Fayette County Commissioners' Petition

137 A. 237, 289 Pa. 200, 1927 Pa. LEXIS 546
CourtSupreme Court of Pennsylvania
DecidedMarch 14, 1927
DocketAppeal, 65
StatusPublished
Cited by11 cases

This text of 137 A. 237 (Fayette County Commissioners' Petition) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Pennsylvania primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Fayette County Commissioners' Petition, 137 A. 237, 289 Pa. 200, 1927 Pa. LEXIS 546 (Pa. 1927).

Opinion

Opinion by

Me. Justice Sadlee,

Fayette County has a population of over 200,000, and an assessed valuation in excess of $110,000,000. When the present courthouse was constructed about 1890 there were but two judges, now there are four. The building provided for county purposes has been for some time inadequate, as well as in need of repair. For two years prior to September, 1925, the President Judge frequently called the attention of the assembled grand juries to the need of expansion so that the public affairs might be conducted in a proper and more expeditious manner. At the time mentioned Judge Van Swearingen specially charged the members of the then sitting body, suggesting the necessity of a remodeled or enlarged structure, and referred to the lack of proper accommodations in the existing building, pointing out in detail many of the improvements required, so that the public work could be properly performed. In a supplemental charge at the same term it was suggested the commissioners be authorized “to acquire by purchase or condemnation additional land adjacent to the present site” and erect thereon a building which would provide the necessary facilities.

The grand jury made a report, setting forth that, after a complete examination, it found the rooms and offices in the courthouse “so crowded and congested as to be wholly inadequate for the public business they were designed to accommodate,” and gave many reasons which made necessary an addition to meet the present needs, not necessary to be repeated here. It recommended that the existing structure “be preserved substantially in its present form and utilized for the purposes for which it may be available, and that the county commissioners, with the approval of the court of quarter sessions, acquire by purchase or condemnation additional land adjacent to the present site, and erect thereon a plain, modern, commodious building, designed, with the use of the present courthouse, to provide adequate *203 facilities for the transaction of the public business, and the preservation of the public records.” This return was read in open court, and given a place in the public records. At the following’ December Sessions, the matter was again submitted to the new grand jury in a charge , by Judge Reppert, and a report approving the project was made in language practically the same as that found in the first return.

No formal order of approval was then made by the court of quarter sessions, Judge Van Swearingen having died, and the term of Judge Reppert expiring in January. On August 10, 1926, the three judges then acting formally adopted both grand jury reports, as of the date of their respective presentations. Thereupon the county commissioners by resolution agreed to proceed with the work, and presented a petition asking leave to buy the land required for the addition, and the purchase of one tract was consummated, with the approval of the court. As to two tracts no reasonable price could be agreed upon, and, after the passage of the requisite resolutions to condemn, a petition was presented asking for the appointment of viewers to assess damages. Three disinterested freeholders were chosen, and a bond to protect the property owners was given and approved. Within a few days thereafter one Patterson, whose land was condemned, presented his petition asking that the proceeding be set aside for various reasons which we shall consider separately. The application was dismissed, and it is from this order the present appeal has been taken.

It is insisted that the court was without jurisdiction to approve the findings of the two grand juries, since the exact language of the statute authorizing action by such bodies was not used in the reports filed. In both cases the necessity for the improvement was pointed out with a statement made of many reasons why the new structure should be erected, and the commissioners were asked to either purchase or condemn such land as was *204 required for the purpose. Appellant contends that in such cases the returns must follow the words of the act, and set forth “that the necessities of the county require ground at the county seat for the purpose of the [proposed building to be] erected.” Bennett v. Norton, 171 Pa. 221, is cited as authority for this contention, but an examination of that case will show that it does not decide that a recital of facts equivalent in substance and meaning to the expression employed in the statute will not suffice. It was there held no purchase of land for courthouse purposes could be concluded without action by two successive grand juries.

Prior to 1883, under the Act of 1834 (April 15, P. L. 539), property could have been bought for such use, though no special suggestion to this effect had been made in the report. Since the date mentioned such a recommendation is required (Act,.June 1, 1883, P. L. 58), and it is upon the latter legislation, as amended in 1911 (June 19, P. L. 1039) and again in 1921 (April 21, P. L. 271) the present proceeding is based. The report of the grand jury must show facts which plainly indicate the necessity for a new or extended building, and the act gives to the commissioners, after approval, the right to buy the necessary land. The repetition in the report of the exact phraseology found in the statute is not required to confer authority on officials of the county to purchase additional ground as is correctly stated in Brewer v. Delaware Co. Com., 18 Del. Co. R. 1. Judge Endlich said, in Reports of Grand Jury, 20 Dist. R. 867, where the court’s approval was withheld for a different reason: “If upon the reports of the grand jury an implication fairly arises of an intent to find a necessity, and to confer upon the commissioners authority for acquisition by them of such additional land as they, in the exercise of their lawful discretion, may determine, ......” it is sufficient. The returns now before us satisfy the legal requirements.

*205 If the property required “cannot be obtained by agreement with the owner or owners, or at a price reasonable in the- estimation of said commissioners,” the court of common pleas is given power to appoint viewers to assess the damages. It will be observed that the initiative in a proceeding such as is now presented does not rest with the county commissioners, but the first step is action by the grand jury, followed by approval of the court. This was true under the Act of 1834 already referred to (Com. v. Marshall, 3 W. N. C. 182) and is plainly directed in the Act of 1921. The commissioners in the present case awaited the action of the court on the grand jury reports, and then proceeded in an attempt to purchase, and finally to condemn, in the manner directed by the controlling statute.

It is, however, urged that the approval of the returns by the court on August 10, 1926, was too late, and, therefore, ineffective. A consideration of the appropriate legislation leads to the belief that it was never intended that the first grand jury report should be immediately acted on. The thought was that the public should be thus informed of possible action, and be given the opportunity to object before the meeting of the succeeding official body and lodge any objections they might have: Northampton Commissioners’ App., 57 Pa. 452. It is not necessary that the various steps required by the statute be more than reasonably continuous.

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Bluebook (online)
137 A. 237, 289 Pa. 200, 1927 Pa. LEXIS 546, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/fayette-county-commissioners-petition-pa-1927.