Griffin v. City of New Castle

88 Pa. Super. 439, 1926 Pa. Super. LEXIS 210
CourtSuperior Court of Pennsylvania
DecidedApril 19, 1926
DocketAppeal 134
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 88 Pa. Super. 439 (Griffin v. City of New Castle) 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
Griffin v. City of New Castle, 88 Pa. Super. 439, 1926 Pa. Super. LEXIS 210 (Pa. Ct. App. 1926).

Opinion

Opinion by

Keller, J.,

Since 1898 plaintiff has owned a house and lot fronting on Eastbrook Road, a street in the City of New Castle. As originally laid out the road was thirty-three feet wide. In 1909 the City Councils passed an ordinance fixing its width at forty feet, of which twenty feet should be on each side of a described center line, and establishing a grade, which in front of plaintiff’s house was several feet higher than the original grade. Nothing was done towards the actual widening and grading of the road until June 6, 1921, when the City Council passed an ordinance providing for the opening and widening of said road between Croton Avenue and City Line (North Boundary) according to the width and location as fixed and established by an ordinance, approved January 18, 1909; and for the grading of said street or road, between said points; and for ihe payment of the damages, costs and expenses thereof. Pursuant thereto the street was widened and graded, resulting in the taking of some of the plaintiff’s land and damage to her property.

On petition of the City Solicitor, based upon- the Ordinance of 1921, viewers were appointed in January, 1922, to assess the damages, costs ¡and expenses of said improvement upon the properties benefited, in the mam ner provided by the Act of May* 16, 1891, P. L. 75. *442 Under the provisions of section 5 of said act the plaintiff’s claim for damages sustained in the widening and grading of said street was presented to the viewers and not being satisfied with their award she appealed from said report to the Court of Common Pleas, where an issue was awarded and the case tried before a jury which rendered a verdict in her favor. The City appeals to this court from the judgment entered on that verdict.

The learned City Solicitor presents three grounds for reversing the judgment.

(1) He contends that under the Acts of May 16, 1891, P. L. 75, and May 26,1891, P. L. 117, the damages should have been determined as of the date of the ordinance of January 18, 1909, which established the width and grade of the street, instead of the time when the improvement was actually made. Two things prevent our adopting this view. In the first place the case; was tried in the court below on the theory that the correct date for ascertaining the plaintiff’s damage — to be determined by the difference between the value of her property before and after the improvement — was when the street was actually widened and graded; and all of the witnesses on both sides testified on that basis. The City’s third point was, “You must first determine in this case what the property would have sold for immediately before the street was graded and widened. You will then determine what it would have sold for immediately after the street was graded and widened; the difference in these amounts is the measure of damages to be allowed the plaintiff and the only one.” This was affirmed, as was also plaintiff’s seventh point, which was substantially the same, except that the correct term, “market value,” was used instead of defendant’s equivalent “what the property would have sold for.” Appellant’s after-thought on the subject of damages ought not to move this court to *443 sustain an assignment which in effect complains of the court’s affirmation of its own point. But, in the second place, we are satisfied that the measure of damages adopted in the court below was correct. The appellant relies on the language of section 4 of the Act of May 16,1891, supra, and on three decisions of the Supreme Court, Witman v. Reading, 191 Pa. 134, Shields v. Pittsburgh, 201 Pa. 328, and Chelten Trust Co. v. Blankenburg, 241 Pa. 394. We have given them careful consideration but do not think they require a reversal of this judgment.

Section 4 of the Act of 1891, supra, provides that viewers may be appointed “before or at any time after the entry, taking, appropriation or injury of any property or materials for constructing said improvement”; but it did not thereby change the long-established measure of damages in eminent domain cases nor make anything an injury entitling an owner to compensation which was not such under the then existing law: Thirteenth Street, 38 Pa. Superior Ct. 265, 274. Section 4, when considered with the rest of the Act, does not contemplate the appointment of viewers before the municipality has ordained the actual opening, widening, grading, etc., of the street, or taken other action amounting to an order to open, etc. The mere plotting or location of a street, or fixing or establishment of its width or grade does not justify the appointment of viewers in the absence of some exercise of authority on the part of the city looking to the actual opening, widening, grading, etc., of the street. This is appareht from section 7 with which it is closely related. After the ordinance has been passed providing for the opening, widening or grading of the street as located on the city plan or by previous ordinance establishing it, viewers may be appointed before any entry, taking, etc., under the ordinance, and if the cost of the improvement, as determined by the report of *444 viewers assessing damages and benefits, is more than the city can afford to pay it may by action taken within thirty days after the filing of the report, and prior to the entry upon, taking, appropriation or injury to any property, repeal the ordinance or discontinue the proceeding, and shall not thereafter be liable to pay the damages assessed but only the costs of the proceeding. The ordinance thus to be repealed or the proceeding discontinued, does not refer to the plotting or locating of a street on the city plan, or establishing, its width or grade, but to the opening, widening and grading of the street thus located, fixed or established: Moravian Seminary v. Bethlehem, 153 Pa. 583, 589; Winter Ave., 23 Pa. Superior Ct. 353, 359; Black Street, 236 Pa. 395, 402. There is nothing in the cases relied upon by appellant which conflicts with this view. All three of them, it must be remembered, were concerned with parks or park boulevards, and not with ordinary streets, and were affected to some extent by provisions not applicable to the latter. This is pointed out in the recent case of Penna. Mut. Life Ins. Co. v. Cuyler, 283 Pa. 422, 426. In Witman v. Reading, supra, the park commissioners of the City of Reading in December 1895 surveyed and laid out a boulevard, marked on the ground by construction stakes, and submitted the route to city councils with the request that an ordinance be passed appropriating the land so marked out as the boulevard. Councils regularly adopted the proposed ordinance in April 1896 and the boulevard was constructed, in September of the same year. The Wit-mans owned a stone quarry, shipment from which was made over an inclined railway built by them on leased land, which would be crossed and intercepted by the proposed boulevard. They were not financially able to adapt their railway to the crossing of the boulevard, and in consequence, between the passing of the ordinance and the actual construction of the road, they relet their property held under lease, including the *445

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Bluebook (online)
88 Pa. Super. 439, 1926 Pa. Super. LEXIS 210, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/griffin-v-city-of-new-castle-pasuperct-1926.