Pennsylvania State Police, Bureau of Liquor Control Enforcement v. Legion Post 304 Home Ass'n ( 2017 )


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  •              IN THE COMMONWEALTH COURT OF PENNSYLVANIA
    Pennsylvania State Police, Bureau            :
    of Liquor Control Enforcement,               :
    Appellant                 :
    :
    v.                           :   No. 550 C.D. 2016
    :   Argued: April 20, 2017
    Legion Post 304 Home Association             :
    BEFORE:         HONORABLE MARY HANNAH LEAVITT, President Judge
    HONORABLE JOSEPH M. COSGROVE, Judge
    HONORABLE JAMES GARDNER COLINS, Senior Judge
    OPINION
    BY PRESIDENT JUDGE LEAVITT                                           FILED: June 15, 2017
    The    Pennsylvania      State   Police,   Bureau     of   Liquor   Control
    Enforcement (State Police) appeal an order of the Court of Common Pleas of
    Carbon County (trial court) holding that Legion Post 304 Home Association
    (Licensee) conducted games of small chance and bingo after its licenses expired, in
    violation of the Local Option Small Games of Chance Act1 and the Bingo Law.2 In
    doing so, the trial court affirmed a decision of the Liquor Control Board. The trial
    court also affirmed the decision of the Board that “Bonanza Bingo,” which was
    offered two days a week by Licensee, was a lawful form of bingo. The trial court
    remanded the matter to the Administrative Law Judge (ALJ) to impose penalties
    on Licensee for its license violations, and the ALJ imposed a penalty of $700. The
    State Police have appealed the trial court’s decision that Licensee’s “Bonanza
    Bingo” is a lawful form of bingo.
    1
    Act of December 19, 1988, P.L. 1262, as amended, 10 P.S. §§328.101 – 328.915.
    2
    Act of July 10, 1981, P.L. 214, as amended, 10 P.S. §§301-308.1.
    On or about April 28, 2013, State Police Officer William J.
    Rosenstock, incognito, went to Licensee’s premises, where he purchased two
    Bonanza Bingo tickets. The bartender explained how to play: “[T]here’s a master
    sheet which [is] sitting at the bar. You compare your tickets … to the master sheet
    … and you win the corresponding … prizes.” Notes of Testimony, 6/5/2014, at 33
    (N.T., 6/5/2014, __); Reproduced Record at 43a (R.R. __). Officer Rosenstock
    played his tickets and left without winning a prize.
    On August 26, 2013, Officer Rosenstock returned, this time to
    conduct a routine inspection. Officer Rosenstock noted that Licensee’s small
    games of chance license, which was displayed on the wall, had expired on April 4,
    2013. He also discovered that Licensee’s bingo license expired on August 20,
    2013. Based on information provided by Licensee, Officer Rosenstock found that
    Licensee had conducted small games of chance, including the Bonanza Bingo
    game, from April 5, 2013, through August 26, 2013.
    On January 13, 2014, Officer Rosenstock issued Citation No. 13-2097
    to Licensee. Count One charged violations of the Local Option Small Games of
    Chance Act and the Department of Revenue’s implementing regulation during the
    period from April 5, 2013, through August 17, 2013.                     Count Two charged
    violations of the Liquor Code3 and the Bingo Law for the period from April 28,
    2013, to August 26, 2013.
    At the June 5, 2014, hearing, Officer Rosenstock established the
    above-described narrative of the State Police investigation and citation issued to
    3
    Act of April 12, 1951, P.L. 90, as amended, 47 P.S. §§1-101 – 10-1001.
    2
    Licensee. Keith McQuait, commander of Legion Post 304 Home, then testified for
    Licensee.
    McQuait explained that Licensee offers bingo games on Sundays and
    Tuesdays. Those who play purchase a “Bonanza Bingo” card for $1.00 each. The
    player compares the purchased card to the master board to determine whether he
    has a winning combination.
    The ALJ dismissed the State Police citation in its entirety. The ALJ
    held that the citation was too poorly drafted to provide adequate notice and, thus,
    offended due process. The ALJ dismissed Count Two for the additional reason
    that “Licensee’s method of playing bingo, however untraditional,” was a lawful
    form of bingo. R.R. 127a.
    The State Police appealed to the Liquor Control Board, which
    reversed the ALJ, in part. The Board concluded that the ALJ erred in dismissing
    the entire citation on due process grounds because Licensee did not raise that issue;
    it was error for the ALJ to raise the issue sua sponte. With respect to Count One,
    the Board found that Licensee had violated the Small Games of Chance Act by
    offering these games after its license expired. With respect to Count Two, the
    Board found that Licensee had violated the Bingo Law by offering Bonanza Bingo
    after its bingo license had expired. Finally, the Board concluded that the definition
    of the word “bingo” under the Bingo Law was “intentionally broad” and, as such,
    authorized “Bonanza Bingo.” Liquor Control Board Decision, 11/19/2014, at 10.
    The Liquor Control Board remanded the matter to the ALJ to impose a penalty on
    Licensee for conducting games after its licenses had expired. The State Police
    requested reconsideration from the Board, but the request was denied.
    3
    Thereafter, the State Police appealed to the trial court, arguing that the
    Liquor Control Board erred in holding that “Bonanza Bingo” did not meet the
    definition of “bingo” in Section 3 of the Bingo Law.4 The trial court held a
    hearing.
    The State Police did not offer new evidence; rather, it presented legal
    arguments on the meaning of “bingo.”                Licensee presented testimony from
    McQuait, who explained the mechanics of Bonanza Bingo. A large master board
    sits at one end of the bar with the word “Bingo” printed at the top. Below each
    letter are five numbers (with one “free” in the middle) handwritten by the
    bartender. He writes new numbers daily, which are chosen by patrons from a deck
    of cards and read to the bartender. Throughout the day patrons can purchase a
    sealed bingo card for $1.00. Patrons then compare the numbers on their bingo card
    to those posted on the master board. If their bingo card creates a “bingo” match to
    the master card, they win a prize.
    The trial court concluded that Bonanza Bingo met the statutory
    definition of “bingo.” It rejected the State Police argument that Bonanza Bingo
    4
    It defines “bingo” as follows:
    A game in which each player has a card or board containing five horizontal rows
    all but the central one containing five figures. The central row has four figures
    with the word “free” marked in the center thereof. Any preannounced
    combination of spaces when completed by a player constitutes bingo. In the
    absence of a preannouncement of a combination of spaces, any combination of
    five in a row whether horizontal or vertical when completed by a player
    constitutes bingo when its numbers are announced and covered. A wheel or other
    mechanical device may be used by any person conducting the game of bingo, and
    any such person may award a prize to any player or players first completing any
    combination constituting bingo.
    10 P.S. §303.
    4
    was more akin to a pull-tab “strip ticket” than a bingo game.5 The trial court
    affirmed the Liquor Control Board’s decision “in toto[.]”                       Trial Court op.,
    12/11/2015, at 14.         The trial court remanded the matter to the ALJ for an
    adjudication on penalties against Licensee for conducting games after its license
    expired.
    The State Police appealed the trial court’s order to this Court. This
    Court quashed the appeal, for the stated reason that because the trial court had
    “remanded this matter for further consideration of appropriate penalties, a matter
    which necessarily requires the exercise of the ALJ’s discretion, the notice of appeal
    is quashed as taken from a non-final interlocutory order.” Order, 2/23/2016, at 2
    (Quigley, S.J.); R.R. 277a. On remand, the ALJ issued a supplemental order
    imposing a $350 fine for each count for a total of $700.
    Upon receipt of the ALJ’s penalty decision, the State Police appealed
    to this Court.6      As it did in its earlier appeal to this Court, the State Police
    challenged the trial court’s holding that Bonanza Bingo is a lawful type of bingo.
    The State Police contend that the Bingo Act authorizes only traditional call bingo.
    Licensee argues otherwise.
    5
    Section 103 of the Local Options Small Games of Chance Act defines “pull-tab” as:
    A single folded or banded ticket or a strip ticket or card with a face covered to
    conceal one or more numbers or symbols, where one or more of each set of tickets
    or cards has been designated in advance as a winner.
    10 P.S. §328.103.
    6
    On appeal, this Court’s standard of review “is limited to determining whether the decision of
    the trial court is based on substantial evidence, and whether the trial court abused its discretion or
    committed an error of law.” Erie Sports Bar, Inc. v. Pennsylvania State Police, Bureau of
    Liquor Control Enforcement, 
    6 A.3d 663
    , 666 (Pa. Cmwlth. 2010).
    5
    On May 26, 2016, this Court ordered the parties to address the issue
    of whether the State Police appeal could be heard by this Court without it first
    being presented to the Liquor Control Board. Specifically, the order stated:
    [I]t appears that neither party appealed the ALJ’s penalty
    adjudication to the Board and thereafter to the [trial court].
    Accordingly, the parties shall address in their principal briefs
    on the merits whether the ALJ’s March 23, 2016[,] adjudication
    is immediately appealable directly to the Commonwealth Court
    or must follow the statutory review process.
    Order, 5/26/2016, at 2 (Friedman, S.J.) (internal citation omitted); R.R. 293a.
    We begin with the jurisdictional question. The State Police contend
    that the trial court’s December 11, 2015, order decided all substantive legal issues
    and remanded the matter to the ALJ solely to perform a ministerial act, i.e., to set
    penalties. State Police Brief at 17. The State Police contend that an appeal of the
    ALJ’s supplemental order to the Board would be burdensome, fruitless, and not in
    the interests of judicial economy. The Liquor Control Board has already decided
    the question of whether Bonanza Bingo is “bingo” under the Bingo Law. In the
    alternative, the State Police argue that it has a right of appeal under the
    Pennsylvania Rules of Appellate Procedure.
    We begin with an examination of the statutory review process.
    Section 471(b) of the Liquor Code states, in relevant part:
    In the event the bureau or the person who was fined or whose
    license was suspended or revoked shall feel aggrieved by the
    adjudication of the administrative law judge, there shall be a
    right to appeal to the board. The appeal shall be based solely
    on the record before the administrative law judge. The board
    shall only reverse the decision of the administrative law judge if
    the administrative law judge committed an error of law, abused
    its discretion or if its decision is not based on substantial
    6
    evidence. In the event the bureau or the person who was fined
    or whose license was suspended or revoked shall feel aggrieved
    by the decision of the board, there shall be a right to appeal to
    the court of common pleas in the same manner as herein
    provided for appeals from refusals to grant licenses.
    47 P.S. §4-471(b) (emphasis added). The trial court hears the appeal of the Liquor
    Control Board’s decision de novo; it makes its own findings of fact and
    conclusions of law.           Pennsylvania State Police, Bureau of Liquor Control
    Enforcement v. Capek, 
    657 A.2d 1352
    , 1353 n.3 (Pa. Cmwlth. 1995).
    Accordingly, the trial court can “sustain, alter, change, modify or amend the
    Board’s action whether or not it made findings which are materially different from
    those found by the Board.” 
    Id.
    The State Police direct this Court to Pennsylvania State Police,
    Bureau of Liquor Control Enforcement v. Kenrich Athletic Club, License No. C-
    1927, 
    49 A.3d 13
     (Pa. Cmwlth. 2012). In that case, the ALJ found that the licensee
    had violated the Liquor Code and imposed a fine and a license suspension of 14
    days. The ALJ deferred setting dates for suspension; the licensee did not appeal
    the ALJ’s adjudication. Several weeks later, the ALJ issued a supplemental order
    setting the period of suspension. The licensee then requested an accommodation
    so that it could hold a previously scheduled major event. At the time of this
    request, the licensee had served four days of suspension. The ALJ granted the
    request and thereafter entered a second order scheduling the remainder of the
    licensee’s suspension.
    The licensee appealed the ALJ’s second order to the Liquor Control
    Board, which appeal automatically stayed the ALJ’s order.7                The licensee
    7
    Section 471(b) of the Liquor Code states:
    (Footnote continued on the next page . . .)
    7
    contended that the ALJ was obligated to give it 45 days advance notice of the
    suspension period.      The Liquor Control Board rejected this argument and
    remanded the matter to the ALJ to set new dates for the remaining 10 days of
    suspension. The licensee appealed to the trial court, which denied the appeal. The
    ALJ then ordered new dates for the suspension period.
    The licensee again appealed to the Liquor Control Board. It argued
    that under the Liquor Code, the ALJ was required to give the licensee at least 30
    days advance notice of the suspension period. The Board agreed and remanded the
    matter to the ALJ to set yet another suspension schedule, and the ALJ did so.
    The State Police appealed the ALJ’s final adjudication directly to this
    Court. It argued that it could bypass the Liquor Control Board and appeal directly
    to this Court because the trial court’s remand order to the ALJ had been a final
    order.
    We agreed and allowed the direct appeal. We held that the ALJ’s
    setting the new period of suspension was not itself an adjudication. We reasoned
    as follows:
    [The ALJ’s] Order on Remand only set new dates of suspension
    to effect the unexpired term of the fourteen (14) day suspension
    set forth in the unappealed Adjudication....            Licensee
    unquestionably had the right to appeal the Adjudication to the
    Board and challenge the ALJ’s suspension decision. But it did
    not. Once that thirty-day appeal period expired, the ALJ was
    free to set the dates of suspension in accordance with the
    penalty set forth in the unappealed Adjudication, and Licensee
    (continued . . .)
    Each of the appeals shall act as a supersedeas unless, upon sufficient cause
    shown, the reviewing authority shall determine otherwise….
    47 P.S. §4-471(b).
    8
    had no right to particular dates of its choosing. The subsequent
    ministerial act by an ALJ of implementing/enforcing an
    unappealed adjudication is not also an adjudication appealable
    to the Board. In this case, the [trial court’s] Order on Remand
    was such a ministerial act by the ALJ, performed at the
    direction of the trial court, and thus based on a proceeding
    before the trial court.
    Because the Order on Remand was not an adjudication, the
    Licensee could not appeal it to the Board.... We, therefore,
    affirm the trial court and remand this matter to the trial court
    with direction that the trial court set dates of suspension for the
    unexpired term of the fourteen-day suspension period set forth
    in the Adjudication.
    Kenrich Athletic Club, 49 A.3d at 20 (internal footnotes omitted) (emphasis
    added).
    We return to the procedural history of this case. When the State
    Police initially appealed the trial court’s order remanding the matter to the ALJ to
    set penalties, we quashed the appeal. We held that the State Police had appealed
    an interlocutory order and observed that the ALJ’s “consideration of appropriate
    penalties [was] a matter which necessarily requires the exercise of the ALJ’s
    discretion[.]” Order, 2/23/2016, at 2 (Quigley, S.J.); R.R. 277a. We noted that the
    exercise of discretion by the ALJ on remand distinguished this case from Kenrich
    Athletic Club. One of the parties might want to challenge the penalty amount and,
    if so, that needed to be heard by the Liquor Control Board before being appealed to
    this Court. In this way, all issues in this case, whether concerning the penalty
    amount or the metaphysics of “bingo,” could be decided in a single appeal to this
    Court.
    However, here, neither party has challenged the ALJ’s penalty
    decision; accordingly, the adjudication became final.           47 P.S. §4-471(b)
    9
    (“Suspensions and revocations shall not go into effect until thirty days have
    elapsed from the date of the adjudication during which time the licensee may take
    an appeal as provided for in [the Liquor Code]”); Kenrich Athletic Club, 49 A.3d at
    19 (licensee did not appeal the ALJ’s adjudication and, thus, waived the right to
    challenge it). In short, the ALJ’s penalty of $700 is beyond review, even by the
    Liquor Control Board, because neither party appealed it.
    With regard to the issue of the legality of the game of Bonanza Bingo,
    the State Police argue that an appeal to the Liquor Control Board on that issue
    would be futile. The Liquor Control Board and the trial court have each held that
    the game of Bonanza Bingo was lawful, and it is unlikely that another review, by
    either tribunal, would yield a different result. State Police Brief at 20. We agree,
    but for different reasons. Even if the Liquor Control Board “changed its mind” on
    whether Bonanza Bingo is lawful under the Bingo Law, it cannot issue a new
    ruling on that legal issue because it has been decided by the trial court. The Liquor
    Control Board cannot overrule the trial court. Stated otherwise, the Liquor Control
    Board lacks jurisdiction over the single issue that is the subject of the State
    Police’s appeal to this Court, i.e., whether Bonanza Bingo is a lawful form of
    bingo. Therefore, the State Police’s appeal to our Court on the issue of the legality
    of the game of Bonanza Bingo is appropriate.8
    8
    In Shuster v. Workers’ Compensation Appeal Board (Pennsylvania Human Relations
    Commission), 
    745 A.2d 1282
     (Pa. Cmwlth. 2000), we addressed the appealability of a remand
    order issued in a workers’ compensation proceeding. In Shuster, the Workers’ Compensation
    Appeal Board remanded a matter to a Workers’ Compensation Judge for a determination of the
    reasonableness of attorneys’ fees. The claimant appealed the Board’s remand order to this Court.
    We concluded that the WCJ had to decide the fee question before the Board’s order could be
    reviewed by this Court.
    This matter is different from Shuster and has no impact on our Shuster jurisprudence. The
    process is different for Liquor Code proceedings. Once the trial court decides the legal question,
    (Footnote continued on the next page . . .)
    10
    We next turn to the merits of the State Police’s appeal. The State
    Police argue that the trial court erred in holding that Licensee’s game of Bonanza
    Bingo was permitted under the Bingo Law. It contends that Section 3 of the Bingo
    Law “describes the game of ‘traditional bingo’ that has been played in Fire Halls
    and Church Halls for decades.” State Police Brief at 21. It contends that Bonanza
    Bingo is not traditional bingo but more akin to a pull-tab, strip-ticket game.
    Licensee pre-draws numbers at the beginning of the day and places those numbers
    on a master card. Players do not have to be present when the numbers are drawn;
    cards can be purchased throughout the day; and if none of the cards sold that day
    match the numbers on the master card, there is no winner that day. Licensee
    responds that the statute authorizes types of bingo games other than “traditional”
    bingo. Licensee Brief at 4.
    Section 4 of the Bingo Law permits licensed nonprofit associations,
    such as Licensee, to conduct “the game of bingo as herein defined” for the
    promotion of charitable or civic purposes.9 10 P.S. §304. The Bingo Law defines
    “bingo” as follows:
    A game in which each player has a card or board containing
    five horizontal rows all but the central one containing five
    figures. The central row has four figures with the word “free”
    marked in the center thereof. Any preannounced combination
    of spaces when completed by a player constitutes bingo. In the
    (continued . . .)
    the agency lacks jurisdiction over that question. Here, Licensee did not challenge the penalty
    ordered on remand.
    9
    Section 4 states:
    Any association, for a charitable or civic purpose, when licensed pursuant to this
    act, may conduct the game of bingo as herein defined.
    10 P.S. §304.
    11
    absence of a preannouncement of a combination of spaces, any
    combination of five in a row whether horizontal or vertical
    when completed by a player constitutes bingo when its numbers
    are announced and covered. A wheel or other mechanical
    device may be used by any person conducting the game of
    bingo, and any such person may award a prize to any player or
    players first completing any combination constituting bingo.
    10 P.S. §303 (emphasis added). When operating bingo games, associations are
    required to comply with certain rules, including:
    (2) No association shall conduct bingo more than twice in any
    one week, except an association shall be permitted to conduct
    the game of bingo for a period not to exceed ten days at the
    association’s exposition, carnival or fair site in addition to the
    regularly scheduled games.
    (3) Prizes awarded shall not exceed a value of $250 for any
    one game of bingo, except for jackpot games which shall not
    exceed a value of $2,000 for one such game. In addition, no
    more than $4,000 in prizes shall be awarded in any calendar
    day.
    ***
    (5) The association shall own the equipment used in playing
    bingo or shall sign a written agreement leasing the equipment
    from another licensed association for a fee….
    Section 5(c) of the Bingo Law; 10 P.S. §305(c).
    With respect to construction of the Bingo Law, the General Assembly
    has directed “that all phases of licensing, operation and regulation of the game of
    bingo be strictly controlled, and that all laws and regulations with respect thereto
    as well as all gambling laws should be strictly construed and rigidly enforced.”
    Section 2 of the Bingo Law; 10 P.S. §302 (emphasis added). In Commonwealth v.
    Bohn, 
    36 Pa. D. & C. 3d 405
    , 406 (C.C.P. Lebanon 1985), the Court of Common
    12
    Pleas of Lebanon County stated, “[a] basic tenet of our criminal law is that penal
    statutes are to be strictly construed” and “[t]he Bingo Law expresses this in
    [S]ection []2.” This is so lest we “create offenses which the legislature did not
    intend to create.” 
    Id.
    The rules of statutory construction require that courts, whenever
    possible, give each word in a statutory section meaning and not treat any word as
    surplusage. 1 Pa. C.S. §1921(a) (“[e]very statute shall be construed, if possible, to
    give effect to all of its provisions”). In Fumo v. Hafer, 
    625 A.2d 733
    , 735 (Pa.
    Cmwlth. 1993), we explained:
    The primary method of determining the meaning of a statute is
    simply to look at the plain and unambiguous meaning of the
    statute as written by the legislature. However, where the
    meaning of a statute is not clear, courts may look to other
    factors, i.e., the consequences of a particular interpretation, in
    determining legislative intent. In interpreting statutes, courts
    may also consider two statutes involving the same subject and
    construe the statutes in harmony if possible.
    (internal citations omitted). With these principles in mind, we turn to the meaning
    of “bingo.”
    Section 3 of the Bingo Law contemplates two types of bingo: (1) a
    game where a “preannounced combination” of spaces are used, and (2) a game
    which does not use a “preannounced combination” of spaces but a combination of
    five numbers in a row.10 Bonanza Bingo uses a “preannounced combination of
    10
    In the second type of game, “a combination of five in a row whether horizontal or vertical
    when completed by a player constitutes bingo when the numbers are announced and covered.”
    10 P.S. §303.
    13
    spaces” because patrons are notified, prior to purchasing a bingo card, of the
    combinations of spaces needed to win. R.R. 111a. As the trial court observed:
    On the periphery of this master card are eighteen (18) different
    preannounced combinations of spaces when completed by a
    player would constitute bingo. This master card further
    explains that if a player was fortunate enough to “have” any one
    or more combination[s], [that player] will win that
    corresponding monetary prize or prizes.
    Any player who desires to play this game purchases a sealed
    card. [The player is] then tasked with comparing the numbers
    on [his] respective game boards with the number on the master
    card. If [his] numbers match any of the preannounced
    combinations outlined on the master card: BINGO, [THE
    PLAYER] WIN[S]!
    Trial Court op., 12/11/15, at 12.
    The definition of “bingo” states that “[a] wheel or other mechanical
    device may be used by any person conducting the game of bingo and any such
    person may award a prize to any player or players first completing any
    combination constituting bingo.” 10 P.S. §303 (emphasis added). The statute does
    not mandate the use of a wheel or mechanical device to choose numbers. Licensee
    uses a deck of cards to select the numbers, which is not a forbidden methodology.
    Section 3 states that the licensee “may award a prize to any player or players first
    completing any combination constituting bingo.” 10 P.S. §303 (emphasis added).
    It does not require a prize or that there be a winner.
    Under the Small Games of Chance Act, the term “pull-tab” is defined
    as, “[a] single folded or banded ticket or a strip ticket or card with a face covered
    to conceal one or more numbers or symbols, where one or more of each set of
    tickets or cards has been designated in advance as a winner.” 10 P.S. §328.103. In
    14
    a pull-tab game, each ticket is pre-printed to be a winner or a loser. The chance of
    winning “shall not be made contingent upon any other occurrence or the winning
    of any other contest, but shall be determined solely at the discretion of the
    purchaser.” Id. We reject the State Police argument that Bonanza Bingo meets the
    definition of a pull-tab game of chance.
    Unlike a pull-tab game, Bonanza Bingo does not have a pre-
    determined winner; that depends on the master card. In addition, unlike a pull-tab
    ticket, when the player opens a Bonanza Bingo ticket he does not know
    immediately whether he has won or lost. Rather, the player must “play” the game
    by comparing the numbers on the master card with the numbers appearing on his
    Bonanza Bingo card, as a player must do when bingo is played in the more
    traditional announced form. Licensee’s Bonanza Bingo, albeit atypical, meets the
    statutory definition of “bingo.”
    For these reasons, we affirm the trial court.
    ______________________________________
    MARY HANNAH LEAVITT, President Judge
    15
    IN THE COMMONWEALTH COURT OF PENNSYLVANIA
    Pennsylvania State Police, Bureau     :
    of Liquor Control Enforcement,        :
    Appellant          :
    :
    v.                        :   No. 550 C.D. 2016
    :
    Legion Post 304 Home Association      :
    ORDER
    AND NOW, this 15th day of June, 2017, the order of the Court of
    Common Pleas of Carbon County dated December 11, 2015, in the above-
    captioned matter is AFFIRMED.
    ______________________________________
    MARY HANNAH LEAVITT, President Judge
    

Document Info

Docket Number: PSP, BLCE v. Legion Post 304 Home Association - 550 C.D. 2016

Judges: Cosgrove, Hannah, Honorable, Joseph, Leavitt, Mary

Filed Date: 6/15/2017

Precedential Status: Precedential

Modified Date: 10/26/2024