APART. OWNERS & MANAGERS, ETC. v. Brown

382 A.2d 473, 252 Pa. Super. 539
CourtSuperior Court of Pennsylvania
DecidedDecember 28, 1977
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 382 A.2d 473 (APART. OWNERS & MANAGERS, ETC. v. Brown) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Superior Court of Pennsylvania primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
APART. OWNERS & MANAGERS, ETC. v. Brown, 382 A.2d 473, 252 Pa. Super. 539 (Pa. Ct. App. 1977).

Opinion

252 Pa. Superior Ct. 539 (1977)
382 A.2d 473

APARTMENT OWNERS AND MANAGERS COMMITTEE OF the STATE COLLEGE AREA CHAMBER OF COMMERCE, by Harold Zipser, Chairman, Trustee Ad Litem, Garden House Realty Co., I & A Corporation, Atlas Realty Co., Inc. and Marie Capparelli, t/d/b/a Casa DiAltaomonte Restaurant, Appellants,
v.
Charles C. BROWN, Officially as District Attorney of Centre County, Pennsylvania.
Henry F. GNAS
v.
NATALIE'S TOWING SERVICE, INC., Appellant.

Superior Court of Pennsylvania.

Argued September 14, 1976.
Decided December 28, 1977.

*542 Benjamin Novak, State College, with him Novak & Donovan, State College, for appellants.

Charles C. Brown, Jr., appellee, in propria persona.

John W. Blasko, State College, for appellee, Henry F. Gnas.

Before WATKINS, President Judge and JACOBS, HOFFMAN, CERCONE, PRICE, VAN der VOORT and SPAETH, JJ.

PRICE, Judge:

Two cases which were consolidated in the lower court are before us on appeal. The appeal in No. 977 is from the order of the lower court dismissing the appellants' petition for declaratory relief. The appeal in No. 978 is from the order of the lower court requiring the appellant to pay $25.30 plus interest to appellee. We affirm the orders of the lower court in No. 977 and in No. 978.

The issue at the heart of these appeals is whether one who removes an illegally parked vehicle from his land has a possessory lien on the vehicle for the costs of towing and storage. The facts underlying the appeals are as follows: Prior to 1973, many owners of private property in State College, Pennsylvania, were seriously hindered in the use of their land by trespassers who illegally parked their motor vehicles on private property. The problem was particularly acute on weekends when the Pennsylvania State University football team played in State College. Owners and tenants of apartment buildings often discovered that unauthorized vehicles occupied spaces in their private parking facilities.[1]*543 Furthermore, all attempts to remedy the situation, such as posting warning signs or issuing citations, had been of little or no avail.

In 1973, several of the property owners proposed to Emanuel Natalie that he begin a towing service to remove illegally parked vehicles. Natalie formed appellant Natalie's Towing Service, Inc. [Natalie's]. The corporation purchased two towing trucks, other miscellaneous towing equipment, and a lot near the center of State College to be used as a pound. It then contracted with the owners of private parking lots to patrol their lots and to remove vehicles which were parked without permission. Natalie's also responded to individual calls from property owners to remove specific vehicles.

The procedure employed by Natalie's involved towing the vehicles to its pound, where they could be reclaimed by their owners. At least two attendants were on duty at the pound at all times. However, before Natalie's would release a vehicle to its owner, the owner was required to pay a fee.[2]

On October 10, 1973, appellee Henry F. Gnas, Jr., travelled from Beaver, Pennsylvania to State College to observe the football game being played that day. After the game, he and his friends repaired to the Tavern Restaurant on College Avenue. Mr. Gnas had been in State College on only one other occasion, and he was not particularly familiar with the area.

En route to the restaurant, Mr. Gnas bypassed opportunities to park in a large metered parking lot and in a four story parking garage. Instead, he parked in an unattended, unmetered, single-level lot which entered from an alley near the restaurant. The lot was enclosed on three sides by wooden logs. Mr. Gnas testified that he saw no signs prohibiting unauthorized parking.

*544 Mr. Gnas and his friends entered the restaurant and began to await an available table. After approximately one hour, he observed a sign inside the restaurant cautioning patrons not to park on private property. Mr. Gnas left the restaurant to check on his vehicle, only to discover that it had already been towed away by Natalie's.

Mr. Gnas dispatched his brother to obtain the car from the pound, which was located four blocks away. His brother paid the $25.30 fee, and the car was released.

On December 11, 1973, Mr. Gnas caused a writ of summons in assumpsit to be served on Natalie's. A complaint requesting judgment in the amount of $25.30 was filed on January 31, 1975. This is the appeal at No. 978.

In January, 1974, at a meeting of the Apartment Owners and Managers Committee of the State College Area Chamber of Commerce, Centre County District Attorney Charles C. Brown opined that one who tows an illegally parked vehicle from private property and refuses to relinquish it until a fee is paid is guilty of theft. He also stated that if any owner of a vehicle that had been towed filed a proper complaint with his office, he would prosecute the offender. Thereafter, Natalie's discontinued its towing service.

On July 19, 1974, the Apartment Owners and Managers Committee of the State College Area Chamber of Commerce, and several other individuals and corporations, filed a petition for declaratory relief pursuant to the Uniform Declaratory Judgments Act, Act of June 18, 1923, P.L. 840, § 1 (12 P.S. § 831) et seq., naming District Attorney Charles C. Brown as respondent. The petitioners sought a declaration of their civil rights and criminal liabilities under the facts as described above.

The action for a declaratory judgment and the action brought by Mr. Gnas against Natalie's were consolidated, and trial took place on February 26, 1975. In the action for a declaratory judgment, a stipulation of facts and issues was prepared and submitted to the court. This is the appeal at No. 977.

*545 On September 19, 1975, the lower court entered an order directing Natalie's to "refund and pay over" to Mr. Gnas the sum of $25.30 plus interest and dismissing the petition for declaratory relief. In its memorandum accompanying the order, the lower court explained that Natalie's did not have a possessory lien on the vehicle. Furthermore, the petition for a declaratory judgment was dismissed because the court declined to render an "advisory opinion as to a non-existent case," a function without the purview of the Uniform Declaratory Judgments Act.

Natalie's contends that the lower court erred in determining that no lien exists in this case. Three theoretical bases for the existence of a lien are suggested. First, Natalie's argues that it has a common law or artisan's lien. A common law lien is the right of one who by labor, skill, or materials adds value to the chattel of another, whether under an express or implied agreement with the owner, to retain possession of the chattel until the owner has paid for the value of his services. R. Brown, The Law of Personal Property § 107 (2d ed. 1955). In Pennsylvania, a garageman has the right to assert a possessory lien for an automobile which he has stored or repaired at the request of the owner. Saxton v. Gemehl, 72 Pa.Super. 177 (1919).

The common law lien arises by implication from the express or implied contractual relation that exists between the workman and the owner. See 51 Am.Jur.2d, Liens § 21 (1966).

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