DocketNumber: Appeal, 151
Judges: Frazer, Walling, Simpson, Kephart, Maxey
Filed Date: 1/28/1931
Status: Precedential
Modified Date: 10/19/2024
The plaintiff, a national bank, brought this action of assumpsit against the defendant, a township of the second class, in Bradford County, to recover for certain *Page 483 loans. The latter, the defense urged, were invalid as creating an indebtedness in excess of the constitutional limit. Jury trial was waived, and the trial by the court resulted in a final judgment for plaintiff, and defendant has appealed. While the case was stubbornly contested, both below and here, we find nothing calling for a reversal.
Complaint is made as to the inadequacy of the findings and conclusions of the trial judge. An examination of the record shows that the material facts are stated in separate paragraphs, as are the controlling legal conclusions. True, some of the defendant's requests were not categorically answered. Where, as here, however, the controlling questions are discussed and set forth in the general opinion, specific answers to the requests are not required: Kuhn v. Buhl,
The defendant township has eighty-eight miles of public highways, which, by reason of hills and streams, are expensive to maintain. This caused the township to become financially involved, beginning as far back as 1912 and increasing until, in 1922, its liabilities were $15,788.37. This was approximately four per cent of the assessed value of the taxable property, which that year was $423,990; hence, the two per cent constitutional borrowing capacity of the township was exhausted.
The road tax levy that year was ten mills and four of the loans here involved, aggregating $2,850, were expressly made and received that year as temporary advancements to enable the supervisors to repair and improve *Page 484
the highways in proper season under an agreement for repayment from the current revenues. As the latter greatly exceeded the loans they were valid: Jackson v. Conneautville Boro. S.D.,
Two other loans are involved in this suit, each for $2,150.75, one made November 17, 1922, and the other, *Page 485
January 31, 1923. These were intended for and did supply funds to pay Mr. Lane, a contractor for the construction of two concrete bridges on the Barwick Turnpike, a main thoroughfare extending through the township, and in fact, through and beyond the county. A great flood in 1921 had undermined the abutments of the old bridges, so that in spite of temporary repairs they required replacement in 1922, and the state highway department ordered that they should be constructed of concrete. The trial court found that the flood which necessitated the construction of the bridges in 1922 created such an extraordinary emergency as necessitated their construction. It was the imperative duty of the supervisors to maintain reasonably safe bridges, otherwise the township might become liable for damages much greater than the cost of the new bridges. To do this, the supervisors might make temporary loans and provide for their payment by an extra tax levy. This would not violate the Constitution. What seems to be the true rule is that stated by Judge HENDERSON, in Reuting et al. v. Titusville,
Aside from the question of extraordinary emergency, which the defendant strenuously denies, the township had sufficient probable sources of revenue to warrant building the bridges. The supervisors believed in good faith that the expenses thus incurred must ultimately be borne by Bradford County, and it was agreed between the supervisors and county commissioners that the former should build the bridges subject to a determination of the question of liability. The supervisors based their relief on the general Act of April 25, 1907, P. L. 104, as amended by later statutes, under which the county would be liable. The commissioners while conceding liability under the general acts urged that the earlier local Act of March 12, 1869, P. L. 325, which provided that in Bradford and Sullivan Counties the abandoned turnpike road here in question should be maintained at the expense of the townships, was not repealed by the general act. This contention was finally sustained. See Com. ex rel. Schrier v. Ruggles et al.,
The judgment is affirmed.
McDonald Construction Co. v. Gill ( 1926 )
Kershbaum v. London Guarantee & Accident Co. ( 1926 )
Appeal of the City of Erie ( 1879 )
Reuting v. City of Titusville ( 1896 )
Georges Township v. Union Trust Co. ( 1928 )
Commonwealth ex rel. Schrier v. Ruggles ( 1924 )
Lehigh Coal & Navigation Company's Appeal ( 1886 )
Maneval v. Jackson Tp. ( 1891 )
Wade v. Oakmont Borough ( 1895 )
Addyston Pipe & Steel Co. v. City of Corry ( 1900 )
Commonwealth v. Monongahela Bridge Co. ( 1906 )
Com. v. School District ( 1913 )
Potters National Bank v. Ohio Township ( 1918 )
Jackson v. Conneautville Borough School District ( 1924 )
Scranton Electric Co. v. Old Forge Boro. ( 1932 )
Commonwealth Ex Rel. Directors of Poor v. Gibson ( 1932 )
Philadelphia & Reading Coal & Iron Co. v. Coal Township ... ( 1933 )
Jackson & Perkins Co. v. Mushroom Transportation Co. ( 1945 )
Pittsburgh Paving Co. v. Pittsburgh ( 1938 )
Miller & Sons' Co. v. Mt. Lebanon Township ( 1932 )
Graham v. Philadelphia ( 1939 )
Goldman v. National Refrigerator Co. ( 1935 )
O'Brien v. Sovereign Camp of the Woodmen of the World ( 1936 )
Russell v. Richard C. Remmey Son Co. ( 1935 )