Farmers Trust Co. v. Cumberland County Commissioners

20 Pa. D. & C. 271, 1933 Pa. Dist. & Cnty. Dec. LEXIS 123
CourtPennsylvania Court of Common Pleas, Cumberland County
DecidedJune 7, 1933
Docketno. 113
StatusPublished

This text of 20 Pa. D. & C. 271 (Farmers Trust Co. v. Cumberland County Commissioners) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Pennsylvania Court of Common Pleas, Cumberland County primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Farmers Trust Co. v. Cumberland County Commissioners, 20 Pa. D. & C. 271, 1933 Pa. Dist. & Cnty. Dec. LEXIS 123 (Pa. Super. Ct. 1933).

Opinion

Reese, P. J.,

Farmers Trust Company, of Carlisle, Penna., has filed its petition under the Uniform Declaratory Judgments Act of June 18,1923, P. L. 840, praying the court to determine whether the County of Cumberland or the Borough of Camp Hill is responsible in damages to the petitioner for that portion of its land taken in the change of the lines and width of a section of State highway route no. 708 within the limits of the Borough of Camp Hill. The determination of this question involves the construction of certain statutes and municipal ordinances, and the parties have therefore stipulated that the court shall render a declaratory judgment. From the averments of the petition, to which no answer was filed by either the county or the borough, and from the stipulation of the parties, we make the following

Findings of fact

1. Farmers Trust Company is a corporation existing by virtue of the laws of Pennsylvania, has its principal place of business in the Borough of Carlisle, in this county, and is the owner of real estate situate on the northwest corner [272]*272of Market and Thirty-second Streets in the Borough of Camp Hill, in this county.

2. By the Act of June 26, 1931, P. L. 1406, amending the Act of May 5,1927, P. L. 787, State highway route no. 708 was established as follows: “Beginning at a point in Wormleysburg, where Walnut Street intersects with State highway route number thirty; thence westerly through a granted right of way of one hundred feet in width to a point on Seventeenth Street in the borough of Camp Hill; thence westerly and southerly to an intersection with State highway route number thirty-four at Oyster’s Point.”

3. Oyster’s Point is the intersection of Market and Thirty-second Streets in the Borough of Camp Hill, and the land of the petitioner is on the northwest corner of said intersection.

4. Route 708 is partly within the Borough of Wormleysburg, partly in East Pennsboro Township, and partly in the Borough of Camp Hill.

5. A portion of Thirty-second Street in the Borough of Camp Hill, on which the petitioner’s land abuts, is a part of route 708.

6. Route 708 was adopted by the Department of Highways on September 1, 1931, and the lines and location thereof were fixed by a plan approved by the Secretary of Highways on March 9, 1932, and by the Governor on March 15, 1932.

7. The Department of Highways, by letters dated March 21, 1932, notified the Commissioners of Cumberland County, the council of the Borough of Wormleysburg, and the council of the Borough of Camp Hill of the adoption on September 1,1931,-of route 708, attaching to said letters copies of the plan approved by the Secretary of Highways on March 9, 1932, and by the Governor on March 15, 1932. The said letters advised that the Department of Highways had assumed -responsibility for the maintenance of route 708 as adopted.

8. Thereafter, the Department of Highways prepared plans which changed the location, width, and lines of route 708 as theretofore adopted, and more particularly showed proposed changes in the location, width, and lines of that portion of Thirty-second Street in the Borough of Camp Hill which was a part of route 708.

9. A copy of said plan was submitted to the Commissioners of Cumberland County for their approval on or about September 28, 1932, and on October 5, 1932, the commissioners adopted a resolution which provided, inter alia: “We . . . are satisfied with the said plans and agree that the Department of Highways may proceed with the construction of said highway and that the County of Cumberland will assume the payment of damages which may occur in the course of the construction of said highway in accordance with the aforesaid plans, which liability shall extend only to liability for property damages with which the said County of Cumberland may be legally and properly charged, but in no event shall said liability for property damages, occasioned as aforesaid, be construed to include, or be extended to include, property damages which may be occasioned by reason of said construction within the limits of either the Borough of Wormleysburg or the Borough of Camp Hill through which said proposed route passes.”

10. The plans submitted to the Commissioners of Cumberland County as aforesaid contained, inter alia, the following pertinent notations:

“Drawings for construction and condemnation of right of way, except in the Boroughs of Wormleysburg and Camp Hill, route 708 ....
“Established by authority of law as and for the width, lines, locations, and grades of said highway route no. 708, Cumberland County . . . except as to [273]*273the portion within the limits of the Borough of Wormleysburg . . . and the portion within the limits of the Borough of 'Camp Hill. . . .
“The Cumberland County Commissioners to remove all buildings necessary for the construction of this project, except in the Boroughs of Camp Hill and Wormleysburg, where the removal of the buildings necessary to construct the project shall be made by the respective borough officials.”

11. The said plans, however, did show the proposed location, width, and lines of the portions of said route no. 708 within the limits of the Boroughs of Wormleysburg and Camp Hill.

12. The said plans, changing the location, width, and lines of route no. 708, as aforesaid, were approved by the Secretary of Highways on October 11,1932, and by the Governor on October 13, 1932.

13. The said plans were submitted to the burgess and council of the Borough of Camp Hill on or about November 16, 1932, and the borough council enacted an ordinance which became effective upon the approval of the burgess on November 22,1932, and which provided, inter alia: “Be it enacted and ordained by the Council of the Borough of Camp Hill, and it is hereby enacted and ordained by authority of the same, that the lines, grades, courses, distances, drainage structures, and all other structures shown on the plans prepared and submitted by the Department of Highways as aforesaid [referring to the plans for route no. 708], be and the same are adopted and are hereby enacted and ordained as and for the true and proper lines, grades, courses, distances, drainage structures, and other structures of and for North Thirty-second Street, as shown on the said plans.”

14. A copy of said plans, showing the approval of the Secretary of Highways and the Governor, was delivered to the Commissioners of Cumberland County and placed by them in a book kept by them for that purpose, which book was kept in the office of the recorder of deeds for safekeeping.

15. The said plans were not acknowledged by the Secretary of Highways, nor were the plans recorded in the office of the Recorder of Deeds- of Cumberland County in the book kept for that purpose by the recorder of deeds.

16. The work on the project was begun on or about December 1, 1932, and Thirty-second Street in the Borough of Camp Hill has been widened in accordance with said plans, with the result that 1,335 square feet of the petitioner’s property has been taken.

17.

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Bluebook (online)
20 Pa. D. & C. 271, 1933 Pa. Dist. & Cnty. Dec. LEXIS 123, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/farmers-trust-co-v-cumberland-county-commissioners-pactcomplcumber-1933.