PA Independent Oil & Gas Assoc. v. PA One Call System, Inc. ( 2021 )


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  •                  IN THE COMMONWEALTH COURT OF PENNSYLVANIA
    Pennsylvania Independent Oil & Gas             :
    Association,                                   :
    Petitioner                   :
    :   No. 507 M.D. 2019
    v.                              :
    :   Submitted: May 29, 2020
    Pennsylvania One Call System,                  :
    Inc.,                                          :
    Respondent                    :
    BEFORE:        HONORABLE RENÉE COHN JUBELIRER, Judge
    HONORABLE PATRICIA A. McCULLOUGH, Judge
    HONORABLE BONNIE BRIGANCE LEADBETTER, Senior Judge
    OPINION BY
    JUDGE McCULLOUGH                                                 FILED: January 5, 2021
    Before the Court are the preliminary objections of Pennsylvania One Call
    System, Inc. (POCS), to the petition for review filed by Pennsylvania Independent Oil
    & Gas Association (PIOGA), which sought a declaratory judgment concerning the
    propriety of POCS’ rate structure under what is known as the Underground Utility Line
    Protection Law (UULPL).1 POCS’ preliminary objections challenge the subject matter
    jurisdiction of this Court, assert that PIOGA has failed to state a claim under the
    UULPL, and contend that PIOGA’s action is precluded by the business judgment rule.
    We sustain POCS’ preliminary objection to this Court’s jurisdiction, and accordingly
    offer no opinion concerning its remaining objections.
    1
    Act of December 10, 1974, P.L. 852, No. 287, as amended, 73 P.S. §§176-86.
    Background
    POCS is an organization originally formed by Allegheny County public
    utility companies in 1968, with the goal of providing a means by which excavators and
    owners of underground utility lines could communicate and avoid damage or disruption
    to subterranean utility equipment. POCS’ operation ultimately expanded beyond
    Allegheny County and grew to cover all of Pennsylvania. POCS incorporated as a
    Pennsylvania nonprofit corporation in 1978, and in 1979, it attained tax-exempt
    Internal Revenue Service 501(c)(6)2 status. The General Assembly enacted the first
    version of the UULPL in 1974. Beginning then, and continuing through its various
    revisions, the UULPL placed certain duties upon both a “One Call System”3 and the
    various facility owners that use the system.
    The instant dispute concerns the methodology by which POCS sets the
    fees for using its service. On September 10, 2019, PIOGA filed a petition for review
    in this Court’s original jurisdiction, seeking a declaratory judgment that POCS’ fee
    structure fails to comply with the UULPL. Briefly summarized, PIOGA asserts that
    2
    See 
    26 U.S.C. §501
    (c)(6) (exempting from taxation “[b]usiness leagues, chambers of
    commerce, real-estate boards, boards of trade, or professional football leagues (whether or not
    administering a pension fund for football players), not organized for profit and no part of the net
    earnings of which inures to the benefit of any private shareholder or individual”).
    3
    The UULPL defines the “One Call System” as follows:
    “One Call System” means the communication system established
    within this Commonwealth to provide a single nationwide toll-free
    telephone number or 811 number for excavators or designers or any
    other person covered by this act to call facility owners and notify them
    of their intent to perform excavation, demolition or similar work as
    defined by this act. The One Call System shall be incorporated and
    operated as a nonprofit corporation pursuant to 15 Pa.C.S. Pt. II Subpt.
    C (relating to nonprofit corporations).
    Section 1 of the UULPL, 73 P.S. §176.
    2
    POCS’ fee structure is designed to recover a significantly greater proportion of its
    operating costs from the owners of utility facilities, when compared to the contractors
    that use POCS’ service.4 PIOGA seeks a determination that the fees for using POCS’
    service must be divided equally between contractors and facility owners. POCS’ first
    4
    The parties’ dispute primarily centers upon the following fee-related provisions of the
    UULPL:
    (e) Operation costs for the One Call System shall be shared, in an
    equitable manner for services received, by facility owner members as
    determined by the One Call System’s board of directors. Political
    subdivisions with a population of less than two thousand people or
    municipal authorities having an aggregate population in the area served
    by the municipal authority of less than five thousand people shall be
    exempt from the payment of any service fee. The One Call System
    may be reimbursed for its costs in providing this service from the
    contractor fees.
    (f) All fees shall be set by the board of directors and shall be based on
    the latest annual audited cost factors of the One Call System. Fees shall
    be set and adjusted to a rate not more than five percent above the
    audited cost factor plus the current average published Consumer Price
    Index for Pennsylvania. Costs of capital improvements may be added,
    if the improvement receives a majority vote of the board of directors.
    (f.1) An excavator, designer or operator who proposes to commence
    excavation or demolition work and requests information from the One
    Call System shall pay to the One Call System an annual fee for the
    service provided by the One Call System under section 3. The fee shall
    be set by the One Call System board of directors and shall be used to
    offset a portion of the operation costs of the One Call System and a
    portion of the operation costs levied on the One Call System’s political
    subdivision and municipal authority members. Failure to pay the fee
    shall constitute a violation of this act and shall subject the excavator,
    designer or operator to the enforcement authority of the commission
    for the nonpayment.
    Section 3.1(e)-(f.1) of the UULPL, added by the Act of November 29, 2006, P.L. 1593, 73 P.S.
    §178.1(e)-(f.1).
    3
    and central objection to PIOGA’s action is that POCS is a private entity, not the
    “Commonwealth government,” and, thus, that this Court lacks original jurisdiction
    over the matter. 42 Pa.C.S. §761(a)(1) (providing the Commonwealth Court with
    jurisdiction over actions “[a]gainst the Commonwealth government, including any
    officer thereof, acting in his official capacity”).5 Because PIOGA has not asserted any
    other basis for this Court’s jurisdiction, and because no other such basis is apparent on
    the face of the pleadings, our initial inquiry centers upon whether POCS may be
    deemed to be a governmental entity notwithstanding its apparent status as a private,
    nonprofit corporation.
    Discussion
    A. Standard of Review
    Our standard of review over preliminary objections is well-settled:
    In reviewing preliminary objections, all material facts
    averred in the complaint, and all reasonable inferences that
    can be drawn from them, are admitted as true. Vattimo v.
    Lower Bucks Hospital, Inc., 
    465 A.2d 1231
    , 1232 (Pa. 1983);
    Fletcher v. Pennsylvania Property & Casualty Insurance
    Guaranty Association, 
    914 A.2d 477
    , 479 n.2 (Pa. Cmwlth.
    2007), aff’d, 
    985 A.2d 678
     (Pa. 2009). However, a court
    5
    For purposes of our original jurisdiction, “Commonwealth government” is defined as:
    The government of the Commonwealth, including the courts and other
    officers or agencies of the unified judicial system, the General
    Assembly and its officers and agencies, the Governor, and the
    departments, boards, commissions, authorities and officers and
    agencies of the Commonwealth, but the term does not include any
    political subdivision, municipal or other local authority, or any officer
    or agency of any such political subdivision or local authority.
    42 Pa.C.S. §102.
    4
    need not accept as true conclusions of law, unwarranted
    inferences, argumentative allegations, or expressions of
    opinion. Portalatin v. Department of Corrections, 
    979 A.2d 944
    , 947 (Pa. Cmwlth. 2009). “Preliminary objections
    should be sustained only in cases that are clear and free from
    doubt.” Pennsylvania AFL–CIO v. Commonwealth, 
    757 A.2d 917
    , 920 (Pa. 2000).
    Seitel Data, Ltd. v. Center Township, 
    92 A.3d 851
    , 859 (Pa. Cmwlth. 2014) (citations
    modified).
    A challenge to a court’s subject matter jurisdiction may be raised by
    preliminary objection. See Pa.R.C.P. No. 1028(a)(1). In a circumstance such as this,
    however, the proper disposition of the jurisdictional objection cannot be determined
    from the pleadings alone, for the determination of whether POCS is a private or a
    governmental entity turns upon our consideration of evidence relating to POCS’
    structure and operation.    Both our precedent and our Rules of Civil Procedure
    acknowledge the fact-intensive nature of a preliminary objection of this sort. “There
    are basically two categories of preliminary objections[:] Those raising questions of
    fact outside the record and those which may be determined from the facts of record.”
    Chester Upland School District v. Yesavage, 
    653 A.2d 1319
    , 1325 (Pa. Cmwlth. 1994).
    A demurrer is of the latter sort, and “may be determined from facts of record so that
    further evidence is not required.” Pa.R.C.P. No. 1028(c)(2), Note. POCS’ second and
    third preliminary objections are in the nature of demurrers, and the attempt to introduce
    evidence in support of either such objection would render it an impermissible
    “speaking demurrer.” See Minor v. Kraynak, 
    155 A.3d 114
    , 124 (Pa. Cmwlth. 2017).
    Here, POCS’ jurisdictional challenge under Pa.R.C.P. No. 1028(a)(1),
    however, is of the sort that “cannot be determined from facts of record.” Pa.R.C.P. No.
    1028(c)(2), Note. “In such a case, the preliminary objections must be endorsed with a
    notice to plead or no response will be required.” 
    Id.
     The respondent bears the burden
    5
    to demonstrate the absence of jurisdiction, and only upon the presentation of evidence
    supporting the jurisdictional challenge does the burden shift to the petitioner. Sawyers
    v. Davis, 
    222 A.3d 1
    , 5 (Pa. Super. 2019). We have held that a mere allegation that the
    court lacks jurisdiction is insufficient to shift the burden to the petitioner; rather, the
    respondent “must first support its challenge to the court’s . . . jurisdiction by presenting
    evidence.” Maleski by Taylor v. DP Realty Trust, 
    653 A.2d 54
    , 61 (Pa. Cmwlth. 1994).
    “Only after the [respondent] has done so does the burden shift to the [petitioner] to
    adduce sufficient competent evidence to establish the court’s jurisdiction.” 
    Id.
     Such
    evidence is not limited to deposition testimony, and “the burden may be met via
    affidavits or other competent evidence.” 
    Id.
    POCS endorsed its preliminary objections with a notice to plead, and it
    supported its position with an affidavit from POCS’ President and Chief Executive
    Officer, William G. Kiger, along with its articles of incorporation as a Pennsylvania
    nonprofit corporation, its bylaws, and its Internal Revenue Service approval letter
    recognizing POCS as a tax-exempt organization. (POCS Preliminary Objections at 22;
    Attachment 1; Exhibits A-C.) Accordingly, we conclude that POCS has properly
    offered supporting documentation in support of its jurisdictional objection, and that we
    have sufficient grounds upon which to assess whether POCS may be deemed to be an
    agency of the Commonwealth, such that jurisdiction over PIOGA’s action will lie in
    this Court under 42 Pa.C.S. §761(a)(1).
    B. The Parties’ Arguments
    Both parties acknowledge that POCS is facially a nonprofit corporation,
    and that neither the UULPL nor any other statute claims POCS as an agency of this
    Commonwealth. (Preliminary Objections ¶17; Answer to Preliminary Objections at
    ¶8).   Both parties also acknowledge that the absence of a statutory provision
    6
    designating POCS as an agency is not necessarily dispositive, and that courts have
    considered a number of factors in determining whether a putatively private entity may
    be deemed to be a part of the Commonwealth government for purposes of our original
    jurisdiction statute. These factors include:
    (1) denomination as a government agency, instrumentality,
    body politic, etc.,
    (2) who appoints a majority of the board of directors or the
    membership of the governing body,
    (3) who receives the assets upon dissolution of the entity,
    (4) the source of the operating funds,
    (5) the degree of supervision by another [C]ommonwealth
    entity,
    (6) the geographic scope of operations,
    (7) entitlement to legal counsel from the Attorney General,
    and
    (8) statutory language distinguishing       it   from   other
    Commonwealth entities.
    Cooper v. Pennsylvania State Athletic Conference, 
    841 A.2d 638
    , 641 (Pa. Cmwlth.
    2004) (citing G. DARLINGTON, K. MCKEON, D. SCHUCKERS, K. BROWN, & P. CAWLEY,
    PENNSYLVANIA APPELLATE PRACTICE §40:307 (West 2019-2020 ed.)).
    POCS contends that none of the above-listed factors suggest that it may
    be deemed to be a Commonwealth entity. POCS observes that it is not designated as
    an agency or a part of the Commonwealth government in the UULPL or any other
    statute. (Preliminary Objections ¶17(a); POCS’ Br. at 20.) With regard to its board of
    directors, POCS acknowledges that the UULPL requires the presence of the Chairman
    7
    of the Public Utility Commission (PUC), the Director of the Pennsylvania Emergency
    Management Agency (PEMA), and the Secretary of the Department of Transportation
    (PennDOT), and further specifies that 20% of its board must be composed of
    representatives of municipalities or municipal authorities.                      73 P.S. §178.1(d).
    However, POCS asserts that the majority of its 35-member board consists of private
    entity stakeholders, who were “chosen by the facility owners” as the UULPL directs.
    Id. Because the Commonwealth does not appoint or control a majority of its board of
    directors, POCS argues that the second factor supports a conclusion that it is a private
    entity. (Preliminary Objections ¶17(b) (citing Pennsylvania State University v. Derry
    Township School District, 
    731 A.2d 1272
    , 1274-75 (Pa. 1999) (PSU) (“When
    determining whether an institution is an agency or instrumentality of the government,
    we must consider whether the Commonwealth has majority control of the board.”));
    POCS’ Br. at 20.)
    As for the third factor, POCS asserts that under 15 Pa.C.S. §5975(c)6
    (relating to corporations and unincorporated associations) and POCS’ bylaws, upon
    dissolution, POCS’ assets will be distributed to POCS’ members, not to the
    Commonwealth. (Preliminary Objections ¶17(c); POCS’ Br. at 20.) With regard to
    the fourth factor, POCS asserts that it never has received any funding from the
    Commonwealth, and that its operation is funded solely by the fees received from its
    users. (Preliminary Objections at ¶17(d); POCS’ Br. at 20.) As it concerns the fifth
    factor, POCS argues that it is not controlled or supervised by any other entity of the
    Commonwealth and, although the UULPL grants authority to the PUC to enforce the
    6
    Section 5975(c) states that, except as otherwise provided, upon dissolution of a nonprofit
    corporation, “any surplus remaining after paying or providing for all liabilities of the corporation shall
    be distributed to the shareholders, if any, pro rata, or if there be no shareholders, among the members
    per capita.” 15 Pa.C.S. §5975(c).
    8
    UULPL and to investigate violations thereof,7 it does not allow PUC to direct or control
    POCS or its operations. (Preliminary Objections ¶17(e); POCS’ Br. at 27.)
    POCS does not address the sixth factor—geographic scope of
    operations—but it concedes that it operates throughout all of Pennsylvania.
    (Preliminary Objections ¶7 (stating that “from 1972 until 1978 POCS grew from one-
    call coverage of [one] county to state-wide coverage”)). On the seventh factor, POCS
    asserts that it is not entitled to legal representation by the Attorney General, that it has
    never received such representation, and that it has always retained private counsel for
    its legal needs. (Preliminary Objections ¶17(f); POCS’ Br. at 20.) For purposes of the
    eighth factor, POCS does not point to any statutory language distinguishing it from
    other Commonwealth entities.
    Apart from the considerations that POCS derives from the language of the
    UULPL, POCS supports the majority of its factual assertions with the declaration of
    its President and CEO, Mr. Kiger. Beyond the specific factors listed above, Mr. Kiger’s
    declaration offers a litany of other details about POCS’ operation that purport to show
    that POCS is a private, rather than governmental entity: that POCS’ employees are not
    hired or paid by the Commonwealth and do not participate in state pension plans; that
    POCS procured its own office space and owns the property on which its headquarters
    are located; that POCS does its own procurements without resort to the Commonwealth
    Procurement Code;8 that POCS is not subject to the Right-to-Know Law (RTKL);9 that
    7
    See, e.g., Section 7.10(a) of the UULPL, added by the Act of October 30, 2017, P.L. 806, 73
    P.S. §182.10(a) (granting the PUC authority to order compliance with the UULPL, issue warnings,
    and levy administrative penalties for violations).
    8
    62 Pa.C.S. §§101-2311.
    9
    Act of February 14, 2008, P.L. 14, No. 3, 65 P.S. §§67.101-67.3104.
    9
    POCS is not subject to the Sunshine Act;10 and that POCS holds all funds generated by
    its fees in its own name and has no involvement with public funds. (Preliminary
    Objections ¶17(g); Attachment 1 ¶¶8-18.)
    PIOGA does not dispute the factual assertions about POCS’ operations set
    forth in Mr. Kiger’s declaration. PIOGA further concedes that “the relationship
    between POCS and UULPL does not fit nicely into the existing jurisprudence
    concerning this [C]ourt’s original jurisdiction.” (PIOGA’s Br. at 17.) In support of its
    view that POCS should be deemed to be a Commonwealth agency, PIOGA emphasizes
    the duties that the UULPL places upon POCS, which PIOGA believes to signify the
    General Assembly’s intent to control various aspects of POCS’ operations. (Answer
    to Preliminary Objections ¶11; PIOGA’s Br. at 14-15.) In PIOGA’s view, these
    statutorily imposed duties, particularly those related to POCS’ fees and finances, have
    transformed POCS from a private entity into an agency of the Commonwealth.
    With regard to the above-listed factors articulated in Cooper, PIOGA
    primarily emphasizes POCS’ statewide operation, and points to a statement of our
    Supreme Court in James J. Gory Mechanical Contracting, Inc. v. Philadelphia
    Housing Authority, 
    855 A.2d 669
    , 678 (Pa. 2004) (Gory), that “the pivotal factors to
    be looked at are whether the entity operates on a statewide basis and is predominantly
    controlled by the state.” (Answer to Preliminary Objections ¶5; PIOGA’s Br. at 17
    n.37.) Because POCS operates across Pennsylvania, and because the UULPL imposes
    duties upon POCS, PIOGA argues that POCS may be deemed to be an agency of the
    Commonwealth. Also due to POCS’ statewide operation, PIOGA contends that any
    county in Pennsylvania would be an appropriate venue for the instant litigation;
    accordingly, if we conclude that jurisdiction will not lie in this Court’s original
    10
    65 Pa.C.S. §§701-16.
    10
    jurisdiction, PIOGA requests that we transfer the matter to the Court of Common Pleas
    of Clarion County rather than dismiss its petition. (Answer to Preliminary Objections
    ¶¶18-19; PIOGA’s Br. at 18.)
    C. Relevant Case Law
    Our analysis is largely informed by a series of decisions of our Supreme
    Court concerning various entities’ status as part of the Commonwealth government. In
    Mooney v. Board of Trustees of Temple University of Commonwealth System of Higher
    Education, 
    292 A.2d 395
     (Pa. 1972), our Supreme Court considered whether Temple
    University (Temple) was a “state agency” for purposes of a statute mandating such
    agencies’ disclosure of public records.         The question arose from the General
    Assembly’s designation of Temple as a part of the Commonwealth State System of
    Higher Education, enabling Temple to receive additional funding from the
    Commonwealth. This Court sustained Temple’s preliminary objections to an action
    brought in our original jurisdiction, concluding that Temple was not a governmental
    entity, and that we therefore lacked subject matter jurisdiction over the suit.
    On review, the Supreme Court noted that Temple was chartered as a
    nonprofit corporation, and although the legislation that altered its designation referred
    to Temple as an “instrumentality of the Commonwealth,” the Court emphasized that it
    also provided that Temple “shall continue as a corporation for the same purposes as,
    and with all rights and privileges heretofore granted to[,] Temple University.” 
    Id. at 398-99
    . The Court found this latter language significant, in that it signaled the
    legislature’s intent “to preserve Temple’s status as a non[]profit corporation chartered
    for educational purposes,” rather than to transform Temple into a state agency. 
    Id. at 399
    .
    11
    The Mooney Court noted that, by statute, certain members of Temple’s
    board of trustees were to be appointed by the Governor, the President Pro Tempore of
    the Senate, and the Speaker of the House. Nonetheless, the “twelve Commonwealth
    trustees remain only a one[-]third minority of the board’s total number of thirty-six
    trustees,” and the “majority of non-public trustees clearly retains the powers to manage
    and control the University.” 
    Id.
     The Court further noted that the applicable statute
    retained the board of trustees’ authority to maintain its facilities, to control the
    management of its instructional, administrative, and financial affairs, and to adopt
    bylaws for its own governance, all of which suggested that Temple was not a state
    agency. 
    Id.
     Even the statutory restrictions upon Temple’s use of state-provided funds
    were not enough to persuade the Court, which stated that the “regulatory scheme
    provided by the Legislature to safeguard against improper expenditures of public funds
    in no way intrudes upon or alters Temple’s status as a non[]profit corporation chartered
    for educational purposes.” 
    Id. at 400
    . Accordingly, the Court concluded that Temple
    was not a “state agency,” and it affirmed this Court’s order sustaining Temple’s
    preliminary objections for lack of subject matter jurisdiction.
    Another question concerning this Court’s jurisdiction arose in T&R
    Painting Co. v. Philadelphia Housing Authority, 
    353 A.2d 800
     (Pa. 1976). There, this
    Court had dismissed an action brought in our original jurisdiction against the
    Philadelphia Housing Authority (PHA), concluding that the entity was a local agency,
    not an agency of the Commonwealth. The dispute centered upon statutory language
    stating that the PHA “shall constitute a public body, corporate and politic, exercising
    public powers of the Commonwealth as an agency thereof . . . .” 
    Id. at 801
    . Although
    this language suggested that the PHA was an agency of the Commonwealth, our
    Supreme Court found the statute ambiguous in light of at least eight other statutory
    12
    provisions suggesting that it was, instead, “a local agency operating within a limited
    area.” 
    Id.
     Concluding that PHA’s statutory powers and duties related only to matters
    of local concern, and that there was no need for statewide resolution of claims against
    it, our Supreme Court held that PHA was a local agency, not a Commonwealth agency
    amenable to suit in this Court’s original jurisdiction. 
    Id. at 802
    .
    In Harristown Development Corp. v. Department of General Services,
    
    614 A.2d 1128
     (Pa. 1992), our Supreme Court considered a statute subjecting nonprofit
    corporations that collected rent from the Commonwealth in excess of $1,500,000.00 to
    the terms of the Sunshine Act and the RTKL. Relying upon Mooney, this Court had
    concluded that the new statutory language did not transform such nonprofit
    corporations into agencies of the Commonwealth. The Supreme Court disagreed.
    Simply, the Court held that the subject entity “is an agency if the General Assembly
    says it is.” 
    Id. at 1131
    . Because the legislation at issue amended the definition of
    “agency” in the Sunshine Act and the RTKL to include such nonprofit corporations,
    the Court found it clear that the General Assembly intended to claim them as agencies
    for purposes of those statutes.
    PSU concerned a county and school district’s authority to levy real estate
    taxes upon the Milton S. Hershey Medical Center (HMC), which was owned by
    Pennsylvania State University (PSU). This Court had concluded that, because PSU
    was an instrumentality of the Commonwealth, its property was not subject to local real
    estate taxes. Our Supreme Court disagreed. The Court noted that the determination of
    whether PSU constituted an agency of the Commonwealth depended upon a variety of
    factors, and was complicated by “the fact that it is not merely funded by the
    Commonwealth, but in certain very limited respects it has governmental
    characteristics, while in other regards it is plainly non-governmental.” 
    Id. at 1274
    .
    13
    Although courts had reached differing conclusions regarding PSU’s status in different
    contexts, the Supreme Court did not find these disparate characterizations to be
    problematic “because an entity’s status as an agency or instrumentality varies,
    depending on the issue for which the determination is being made.” 
    Id.
    Public funding alone, the Supreme Court noted, is not dispositive. 
    Id. at 1274
     (“The mere funding of an institution does not . . . make it an agency or
    instrumentality of the state.”) (citing Mooney, 292 A.2d at 398-99). With regard to real
    estate taxation, our Supreme Court stated that “the pivotal factor” is “whether the
    institution’s real property is so thoroughly under the control of the Commonwealth,
    that, effectively, the institution’s property functions as Commonwealth property.” Id.
    The Court found the answer in the composition of PSU’s board of trustees. Revisiting
    Mooney, the Court explained that, “[w]hen determining whether an institution is an
    agency or instrumentality of the government, we must consider whether the
    Commonwealth has majority control of the board.” Id. at 1274-75 (citing Mooney, 292
    A.2d at 399). The Court found that PSU’s board was “not governmental in nature.”
    Id. at 1275. PSU’s board consisted of 32 members, only 10 of whom were public
    officials. Id. “Thus, governmental representation on the board constitutes only a
    minority interest.” Id. Given the largely private composition of PSU’s board of
    trustees, the Court found it clear that “the authority to control and dispose of PSU
    property is not within the purview of the Commonwealth.” Id. Thus, because the real
    property owned by PSU was not “so controlled by the Commonwealth as to fall within
    the latter’s immunity from local real estate taxation,” PSU could not be deemed an
    agency of the Commonwealth in this context. Id.
    The context-sensitivity of the determination of agency status gave rise to
    the Supreme Court’s decision in Gory. Although the Supreme Court had deemed PHA
    14
    to be a local agency in T&R Painting Co., PHA in Gory contended that a breach of
    contract claim brought against it by a construction contractor belonged in this Court’s
    original jurisdiction, rather than that of a court of common pleas. Because the Supreme
    Court had concluded that the Port Authority of Allegheny County was entitled to
    sovereign immunity in Marshall v. Port Authority of Allegheny County, 
    568 A.2d 931
    (Pa. 1990), and because PHA was a similar entity, PHA contended that Marshall had
    overruled T&R Painting Co. and redefined PHA as a Commonwealth agency. Gory,
    855 A.2d at 676.
    Rejecting this position, the Supreme Court again noted that the
    classification of an entity can vary depending upon the context. Id. at 677 (citing PSU,
    731 A.2d at 1274). Marshall, the Court noted, concerned the scope of sovereign
    immunity, and thus did not control the determination of PHA’s status for the
    “completely different purpose” of this Court’s subject matter jurisdiction. Id. With
    regard to this Court’s original jurisdiction, the Supreme Court in Gory drew a contrast
    between characteristics of local agencies and those of Commonwealth agencies, and
    articulated two considerations that are particularly significant to the jurisdictional
    analysis. The dispute in the instant case largely derives from the parties’ differing
    understandings of this discussion in Gory:
    [W]hen determining whether an entity is a Commonwealth
    agency for jurisdictional purposes so that cases against it
    must be originally heard in the Commonwealth Court, the
    pivotal factors to be looked at are whether the entity operates
    on a statewide basis and is predominantly controlled by the
    state. As we explained in T&R Painting Co., where the entity
    acts throughout the state and under the state’s control, it is
    clearly meant to be a Commonwealth agency for
    jurisdictional purposes so that it may be sued in the
    Commonwealth Court. In contrast, where the entity operates
    within a single county or municipality and is governed in
    large part by that county or municipality, the entity must be
    15
    characterized as a local agency and sued in the trial courts
    because the trial courts will be more familiar with the issues
    surrounding the entity’s operations and organizational make-
    up.
    Id. at 678.
    The Gory Court noted that the applicable statutory scheme had changed
    little since T&R Painting Co., that housing authorities continued to “operate solely in
    one locality and predominantly under the control of the governing body in that
    locality,” and that they accordingly “must continue to be considered local agencies for
    purposes of jurisdiction and subject to the original jurisdiction of” the court of common
    pleas. Gory, 855 A.2d at 675-76. Applying these factors to PHA specifically, the Gory
    Court found “clear that PHA is a local agency for jurisdictional purposes” because
    PHA’s “scope of authority is limited to the territorial boundaries of Philadelphia,” and
    because “PHA’s five members are all appointed by the Mayor of Philadelphia” rather
    than a Commonwealth official. Id. at 678.
    Finally, and by way of contrast to T&R Painting Co. and Gory, our
    Supreme Court in Blount v. Philadelphia Parking Authority, 
    965 A.2d 226
     (Pa. 2009),
    concluded that the Philadelphia Parking Authority (PPA) was a Commonwealth agency
    for purposes of this Court’s original jurisdiction. The dispute in Blount centered upon
    the validity of PPA’s regulations concerning taxi and limousine services, under which
    PPA had issued citations to various taxi drivers and companies. This Court had
    determined that we lacked original jurisdiction over a challenge to PPA’s regulations,
    concluding that PPA was a local agency, not a Commonwealth agency. Our Supreme
    Court reached the opposite conclusion.
    The Blount Court emphasized that, by statute, parking authorities were
    defined as “public bod[ies] corporate and politic, exercising public powers of the
    16
    Commonwealth as agenc[ies] of the Commonwealth.” 
    Id. at 230
     (quoting 53 Pa.C.S.
    §5505(a)(1) (relating to municipalities)) (bracketed material in original). This statutory
    language was highly similar to that at issue in T&R Painting Co., which similarly
    designated PHA as an agency of the Commonwealth, yet was not dispositive of PHA’s
    status. Id. As in T&R Painting Co., moreover, the applicable statute in Blount also
    contained language suggesting that parking authorities were local entities. Id. at 231.
    Accordingly, the Blount Court reasoned, determining the proper classification of PPA
    required consideration of the General Assembly’s intent. The Court conducted this
    inquiry by analyzing the factors that it had outlined in Gory, i.e., “whether the PPA
    operates statewide and whether it is controlled by the state.” Id. at 231-32 (citing Gory,
    855 A.2d at 678).
    Beginning with statewide operation, the Blount Court observed that PPA
    exercised regulatory authority not only over taxicabs operating within Philadelphia, but
    also taxicabs that travel elsewhere in Pennsylvania to or from Philadelphia. Id. at 232.
    Moreover, PPA shared responsibility for regulating taxicab operations with the PUC,
    and the “two agencies’ spheres of operation combine and overlap to create a system of
    ground transportation that is essential to the welfare of the Commonwealth ‘as a
    whole.’” Id. at 233 (quoting 53 Pa.C.S. §5701.1). Where T&R Painting Co. and Gory
    had emphasized that PHA’s powers and duties were limited to matters occurring within
    Philadelphia, the comparatively larger geographic scope of PPA’s regulatory authority
    in Blount served to distinguish PPA from PHA, and tended to suggest that PPA was
    not solely a local governmental entity.         Further unlike PHA, the Blount Court
    explained, “PPA is controlled by the Commonwealth.” Id. The PPA’s governing board
    was appointed by the Governor of Pennsylvania, and it managed PPA’s property and
    operations without any local government oversight. Id. Moreover, the applicable
    17
    statutes directed the manner in which PPA was required to utilize its budget, its Taxicab
    Regulatory Fund was overseen by the General Assembly and not the City of
    Philadelphia, and the General Assembly reserved the right to examine PPA’s accounts
    and records at any time. Id. at 233-34. This significant degree of state-level control
    over PPA’s budget and finances further suggested that PPA was a Commonwealth
    agency, not a local agency.
    The Blount Court noted that PPA was “an entity unlike any other in
    Pennsylvania.” Id. at 234. Its distinctiveness notwithstanding, the Court found that
    PPA’s status as a local or Commonwealth agency could be ascertained under the Gory
    factors. Because Commonwealth officials controlled “not only its governing structure
    but also its funding,” and because PPA was an “entity whose actions have statewide
    impact,” the Court concluded that PPA is a Commonwealth agency, and an action
    against it is properly brought in the Commonwealth Court’s original jurisdiction. Id.
    D. Analysis
    The above-discussed jurisprudence reveals a variety of considerations that
    must be weighed in order to determine a given entity’s status for purposes of our
    jurisdiction. These factors include those that we identified in Cooper, 
    841 A.2d at 641
    ;
    see supra at 7, which we find to be useful guideposts for purposes of this analysis.
    Importantly, however, it is clear that the focus of the inquiry differs depending upon
    whether we seek to ascertain the identity of an undisputedly governmental body, i.e.,
    its status as an agency of the Commonwealth or rather a local governmental unit, or
    whether there is a threshold question of the entity’s status as a governmental body in
    the first place. For instance, in Mooney, Harristown, and PSU, our Supreme Court
    assessed whether ostensibly nongovernmental entities nonetheless could be considered
    18
    governmental agencies, and considered factors such as statutory identification of the
    entity as an agency, whether the Commonwealth controlled a majority of the entity’s
    governing board and the extent to which the Commonwealth exercised authority over
    the entity’s governance, whether the entity was funded by the Commonwealth, or any
    other statutory indication that the General Assembly intended that the entity would
    operate as a governmental agency. By contrast, in T&R Painting Co., Gory, and
    Blount, the question was whether undisputedly governmental entities were agencies of
    the Commonwealth or, instead, local agencies. In that context, our Supreme Court
    held, the “pivotal factors” in the determination are whether the entity operates on a
    statewide basis and whether it is predominantly controlled by the Commonwealth, or
    instead by a local authority. Blount, 965 A.2d at 231-32; Gory, 855 A.2d at 678.
    In our view, the principal source of the instant dispute is that PIOGA
    identifies and primarily relies upon the considerations tailored to differentiating
    between state and local agencies. Its arguments are largely nonresponsive to the
    threshold question of whether POCS is a governmental agency in the first place. In
    this regard, we observe that PIOGA does not dispute the facts set forth in Mr. Kiger’s
    declaration, as they concern the factors identified in Cooper. Moreover, we disagree
    with PIOGA’s characterization of this litigation as implicating a “unique situation” that
    “does not fit nicely into the existing jurisprudence concerning this [C]ourt’s original
    jurisdiction.” (PIOGA’s Br. at 14, 17.) Rather, we conclude that the considerations
    identified in Cooper, coupled with our Supreme Court’s holdings on similar questions,
    provide ample guidance on the determination of POCS’ status.
    As noted, it is undisputed that POCS is a nonprofit corporation and that
    no statute defines POCS as a governmental agency. Clearly, then, this is not a situation
    in which the entity “is an agency if the General Assembly says it is.” Harristown, 614
    19
    A.2d at 1131. Indeed, the General Assembly not only declined to claim POCS as an
    agency of the Commonwealth, but the definition of a “One Call System” in the UULPL
    expressly states that such a system “shall be incorporated and operated as a nonprofit
    corporation.” Section 1 of the UULPL, 73 P.S. §176; see supra n.3. This is analogous
    to the Mooney Court’s observation that, notwithstanding Temple’s statutory
    characterization as an “instrumentality of the Commonwealth,” the statute contained
    language preserving Temple’s status “as a corporation for the same purposes as, and
    with all rights and privileges heretofore granted,” which suggested the General
    Assembly’s intent to “preserve Temple’s status as a non[]profit corporation chartered
    for educational pruposes,” rather than to claim Temple as an agency of the
    Commonwealth. Mooney, 292 A.2d at 398-99. Not only does the UULPL recognize
    POCS’ status as a nonprofit corporation, but, unlike in Mooney, here the General
    Assembly made no attempt in the UULPL to define POCS as an instrumentality of the
    Commonwealth.11 We conclude, thus, that this factor weighs heavily in favor of a
    conclusion that POCS is not a state agency.
    On the second Cooper factor, we find that the composition of POCS’
    board of directors also suggests that it is a private entity. Initially, the UULPL directs
    that POCS’ board of directors is “to be chosen by the facility owners.” Section 3.1 of
    the UULPL, 73 P.S. §178.1(d). That is, the board’s composition is largely within the
    discretion of private party stakeholders; its members are not appointed by
    Commonwealth officials. This distinguishes POCS’ board of directors from bodies
    such as the governing board of PPA, the members of which were appointed by the
    11
    Moreover, although the parties do not place significant emphasis upon the eighth Cooper
    factor—statutory language distinguishing the organization from other Commonwealth entities—we
    note that UULPL’s mandate that a “One Call System” be organized as a nonprofit corporation serves
    to distinguish such an entity from those that are expressly designated as agencies by statute.
    20
    Governor, thereby suggesting the Commonwealth’s control over the organization’s
    governance. See Blount, 965 A.2d at 233. As POCS acknowledges, however, the
    UULPL requires that three Commonwealth officials sit on its board—the Chairman of
    PUC, the Director of PEMA, and the Secretary of PennDOT. Section 3.1 of the
    UULPL, 73 P.S. §178.1(d)(1)-(2), (4). However, these three officials represent a clear
    minority of POCS’ 35-member board.            See PSU, 731 A.2d at 1274-75 (“When
    determining whether an institution is an agency or instrumentality of the government,
    we must consider whether the Commonwealth has majority control of the board.”).
    The UULPL’s mandate that “[n]o less than twenty percent of the seats on the board
    shall be held by municipalities or municipal authorities,” Section 3.1(d) of the UULPL,
    73 P.S. §178.1(d), does not alter our analysis. Twenty percent remains far less than
    majority control, and, in any event, municipal officials are clearly not Commonwealth
    officials. Because the Commonwealth does not control a majority of POCS’ board of
    directors or appoint its members, we find that this factor also suggests that POCS is a
    private entity, not a state agency.
    PIOGA does not dispute POCS’ observations that the Commonwealth is
    not entitled to any of POCS’ assets should it dissolve, and that POCS’ operations are
    funded by the fees for using its service, not by the public fisc. Moreover, it is clear that
    POCS is not entitled to legal representation from the Attorney General, as POCS is
    represented by private counsel in the very case before us. Accordingly, the third,
    fourth, and seventh Cooper factors all suggest that POCS is a not a government agency.
    We additionally take note of POCS’ assertions of various other indicia of its private
    status: that its employees are not hired or paid by the Commonwealth and do not
    participate in state pension plans; that it procures its own supplies and owns its own
    office space; that it is not subject to the RTKL or the Sunshine Act; and that it holds all
    21
    of its funds in its own name. (Preliminary Objections ¶17(g); Attachment 1 ¶¶8-18.)
    We agree that these attributes additionally differentiate POCS from entities recognized
    to be Commonwealth agencies.
    All that remains is PIOGA’s reliance upon the fifth and sixth Cooper
    factors—the degree of supervision by another Commonwealth entity and the
    geographic scope of operations. Although PIOGA stresses our Supreme Court’s
    statement that “the pivotal factors to be looked at are whether the entity operates on a
    statewide basis and is predominantly controlled by the state,” Gory, 855 A.2d at 678,
    as noted above, these considerations are most pivotal in distinguishing between state
    and local agencies, which was the dispositive issue in T&R Painting Co., Gory, and
    Blount. Here, the first and most significant inquiry is whether POCS is a government
    agency of any type.
    There is no dispute that the geographic scope of POCS’ operations
    presently includes all of Pennsylvania. However, this factor alone clearly cannot
    suffice. If statewide operation was all that is required to define an entity as a
    Commonwealth agency, then countless private entities would be surprised to find
    themselves reclassified as governmental bodies. As POCS pithily argues, “Starbucks
    or JiffyLube or State Farm Insurance could be considered to be the ‘Commonwealth
    government’ for the court’s jurisdictional purposes simply because they have statewide
    operations.” (POCS’ Br. at 21.) To be clear, statewide operation is an exceptionally
    weighty consideration when distinguishing between state and local agencies, for the
    obvious reason that the extension of a given entity’s regulatory authority beyond a
    particular locale is highly suggestive that it is not strictly a local agency. See, e.g.,
    Blount, 965 A.2d at 232-33. However, when deciding whether a facially private entity
    22
    nonetheless may be deemed to be an agency of the Commonwealth, plainly the analysis
    requires more than mere statewide operation.
    We turn, then, to PIOGA’s contentions regarding the degree of control
    that the Commonwealth exercises over POCS. In support of its contention that POCS
    is predominantly controlled by the Commonwealth, PIOGA points to certain duties that
    the UULPL imposes upon POCS, particularly those relating to POCS’ operations and
    the fees that POCS charges for its services. See Section 3.1(e)-(f.1) of the UULPL, 73
    P.S. §178.1(e)-(f.1); supra n.4. These statutory provisions, according to PIOGA,
    demonstrate the Commonwealth’s “pervasive control” over POCS’ “governance and
    finances.”     (PIOGA’s Br. at 17-18.)    We already have addressed the UULPL’s
    requirements concerning POCS’ board of directors, and contrary to PIOGA’s
    assertions, the composition of POCS’ board suggests its status as a private entity, not
    a Commonwealth agency. To the extent that PIOGA asserts that the UULPL’s
    imposition of duties upon POCS renders it a Commonwealth agency, see Section 3 of
    the UULPL, 73 P.S. §178 (Duties of One Call System), we note that the UULPL also
    imposes corresponding duties upon facility owners. See Section 2 of the UULPL, 73
    P.S. §177 (Duties of facility owners). Yet, PIOGA does not suggest that the facility
    owners which compose its membership are therefore Commonwealth agencies.
    We are no more persuaded by the UULPL’s fee provisions. The existence
    of statutory controls on an entity’s fees does not transform the entity into an agency of
    the Commonwealth. As just one example, it is undeniable that private automobile
    insurance companies are not Commonwealth agencies merely because the Motor
    Vehicle Financial Responsibility Law12 contains provisions relating to the manner in
    which they may charge customers for using their services. Similarly here, the fact that
    12
    75 Pa.C.S. §§1701-1799.7.
    23
    the UULPL contains provisions relating to the fees charged by a One Call System does
    not mean that POCS may be deemed to be part of the Commonwealth government.
    In sum, we find that the facts overwhelmingly support POCS’ assertion
    that it is a private entity, and not a Commonwealth agency or otherwise a component
    part of the Commonwealth government. As such, this Court lacks original jurisdiction
    over PIOGA’s action. 42 Pa.C.S. §761(a)(1).
    In the event that we find subject matter jurisdiction lacking, as we have,
    PIOGA requests that we transfer its petition to the Court of Common Pleas of Clarion
    County as an alternative to dismissal. (PIOGA’s Br. at 18.) POCS opposes such a
    transfer, although it concedes that, due to its statewide operation, venue would be
    proper in any county in Pennsylvania under Pa.R.C.P. No. 2179.13 (POCS’ Reply Br.
    at 11.) Under section 5103(a) of the Judicial Code, 42 Pa.C.S. §5103(a),14 and
    13
    Rule 2179 of the Pennsylvania Rules of Civil Procedure provides that an action against a
    corporation or similar entity may be brought in “a county where it regularly does business.” Pa.R.C.P.
    No. 2179(a)(2).
    14
    Section 5103(a) provides:
    If an appeal or other matter is taken to or brought in a court or
    magisterial district of this Commonwealth which does not have
    jurisdiction of the appeal or other matter, the court or magisterial
    district judge shall not quash such appeal or dismiss the matter, but
    shall transfer the record thereof to the proper tribunal of this
    Commonwealth, where the appeal or other matter shall be treated as if
    originally filed in the transferee tribunal on the date when the appeal or
    other matter was first filed in a court or magisterial district of this
    Commonwealth. A matter which is within the exclusive jurisdiction of
    a court or magisterial district judge of this Commonwealth but which
    is commenced in any other tribunal of this Commonwealth shall be
    transferred by the other tribunal to the proper court or magisterial
    district of this Commonwealth where it shall be treated as if originally
    filed in the transferee court or magisterial district of this
    Commonwealth on the date when first filed in the other tribunal.
    (Footnote continued on next page…)
    24
    Pa.R.C.P. No. 213(f),15 we will transfer the matter to the Court of Common Pleas of
    Clarion County. See Seitel, 
    92 A.3d at 863-64
    . The Prothonotary of this Court shall
    transmit the record of the above proceedings to the Prothonotary of the Court of
    Common Pleas of Clarion County. PIOGA shall bear the costs of the transfer.
    Pa.R.C.P. No. 213(f); Leonard v. Thornburgh, 
    463 A.2d 77
    , 79 (Pa. Cmwlth. 1983).
    POCS’ preliminary objection is sustained.
    ________________________________
    PATRICIA A. McCULLOUGH, Judge
    Judge Crompton did not participate in this decision.
    42 Pa.C.S. §5103(a).
    15
    Rule 213(f) provides:
    When an action is commenced in a court which has no jurisdiction over
    the subject matter of the action it shall not be dismissed if there is
    another court of appropriate jurisdiction within the Commonwealth in
    which the action could originally have been brought but the court shall
    transfer the action at the cost of the plaintiff to the court of appropriate
    jurisdiction. It shall be the duty of the prothonotary or clerk of the court
    in which the action is commenced to transfer the record together with
    a certified copy of the docket entries to the prothonotary or clerk of the
    court to which the action is transferred.
    Pa.R.C.P. No. 213(f).
    25
    IN THE COMMONWEALTH COURT OF PENNSYLVANIA
    Pennsylvania Independent Oil & Gas       :
    Association,                             :
    Petitioner             :
    :    No. 507 M.D. 2019
    v.                           :
    :
    Pennsylvania One Call System,            :
    Inc.,                                    :
    Respondent              :
    ORDER
    AND NOW, this 5th day of January, 2021, the preliminary objection of
    Pennsylvania One Call System, Inc., is SUSTAINED. Because this Court lacks
    subject matter jurisdiction over the claims asserted in Pennsylvania Independent Oil
    & Gas Association’s petition for review, we transfer the above-captioned matter to
    the Court of Common Pleas of Clarion County. The Prothonotary of this Court shall
    transmit the record and a certified copy of the docket entries of the above
    proceedings to the Prothonotary of the Court of Common Pleas of Clarion County.
    Pennsylvania Independent Oil & Gas Association shall bear the costs of the transfer.
    ________________________________
    PATRICIA A. McCULLOUGH, Judge