Canonsburg Borough's Annexation

4 Pa. D. & C. 624, 1923 Pa. Dist. & Cnty. Dec. LEXIS 289
CourtWashington County Court of Quarter Sessions
DecidedJuly 9, 1923
StatusPublished

This text of 4 Pa. D. & C. 624 (Canonsburg Borough's Annexation) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Washington 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
Canonsburg Borough's Annexation, 4 Pa. D. & C. 624, 1923 Pa. Dist. & Cnty. Dec. LEXIS 289 (Pa. Super. Ct. 1923).

Opinion

Brownson, P. J.,

— By an Ordinance of the Borough of Canons-burg, approved March 20, 1923, the borough attempted to annex to it certain territory, which included properties owned by the Standard Chemical Company and the W. S. George Pottery Company, complainants, under the provisions of section 18 of article i, chapter m, of the Borough Code of May 14, 1915, P. L. 312. The two manufacturing companies just named have filed a complaint against this action under section 9 of article I, chapter vn, of the same Code, joined in by the administratrix of Joseph M. Flannery.

The amended complaint objects to the regularity and sufficiency of the plans forming a part of the original statement filed by the borough in the office of the Clerk of the Court of Quarter Sessions, in that the plan of the borough limits before the annexation, and the plan thereof as affected by the annexation, do not conform to the statute, this objection being understood to mean that they were not drawn upon the same sheet of paper, with one superimposed upon the other. We need not consider whether this was a valid objection, because, if it were, it has been remedied by an amendment of the statement. We shall consider the other objections to the ordinance made by the complaint.

1. The land embraced in the annexation ordinance consists of a section of territory whereof slightly over four-fifths in area lay in the Township of Chartiers and about one-fifth in the Township of North Strabane. The complainants collectively own all of the land in the latter township, with the exception of three houses and lots. They object that the territory taken from North Strabane is not “adjacent” to the borough within the meaning of the statute, because it is separated therefrom by Chartiers Creek and by unimproved land lying on the farther side of the creek.

The word “adjacent” manifestly was used in the act in such a sense as to require that the territory to be annexed shall adjoin the annexing borough, it not being the intent to authorize a borough to annex land entirely separated from it by intervening territory that would be under the government of another municipality: Camp Hill Borough, 142 Pa. 511. But it is not essential that each individual lot, parcel or tract of land comprised within the annexed territory shall itself adjoin the borough; it is sufficient if that territory, considered as a unit and regarded as a whole, so adjoins: Camp Hill Borough, 142 Pa. 511. The fact that Chartiers Creek, a stream sixty feet wide, flows through it, in this instance, does not prevent the territory from being treated as a unit for present purposes. The creek is the boundary of complainants’ lands, and these adjoin, both legally and in fact, the lands of proprietors on the opposite side of the stream embraced in the annexation, which lands connect complainants’ properties with the borough line. Nor did the fact that the properties of the latter were in North Strabane Township, while the lands between them and the borough line were in Chartiers Township, prevent the borough from treating and dealing with the territory annexed as a unit for annexation purposes. Just as it is immaterial that artificial property lines may sub-divide a section of territory into individual holdings, so is it with artificial township lines. The statute empowers boroughs to annex “adjacent land” without regard to artificial lines of division which may run through it. There is nothing in the act to interfere with the taking in by the borough authorities of the whole of a continuous area of land, which, in their judgment, ought to be annexed, merely because it happens to lie in more than one township'.

2. The complainants further contend that the annexed territory ought not to be treated as a unit because (so the complaint avers) the portion thereof [626]*626known as White Lawn Terrace “is not adjacent to the remainder of the territory, . . . being cut off therefrom on the south by a high bluff . . . (and) on the west by a deep ravine or hollow,” so that no road or street can be constructed therefrom, at reasonable expense, to the remainder of the territory. White Lawn Terrace is a locality at the northern edge of the annexed territory. It takes its name from a plan of lots which covers the greater part of it. It is largely built up, and about three-fourths of the signers of the annexation petition are freeholders therein. It is a fact that on the south thereof is a high bluff, and on the west is a ravine, so that its inhabitants cannot travel therefrom, in a straight line, to the remainder of the territory in question, and streets to enable them to do so cannot be laid out and constructed at reasonable expense, though they can at present travel to it by means of winding streets, and other similar means of access thereto can be laid out. But it is very clear that, for the purposes of the question we are now considering, the bluff and the ravine do not interfere with the existence of continuity of territory in a legal sense. To warrant the inclusion in one borough of two adjoining portions of land, it is not legally essential that one shall be accessible from the other by travel in straight lines.

3. The complainants ask us to review the discretion exercised by the borough authorities in passing the annexation ordinance, and to hold that such discretion was not wisely and properly exercised. On the other hand, the borough contends that we have no jurisdiction to consider the merits of the action taken in passing the ordinance, and are limited to a review of the regularity of the procedure connected therewith.

Prior to 1903, the courts were in the habit of considering more than the mere regularity of the steps by which ordinances were enacted, when such ordinances were brought before them by complaints filed in the Quarter Sessions: see, e. g., Chartiers Borough’s Appeal, 19 W. N. C. 46, where an act done by a borough in the enforcement of a certain ordinance, as against the complainant, was restrained as oppressive. But from the passage of the Act of April 22, 1903, P. L. 247, until 1915, it was generally held that the only remedy whereby to attack the validity of an annexation ordinance upon such grounds was by a bill in equity: Clairton Borough, 34 Pa. Superior Ct. 74; Beaver Borough, 34 Pa. Superior Ct. 467; Fister v. Kutztown Borough, 49 Pa. Superior Ct. 483. It was also held that when the remedy in equity was invoked, the Common Pleas could not substitute its discretion in place of that confided by the law to the borough authorities, by determining whether, in the interests of the public, it was or was not expedient that the ordinance in question should be enacted: Fister v. Kutztown Borough, 49 Pa. Superior Ct. 483, 487, 488. As, however, there is implied in the grant to boroughs of the delegated power to enact ordinances the limitation that ordinances enacted in pursuance thereof must not be, in a legal sense, unreasonable, the courts might interfere in the case of any ordinance, when shown to be so patently unreasonable and oppressive as to amount to an abuse or excess of power: Mallie v. Yeadon Borough, 10 Del. Co. Reps. 521; and see Pittsburgh P. A. Co. v. Swissvale Borough, 70 Pa. Superior Ct. 224. The effect of the enactment, as a part of the Borough Code of 1915, of section 9 of article I, chapter VII, was held by the Supreme Court to be that any resort to equity is abolished, and now the exclusive remedy for the purpose of questioning the validity of an ordinance is by complaint to the Quarter Sessions: Parkin v. New Kensington Borough, 262 Pa. 433; Whitney v. Jersey Shore Borough, 266 Pa. 537.

Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI

Related

Parkin v. New Kensington Borough
105 A. 629 (Supreme Court of Pennsylvania, 1918)
Whitney v. Jersey Shore Borough
109 A. 767 (Supreme Court of Pennsylvania, 1920)
Clairton Borough
34 Pa. Super. 74 (Supreme Court of Pennsylvania, 1907)
Beaver Borough
34 Pa. Super. 467 (Supreme Court of Pennsylvania, 1907)
Fister v. Borough
49 Pa. Super. 483 (Superior Court of Pennsylvania, 1912)
Pittsburgh Poster Advertising Co. v. Swissvale Borough
70 Pa. Super. 224 (Superior Court of Pennsylvania, 1918)
In re Annexation of a Portion of Porter Township
75 Pa. Super. 543 (Superior Court of Pennsylvania, 1921)
Annexation to Borough of Camp Hill
21 A. 978 (Cumberland County Court of Quarter Sessions, 1891)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
4 Pa. D. & C. 624, 1923 Pa. Dist. & Cnty. Dec. LEXIS 289, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/canonsburg-boroughs-annexation-paqtrsesswashin-1923.