PHILADELPHIA HOME RULE CHARTER
CHAPTER 2 REMOVAL OF APPOINTIVE OFFICERS
§11-101. Statutes and Ordinances Superseded.
Subject to Section 18 of the Act of the General Assembly
approved April 21, 1949, P.L. 665, of the Commonwealth of Pennsylvania, it is
the intention of the electors in adopting this charter that it shall supersede
all statutes or parts of statutes, local, special or general, and all ordinances
of the City, affecting the organization, government and powers of the City to
the extent that they are inconsistent or in conflict with this
charter.
ANNOTATION
Sources: Act of April 21, 1949, P.L. 865, Section
18.
Purposes: 1. The legislation authorizing this Charter imposed
certain limitations upon the powers of the Charter Commission. Section 18 thus
provides:
"Section 18. Limitations. No city shall exercise any powers
or authority beyond the city limits except such as are conferred by an act of
the General Assembly, and no city shall engage in any proprietary or private
business except as authorized by the General Assembly. Notwithstanding the grant
of powers contained in this act, no city shall exercise powers contrary to, or
in limitation or enlargement of, powers granted by acts of the General Assembly
which are -
"(a) Applicable to a class or classes of cities on the
following subjects:
"(1) Providing for the filing and collection of municipal
and tax claims or liens and for the sale of real or personal property in
satisfaction thereof;
"(2) Providing for the exercise of the power of eminent
domain and the procedure for the condemnation of property for public
purposes;
"(3) Providing for the assessment of damages and benefits
for property taken, injured or destroyed;
"(4) Providing methods for the incurring or increasing of
indebtedness;
"(5) Providing for the annexation or exclusion or detachment
of territory;
"(6) Regulating public schools;
"(7) Providing for the personal registration of
electors;
"(8) Limiting rates and fixing subjects of
taxation;
"(9) Providing for assessment of real or personal property
and persons for taxation purposes.
"(b) Applicable in every part of the Commonwealth.
"(c) Applicable to all the cities of the Commonwealth." Act
of April 29, 1949, P.L. 665.
Accordingly, until the statute is amended, the provisions of
this Charter cannot supersede any laws coming with in the limitations quoted
above.
2. Subject to the above limitations, provisions of this
Charter do supersede all statutes or parts of statutes, local, special or
general of the Commonwealth of Pennsylvania and all ordinances of the City in
any manner affecting the organization, government and powers of the City to the
extent that they are inconsistent with the Charter provisions. The Charter
Commission did not have the express power to repeal statutes or ordinances but
the same objective is obtained in substance by its power to supersede statutes
and ordinances inconsistent with provisions of the Charter. No attempt was made
to list all such laws superseded for statutes applicable to the City and
ordinances of the City are too numerous to have permitted the Commission to
perform this task. Codification and revision of City ordinances will be a step
in that direction. See Sections 2-304 and 4-400(e). It should be noted in
particular that provisions of the Charter of 1919 not inconsistent with this
Charter are not superseded and remain in full force and effect. The same is true
of the Consolidation Act of 1854 (see Section 11-103), and other statutes
applicable to the City of Philadelphia or to Cities of the First
Class.