Cheltenham & Abington Sewerage Co. v. P. S. C.

162 A. 469, 107 Pa. Super. 225, 1932 Pa. Super. LEXIS 160
CourtSuperior Court of Pennsylvania
DecidedMarch 17, 1932
DocketAppeal 21
StatusPublished
Cited by9 cases

This text of 162 A. 469 (Cheltenham & Abington Sewerage Co. v. P. S. C.) 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
Cheltenham & Abington Sewerage Co. v. P. S. C., 162 A. 469, 107 Pa. Super. 225, 1932 Pa. Super. LEXIS 160 (Pa. Ct. App. 1932).

Opinion

Opinion by

Parker, J.,

This case comes to us on an appeal from The Public Service Commission. The Cheltenham & Abington Sewerage Company, organized under the provisions of the General Corporation Act of 1874, as amended by the Act of 1893, P. L. 476, filed tariffs increasing the rates for sanitary sewage service and private storm water drainage service, and creating new charges to municipalities for surface drainage. Complaints were filed with the commission by various individuals and by the Townships of Abington and Cheltenham, Montgomery County. The commission reduced the rates fixed for service through the sanitary systems and with reference to the storm water system held that the sewerage company had failed “to show ownership or possession of these storm water drains so as to justify charges for their use.” By a stipulation filed, the scope of the appeal was confined to the legality of the commission’s action “insofar as it undertook to find and determine that the storm water systems were not the property of the sewerage company.” The prime question involved is whether the appellant was the owner of certain surface drainage or “storm water” sewer systems used in performing a public service.

The questions involved arose out of real estate development enterprises. In 1897, William L. Elkins owned a small tract of land in what was then called Ogontz Park, now Elkins Park, in Cheltenham Township, and Mr. Elkins and P. A. B. Widener owned a larger tract of several hundred acres located in the vicinity of Glenside Station, Abington and Cheltenham Townships. The former is referred to as the Elkins Park district and the latter as the Glenside district. *229 Elkins and Widener having decided to develop these tracts of land by laying them out in suburban lots for residence purposes, entered into some arrangement for their development, the details of which do not appear, with W. T. B. Roberts, a real estate operator.

The two properties were graded, water courses changed, and streets were laid out, graded, paved, curbed, and provided with sidewalks. Plans for the improvements were then adopted and recorded, according to which lots were sold. Prior to the improvement, there were on the tracts water courses which passed entirely through the premises, and various brooks or spring runs which originated on the acreage and flowed into a larger creek. There were small lakes or ponds, swampy ground, and marsh land which were drained. The water courses were encased in pipe or brick conduits and covered over so that the land, as a whole, had an even grade such as was suitable for the purposes intended.

We will first give our attention to the facts arising out of the construction of the drainage sewer system on the Grlenside development. The streets, in their courses, conformed to the natural topography of the land. Brick conduits or tile pipes were laid in the beds of the streams or close by, following closely the routes of the streams. The channels made by nature, after being provided with drain pipe to take care of the water, were filled in, forming the bases of streets or surfaces suitable for buildings and yards of suburban residences. The Storm sewers were placed either on the exact course of the original streams, on straightened lines connecting winding parts of the beds, or close by, and with a slight exception where it was necessary to cut across lots were within the lines of streets. At the same time, a separate system of pipes entirely unconnected with the surface drainage system was laid to take care of the sanitary sewage of the buildings to be erected on the development. After the *230 completion of the paving, sewers, and drains, plans were duly recorded showing size, location, and number of lots.

Between May 8,1899, and March 18,1901, Mr. Elkins and Mr. Widener sold and conveyed to Mr. W. T. B. Roberts by three separate deeds the title to the Glen-side development. These deeds, in addition to describing the land conveyed, contained a clause conveying the “roads, avenues, streets, woods, improvements, ways, waters, water courses, rights, liberties, privileges, hereditaments and appurtenances,” and the “reversions and remainders, rents, issues, and profits thereof.” Prior to these conveyances, Elkins and Widener conveyed three parcels of land on the Glen-side development describing the land as abutting on certain of the streets of the plot. After the transfer from Elkins and Widener, Roberts proceeded to sell and convey the lots on a more extensive scale. He built more than fifty houses on the tract, attached the houses to the sewer systems, and sold them to various owners. These deeds from Roberts not only described the properties as fronting on certain of the streets, but made reference to the recorded plans of the subdivisions.

On or about August 29, 1900, Roberts secured a charter for a corporation, the expressed purpose of which was “constructing and maintaining sewers, culverts, conduits, and pipes with all necessary inlets and appliances for surface, and under surface and sewage drainage in the Townships of Cheltenham and Abington.” Not until 1906 did Mr. Roberts convey to the sewerage corporation any rights which he had or had acquired in and to any sewerage systems on the Glen-side development, and in the meantime a large number of lots had been sold in which the premises were described by reference to the recorded plot and the adjoining streets. These facts, as stated by us, have either been found by the commission upon sufficient *231 competent evidence or are taken from the admissions of the parties. The net result was that the promoters and owners for the mutual advantage of seller and purchaser had provided a system of artificial conduits in place of the natural water courses and furnished facilities to take care of the surface drainage on the improvement, and after so doing, proceeded to sell lots.

These facts, in our opinion, disclose an evident intent upon the part of the promoters to dedicate to public use the storm water system, for the benefit of the township and lot owners.

(1) “A sale of lots by a private owner according to a plan which shows them to be on a street implies a grant or covenant to the purchaser that the streets designated on the plan shall remain open for the use of the lot owner, and operates as a dedication of the street to public use. The rights of lot owners in such a case are founded in the contract of the parties and do not depend upon the acts of municipal authorities. This must be considered as settled law under our decisions”: Bell v. Pittsburgh Steel Co., 243 Pa. 83, 87. In Davis v. Kahkwa Park Realty Co., 296 Pa. 281, it was held that the subdivision of a tract of land by the owner and the making of a plan showing a park reservation and the selling of lots according to the plan constituted an irrevocable dedication of the park to public use. Not only did the owner, Roberts, convey lots on the Glenside plans as plotted and recorded, but the Township of Abington by ordinance accepted some of the streets upon which sewers were constructed. The sewers included lateral lines connecting with catch basins on the streets, thereby completing the drainage of the streets.

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Bluebook (online)
162 A. 469, 107 Pa. Super. 225, 1932 Pa. Super. LEXIS 160, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/cheltenham-abington-sewerage-co-v-p-s-c-pasuperct-1932.