DocketNumber: Appeal, No. 15
Citation Numbers: 47 Pa. Super. 628
Judges: Beaver, Head, Henderson, Morrison, Porter, Qrlady, Rice
Filed Date: 7/13/1911
Status: Precedential
Modified Date: 2/18/2022
Opinion by
The defendants were the owners of a lot of ground in the borough of Carlisle fronting on an ancient traveled public highway long known as the Springs Road. By an ordinance dated July 12, 1894, the said borough ordained, inter alia, “a street to be sixty feet in width to run from the point on North Hanover street where the Carlisle Springs road intersects said Hanover street to the borough limits on the line of said Carlisle Springs road to be called Metzger street.” Viewers were duly appointed in the manner provided by law to assess the damages, if any, suffered by abutting lot owners by reason of the laying out and opening the same. They made a report awarding to the defendants $25.00 damages. From this report the defendants appealed. While said appeal was pending, to wit, on October 14,1907, the borough officials caused a notice
Nothing was done by either of the parties after the service of this notice until November 14, 1907, on which date an agreement in writing was entered into which had for its apparent object the settlement of the various matters in controversy between the borough and the defendants. This agreement recites the pending appeal of the defendants “from the report of viewers appointed to assess damages and levy contributions in the laying out and opening of Metzger street;” it provided that the same should be- discontinued and withdrawn and that the borough was to pay to the defendants the sum of $175 “as full damages to them for the opening of said streets,” etc. It further provided that $100 of said sum should be paid immediately upon the approval of the agreement by the town council and “the balance of said damages, to-wit, the sum of seventy-five dollars, to be paid upon the completion of the said Long & Co.’s pavement on the sidewalk along their property abutting on said Metzger street; provided that said Long & Co. shall before the 15th of December, 1907, grade the said sidewalk and make thereon a suitable cinder walk and shall likewise complete the said sidewalk by laying a brick pavement thereon six feet in width before the first day of July, 1908,” etc. This agreement was signed by the defendants, was ratified by the town council, and the $100 paid to the defendants as therein, provided.
Again a period of inactivity followed until October, 1908, when the borough, without further notice to the defendants, proceeded to lay down and construct a con
We will first endeavor to ascertain the legal status of the parties under the general law and borough ordinances after the notice referred to was given without any regard to the contract already mentioned into which the parties subsequently entered. We will then inquire how far, if at all, the execution of that contract changed the mutual rights and obligations of the parties.
By the Act of April 20, 1905, P. L. 235, the legislature authorized boroughs to require the grading, paving, repaving and repairing of sidewalks, etc., and provided that on the neglect or refusal of the property owner to construct such sidewalk the borough might cause the same to be done and collect from the owner the costs thereof and ten per cent additional, together with all charges and expenses, and file a municipal lien against the lot to secure the payment thereof. By the ordinance of October 12, 1905, the. plaintiff borough provided for the exercise of the power thus conferred upon it by the legislature and ordained that, upon the refusal of any lot owner to lay a sidewalk, the work should be done by the borough in accordance with the several ordinances relating to that subject, it then collecting the costs thereof with ten per cent additional from the lot owner. As we have already seen, the borough, in October, 1907, had notified the defendants to construct their sidewalk and the latter had refused or neglected to obey the demand of the notice. Was there any legal justification or excuse advanced by them to pre
On the trial the defendants, following the lines foreshadowed by their affidavits of defense, made repeated efforts to prove by the testimony of witnesses that the lines of Metzger street had never been staked out on the ground; that it had never been opened to its full width; that the sidewalks which would eventually be laid on the opposite side of the street would not conform in grade with those on the side on which the defendants’ property was situate, and other like matters, all of which were excluded by the learned trial court. It seems to us apparent, under the facts exhibited by the record and already referred to, that Metzger street was a lawfully ordained public street of the borough of Carlisle of the width of sixty feet. Having been an open traveled public highway before it became a street of the borough, there was no formality to be observed beyond the report of the viewers in opening the street. That it was not immediately opened to its entire legal width was a matter that in no way concerned the defendants. The borough could determine for itself when the public necessity required the use of the full width of the street. In the meantime it was invested with the right to exercise over that street all of the municipal powers given to it by the legislature for the regulation and control of its streets. The several assignments of error complaining of the exclusion of testimony of this character must therefore be dismissed.
But the corporate municipal will to which the legislature had given the sanction of public law was that and that only exercised through' and manifested by its ordinances duly enacted. Let us look for a moment then at the ordinances that were in force in the borough of Car-lisle at the time that the notice of October, 1907, was served on the defendants. There appears at that time to have been in force an ordinance adopted September 12,
The defendants further contend that they were excused from their obligation to lay the sidewalk after the receipt of the notice because no grade line for the location of the sidewalk was given, either in the notice or otherwise, by the borough officials. It does not appear, either from the lien filed or other evidence in the record, that there was any grading to be done beyond the ordinary leveling and preparation of the ground to make a fit foundation for the sidewalk. By an ordinance enacted as early as 1856, and apparently still in force, it was declared to be unlawful for any person to construct any pavement in any street of the borough “unless the height and breadth of said pavement shall have been first previously fixed and settled by the borough regulators.” By a still earlier ordinance of June 17, 1852, it was made the duty of every lot owner, before constructing any sidewalk, “to call upon the regulators of said borough to fix the breadth, elevation and declination of said pavement or sidewalk.”
From an examination of these ordinances then it would appear that the borough had the right to require the defendants to lay a sidewalk in front of their premises and
By that agreement, as we have already seen, the defendants, in consideration of the payment therein provided for, undertook to grade the sidewalk and then to construct it six feet wide of brick. We may concede that if the defendants had stood upon this contract and complied with its obligation, the borough would have had no standing to object to a sidewalk composed of brick. But when the defendants refused to comply with the contract into which they had thus voluntarily entered, the borough was warranted in rescinding it; and it was not thereafter competent for the defendants to set up the contract they had declined to perform as a reason why the borough could not assert its right to compel the laying of a sidewalk under general ordinances, of any such material as was provided for in those ordinances. In other words, the defendants having, so far as this record shows, without any sufficient reason, broken that contract, it practically disappeared from the case. The borough was thus left in the full exercise of all the powers it possessed before the contract was entered into. As we have already seen, it had long before that time served a notice upon the defendants to lay a sidewalk in the manner provided by the ordinances. The defendants were in default under that notice;
Taking this view of the case, we can perceive no reason for a separate discussion of the several assignments of error. We may grant it is somewhat difficult to determine precisely the idea the learned trial court had in view in affirming the plaintiff’s third point (tenth assignment of error), or the effect which such instructions might have had upon the minds of the jury had there been in issue any question of fact that ought to have relieved the defendants from the legal obligation otherwise resting on them. But there was no evidence produced or offered on the part of the defendants that in our judgment would have had the legal effect of relieving them from the duty of putting down the sidewalk, or, failing in that, from the obligation of paying for it after the borough had put it down.' It is sufficient then to say that no one of the assignments exhibits any substantial error on the part of the trial court which would warrant us in reversing the judgment that has been entered.
Judgment affirmed.