Glen Alden Coal Co. v. Scranton City

127 A. 307, 282 Pa. 45, 1925 Pa. LEXIS 567
CourtSupreme Court of Pennsylvania
DecidedNovember 25, 1924
DocketAppeal, 158
StatusPublished
Cited by17 cases

This text of 127 A. 307 (Glen Alden Coal Co. v. Scranton City) 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
Glen Alden Coal Co. v. Scranton City, 127 A. 307, 282 Pa. 45, 1925 Pa. LEXIS 567 (Pa. 1924).

Opinion

Opinion by

Me. Chief Justice Moschzisker,

• Certain real estate owners in a city of the second class sued in equity to set aside the general tax assessment for the current year and to restrain collections thereunder; the bill was dismissed and plaintiffs have appealed.

The controlling question involved, stated by appellants, is: “Does the Act of June 23, 1919, P. L. 575, governing cities of the second class, authorize and empower the making of a new, complete and general assessment of all property in such cities in a year intervening between triennial assessments?”

A regular triennial assessment of all property within the City of Scranton was made in the year 1923. In 1924, a new, complete assessment was made, at generally increased valuations. Appellants contend that this could not legally be done; they argue that the system of triennial assessments is so firmly fixed in our law that the legislative language employed in the Act of 1919 should be read, not as altering that system, or authorizing wholesale departures therefrom, but rather as merely authorizing new or additional valuations by way of corrections of the triennial assessment, where changes subsequently occur through “the erection of new struc *48 tures, the destruction or removal of old structures, the mining out of part of the coal or minerals from the land assessed in the last triennial assessment, or by reason of any other [such] particular and special circumstances”; and that these altered conditions would warrant a new assessment in particular instances or locations only, but not a general assessment in the whole city.

The words of the act which we have to construe are: “They [the assessors] shall triennially make a valuation for all purposes of municipal taxation, and shall have ......the power to make a new assessment in any ward or wards they deem necessary in any subsequent year, other than triennial years, in the manner prescribed by law for the triennial assessment.”

■ The above-quoted words on their face certainly give full authority, not merely to revise or enlarge a previously made assessment, but also “to make a new assessment ......in the manner prescribed by law for the triennial assessment,” and to do this not only for particular locations within the city, but “in any ward or wards” the assessors may “deem necessary.” It seems unanswerable that, if the assessors have full powers to make a new assessment “in any subsequent year other than triennial years” in “any ward or wards,” they; necessarily have such power in all wards, and hence throughout the entire city.

“The word ‘any’ is frequently used in the sense of ‘all’ or ‘every,’ and when thus used has a very comprehensive meaning”: 2 Am. & Eng. Enc. Law (2d ed.) 414; 3 Corpus Juris 232. The words “any railroad” were so construed by the Federal Supreme Court in Chicot County v. Lewis, 103 U. S. 164, 167, the court saying: “The power given is to subscribe to any railroad; this includes all railroads in the state, without restriction.” In construing an act of assembly in Williams v. Ivory, 173 Pa. 536, 542, we said: “‘any person’ means every person”; this construction was followed in Peterson v. Delaware River Ferry Co., 190 Pa. 364, 365. In Buck *49 walter v. Black Rock Bridge Co., 38 Pa. 281, 287, “any damages” was held to mean “all damages.” But, say appellants, the history of tax legislation in Pennsylvania, when taken as a whole, requires that the narrower construction contended for by them be given to the word “any” as it is used in the act now before us.

It must be admitted that originally a rigid system of triennial assessments prevailed generally throughout the State and still governs county assessments. The values of farms and small town properties, however, do not fluctuate like city real estate, and the legislature apparently recognized this fact, for, while preserving the obligation to make triennial valuations, it has, as to cities, pursued a steady course of permitting intervening annual assessments to be made in the same manner as triennial ones, whenever the taxing authorities deem them necessary. The change was first enacted for the benefit of Philadelphia, then for cities of the third class, and lastly for those of the second class, thus covering all classes of cities known to our law.

The Act of May 13, 1856, P. L. 567, 569, relating to Philadelphia, provided that “No change shall be made in the valuations of real estate, in other than the triennial year, except in case of destruction by fire or flood, qr qf improvements made”; but this system was departed from by the Act of February 2,1867, P. L. 137,138, which provided (in almost the same words as those now found in the act before us, referring to cities of the second class) that, in addition to making the triennial assessment, the assessors shall have power in “any ward, or wards, of said city” to make a new assessment “in any subsequent year, other than the triennial year.” While no case passing on this feature of the act is cited, we know as a matter of fact that annual general assessments, made avowedly as such, have for years prevailed ■ in Philadelphia.

Section 5 of article XY of the Act of May 23,1889, P. L. 277, 318, as amended by the Act of May 23, 1895, P. *50 L. 119, 120, (passed on in Jermyn v. Scranton, 186 Pa. 595, when that city was in the third class) provided, although in somewhat different language from the Philadelphia statute, a like system for cities of the third class. This was reenacted by the Act of June 27, 1913, P. L. 568, 618.

When the legislation governing cities of the second class is examined, and considered in connection with the development of the law shown by the statutes noted in the last two paragraphs, it seems clear that the Act of 1919 means just what it says and that it gives full authority to make the general assessment here under attack.

If the purpose of the lawmakers was simply that contended for by appellants, then there is no apparent reason for inserting in the Act of 1919 the provision here in question. We say this because section 2 of the Act of July 9, 1897, P. L. 219, as to tax assessments in cities of the second class, grants ample power to “revise, equalize or alter [triennial] assessments by increasing or reducing valuations” or by adding “subjects of taxation ......omitted therefrom”; which provision covers all the ways of correcting such assessments, and authorizes all the amendments thereto suggested by the interpretation that appellants would put on the present legislation.

The Act of March 7, 1901, P. L. 20, “for the government of cities of the second class,” by article YI, particularly retains the above-recited provisions of the Act of 1897; and thus the law stood until the Act of April 1, 1909, P. L. 83. Section 2 of this latter act recites for amendment article VI of the Act of 1901, which provided for a triennial assessment in cities of the second class and stated that it “shall remain the lawful assessment......until the next triennial assessment,” substituting for that provision the following: “They [the assessors] shall have the power to make a new assessment in any ward or wards they deem necessary, in any subsequent year other than triennial years, in the man

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Bluebook (online)
127 A. 307, 282 Pa. 45, 1925 Pa. LEXIS 567, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/glen-alden-coal-co-v-scranton-city-pa-1924.