Borough of Dunmore v. Conrad

76 Pa. Super. 473, 1921 Pa. Super. LEXIS 172
CourtSuperior Court of Pennsylvania
DecidedApril 26, 1921
DocketAppeal, No. 30
StatusPublished
Cited by8 cases

This text of 76 Pa. Super. 473 (Borough of Dunmore v. Conrad) 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 Dunmore v. Conrad, 76 Pa. Super. 473, 1921 Pa. Super. LEXIS 172 (Pa. Ct. App. 1921).

Opinions

Opinion bt

Linn, J.,

In numerous assignments appellant presents the following matters for review: invalidity of the assessment because (1) made by an illegal application of the foot-fiont method; (2) three lots were joined in one assessment; (3) the borough modified the contract; (4) it was not substantially performed; (5) he also asserts that pursuant to section 10 of the Act of June 4, 1901, P. L. 367; Act of April 2, 1909, P. L. 194, the lien expired before verdict or judgment on the claim; (6) that amendment of the claim should not have been permitted.

The record shows a trial on the merits of a scire facias sur municipal claim to recover a special assessment by the foot-front method on defendant’s real estate for its share of the cost of a sewer laid in front of it. This trial was conducted before a referee by agreement of the parties approved by the court pursuant to the local reference Act of April 6, 1869, P. E. 725, supplemented by the Act of June 22, 1871, P. L. 1363. Appellant has not [476]*476brought up the testimony, his counsel having stated at the argument that they would present their contentions as apparent on the record without the evidence. Some eighty exceptions were filed to the referee’s findings of fact and conclusions of law and all were dismissed.

In 1909 an ordinance was approved providing for the construction of a system of public sewers in section “S” of the second sewer district of the borough, specifying in considerable detail what should be done and the streets in which the sewer should be laid and appropriating for payment the sum of “$33,759.40, or so much thereof as may be necessary, which sum shall be derived from assessments on the properties fronting, adjoining and abutting on and along the line of the said sewers according to the foot-front rule; provided, that on all corner lots more than eighty feet in depth, where the sewer passes on both sides, or where a sewer has previously been constructed on the short side or will hereafter be constructed on the short side, an allowance of two-thirds of the length of the long side shall be made; and on all lots where the sewers pass at both ends, an allowance of one-half of one end shall be made, and on all lots less than seventy feet in depth, where the sewer passes along the long side only, an allowance of one-half of the length of the lot shall be made, and on all lots where the sewer passes at both ends and on one side, an allowance of the side and one-half of the shortest end shall be made, and which allowances are deemed just and equitable by the council.”

Pursuant thereto a contract for the work was duly executed but before it was completed a supplemental agreement was made providing that the diameter of the sewer be reduced in some streets and that a change in level be made for a large part of its length, thereby reducing the amount of excavation required as well as the cost of the work. Performance of this contract was the subject of litigation reported as Conrad v. O’Boyle et al., 61 Pa. Superior Ct. 467. The sewer was completed in [477]*477front of defendant’s property in 1910 and on October 31, 1910, this municipal claim was filed; on October 29, 1915, a sci. fa. to revive was filed. An affidavit of defense was put in May, 1916, and on March 24, 1920, the parties made the agreement of reference and waived trial by jury. The report of the referee was filed Octor 27, 1920, and on December 30, 1920, the court dismissed the exceptions and confirmed the report of the referee who in this report had directed the prothonotary to enter judgment for plaintiff for $1,110.88 (apparently according to established local practice under the reference statutes: Torrey v. Scranton, 133 Pa. 173, 179; McCarthy v. Masters, 142 Pa. 82, 83). The referee found that the change in level of the sewer resulted in reducing the cost of the excavation not only by $1,335.90 as the engineer had reported and the council had approved, but by $5,874.08 or at the rate of fifty cents per lineal foot of sewer and that “the defendant is entitled to a deduction of twenty-five cents each foot front from the amount of the assessment and no other reductions.”

1. In the municipal claim filed it is stated that “. the assessment was made in and by said ordinance and was according to the foot-front rule with certain allowances for corner, triangular and other irregularly shaped lots and the amount of foot frontage with which the said lot was assessed is 348 feet.” Appellant complains that the referee and the court declined to hold the assessment invalid for alleged misapplication of the foot-front rule. Assessments by that method are authorized by the statute governing the borough’s action. Section 2 of the Act of May 15, 1889, P. L. 220, provides: “Whenever any borough shall determine to construct any public sewer, it shall have power, by ordinance or ordinances duly passed, to assess the cost thereof as a sewage tax upon the property adjoining or adjacent to the same, either by the foot-front or in such other manner and in such proportions and amounts as to the burgess and town council may seem just and equitable.” It has frequently [478]*478been said that tbe foot-front rule is not a principle of taxation but merely a convenient method reasonably certain to produce a substantially fair result in built-up sections, adopted and sustained as a practical adjustment of proportional benefits; tbe decisions were considered by Judge Portee in Scranton v. Koehler, 14 Pa. Superior Ct. 1, at page 20, etc. (see same case in 200 Pa. 126), and by President Judge Rice in Harrisburg v. McPherran, 14 Pa. Superior Ct. 473 at 488, etc. As tbe method furnishes only a working rule for the practical adjustment of proportional benefits conferred upon property by a local improvement, the cost of which shall be collected out of the property, it is obvious that we cannot determine whether the rule was misapplied in this case without considering the evidence which we do not have. If the assessment was too large because of misapplication of the rule, an adjustment would have been proper under Witman v. Reading, 169 Pa. 375, 392, and Park Avenue Sewers, 169 Pa. 433. We must assume that there was sufficient evidence .to justify the conclusion of the referee that appellant was entitled only to a deduction of twenty-five cents per foot-front upon the whole case.

We cannot say that the part of the ordinance providing for allowances on corner lots, etc., quoted renders the ordinance invalid. The presumption is in favor of validity and it had been held that article I, section 9, of the Constitution providing that “all taxes shall be uniform upon the same class of subjects within the territorial limits of the authority levying the tax” does not apply to assessments for the cost of such local improvements ; the decisions are collected in Judge Simonton’s opinion in Harrisburg v. McPherran, 14 Pa. Superior Ct. 473 at 482, etc. In their brief counsel for appellant say, “It may be admitted that as to corner lots where the sewers extend along both sides, an assessment on both is liable to be excessive; and so also where there are sewers along both ends. And the provisions of the ordinance [479]*479may probably baye been intended to try and limit tbis. _|.,.Tbe amount wbicb was not put upon tbe corner or double-end lots bad to be borne by others increasing tbeir assessments and thus operating to tbeir disadvantage.

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Bluebook (online)
76 Pa. Super. 473, 1921 Pa. Super. LEXIS 172, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/borough-of-dunmore-v-conrad-pasuperct-1921.