Borough of Aliquippa v. Pittsburgh & Lake Erie Railroad

94 Pa. Super. 279, 1928 Pa. Super. LEXIS 179
CourtSuperior Court of Pennsylvania
DecidedApril 13, 1928
DocketAppeal 12
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 94 Pa. Super. 279 (Borough of Aliquippa v. Pittsburgh & Lake Erie Railroad) 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
Borough of Aliquippa v. Pittsburgh & Lake Erie Railroad, 94 Pa. Super. 279, 1928 Pa. Super. LEXIS 179 (Pa. Ct. App. 1928).

Opinion

Opinion by

Porter, P. J.,

This is a scire facias on a municipal claim, filed by the borough against two separate piece's of land owned by the defendant. The borough, without a petition of property owners, enacted an ordinance providing for the grading and paving of the roadway of South Hopewell Avenue and for the payment of the cost of the improvement, one-third by the borough and two-thirds by an equal assessment on the foot-front of real estate abutting upon the line of the street as improved. After the completion of the work the borough filed a claim against the abutting property of the defendant, having a frontage of 1068.20 feet, at the rate of five dollars and nine hundred and thirty-nine one thousandths per foot-front, amounting to $6344.03. This frontage included two pieces of land, one having a frontage of 891% feet on the street and the other having a frontage of 174% feet thereon. The defendant filed an affidavit of defense to the scire facias, averring that the entire frontage of its property which was assessed was an essential part of its roadbed and not liable for a municipal improvement. Hpon the trial the defense as to the second piece of *281 land, having a frontage of 174% feet on the avenne, was abandoned and the defendant admitted liability for the assessment of that portion of its land, which eliminated all controversy as to that particular parcel.

At the trial, it appeared in, evidence that the first parcel of land described in the claim and having a frontage of 891% feet on the avenue extended from the line between the Boroughs of Aliquippa and Wood-lawn, northwardly to a point a short distance north of the passenger station of defendant company. The defendant produced evidence, which was uncontradicted, and clearly established that the passenger station, with its appurtenances and the land Set apart in connection therewith, had a frontage of only 86 feet upon the street, said frontage being at the northerly end of the particular parcel here involved. The defendant also produced evidence that that part of the parcel lying south of the frontage occupied by the station and its appurtenances, and having a frontage of 805% feet on the street, was a slope extending from the graded portion of its right of way up to the curb line of the street aS improved; that this slope was necessary for the protection of the tracks upon its roadbed to avoid the danger of slides from the hillside, and that there were no buildings or other structures upon that slope. The chief engineer of the defendant company testified that, in 1910, owing to the condition of increased traffic and the necessity for installing additional tracks upon the easterly side of their right of way to accommodate the local shippers, the company was compelled to relocate its main tracks and for that purpose acquired title to the land on the westerly side of its right of way and extending westwardly up to 'South Hopewell Avenue ; having acquired title to the land, it proceeded to excavate the ground, which was a hillside, located its two southbound main track's upon the westerly side of the new location, with a side track, west of the main *282 tracks, for part of the distance, and constructed a ditch west of these tracks, for the purpose of taking care of the water which fell upon the tracks and came from the hillside; that this excavation rendered it necessary to either make a slope west of the tracks, or build a retaining wall which would be much more expensive and that the company elected to grade the slope and did grade that slope, in harmony with the principles of sound engineering, the inclination of the slope being the standard of one and one-half feet to one foot of perpendicular and that that slope extended not only to the building line of South Hopewell Avenue, but actually extended to the curb line of the improved street.

The plaintiff called in rebuttal of this testimony Mr. Baker, who, while a registered civil engineer, admitted that he had not had a great deal of experience in railroad construction. He testified in chief that the slope from South Hopewell Avenue down to the flat of the tracks was not necessary for the proper maintenance of the defendant company’s property. When asked on cross-examination: “Q. Do you mean that that slope could be done away with? A. As I 'see it this slope could just as readily apply to Hopewell Avenue; in other words, the railroad company has all the land necessary for all the purposes for which they are using it there, and all they seem to need, without the slope.” He explicitly testified on cross-examination that the street was 20 feet above the level of the railroad track's at the southern line of the station house lot and that the elevation gradually decreased until at the line of Woodlawn Borough it was 15 feet. He was then asked: “Q. When you say that this slope is not necessary, do you mean that it could be removed, and that the properties of the railroad company and Hopewell Avenue would remain as they are now? A. Not without some other means of support. Q. Then your opinion when you said the slope was not necessary, was *283 that the slope could be removed, but that if it was, it would be necessary to substitute in its place a retaining wall? A. I mean that. It is self-evident that if the slope was removed you would have to build a retaining wall to support South Hopewell Avenue; but I don’t see that that is necessary for the maintenance of the railroad, because they are using all the ground that they seem to need, without interfering with this ground in question.” Further in the cross-examination, he was .asked: “Q. You concede that if this shoulder were removed it would be necessary to construct a retaining wall along South Hopewell Avenue? A. That would be true if you removed all the embankment. Q. If you removed it you would have to construct a retaining wall, and if you did not do that, South Hopewell Avenue would slide into the ditch and on the railroad company’s property? A. There would have to be some way to retain that street. Q. .So the fact is that in the operation of these tracks and the lines and system of the defendant company, they have a choice of two methods of protecting their tracks and property from such slides; one by this 'slope which keeps the earth in a state of natural repose, and the other by the method of the retaining wall? A. That is correct.” This witness distinctly admitted that the construction of the retaining wall would be more expensive than the retention of the slope. He further testified: “Q. In the construction of trackage is it not a fact that a slope in the state of natural repose is as good protection to the roadbed as a concrete retaining wall? A. I think that is so. ” This was the only witness called by the appellant to testify as to the existing conditions and the necessity for the maintenance of the slope for the protection of the roadbed of the defendant company. His testimony is only capable of the construction that if the slope were removed the defendant company would have to build a retaining wall in order to support the earth above its tracks. *284

Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI

Related

CSX Transportation, Inc. v. Delaware County Board of Assessment Appeals
104 A.3d 612 (Commonwealth Court of Pennsylvania, 2014)
Schick Inc. v. Amalgamated Clothing & Textile Workers Union
533 A.2d 1235 (Court of Chancery of Delaware, 1987)
Lacey v. Montgomery
124 A.2d 492 (Superior Court of Pennsylvania, 1956)
Palmer v. Philadelphia Suburban Transportation Co.
98 A.2d 245 (Superior Court of Pennsylvania, 1953)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
94 Pa. Super. 279, 1928 Pa. Super. LEXIS 179, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/borough-of-aliquippa-v-pittsburgh-lake-erie-railroad-pasuperct-1928.