Bender v. Akron Borough

14 Pa. D. & C. 305, 1930 Pa. Dist. & Cnty. Dec. LEXIS 477
CourtPennsylvania Court of Common Pleas, Lancaster County
DecidedJanuary 18, 1930
DocketEquity Docket No. 8
StatusPublished

This text of 14 Pa. D. & C. 305 (Bender v. Akron Borough) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Pennsylvania Court of Common Pleas, Lancaster County primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Bender v. Akron Borough, 14 Pa. D. & C. 305, 1930 Pa. Dist. & Cnty. Dec. LEXIS 477 (Pa. Super. Ct. 1930).

Opinion

Groff, J.,

The pleadings in this case consist of a bill of complaint, entered and filed in the Court of Common Pleas of this county on March 28, 1929; an answer raising a question of law, filed June 3, 1929; an answer to the facts alleged in the bill, containing new matter, filed Sept. 16, 1929; and a reply to the new material contained in defendant’s answer, filed Sept. 27, 1929.

[306]*306The question raised by these pleadings is: Does the existence of a street laid out by the Borough of Akron, extending south from Main Street, in said borough, over plaintiff’s land, as shown on the borough plan adopted by the borough in 1895, and never opened, nor damages paid therefor, constitute a cloud upon plaintiff’s title to the land over which this street extends?

Finding of facts.

1. The plaintiff is a resident of the Borough of Akron, Lancaster County, Pennsylvania.

2. The defendant is the Borough of Akron, a municipal corporation of the Commonwealth of Pennsylvania, and located in Lancaster County.

3. The plaintiff has been the owner in fee simple since 1918, and has been in possession of a certain tract of land which fronts on the south side of Main Street, an existing street in said Borough of Akron.

4. The said tract extends in depth southward from said Main Street 300 feet, more or less.

5. The eastern boundary of plaintiff’s said tract intersects said Main Street at a point about 268 feet west of the intersection of Main Street and Ninth Street in said borough, the latter being the state highway leading from Lancaster to Ephrata.

6. Said tract, for a distance of about forty-five feet westward from the said eastern boundary, contains no building.

7. About the year 1895 the defendant borough duly adopted a general borough plan, showing existing and proposed streets.

8. One of the proposed streets on said plan was designated as Eighth Street, and said street still remains on said plan.

9. The said proposed street, as designated on said plan, would have a cart-way thirty-three feet wide and a sidewalk eight feet wide on each side of it.

10. The cartway and the western sidewalk of the said proposed street is shown as extending southward from Main Street over and upon the said land of the plaintiff to the southern boundary of plaintiff’s land.

11. The said street is laid out only on said plan of 1895, and no proceedings have ever been taken by said borough to open the said street or to assess the damages to the owners of the land over which said street is laid out.

12. No highway, roadway or other passageway along the course of said proposed street now exists or is used by the public.

13. The said land over which the said proposed street is laid out is of the value of about $2000, provided said street is vacated.

14. The plaintiff desires to, and has planned to, erect a dwelling on her said land facing on said Main Street.

15. The plaintiff has been notified and warned by the defendant that she may not build any building on said land except at her own risk, and the defendant has threatened to open the said street without paying any damages to the plaintiff for destruction of any building she may erect on the line of said street.

16. The street in question is known as Eighth Street. It is plotted and shown on the draft of the borough as unopened.

17. No proceedings were ever had by the borough council to open said Eighth Street.

18. On Jan. 28, 1929, the Borough of Akron, through its solicitor, notified the plaintiff’s son, who was staking off the ground in question, located on the said Eighth Street, for the purpose of erecting a house, that he desired to call the attention of plaintiff’s son to the fact that Eighth Street is a street [307]*307plotted on the borough plan, and that if he built upon the said street, when the street is opened, he will be entitled to no damages for any property or building that he may put upon it, and that, in addition, he will be required to remove the same at his own expense.

Discussion.

In this case plaintiff files a bill in equity, alleging that she is the owner of a certain tract of land located in the Borough of Akron, Lancaster County, Pennsylvania; that the eastern boundary of said tract intersects Main Street in said borough at a point about 268 feet west of the intersection of Main Street and Ninth Street in said borough; that said tract, for a distance of 45 feet westward from its said eastern boundary, contains no buildings; that in the year 1895 the defendant borough duly adopted a general borough plan showing as existing a proposed street; that the proposed street was designated as Eighth Street on said plan; that said street remains on said plan; that said proposed Eighth Street, as designated on said plan, would have a cartway of 33 feet in width and a sidewalk 8 feet wide on each side of it; that the said proposed cartway and the western sidewalk extends southward from Main Street over and upon the land of plaintiff about 300 feet; that said street is laid out only on said borough plan of 1895, and that no proceedings have been taken by the borough to open said street or assess damages to the owners of the land over which said street is laid out; that the plaintiff desires to, and has planned to, erect a dwelling on her said lot where the street is laid out; that the plaintiff has been notified and warned by the defendant that she may not build on said land except at her own risk; and that the defendant is threatening to open said street without paying any damages for any building the defendant may erect thereon, and then prays the court to order and decree as follows:

“(a) That the existence of Eighth Street on the plan of the Borough of Akron is void and of no effect.

“(b) That the said Eighth Street be stricken from the said plan of said borough as a cloud on plaintiff’s title.

“(c) That an injunction issue forbidding the Borough of Akron to take any proceedings founded on the said plan of 1895 for the opening of a street over or across the said land of the plaintiff.

“(d) That the plaintiff, or her successors in title, may erect a building or buildings on the said premises free and relieved of any and all effect of the laying out and existence of the said Eighth Street over the said premises on the said plan of 1895, with the same effect as though the said street had never been placed on the said plan.

“(e) For such other relief as equity and justice may demand and the court may deem fit.”

The defendant, in its answer, admits the allegations in the first twelve paragraphs of the plaintiff's bill, and then admits the allegations in the fourteenth and sixteenth paragraphs of the plaintiff’s bill. Defendant denies the allegations in the thirteenth paragraph of plaintiff’s bill, namely, that the land over which the said proposed street is laid out is valuable for building purposes, and allages that since the adoption of the borough plan of Akron in 1895 the land has had no value for building purposes. In answer to paragraph fifteen of plaintiff’s bill, defendant denies that it has notified the plaintiff that it intends to and will proceed to open said Eighth Street in accordance with said plan.

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Bluebook (online)
14 Pa. D. & C. 305, 1930 Pa. Dist. & Cnty. Dec. LEXIS 477, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/bender-v-akron-borough-pactcompllancas-1930.