Campbell v. City of Philadelphia

170 A. 467, 112 Pa. Super. 285, 1934 Pa. Super. LEXIS 44
CourtSuperior Court of Pennsylvania
DecidedOctober 20, 1933
DocketAppeal 207
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 170 A. 467 (Campbell v. City of Philadelphia) 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
Campbell v. City of Philadelphia, 170 A. 467, 112 Pa. Super. 285, 1934 Pa. Super. LEXIS 44 (Pa. Ct. App. 1933).

Opinion

Opinion by

James, J.,

On July 10, 1925, the City of Philadelphia passed an ordinance authorizing an agreement with the Reading Company for the elimination of certain grade crossings in the City of Philadelphia, the cost of which was to be borne equally by the two parties. In accordance with said ordinance the Board of Surveyors adopted a plan, according to which the thirty-seven foot frontage of the plaintiff’s property on Ridge Avenue, to a varying depth, beginning at nothing on the north line, to one foot ten and one-eighth inches at the south line, was condemned. The matter involved was about thirty square feet of land and the cost of *287 rebuilding the wall, which was part of a modern bakery building.

Pursuant thereto the city entered its bond on November 29, 1925 to cover the damages and on March 17, 1926 served three months ’ notice upon claimant of its intention to take a portion of his property, both steps being in accordance with Article 3 of the ordinance. On October 7, 1926, the city filed a petition for the appointment of a board of view, which duly filed its report on May 25, 1928, awarding damages to plaintiff in the sum of $5,311 and which report was duly confirmed on July 16, 1928. On June 18, 1928 the city filed an appeal. On January 5, 1931, a jury was sworn in the court of common pleas and a verdict for plaintiff was rendered in the sum of $200. On motion by plaintiff a new trial was granted. On February 24, 1933, the case was again tried before a common pleas jury and resulted in the present award of $2,500. The city, having presented a point for binding instructions, filed a motion for judgment non obstante veredicto, which motion was granted and judgment was entered in favor of the defendant, from which judgment this appeal was taken.

Between the date of the first trial in January, 1931, and the second trial in- February, 1933, the councils of the City of Philadelphia passed an ordinance approved July 11, 1932, entitled “An ordinance to authorize the buildings on premises known as Nos. 5152-54-56 Ridge Avenue, in the Twenty-first Ward, to remain in their present position,” which ordinance was in part as follows: “Section 1. The Council of the City of Philadelphia ordains, That the buildings on the premises aforesaid be allowed to remain in their present position undisturbed ; and it is hereby directed that they shall so remain until such time as the wants of business and travel make it necessary to move back the building fronts to the new line of the street; suitable action to be taken to meet the new conditions and require- *288 meats when they arise and when the need for setting hack said building fronts has been duly certified to Council by the Director of Public Works. ’ ’ The justification of the city council for the passage of this ordinance is found in the ordinance itself, wherein it states, “And Whereas, The wants of business and travel on said Eidge Avenue do not! at the present time require the removal of the said projections and the setting back of the buildings to the new line; And Whereas, the Act of the General Assembly of the Commonwealth of Pennsylvania, of December 27, 1871, P. L. 1390 (1872) authorizes such buildings to be left until the wants of business and travel require their removal.”

The Act of December 27, 1871, supra, (53 PS 7107) is a supplement to the Act of May 6, 1870, and provides in section 2, “When a jury for opening or widening a street, or for assessing damages on the same find a building or buildings extending out upon the sidewalk, a distance not exceeding two-thirds of the width, such buildings may be left until the wants of business and travel may require their removal; and no damages shall be allowed the owner therefor until a future jury shall determine the necessity of their removal, and the amount of damages then to be paid.” There is no question that the land of the appellant condemned by the city brings it within the language of this section in that the building or buildings extending out upon the sidewalk do not exceed a distance of two-thirds of the width. The court below interpreted this section “as decreeing that in all eases of encroachment not exceeding two-thirds of the width of a sidewalk there should be no damages allowed unless and until the municipal authorities have declared in an appropriate manner that the wants of business and travel require the removal of the buildings and have ordered the recession.” With this we can not agree, as by the adoption of the ordinance in question the municipal authorities declared their intention to appropriate the *289 land in question regardless of its location with reference to the sidewalk and the advisability of determining whether such buildings are not to be considered in assessing damages is to be determined entirely by the jury of view appointed for assessing damages on the opening or widening of a street. It is not a question for municipal determination; it is solely a question for determination by the jury and it is entirely discretionary with them whether in assessing damages they shall exclude from their consideration such buildings as extend a distance not exceeding two-thirds of the width of the sidewalk until such time as the wants of business and travel may require their removal. Under this section it is not mandatory or obligatory upon the jury but they may have excluded the land in question for the reasons set forth in the Act, but their failure to exclude from the findings the buildings that may not extend two-thirds of the width of the sidewalk clearly indicates that the jury of view did not exercise their power of exclusion.

If the report of the jury of view did not affirmatively disclose that it had excluded from its report damages for a building or buildings extending out upon the sidewalk a distance not exceeding two-thirds of the width, we must conclude that they had considered the damages to the building or buildings within the lines of the original condemnation. Their duty as a jury of view was to assess damages for land and buildings within the lines and grades of Ridge Avenue as made by the board of surveyors although under said jury of view they may have excluded front their consideration of damages such portions of the land and buildings as came within the classifications of section 2. Their failure to state in their report that they had exercised the alternative allowed by the section can lead to but one conclusion, and that is that they had taken into consideration in the assessment of damages the land and buildings which did not exceed two- *290 thirds of the sidewalk distance. The award by the jury of view of damages in the sum of $5,311 shows clearly that they did not exclude the land in question, because if they did exclude, no damages whatever would have been sustained. All considerations of fact and policy were to be passed upon by the jury of view and when the appeal was taken to the common pleas the jury in that court was confined to but one question and that alone of assessing the damages for the taking.

In an appeal from an award of the jury of view to common pleas, the proceeding is de novo only on the subject of the amount of damages: Orange Home v. Montgomery Co., 218 Pa. 204, 67 A. 209.

The second question involved relates to the passage of the ordinance of July 11, 1932 and its effect upon the appellant’s right for damages.

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Related

Peters v. Reading
184 A. 23 (Supreme Court of Pennsylvania, 1936)

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Bluebook (online)
170 A. 467, 112 Pa. Super. 285, 1934 Pa. Super. LEXIS 44, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/campbell-v-city-of-philadelphia-pasuperct-1933.