Pennsylvania Firearm Owners Association
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  1. #1
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    Default Did the PA Supreme Court just do something right for us law abiding firearm owners?

    Seen this posted on Facebook. If I'm reading this right, they agreed that we have a right to sue preemption violation before we are arrested or fined?

    https://blog.princelaw.com/2021/10/2...ption-statute/


    MONUMENTAL Decision by the PA Supreme Court on Pennsylvania’s Firearm Preemption Statute
    Posted on October 20, 2021 by Joshua Prince, Esq.

    Today, Chief Counsel Joshua Prince, assisted by Attorney Dillon Harris, secured a monumental decision by the Pennsylvania Supreme Court, affirming the decision of Judge Kevin Brobson of the Commonwealth Court (and candidate for Justice of the Pennsylvania Supreme Court), in the matter of Firearm Owners Against Crime, et al. v. City of Harrisburg, et al, where the Court held that FOAC and the other plaintiffs had sufficiently averred standing under Pennsylvania’s Declaratory Judgment Act to challenge Harrisburg’s illegal and unlawful firearm ordinances.

    The 38 page Majority Opinion begins its analysis with the enactment and purpose of the Declaratory Judgment Act, stating:

    In the Declaratory Judgments Act, 42 Pa.C.S. §§ 7531-7541, the General Assembly vested in courts the “power to declare rights, status, and other legal relations whether or not further relief is or could be claimed.” 42 Pa.C.S. § 7532. Significantly, the legislature provided that the Declaratory Judgments Act is “remedial,” and “its purpose is to settle and to afford relief from uncertainty and insecurity with respect to rights, status, and other legal relations, and is to be liberally construed and administered.” 42 Pa.C.S. § 7541(a).

    And thereafter went on to acknowledge, as we argued, that “[a]pplying the traditional substantial-direct-immediate test for standing, this Court has afforded standing to plaintiffs in pre-enforcement declaratory judgment actions challenging the legality or constitutionality of statutes.”

    In turning to FOAC, et al.’s standing, the Court declared

    we conclude the averments in Appellees’ complaint are sufficient to establish their standing to bring a declaratory judgment action challenging the constitutionality and statutory preemption of the City’s Discharge, Parks, Lost/Stolen, and Minors Ordinances. The complaint alleges that First, Bullock, and Stolfer lawfully possess firearms, are licensed to carry a concealed firearm, and fear criminal prosecution under the ordinances as they live, commute, and travel to the City. Complaint, 1/16/15, at ¶¶ 66, 68, 69, 71, 72, 74, 77, 79, 80, 85. Additionally, one of FOAC’s members is under the age of 18, resides in the City, and lawfully possesses firearms. Id. at ¶ 60. Further, the City is actively enforcing the ordinances, citing violators of the Discharge and Minors Ordinances, and the City’s mayor indicated his intent to continue to enforce the ordinances. Id. at Ex. B; Ex. C.

    In acknowledging the choices faced by FOAC, et al., the Court stated

    Given these allegations, which we take as true, Appellees currently must make a choice to either comply with the ordinances, thereby forfeiting what they view as their constitutionally and statutorily protected firearms rights; or violate the ordinances by exercising their rights, thereby risking criminal prosecution. Appellees also have a third option, which is to stop living in, commuting to, or travelling to the City to avoid being subject to its ordinances, which would of course entail relocating from the City, changing employers, or foregoing legislative advocacy. That Appellees are confronted with these options shows that their interest in the outcome of the constitutionality and preemption of the challenged ordinances is substantial, immediate, and direct.

    In finding that FOAC et al.’s interest in the challenged ordinances is substantial, immediate and direct, the Court held

    The individual Appellees’ interest is substantial because they, as lawful possessors of firearms and concealed carry licenses, seek a determination of the validity of the City’s Discharge, Parks, and Lost/Stolen Ordinances, which criminalize aspects of their ability to carry and use firearms within the City and impose reporting obligations for lost or stolen firearms. This exceeds the “abstract interest of all citizens in having others comply with the law.”William Penn Parking Garage, Inc. v. City of Pittsburgh, 346 A.2d 269, 282 (Pa. 1975) (defining substantial interest). Their interest is direct because the challenged ordinances allegedly infringe on their constitutional and statutory rights to possess, carry, and use firearms within the City. See id. (stating a direct interest “simply means that the person claiming to be aggrieved must show causation of the harm to his [or her] interest by the matter of which he [or she] complains.”). Their interest is immediate because they are currently subject to the challenged ordinances, which the City is actively enforcing, and must presently decide whether to violate the ordinances, forfeit their rights to comply with the ordinances, or avoid the City altogether. This alleged harm to their interest is not remote or speculative. See Donahue, 98 A.3d at 1229. Because the individual Appellees, who are all members of FOAC, have standing to challenge the Discharge, Parks, and Lost/Stolen Ordinances, FOAC has standing as an associational representative of these members to challenge the ordinances. See Robinson Twp., 83 A.3d at 922. For the same reasons, FOAC’s member who is a minor and resides in the City has a substantial, direct, and immediate interest in the outcome of this matter, and FOAC also has standing as this minor’s associational representative to challenge the Minor’s Ordinance. See id. Accordingly, Appellees have a substantial, direct, and immediate interest in the outcome of their challenge to the ordinances and have standing to pursue a declaratory judgment action to ascertain their rights and obligations.

    The Court, in dismissing a number of the City’s arguments, went on to declare that “[i]t is not necessary for the mayor or police chief to specifically threaten any individual with enforcement as Appellees’ interests are immediate without that factual development, and it would not assist the legal inquiry into the validity of the ordinances.” (emphasis added).

    In a Concurring Opinion, Justice Wecht declares

    Appellees here face equally intolerable options that render their action consistent with the conferral of standing in our precedential opinions. The choice between engaging in arguably constitutional activity and facing potential prosecution, or forfeiting one’s rights and abstaining from potentially protected conduct altogether, presents precisely the kind of choice that confers standing….Without access to the courts to resolve their dispute, Appellees would be left with no path to challenge the constitutionality of the ordinances other than willfully violating the law….Being forced to choose between abdicating one’s rights or willfully violating the law and subjecting oneself to sanctions presents exactly the kind of dilemma that does confer standing.

    Consistent therewith, Justice Wecht declares that

    We do not require plaintiffs to violate laws or regulations and subject themselves to sanctions for engaging in protected conduct as the price of admission to the courthouse. The rights guaranteed to the citizens of this
    Commonwealth do not depend upon an individual’s willingness to subject herself to the risk of jail or criminal penalties to assert her rights. Resolving uncertainty in accord with liberal construction of the Act means that the courthouse doors are open to resolve the constitutionality of statutes and ordinances without requiring that the individual put his or her life, liberty, or property on the line by first violating the statute or ordinance and being subject to enforcement. Nor does the individual have to face economic hardship or professional disaster. Having a substantial interest “simply means that the individual’s interest must have substance—there must be some discernible adverse effect to some interest other than the abstract interest of all citizens in having others comply with the law.”

    Eloquently, Justice Wecht explains

    The legislative branch, the executive branch, and local municipalities bear responsibility for enacting legislation or regulations that do not unduly infringe upon the rights of our citizens. When government conduct is challenged, the judiciary ensures that the rights of the individual are vindicated when infringed. If the government’s actions threaten individual rights, those individuals have access to the courts to challenge government conduct. Under the Act, they may do so without first subjecting themselves to arrest, threats of arrest, or warnings about potential enforcement action. As our Founder recognized, delaying justice until one is sanctioned by the full force of the law is no justice at all.

    Unfortunately, Chief Justice Baer, and Justices Donohue and Todd issued two dissenting opinions (Dissenting Opinion of Chief Justice Baer and Dissenting Opinion of Justice Donohue) that basically hold that one needs to violate the law in order to obtain standing to challenge the lawfulness of the law. Remember this when these Justices come up for a retention vote.

    If you are in a position to be able to support this matter, FOAC would greatly appreciate donations, which can be made online through the Firm’s escrow account here – https://secure.lawpay.com/pages/princelaw/trust. Simply place “FOAC Harrisburg Preemption Litigation” in the reference box.

    If you or someone you know has been the victim of an unlawful municipal firearm or ammunition regulation or ordinance, contact FICG today to discuss your options.

  2. #2
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    Default Re: Did the PA Supreme Court just do something right for us law abiding firearm owner

    Looks like The Truth About Guns has already picked up on this story.

    https://www.thetruthaboutguns.com/pe...n2okGBhyssR15w

    From the Associated Press . . .

    People can sue to challenge a city’s gun restrictions even if they have not been charged with violating them, Pennsylvania’s highest court ruled Wednesday.

    A divided state Supreme Court said that Firearm Owners Against Crime and other plaintiffs have legal standing to take on the Harrisburg city gun ordinances. At issue are local laws with criminal penalties for discharging a gun outside a gun range, possessing guns in parks, failing to report lost or stolen guns within two days or unaccompanied children having firearms outside their homes.

    The majority opinion in the 4-3 decision said the plaintiffs do not have to wait until they are charged with violating the ordinances before challenging them on constitutional grounds. The decision comes after years of work by Republicans in the state Legislature to prevent local governments from enacting gun laws that are more restrictive than what the state law imposes, and to widen who may sue to overturn such ordinances.

    Kim Stolfer, who heads up the firearm owners’ group, said Wednesday he expects the case to return to a lower court where the underlying merits of their case will be decided.

    “No citizen should face prosecution for exercising a constitutional right,” Stolfer said. “And that’s essentially what Harrisburg wanted us to go through to be qualified in this action to take on their illegal ordinances.”

    Harrisburg Mayor Eric Papenfuse, a defendant along with the city and its police chief, said the lost-and-stolen ordinance has helped city police take on the illegal gun trade, an enforcement effort that removed 153 illegally possessed guns from Harrisburg’s streets this year.

    He called the decision a dangerous precedent.

    “We absolutely plan to defend our ordinances with all of our might,” Papenfuse said Wednesday. “I think the ruling was good news for lawyers and the gun lobby but terrible news for both the residents of Harrisburg and the residents of the commonwealth.”

    The court decision centered on the legal issue of standing, or who is allowed to sue and under which circumstances, under the Pennsylvania Declaratory Judgments Act.

    People generally need to show they have been harmed by a law in order to challenge it, but Justice Sallie Mundy outlined several cases in which that standard has been modified to permit lawsuits that put people in the position of complying with a law or giving up their rights.

    Justice David Wecht, voting with the majority, wrote in a concurrence that standing “has evolved” to permit pre-enforcement review of governmental enactments.

    “We do not require plaintiffs to violate laws or regulations and subject themselves to sanctions for engaging in protected conduct as the price of admission to the courthouse,” Wecht wrote.

    In a dissent, Justice Max Baer said the plaintiffs have not claimed they engaged in conduct prohibited by law or that they intend to.

    “Accordingly, I would hold that (they) have failed to establish a substantial, direct and immediate interest sufficient to afford them standing,” Baer wrote.

    And Justice Christine Donohue said “mere ownership of a firearm does not establish an immediate or direct interest in the ordinances.”

    The city ordinances in question were passed in 1821, 1905, 1951 and, in the case of the lost-and-stolen gun reporting requirement, 2009.

    Adam Garber with CeaseFire PA, a group that seeks to reduce gun violence, said the decision will not make the state safer.

    “This decision could scare local officials who are searching for innovative and new solutions to a public health crisis that is claiming the lives of their constituents on a daily basis,” Garber said in an email.

    Firearm Owners Against Crime is a gun rights group that is regularly involved in lobbying and rallying on related issues in the state Capitol. It claims about 1,600 members. The other two plaintiffs, members of the group, are a Harrisburg resident and a man who works in the city, both concerned they could be prosecuted for violating the ordinances.

  3. #3
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    Default Re: Did the PA Supreme Court just do something right for us law abiding firearm owner

    Let us temper reactions...

    The ruling didn't nullify any 2A restrictions. It just said that gun owners who hadn't broken Harriburg's gun laws had standing to sue

    So it allows people to sue Harrisburg.

  4. #4
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    Default Re: Did the PA Supreme Court just do something right for us law abiding firearm owner

    Quote Originally Posted by NEAHS View Post
    Adam Garber with CeaseFire PA, a group that seeks to reduce gun violence, said the decision will not make the state safer.
    No, numb nuts. It will make it freer...

  5. #5
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    Default Re: Did the PA Supreme Court just do something right for us law abiding firearm owner

    Joshua Prince, patriot!

  6. #6
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    Default Re: Did the PA Supreme Court just do something right for us law abiding firearm owner

    Wasn't there a time, long ago in place that seems so far away, when laws/ordinances had to pass a constitutionality litmus test before being enacted?

    Right off the bat, Harrisburg has some pre-emption violations going on. I wonder if there might already be state and/or federal laws restricting gun possession by children?


  7. #7
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    Default Re: Did the PA Supreme Court just do something right for us law abiding firearm owner

    This is a good ruling. No person should have to fact civil or criminal charges before they can sue an unconstitutional law.
    "Cives Arma Ferant"

    "I know I'm not James Bond, that's why I don't keep a loaded gun under the pillow, or bang Russian spies on a regular basis." - GunLawyer001

  8. #8
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    Default Re: Did the PA Supreme Court just do something right for us law abiding firearm owner



    Great review of the case, worth a watch.
    "Cives Arma Ferant"

    "I know I'm not James Bond, that's why I don't keep a loaded gun under the pillow, or bang Russian spies on a regular basis." - GunLawyer001

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