Chartiers Creek Bridge

37 Pa. Super. 281, 1908 Pa. Super. LEXIS 278
CourtSuperior Court of Pennsylvania
DecidedOctober 12, 1908
DocketAppeal, No. 167
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 37 Pa. Super. 281 (Chartiers Creek Bridge) 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
Chartiers Creek Bridge, 37 Pa. Super. 281, 1908 Pa. Super. LEXIS 278 (Pa. Ct. App. 1908).

Opinion

Opinion by

Beaver, J.,

It is sought, by proceedings alleged to be authorized by secs. 35 and 37 of the Act of June 13,1836, P. L. 551, to change the county bridge over Chartiers creek, 150 feet in length, which connects a road thirty-three feet wide common to Sheraden borough and Chartiers township, at the terminus of Windgap avenue in the latter, with a road on the northern side of the creek which is common to Stowe township and McKees Rocks borough, these four municipalities joining about the middle of the said bridge, and substitute therefor a bridge and viaduct 1,207.5 feet in length, beginning at the junction of Windgap and Youghiogheny avenues in Chartiers township and ending at the center of Singer avenue in the borough of McKees Rocks. The proposed bridge across Chartiers creek is about 350 to 400 feet up the stream from the old bridge and seventy-five feet above its level, and is connected by stone and steel structures on both sides thereof with the proposed termini in the borough of McKees Rocks and Chartiers township, as stated.

It would appear, from the elaborate and satisfactory draft of the localities involved, and the profile of the proposed bridge, which is furnished us in the appellant’s paper-book, as though the improvement, as a whole, were not only important but advantageous and desirable, and would, for various reasons, including the overhead crossings of the railways, accommodate the travel between these populous sections in a much more satisfactory way than the previous- grade crossing of one railroad and low subway of the other on different sides of the creek.

[283]*283The serious question in the case, however, is whether or not such an improvement is authorized under the provisions of secs. 35 and 37 of the Act of June 13, 1836, P. L. 551, under which the proceedings are confessedly conducted. Under the liberal interpretation which we placed upon these sections in the Youghiogheny River Bridge case, 2 Pa. Superior Ct. 265, it would be possible perhaps to make such a radical change as is proposed here, but our Supreme Court did not agree with us in that interpretation, and, in 182 Pa. 618, gave a much narrower construction to the act in question, by which we'are, of course, bound, and in the light of which we must view the present proceedings.

The official draft prepared by the viewers, which accompanies their report, and a copy of which is attached to the appellant’s paper-book, shows that the old bridge, sought to be replaced by the one proposed by the viewers, was common, as already stated,'to Sheraden borough, Chartiers township, Stowe township and McKees Rocks borough. The new bridge would connect Chartiers township and McKees Rocks borough, leaving Stowe township and Sheraden borough without any connection therewith. The present'bridge was connected by a road extending from the south side of the creek to the line of Sheraden borough and Chartiers township at the terminus of Wind-gap avenue in the latter about 350 feet. On the north side of the creek was a public road common to Stowe township and McKees Rocks borough, running almost directly east. It is riot shown that the proposed road connects in any way with this road at the northern terminus of the old bridge.' So far as the draft shows, and so far as it appears from the record, there is no connection between the northern terminus of the proposed road on Singer avenue arid the old road along the creek, except by a detour which passes under the railroad by the subway which it is sought to eliminate by the proposed bridge and viaduct.

The viewers’ report: "That the above designated points are the most suitable places for the erection, of said bridge in the best manner, and for such purpose we have found it necessary to change the course, location and bed of the road to be connécted therewith as follows: 'Beginning at the intersection of the [284]*284centre lines of Chartiers Avenue with Singer Avenue in the Borough of McKees Rocks; thence south eighteen degrees, thirty minutes west, ten hundred forty-nine and seventy one-hundredths (1,049.70) feet to the centre line of Windgap avenue in Chartiers Township, where the same makes an angle in front of lot No. 3 in Samuel A. Duff’s Plan of lots as recorded in Plan Book, Volume 16, page 97; thence along the centre line of said Windgap Avenue, south twenty-three degrees, ten minutes west, one hundred fifty-seven and eighty one-hundredths (157.80) feet to the intersection of said centre line with the centre line of Youghiogheny Avenue, the centre line of the proposed bridge coinciding for its entire length, with the centre line of the road above described. We recommend that the width of said road, as changed, be fixed at fifty feet.’ ”

The appellant invokes the aid of the Act- of March 24, 1905, P. L. 50, providing for the erection of county bridges over any river, creek or rivulet forming the boundary between any borough and township of the first or second class, where the same crosses a public highway. It is to be observed, however, that the language of this act is precisely that of sec. 35 of the act of 1836 above referred to: “That, when any river, creek or rivulet forming the boundary between any borough and township of the first or second class, over which it may be necessary to erect a bridge, crosses a public road or highway.” This language refers to the original erection of a bridge. Does it authorize the substitution of one bridge for another already erected? No provision is made for the vacating of the road leading to the bridge or for the removal of the bridge itself, as is done in the case of roads in secs. 18, 19 and 20 of the same act. Provision, it seems to us, would, or at least should, have been made in the law, if such a proceeding as is before us had been contemplated by the legislature. At the point where the new bridge is contemplated there is no highway on either side of the creek. We cannot see, therefore, how the bridge can be said to cross a highway between a borough and township of the first class, as contemplated in the act of 1905, supra. Was it contemplated by the legislature that the county was to be made liable for a bridge, whose proper length is 150 feet at the crossing of the [285]*285stream, and viaducts more than 1,000 feet in addition, carried on an expensive stone and steel structure, crossing two railroads and two or more public roads at an elevation of from fifty to seventy-five feet above the stream and the valley which borders it on both sides, and this directly over the roof of the house of one of the exceptants? If such an extraordinary power was intended to be conferred by the act of assembly, it should be distinctly so stated therein.

■ Assuming, however, that by a liberal interpretation of the legislation referred to, we could find authority in the law for the substitution of one bridge for another, what is to be done with the old bridge, for which the new one is substituted? There seems to be no provision in the law for such an emergency and, if there were, the viewers have done nothing whatever with the old bridge and the roads which it connects on the different sides of the stream. Shall the bridge be abandoned and the roads vacated? By what authority? We find nothing in the law which authorizes it, and there is certainly nothing in the report of the viewers which, if confirmed by the court, would relieve the commissioners and the township and borough authorities from the duty of maintaining both bridge and roads.

The exceptions sustained by the court below, upon which its final order was made, are:

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Related

Monessen-Charleroi Bridge
68 Pa. Super. 318 (Superior Court of Pennsylvania, 1917)
Chartiers Creek Bridge
48 Pa. Super. 106 (Superior Court of Pennsylvania, 1911)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
37 Pa. Super. 281, 1908 Pa. Super. LEXIS 278, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/chartiers-creek-bridge-pasuperct-1908.