Coffield v. Peters Township

48 Pa. D. & C.2d 381, 1969 Pa. Dist. & Cnty. Dec. LEXIS 110
CourtPennsylvania Court of Common Pleas, Washington County
DecidedJune 10, 1969
Docketno. 6417
StatusPublished

This text of 48 Pa. D. & C.2d 381 (Coffield v. Peters Township) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Pennsylvania Court of Common Pleas, Washington County primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Coffield v. Peters Township, 48 Pa. D. & C.2d 381, 1969 Pa. Dist. & Cnty. Dec. LEXIS 110 (Pa. Super. Ct. 1969).

Opinion

FERGUS, J.,

This case has arisen by a complaint in equity filed by George Coffield et al., all of whom are residents of Meadow Street in Peters Township, Washington County, Pa. The complaint, as originally filed, seeks to enjoin defendant township from entering into any contract relating to the paving of Meadow Street and to the actual paving of said street. By the time of the hearing, the street had been paved and plaintiffs’ requests for relief in this regard are moot. Therefore, the sole issue before the court at the hearing was whether or not the township could properly assess plaintiffs, being some of the abutting owners along Meadow Street, with the costs of improvement.

A review of the record establishes that plaintiffs filed a written notice of opposition to the proposed improvement on March 12, 1968, and the complaint was filed April 10, 1968. The township entered into the contract to pave the said street on April 12, 1968. These facts are mentioned to establish that plaintiffs, while not asking for a preliminary injunction, did not sleep on their rights.

In Peters Township there are, inter alia, several recorded plans of lots known as the Walter C. McNary and Alma M. McNary lot plans numbers 1, 2, 3,4, and 5. The township supervisors elected to combine five of the streets in the McNary plan as part of the township road system and pave Meadow Street, Pleasant Avenue, High Street, Spring Street and McNary Street as a single project. The township circulated petitions and obtained the signatures of 53 percent of the abutting owners from the five streets which they determined to pave in one project. Accepting Meadow Street as a single entity, the petitions are signed by less than 29 percent of the property owners abutting on Meadow Street. This is the crux of the problem in this case, to wit: Can the township com[383]*383bine several streets in one complex and be permitted to make assessments on the basis that a majority of the property owners abutting on the five streets have asked for the same, even though they do not have a majority of the property owners on each of the five streets?

The provision of the township code which is applicable is The Second Class Township Code of May 1, 1933, P. L. 103, sec. 1135, as amended, 53 PS §66135. This section provides as follows:

“Any township may grade, curb, gutter, pave or otherwise improve, with brick, stone or any suitable materials, any public street or road, or part thereof, laid out and opened in the township . . . No street or road, or any part thereof, shall be improved under the provisions of this section, except upon the petitions of the owners of property representing a majority in number of feet front of the properties abutting on the street or road, or part thereof, proposed to be improved.”

Testimony was taken and each party filed briefs and suggested findings of fact and conclusions of law. The facts are not in dispute, and the matter resolves itself into an interpretation of the aforementioned section of the township code. In accordance with Pa. R. C. P. 1517, the chancellor makes the following:

FINDINGS OF FACT

1. Plaintiffs above named are all individuals, residing on Meadow Street, Peters Township, Washington County, Pa., except as follows: Marie Kubacki resides on Euclid Avenue, Canonsburg, Washington County, Pa.; Ann Kuzy resides at 2132 Jefferson Avenue (Canton Township), Washington, Washington County, Pa.

[384]*3842. Peters Township is a second class township located in Washington County, Pa., the municipal offices of which are located at 610 East McMurray Road in said township.

3. Plaintiffs are the owners of lots of real estate fronting on Meadow Street in said Peters Township, which lots are all part of the Walter C. and Alma M. McNary plan no. 2 of record in plan book 7, p. 118, in the office of the Recorder of Deeds of Washington County, Pa.

4. The total feet front of the properties abutting on Meadow Street, Peters Township, Washington County, Pa., is 1,769.42 feet.

5. The total feet front of the properties abutting on all the streets in all the McNary plan of lots in Peters Township, Washington County, Pa., including Meadow Street, is 11,311.38 feet.

6. The total feet front of the properties abutting on Meadow Street belonging to owners who petitioned for the improvement of the street, resulting in the assessment which is the subject of the instant litigation, is 500 feet.

7. The total feet front of the properties abutting on all the streets in all the McNary plans of lots belonging to owners who petitioned for the improvement of the streets, resulting in the assessment which is the subject of the instant litigation, is 6,000 feet.

8. The original place of record of the seven plans of lots which make up what is called in this litigation the McNary plans of lots, is the office of the Recorder of Deeds of Washington County, Pa. These seven plans of lots collectively contain all the streets represented by the total fe.et front of 11,311.38 feet. These seven plans were recorded on the following dates in the following plan books:

Walter C. McNary and Alma M. McNary plan — recorded February 10,1945, in plan book 7, p. 114.

[385]*385Walter C. McNary and Alma M. McNary plan no. 2 —recorded May 18,1945, in plan book 7, p. 118.

Walter C. McNary and Alma M. McNary plan no. 3 —recorded January 10,1946, in plan book 7, p. 128.

Walter C. McNary and Alma M. McNary plan no. 4 —recorded June 23, 1947, in plan book 7, p. 223.

Walter C. McNary and Alma M. McNary plan no. 5 —recorded November 25,1952, in plan book 8, p. 41.

Walter C. McNary and Alma M. McNary plan no. 6 —recorded October 14,1953, in plan book 8, p. 64.

Walter C. and Alma M. McNary Farm, laid out by Kaylor Brothers — recorded September 28, 1961, in plan book 9, p. 161.

9. Plaintiffs are the owners of lots on Meadow Street as indicated on exhibit A, attached to plaintiffs’ complaint, which exhibit also states the correct ownership of the feet front of plaintiffs’ lots.

10. Meadow Street is a single street extending in a northwest-southeast direction between Pleasant Avenue, at its northwest terminus, and McNary Street, at its southwest terminus. (See plan attached to answer.)

11. Meadow Street is not bisected by any streets, alleys or ways between its two terminus points.

12. Meadow Street was adopted as a public street by Peters Township on September 17, 1968, and is identified as a separate street in the resolution of the Board of Supervisors of Peters Township adopted on said date.

13. Meadow Street was graded, paved and otherwise improved pursuant to a contract entered into on April 2, 1968, between Peters Township and Pmssell Industries, Inc., a contractor.

14. The improvements of Meadow Street under said contract did not commence until sometime after April 11, 1968, and they were completed prior to September 3,1968.

[386]*38615. Plaintiffs notified Peters Township by written notices received March 12, 1968, of plaintiffs’ opposition to the pending improvement of Meadow Street.

16. Plaintiffs filed the complaint in equity on April 10, 1968.

17.

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48 Pa. D. & C.2d 381, 1969 Pa. Dist. & Cnty. Dec. LEXIS 110, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/coffield-v-peters-township-pactcomplwashin-1969.