Hoffman's Petition

7 Pa. D. & C. 88, 1925 Pa. Dist. & Cnty. Dec. LEXIS 64
CourtPennsylvania Court of Common Pleas, Montgomery County
DecidedApril 11, 1925
DocketNo. 59
StatusPublished

This text of 7 Pa. D. & C. 88 (Hoffman's Petition) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Pennsylvania Court of Common Pleas, Montgomery County primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Hoffman's Petition, 7 Pa. D. & C. 88, 1925 Pa. Dist. & Cnty. Dec. LEXIS 64 (Pa. Super. Ct. 1925).

Opinion

Miller, P. J.,

Nothwithstanding the revolutionary character of the Uniform Declaratory Judgments Act of June 18, 1923, P. L. 840, because, before its enactment, Pennsylvania courts have ever sat to decide and not to advise, we are inclined to dispose of this matter on its merits, if the same can be lawfully done. The Supreme Court has done the same (Aaron v. Woodcock [283 Pa. 33], decided at Pittsburgh on March 16, 1925); and many of the lower courts have entertained jurisdiction under the act, the constitutionality of which is not yet finally determined, but is squarely raised in this proceeding.

Willing as the court may be, however, thus to serve the petitioner in an advisory capacity, it is, unfortunately, met by an insurmountable difficulty at the very threshold of consideration of the case, which comes before it on a petition for relief and rule to show cause why it should not be granted.

It seems that petitioner owns an unimproved lot of ground at Merion, in this county, upon which he desires to erect an apartment-house. His premises are a part of a larger tract which some time ago was sub-divided by the then owner into many smaller tracts, all of which were conveyed by him subject to a common building restriction, which reads in part, “that at no time hereafter shall any part of the hereby granted premises be used for other purpose than for private residence, and any residence erected on any of said lots shall cost not less than $8000.”

As a consequence, all the improvements which, up to the present time, have since been erected on parts of the original tract consist of single, private dwelling-houses of relatively great cost, and petitioner says that he “has been advised indirectly that certain people residing in the vicinity of his lot . . . will institute injunction proceedings against him as soon as he attempts to construct” the contemplated apartment-house. He, therefore, wants, in effect, to be advised whether or not it is safe for him to go ahead.

June 29, 1925.

At the return of the rule granted, four of the defendants filed verified answers, and it was argued on petition and these answers. No replication was filed nor depositions taken, and, in the absence of any local rule on the subject, the relevant and material facts properly set up in the answers must be taken as true: Good v. Grit Pub. Co., 214 Pa. 614; German v. Conover, 240 Pa. 11.

Now, the Uniform Declaratory Judgments Act, in its 11th section, provides that “when declaratory relief is sought, all persons shall be made parties who have or claim any interest which would be affected by the declaration, and no declaration shall prejudice the rights of persons not parties to the proceeding” (see Schoen’s Petition, 73 Pitts. L. J. 5) ; and section 6 of the act is careful to say that “the court may refuse to render or enter a declaratory judgment or decree where such judgment or decree, if rendered or entered, would not terminate the uncertainty or controversy giving rise to the proceeding.”

The petition names ten defendants as constituting “all the parties, grantees,” of the prior owner of the whole tract who had created and imposed the building restriction, judicial construction of which is desired, while the answers aver affirmatively that such is not the fact; that there are at least three other interested parties who are not named at all and have had no notice of the proceeding; and that of the ten so named, one has been dead for eight or ten years and another had sold and conveyed away his property two or three years ago.

Moreover, as to the ten adverse parties named in the petition, the record does not show that four were served at all, but it does show that of these four, two have answered. Four parties who, so far as shown, have no interest in the matter were served, however, as was, according to the proof of service, the party who has been dead eight or ten years.

By the mere statement of the above facts, it is at once manifest that the petitioner is not entitled to the advisory declaration which he seeks. He has not brought himself within the requirements of the act, so far as they relate to necessary parties, and, therefore, asks us to do a vain thing. Such being the case, it becomes impossible to grant him the relief for which he prays and wholly unnecessary, therefore, to consider any of the many interesting questions raised. We cannot, because of lack of parties, avoid refusing to enter the declaratory decree he desires.

And now, April 11, 1925, rule discharged and petition dismissed without prejudice.

The petitioner has recently acquired a lot of ground at Merion, in Montgomery County. It is located near the centre of this highly-improved community, which contains no stores, industrial plants nor other alleged objectionable establishments, and consists exclusively of many very expensive single dwelling-houses, each of which is used for private residence only by its owner or tenant.

The whole neighborhood is protected by severe building restrictions or covenants which were imposed years ago by a common owner. They are practically similar, and that appearing in petitioner’s deed reads, in part, “that at no time hereafter shall any part of the hereby granted premises be used for other purpose than for private residence and any residence erected on any of said lots shall cost not less than $8000 and the front line thereof shall be at least 75 feet from the middle line of the road on which said residence fronts.” :

[90]*90The petitioner desires to erect an apartment-house on his lot. The structure contemplated is, as we understand it, an ordinary one of this character to be operated for profit, or as a business enterprise, and intended to be occupied by a large number of tenants, each of whom will rent a suite of apartments therein for use by himself and family for private residence. It will have a common dining-room and other utilities, but will not be used as a hotel for the accommodation of transient guests. His neighbors object to its erection.

As a consequence, and to the same term and number, Mr. Hoffman, being unwilling to incur the expense incident to an assertion in the usual way of his claimed right, on Nov. 29, 1924, came in with a petition similar to the one now before us. It was, after hearing, dismissed. without prejudice for lack of necessary parties. He afterward filed the present petition on which the customary rule was granted. It was stated at the argument that all interested parties now want decided the question involved. No objection is made to our jurisdiction; no point is made that all interested parties are not before the court; the constitutionality of the Uniform Declaratory Judgments Act of 1923 is waived; and those who have answered join in petitioner’s prayer for our construction of the restriction in question. We have, therefore, decided to entertain jurisdiction and find the single and narrow disputed question in the case to be whether or not the use as an apartment-house of the structure contemplated, if and when erected, will be violative by the petitioner of the restriction in his deed.

In our opinion, it will. There is nothing in the restriction that forbids the erection of an apartment-house, because it does not concern the character of the structure. It is, to the contrary, directed only to the future use of the premises. In other words, the petitioner can safely build an apartment-house, so long as it is, after completion, used only as a private residence.

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Related

Aaron v. Woodcock
128 A. 665 (Supreme Court of Pennsylvania, 1925)
Good v. Grit Publishing Co.
63 A. 1039 (Supreme Court of Pennsylvania, 1906)
German v. Conover
87 A. 282 (Supreme Court of Pennsylvania, 1913)
Taylor v. Lambert
124 A. 169 (Supreme Court of Pennsylvania, 1924)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
7 Pa. D. & C. 88, 1925 Pa. Dist. & Cnty. Dec. LEXIS 64, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/hoffmans-petition-pactcomplmontgo-1925.