Brookhaven Borough Inc.

54 Pa. D. & C. 546, 1945 Pa. Dist. & Cnty. Dec. LEXIS 100
CourtDelaware County Court of Quarter Sessions
DecidedApril 4, 1945
Docketdocket A
StatusPublished

This text of 54 Pa. D. & C. 546 (Brookhaven Borough Inc.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Delaware County Court of Quarter Sessions primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Brookhaven Borough Inc., 54 Pa. D. & C. 546, 1945 Pa. Dist. & Cnty. Dec. LEXIS 100 (Pa. Super. Ct. 1945).

Opinion

MacDade, P. J., Ervin and Sweney, JJ.,

This is a petition of 239 freeholders, residing within the vicinity of the community or village known as “Brookhaven”, asking for the incorporation of a borough to be known as “The Borough of Brookhaven”. The proposed borough is carved out of the Township of Chester and is bounded on the North by Dutton’s Mill Road and Middletown Township, on the East by Ridley Creek, on the South by Parkside Borough, the City of Chester and Upland Borough, and on the West by [547]*547Bridgewater Road and Chester Creek. At the hearing on March 7, 1945, the petition for incorporation was amended so as to exclude therefrom what is known as the “Smith” tract located at the extreme southerly tip of the proposed borough.

When the petition was filed, the court signed an order requiring notice of the filing of the petition to be advertised in the Chester Times and Weekly Reporter once a week for four weeks within the 30 days immediately before March 7, 1945; that at least 100 handbills giving such notice should be posted at prominent places within the limits of the proposed borough, and that there should be posted in the fire house in the borough a complete description of the boundaries and a plan showing the boundaries of the borough. At the hearing there was offered in evidence proofs of publication and affidavits showing that all the requirements of said order for advertising had been met.

At the hearing, one Horace D. Bullock, a taxpayer of Chester Township, not residing within the limits of the proposed borough, filed exceptions objecting to the incorporation (1) Because the proposed decree made no provisions for the apportionment of Chester Township’s assets or liabilities; (2) that the proposed decree made no provisions for the dismissal or substitution of elective officers of Chester Township residing within the limits of the borough; and (3) that the proposed decree made no provisions for the allocation of the assets and liabilities of the Chester Township school district.

None of these exceptions is valid for the reason that, under the law, machinery is set up for taking care of all of these matters after the incorporation of the borough, and the exceptions have no proper place in a proceeding to incorporate a borough.

Miss Caldwell, who lives practically in the geographical center of the proposed borough, appeared and protested orally the inclusion of her property in [548]*548the borough. She filed no written exceptions. She offered no legal objections and simply stated that she objected because she was having trouble with neighbors and some small boys in the vicinity. We suggested that Donald H. Hamilton, one of the attorneys for the petitioners, personally visit Miss Caldwell and explain the proceedings to her. He reported that he did and was impressed with Miss Caldwell’s knowledge of borough law. He subsequently ascertained that she had spent some time looking up the law in thé Lindsay Law Library. Mr. Hamilton feels that Miss Caldwell understands that she has no legal reasons for objecting to the incorporation, and he told her that in his opinion it would benefit both her and her property to be included in the borough.

Exceptions were also filed by The Pennsylvania Company, Trustee, J. Allen Hodge, Substituted Trustee, of the Estate of John P. Crozer, deceased, and William J. Wolf. William J. Wolf, it appeared, had contracted to purchase from the Crozer Estate what is known as the “West Farm”, located at the extreme westerly side of the borough between Bridgewater Road and Chester Creek. The exceptions filed on behalf of the Crozer Estate and Mr. Wolf were that the Crozer lands had been used exclusively for farming, were not part of the community known as “Brookhaven”, and that said lands did not properly belong to the proposed borough. These exceptions will be discussed hereafter.

At the hearing it developed that the “West Farm” had actually been used exclusively for farming and it was, therefore, determined by the incorporators to eliminate that farm lying between Bridgewater Road and Chester Creek from the borough. The boundaries of the borough were, therefore, revised, and the form of decree of incorporation accompanying their brief contains a description eliminating therefrom the “West Farm”.

[549]*549The only remaining objections are those advanced by the Crozer Estate, to wit, that the Crozer lands do not properly form part of the borough and are used exclusively for farming.

At the hearing, several residents of the proposed borough testified. They stated that their reasons for wanting the incorporation were that they desired to govern themselves; that the Feltonville Section of Chester Township was far removed from Brookhaven; that they wanted the advantages given by law to a borough form of government, and that their interests were such that they should be permitted to form a municipality separate from the Township of Chester.

It appeared that there were about 150 separate properties in the proposed borough, and that out of that number the owners of 140 of the properties had joined in the petition for incorporation. This represents 93 percent of the properties located in the borough. The petition was signed by 239 freeholders in the borough.

Mr. Tomlinson testified in support of the exceptions filed by the Crozer Estate. He stated that John P. Crozer died in 1926; that for three or four years after John P. Crozer’s death, the Crozer property was farmed and that for eight or nine years following this period the lands were not used at all. He said that since 1939 the “dairy farm” had been operated as a farm and that the other portion of the Crozer property was rented to various persons. He admitted that the Shaw farm, which lies on both sides of Edgmont Avenue, was rented to an individual who is employed at the Sun Ship Yard. He admitted that the barn on the Shaw farm had burned down some years ago and that it was not equipped to be operated as a farm, both because of the lack of necessary farm buildings and because of the lack of farm machinery. His testimony proved conclusively that the Crozer properties, with the exception of the “West Farm”, had not been used exclusively for farming for a number of years.

[550]*550Witnesses who testified on behalf of the incorporators likewise stated that the Crozer properties, except the “West Farm”, had not been used exclusively for farming for a number of years.

The substance of the testimony was that the Crozer lands, except the “West Farm”, are not even adaptable for farming purposes.

Mr. MacBride, the suburban real estate officer of The Pennsylvania Company, one of the trustees of the Crozer Estate, testified that the Crozer lands were not held for farming, but were held exclusively for the purposes of investment and resale. He admitted that the advantages attendant upon including the Crozer lands within the borough, such as the probability of the construction of a sewer which would be available to the Crozer tracts, would greatly aid the sale thereof. His testimony corroborates the contention of the incorporators that the Crozer lands, except the “West Farm”, are not “lands used exclusively for farming” as stated in the act, but are lands not only not used for farming in fact, but are lands held for investment and resale and which would be benefited if they were included within the limits of the proposed borough.

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Related

In Re Petition of Boro. of Churchill
170 A. 319 (Superior Court of Pennsylvania, 1933)
Borough of Blooming Valley
56 Pa. 66 (Supreme Court of Pennsylvania, 1867)
Incorporation of the Bor. of Edgewood
18 A. 646 (Supreme Court of Pennsylvania, 1889)
In re Millbourne Borough
46 Pa. Super. 19 (Superior Court of Pennsylvania, 1911)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
54 Pa. D. & C. 546, 1945 Pa. Dist. & Cnty. Dec. LEXIS 100, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/brookhaven-borough-inc-paqtrsessdelawa-1945.