideration of municipality and storage operator comments.--
    The department may consider the comments submitted under section
    3212.1 (relating to comments by municipalities and storage operators) in
    making a determination on a well permit. Notwithstanding any other law, no
    municipality or storage operator shall have a right of appeal or other form of
    review from the department’s decision.
    58 Pa.C.S. § 3215(d) (emphasis added). This subsection was held unconstitutional under
    the ERA in Robinson Township. See Robinson Twp., 83 A.3d at 984.
    83     See 25 Pa. Code § 78a.1.
    84     58 Pa.C.S. § 3215(c).
    [J-55-2022] [MO: Donohue, J.] - 19
    of “public resource agencies,” so too are they empowered to include “municipalities.” The
    now-invalid Section 3215(d) effectively is irrelevant to the issue of the Agencies’ authority.
    For these reasons, I conclude that all of the challenged definitions were “adopted
    within the agency’s granted power,” and thus satisfy the first prong of the Tire Jockey
    test. 85 All that remains is the final prong—whether those definitions are “reasonable.” 86
    II. Reasonableness
    Our test for the validity of a legislative rule frames the “reasonableness” inquiry in
    highly deferential terms:
    In deciding whether an agency action, such as promulgation of a legislative
    regulation, is reasonable, we are not at liberty to substitute [our] own
    discretion for that of administrative officers who have kept within the bounds
    of their administrative powers. To show that these have been exceeded in
    the field of action involved, it is not enough that [the agency’s regulation]
    shall appear to be unwise or burdensome or inferior to another. Error or
    unwisdom is not equivalent to abuse. What has been ordered must appear
    to be so entirely at odds with fundamental principles as to be the expression
    of a whim rather than an exercise of judgment. 87
    We have added that, “[r]egarding the reasonableness prong, ‘appellate courts accord
    deference to agencies and reverse agency determinations only if they were made in bad
    faith or if they constituted a manifest or flagrant abuse of discretion or a purely arbitrary
    execution of the agency’s duties or functions.” 88
    This standard appears to me to be more exacting than a mere inquiry into
    “reasonableness,” and may be more accurately characterized as a test for “irrational”
    85     Tire Jockey, 915 A.2d at 1186.
    86     Id.
    87      Slippery Rock Area Sch. Dist., 983 A.2d at 1242 (quoting Uniontown Area Sch.
    Dist., 313 A.2d at 169).
    88  Tire Jockey, 915 A.2d at 1186 (quoting Rohrbaugh v. Pennsylvania Pub. Util.
    Comm’n, 
    727 A.2d 1080
    , 1085 (Pa. 1999)).
    [J-55-2022] [MO: Donohue, J.] - 20
    agency action. “Reasonable” minds may sometimes differ as to whether a given action
    is “reasonable” under the circumstances. In asking instead whether a regulation is based
    upon a “whim,” or “purely arbitrary,” or “entirely at odds with fundamental principles,” we
    seem to be asking for something more.          Indeed, these characterizations echo the
    “arbitrary and capricious” standard by which the federal courts assess agency action,
    which contains a component of “rational connection” between an agency’s choice and the
    facts upon which it is based. 89
    I find no indication that the challenged definitions reflect an expression of the
    Agencies’ “whim,” constitute a “flagrant abuse of discretion,” are “purely arbitrary,” or may
    be deemed “entirely at odds with fundamental principles.” In this regard, my views align
    substantially with the reasoning offered by the Lead Opinion. 90           Much of MSC’s
    arguments on this prong reduce to an assertion that it will be onerous to comply with the
    notice requirements established by the regulations. As the above-quoted standard makes
    abundantly clear, however, the mere fact that a regulation may impose a burden does not
    render it “unreasonable” for purposes of the Tire Jockey test.
    III. The PNDI Problem
    As noted above, I agree with the Lead Opinion that it was within the Agencies’
    granted authority to provide a definition for the undefined statutory term “other critical
    communities.”    But I also agree with Justice Mundy that the definition chosen is
    89      See Motor Vehicle Mfrs. Ass’n of U.S., Inc. v. State Farm Mut. Auto. Ins. Co., 
    463 U.S. 29
    , 43 (1983) (“The scope of review under the ‘arbitrary and capricious’ standard is
    narrow and a court is not to substitute its judgment for that of the agency. Nevertheless,
    the agency must examine the relevant data and articulate a satisfactory explanation for
    its action including a ‘rational connection between the facts found and the choice made.’”
    (quoting Burlington Truck Lines v. United States, 
    371 U.S. 156
    , 168 (1962)).
    90     See Lead Op. at 56-58.
    [J-55-2022] [MO: Donohue, J.] - 21
    problematic. 91 I quoted the definition in full above. 92 The offending portion defines “other
    critical communities” to include: “Species of special concern identified on a PNDI
    receipt . . . .” 93 The PNDI—the Pennsylvania Natural Diversity Inventory—is a database
    that other agencies use to list plant and animal species classified as threatened,
    endangered, or otherwise warranting special consideration or protection (“other critical
    communities,” as the Agencies use the term). 94
    As MSC, the Commonwealth Court, and Justice Mundy explain, the defect in the
    procedure that the regulation envisions is that species can be added to or subtracted from
    the PNDI by entities other than the Agencies, without going through the formal notice-
    and-comment rulemaking process. By defining the term “other critical communities” to
    include “whatever the PNDI says,” the Agencies have adopted what is, in effect, a method
    of backdoor regulating by which entries into a database are given the force of law without
    meeting the requirements necessary to become lawful regulations.
    91     See Diss. Op. at 6-8 (Mundy, J.)
    92     See supra n.70.
    93     25 Pa. Code § 78a.1.
    94     The regulation defines “PNDI” as:
    The Pennsylvania Natural Heritage Program's database containing data
    identifying and describing this Commonwealth's ecological information,
    including plant and animal species classified as threatened and endangered
    as well as other critical communities provided by the Department of
    Conservation and Natural Resources, the Fish and Boat Commission, the
    Game Commission and the United States Fish and Wildlife Service. The
    database informs the online environmental review tool. The database
    contains only those known occurrences of threatened and endangered
    species and other critical communities, and is a component of the
    Pennsylvania Conservation Explorer.
    25 Pa. Code § 78a.1. A PNDI receipt is defined as: “The results generated by the
    Pennsylvania Natural Diversity Inventory Environmental Review Tool containing
    information regarding threatened and endangered species and other critical
    communities.” Id.
    [J-55-2022] [MO: Donohue, J.] - 22
    Although it implicates a distinct legal doctrine, the challenged definition is
    reminiscent of the problem that we confronted in Protz v. Workers’ Compensation Appeal
    Board (Derry Area School District). 95 There, we concluded that the statutory incorporation
    of the “most recent addition” of the American Medical Association’s Guides to the
    Evaluation of Permanent Impairment, which was to be used to determine an injured
    employee’s degree of impairment for purposes of workers’ compensation, was a violation
    of the non-delegation doctrine because it outsourced the General Assembly’s policy-
    making responsibility to the future discretion of another entity. 96 By adopting future
    editions of the Guides without knowing what they would even contain, the General
    Assembly allowed another entity to make the essential policy choices and, in effect, to
    write the law of this Commonwealth. Importantly, we clarified that “the non-delegation
    doctrine does not prevent the General Assembly from adopting as its own a particular set
    of standards which already are in existence at the time of adoption.” 97 But it does prohibit
    the legislature from “incorporating, sight unseen, subsequent modifications to such
    standards without also providing adequate criteria to guide and restrain the exercise of
    the delegated authority.” 98
    The issue before us here differs inasmuch as it concerns not the General
    Assembly’s delegation of its lawmaking authority, but rather the Agencies’ delegation of
    its rulemaking prerogative. The theory behind MSC’s challenge, moreover, is not non-
    delegation, but rather an asserted violation of the procedural requirements for
    promulgating regulations. But a Protz analogy remains instructive. The definition of
    95     
    161 A.3d 827
     (Pa. 2017).
    96     Id. at 833-38.
    97     Id. at 838.
    98     Id. at 839.
    [J-55-2022] [MO: Donohue, J.] - 23
    “other critical communities” essentially represents a delegation of a delegation. The
    General Assembly delegated rulemaking power to the Agencies.                  The Agencies
    delegated that power to the PNDI database. In the language of Protz, the Agencies are
    “incorporating, sight unseen, subsequent modifications” to the PNDI database. 99 And,
    more to MSC’s point, they are doing so without attending to the procedural requirements,
    prospectively transforming “each revision of the special concern species listed in the
    PNDI database [into] an unlawful amendment to the Chapter 78a regulation.” 100
    The Agencies’ rejoinder, which the Lead Opinion essentially adopts, is that
    although the PNDI database may vary over time and the results of its consultation may
    differ with respect to different sites, the process of using the PNDI database remains
    constant. 101   Thus, their argument goes, only that process needed to be formally
    promulgated. But this is not responsive to MSC’s point. When any given species is added
    to the PNDI database as a species of special concern, the regulation imposes binding
    requirements upon applicants with respect to that species, notwithstanding the fact that
    the addition was not subject to notice-and-comment rulemaking.
    IV. Conclusion
    In light of the foregoing, although I differ with much of the Lead Opinion’s rationale,
    I nonetheless agree with its decision to reverse the order of the Commonwealth Court
    with regard to all but one of the challenged definitions. As it concerns the definition of
    99     Id.
    100    MSC’s Br. at 51.
    101    See Agencies’ Br. at 42 (“The process set forth in subsection 78a.15(f) requiring
    use of the PNDI tool is not ‘ever-changing.’ It is static.”) (emphasis in original); Lead Op.
    at 45 (“[T]he Agencies gave appropriate public notice of the manner in which species of
    special concern were to be identified for purposes of information gathering in the pre-
    permitting stages of unconventional oil and gas wells. While the PNDI receipt information
    may vary by site and over time, the basis for inclusion in the statutorily mandated
    database does not.”).
    [J-55-2022] [MO: Donohue, J.] - 24
    “other critical communities” and its incorporation of the PNDI database, I find a fatal
    procedural defect, and I would thus affirm the Commonwealth’s Court’s decision on that
    narrow point.
    I thus respectfully concur in part and dissent in part.
    [J-55-2022] [MO: Donohue, J.] - 25
    

Document Info

Docket Number: 69 MAP 2021

Judges: Justice David Wecht

Filed Date: 4/19/2023

Precedential Status: Precedential

Modified Date: 4/19/2023