Burke v. General Outdoor Advertising Co.

168 A. 334, 110 Pa. Super. 343, 1933 Pa. Super. LEXIS 63
CourtSuperior Court of Pennsylvania
DecidedMay 2, 1933
DocketAppeal 104
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 168 A. 334 (Burke v. General Outdoor Advertising Co.) 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
Burke v. General Outdoor Advertising Co., 168 A. 334, 110 Pa. Super. 343, 1933 Pa. Super. LEXIS 63 (Pa. Ct. App. 1933).

Opinion

Opinion by

Stadtpeld, J.,

This is an appeal by General Outdoor Advertising Company, Inc., defendant, from a judgment on a verdict in favor of Mrs. N. J. Burke, plaintiff, in an action of.assumpsit for the recovery of rent under a lease. The plaintiff, by three written agreements, identical in form, on August 4, 1927, leased to defendant the entire roof of the building at No. 838 Columbus Avenue, near Brighton Road, the roof of the building at No. 1801 Brighton Road corner of Columbus Avenue, and the roof of the building at the corner of Irwin and Columbus' Avenue in the city of Pittsburgh, a separate lease being executed for each roof. The buildings at No. 838 Columbus Avenue and at No. 1801 Brighton Road are at a corner, being separated by another building also owned by plaintiff, but not under lease to the defendant.

■ Each lease was for a term of five years, and the yearly rental for each location was $750 payable in advance in equal semi-annual installments. Defendant is in the business of erecting and maintaining out-door advertising signs. Each lease contained the following provision: “......if the tenant be prevented by authorities having jurisdiction from constructing and/or maintaining its signs on said roof, this lease shall terminate at the option of the tenant, *346 on fifteen days notice given to the landlord by registered mail, and the landlord agrees thereupon to return to the tenant any rent paid in advance for the unexpired term.”

The tenant paid the rent regularly until February 4, 1929, after which it ceased to do so, and notified the plaintiff in writing by registered mail on March 29, 1929, that it was giving 15 days notice of its intention to terminate the leases, in accordance with the provision above quoted. In its notice, it specified, as to the first two properties, above referred to, that the bureau of building inspection had refused permission to construct and/or maintain advertising sign structures on said roofs on the ground that the latter were unsafe for said use; and as to the third property on the ground that such use would be violative of the zoning ordinance in force and effect in the City of Pittsburgh.

At the trial of the ease plaintiff offered the leases in evidence with undenied averments in the statement of claim that an installment of rent had not been paid and rested. Defendant then undertook to prove that “it was prevented by authorities having jurisdiction from constructing its signs on said roofs,” and gave notices of cancellation. No rent was paid thereafter.

As to the first two properties described above it appeared that one Eugene Ingold, city sign inspector, upon being apprised by the engineer or agent of defendant company some time prior to March 26, 1929, of the latter’s desire to erect signs on the roofs of said properties, made at least two personal inspections of the roofs and their location, and came to a definite conclusion that it was not safe to erect and maintain any signs on those two roofs and forbade their construction. He took copies of leases of plaintiff to defendant .company and wrote across the face thereof: “Permit refused. March 26, 1929. Eugene Ingold, Insp. City of Pittsburgh.”

*347 The superintendent of building inspection also issued an official order refusing permit for construction of any sign on the roof of the property third above described, because the location ivas classified as “a residential,” wherein commercial signs were forbidden by the provisions of the zoning ordinance.

There was no evidence as to any written application for permit and no record thereof by the bureau, no records being kept of applications which are refused. There was some testimony that a written application for permit for the third property had likely been made; because of the reference thereto in the order of the bureau refusing the same. No plans or specifications of the proposed signs or any bf them were offered in evidence, nor did the testimony show .that any had been filed with the bureau.

Eugene Ingold, inspector of signs, called as a witness on behalf of defendant testified that he had made at least two inspections of the premises which disclosed that they were “old buildings,” in a “rattle-’ trap neighborhood,” roofs too old; and old building between the leaseholds of the first two properties, held together- by hog chains and which Ingold suspected defendant might try to use as a base for anchors or supports, although not then under lease to defendant but owned by plaintiff; that there was a clean sweep of winds from the river and a school building close by, with many children coming and going. The bureau regulations allowed only iron signs on roofs and he would not permit the erection of iron signs on the roofs in question. He was unwilling to. risk signs at that location for “fear ...... more than anything else” that either during the construction or maintenance of the sign a piece of metal might fall and injure one or more children. He condemned the locations generally as hazardous to public safety and directed defendant’s engineer and agent, Dailey, to “cut *348 them out altogether.” The good faith, of the inspector’s conclusion and decision was not questioned.

As to the third property, defendant offered in evidence the zoning ordinance of the City of Pittsburgh, the zoning map showing the location of the property as being within the prohibited area, and the order of the bureau refusing the permit.

Upon the conclusion of the trial, the trial judge affirmed plaintiff’s request for binding instructions and a verdict was rendered in favor of plaintiff for the full amount of her claim. Motions ex parte defendant for new trial and for judgment non obstante veredicto were overruled by the court en banc in an opinion by Egax, J. Prom the judgment entered on the verdict this appeal is taken by defendant.

The lower court predicated its opinion on the ground that the defendant had not met the burden of proof; that it had offered no testimony tending to show that any application; as to the first two properties had been made to the superintendent of the bureau, or that the latter had refused a permit; that the only testimony as to any application was that of Dailey, formerly in defendant company’s employ as engineer and agent, that he made a verbal application to Ingold at some period of Which he was uncertain; that defendant produced no copies of an application, or of plans or specifications; that it was bound to show that it had made a bona fide and reasonable effort to secure a permit to erect a sign, of a size and weight, which was in conformity with the size and strength of plaintiff’s buildings. The court further held that defendant was bound to know the restriction in the zoning ordinance as to the third property referred to, at the time it entered into the leases. It was also of the opinion that the tenant, defendant company, was not restricted to the use of the roofs only for the purpose of erecting advertising signs on it. With these conclusions of the lower court we can not agree.

*349 Under the ordinance of the City of Pittsburgh, approved1 July 3,1913; offered in evidence by the defendant, it is provided, inter alia, under Section 5,......

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
168 A. 334, 110 Pa. Super. 343, 1933 Pa. Super. LEXIS 63, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/burke-v-general-outdoor-advertising-co-pasuperct-1933.