Borough of Rockwood v. Hemminger

161 A. 457, 106 Pa. Super. 223, 1932 Pa. Super. LEXIS 227
CourtSuperior Court of Pennsylvania
DecidedApril 12, 1932
DocketAppeal 176
StatusPublished

This text of 161 A. 457 (Borough of Rockwood v. Hemminger) 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 Rockwood v. Hemminger, 161 A. 457, 106 Pa. Super. 223, 1932 Pa. Super. LEXIS 227 (Pa. Ct. App. 1932).

Opinion

Opinion by

Cunningham, J.,

The important question arising under this appeal is primarily one of law and involves the legality of a municipal assessment for street improvements, which the plaintiff borough is endeavoring to enforce against the defendant property owner. No facts are in dispute and the appeal comes before us in the form of a statement of the case’ filed under our Buie 56. .

In 1923, the requisite number of owners of properties *225 abutting upon that portion of Market Street in the Borough of Rockwood, Somerset County, which extends north from Coxe’s Creek for a distance of approximately 1725 feet to Somerset Avenue petitioned the borough council to adopt an ordinance authorizing its grading, curbing and paving. This petition was not signed by Annie C. Hemminger, the appellant herein. The ordinance, duly adopted and approved, was entitled: “An ordinance authorizing and requiring the grading, curbing and paving of Market Street, in the Borough of Rockwood, between the north side of Coxe’s Creek and the north side of Somerset Avenue; and making an appropriation for the payment of the same.”

Proceeding north from the bridge over Coxe’s Creek, there are three intervening cross streets before Somerset Avenue is reached: Main Street, about 250 feet north of the creek; Broadway Street, 325 feet north of Main; Grandview Street, approximately 750 feet north of Broadway and 400 feet south of Somerset Avenue. Between the creek and Grandview Street, a distance of approximately 1350' feet, Market Street is 100 feet in width between building lines and from Grandview Street to Somerset Avenue only 50 feet in width.

A contract was awarded under which the contractor undertook “to grade, pave and curb Market Street between the bridge over Coxe’s Creek to Somerset Avenue in Rockwood Borough, according to the plans and specifications therefor.” Only two unit prices were specified in the contract: (a) “Grading per eu. yd. $2.00” and (b) “Concrete per sq. yd. $3.58.”

By direction of the municipality, the first block northward between the creek and Main Street, approximately 250 feet in length and passing through a business district, was graded and paved the full width of the cartway — 60 feet — and curbs were constructed along the sidewalks. In the next block northward, be *226 tween Main and Broadway Streets, a distance of 325 feet and passing through a residential section, the street was graded, curbed and paved to a width of 20 feet on each side, leaving an open space of 20 feet unpaved in the middle of the street. From Broadway north to Grandview, a distance of about 750 feet, Market Street is still 100 feet wide, but the only paving done was of a strip 18 feet wide in the middle of the cartway and no curbs were installed in this block. From Grandview Street to Somerset Avenue, Market Street is only 50 feet in width and the 18 foot strip of paving was continued along the middle of Market through the block from Grandview to Somerset Avenue, a distance of about 400 feet, but no curbs were constructed in this block.

Speaking generally, the cartway of Market was fully graded and paved from Coxe’s Creek to Broadway and curbs were installed along these two short blocks of the improvement, but from Broadway Street to Somerset Avenue the only paving done was a strip 18 feet wide in the middle of the cartway and no curbs were installed along these two blocks aggregating more than 1100 feet in length.

The property of appellant is located on the northeast corner of Grandview and Market Streets, fronting ISO feet on Market. Although no curbing was constructed in front of, or across the street from, her property nor along any part of Market north of Broadway (750 feet to the south) and although the only part of Market paved in front of her property was a strip 18 feet wide in the middle of the cartway, the municipal authorities assessed appellant’s property on the basis of two-thirds of the entire cost of the improvement “at the same rate per foot front as the properties where the roadway had been paved to widths of 60 and 40 feet,” viz., $6.77 per foot, with interest from the date of the completion of the work, and an attorney’s commission of 5 per cent, or a total *227 assessment of $951.21. The municipal claim, subsequently filed, recites that the “kind and character of the improvement for which [it] is filed is the grading, curbing and paving of the street or cartway of Market Street, between the north side of Coxe’s Creek and the north side of Somerset Avenue.”

To the scire facias, issued upon the claim, appellant interposed two defenses: First, that her property was rural and therefore not subject to assessment by the foot front rule; and second, that the amount of the assessment was in excess of her legal liability because, inter alia, no curbing had been constructed in front of, or near, her property although the ordinance, contract and claim all specified curbing as a part of the improvement.

The learned trial judge, Reed, P, J., specially presiding, properly submitted her first contention as a question of fact to the jury (City of Phila. to Use v. Brady, 104 Pa. Superior Ct. 79, and cases there cited); that tribunal found by its verdict that appellant’s property was urban and that question passed out of the case; as to the second, the trial judge held it was a question of law and instructed the jury that if they found appellant’s property was town property they should render a verdict in favor of the plaintiff for the full amount of the claim.

The court had been requested, but refused, to charge on behalf of defendant as follows: “Inasmuch as the ordinance provided for the curbing of this entire street, and since it is an admitted fact that no curbing was placed on the street for a distance of about 1150 feet, that is between Broadway Street and Somerset Avenue, there could be no verdict in favor of the plaintiff and against the defendant for the cost of curbing in front of her property.” Motions for a new trial and for judgment n. o. v. were filed and denied and the property owner appealed from the judgment entered on the verdict. In an able opinion supporting his dis *228 position of the case the trial judge, although recognizing the apparent injustice of making appellant pay the same rate per foot front as was charged against the property owners living along the two blocks which were fully paved and curbed, felt constrained, under the construction placed by him upon the authorities, to sustain the theory of the municipality.

We are unable to agree with his conclusion; there is a dividing line between lawful taxation and confiscation and in our opinion that line has been crossed in this case. It is, perhaps, impossible to define by any general statement the limitation upon the power of municipal corporations to assess the cost of public improvements upon the owners of abutting properties, but there is a limitation and the facts appearing in each case, as it arises, must determine upon which side of the line it falls. Assessments of the nature here involved are a species of taxation (Hammett v. Philadelphia, 65 Pa. 146, 150) and as has been said by this court in Harrisburg v. McPherran, 14 Pa. Superior Ct.

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Related

City of Phila. to Use v. Brady
157 A. 694 (Superior Court of Pennsylvania, 1931)
Hammett v. Philadelphia
65 Pa. 146 (Supreme Court of Pennsylvania, 1869)
Alcorn v. City of Philadelphia
4 A. 185 (Supreme Court of Pennsylvania, 1886)
Philadelphia v. Evans
21 A. 200 (Supreme Court of Pennsylvania, 1891)
Witman v. City of Reading
32 A. 576 (Supreme Court of Pennsylvania, 1895)
Scranton v. Koehler
49 A. 792 (Supreme Court of Pennsylvania, 1901)
Harrisburg v. McPherran
14 Pa. Super. 473 (Superior Court of Pennsylvania, 1900)
Ebensburg Borough v. Little
28 Pa. Super. 469 (Superior Court of Pennsylvania, 1905)

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Bluebook (online)
161 A. 457, 106 Pa. Super. 223, 1932 Pa. Super. LEXIS 227, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/borough-of-rockwood-v-hemminger-pasuperct-1932.