DocketNumber: Appeal, 101
Judges: Drew, Hughes, Linn, Maxey, Patterson, Stearns, Stern
Filed Date: 3/27/1944
Status: Precedential
Modified Date: 10/19/2024
Plaintiff property owners, who are the appellants, charge in their bill that the Board of Adjustment granted a permit authorizing the conversion of a house from a one-family into a four-family dwelling in violation of the zoning ordinance; that the Board acted without a meeting, without a hearing, without keeping records, without giving "public notice" and without giving "due notice" and ". . . without proceeding in a proper legal manner as required by the General Borough Act," and that no ". . . decision within the terms and meaning of the General Borough Act, or of the said Zoning Ordinance was ever reached by the Board of Adjustment in connection with the issuance of the said permit." Plaintiffs asked that the permit be set aside and defendants restrained from acting in accord with it.
On preliminary objections, the bill was dismissed, the decree stating that ". . . plaintiffs . . . [have] indicated that amendment could not be made to present a different case." *Page 452
The Act of June 29, 1923, P. L. 957, section 7, as amended by the Act of April 17, 1929, P. L. 529, section 1, 53 PS section 15737, provides: "Any person or persons, jointly or severally, aggrieved by any decision of the board of adjustment, or any taxpayer . . . may present to a court of record a petition, duly verified, setting forth that such decision is illegal in whole or in part, specifying the grounds of the illegality. Such petition shall be presented to the court within thirty days after the filing of the decision in the office of the board."
Defendants object that the bill is defective for want of averment of facts to support a finding that plaintiffs had not been advised of the granting of the permit in time to appeal from the action of the Board pursuant to the statute.
Passing the averments of mere legal conclusions, the serious defect is the failure to aver when plaintiffs learned of the Board's action; if they knew in time to proceed under the statute, its provisions required them to do so. InColteryahn San. Dairy v. Milk Con. Comm.,
Decree affirmed at appellants' costs.
Bowman v. Gum, Incorporated ( 1936 )
Kemble v. Phila. etc. R. Co. ( 1891 )
Colteryahn Sanitary Dairy v. Milk Control Commission ( 1938 )
Sherman v. Delaware & Atlantic Telegraph & Telephone Co. ( 1908 )
Commonwealth Ex Rel. Minerd v. Margiotti ( 1936 )
White v. Old York Road Country Club ( 1935 )