Horsham Township v. WEINER

255 A.2d 126, 435 Pa. 35, 1969 Pa. LEXIS 685
CourtSupreme Court of Pennsylvania
DecidedJune 27, 1969
DocketAppeal, 15
StatusPublished
Cited by14 cases

This text of 255 A.2d 126 (Horsham Township v. WEINER) 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
Horsham Township v. WEINER, 255 A.2d 126, 435 Pa. 35, 1969 Pa. LEXIS 685 (Pa. 1969).

Opinion

Opinion by

Me. Justice Pomeroy,

This is an appeal by defendants from a decree in equity which, having impliedly held in favor of plaintiffs on the question of dedication of a sewer line, went on to dismiss defendant’s counterclaim for reimbursement of the cost of the line. The plaintiffs in this case were a second class township and its sewer authority; 1 the defendants were a land developer (Weiner) and two corporations (Solida and Wilshire Manor) controlled by him (hereinafter collectively referred to as “appellants”). The complaint sought an order directing the appellants to dedicate to the Township of Horsham (Township) for the consideration of $1.00 a sewer line which Weiner had installed in connection with a subdivision which he was developing within the Township called “Oak Hill Farms”. The answer denied that appellants had agreed to dedicate the sewer line, but averred that Solida had only agreed to dedicate a smaller sewer line originally contemplated. By way of counterclaim, appellants alleged that the Township had agreed to pay them the difference in cost between the smaller line and the larger one actually installed, and demanded payment of this difference. These pleadings were filed and the case became at issue in December, 1964.

On September 23, 1965, the Chancellor scheduled a hearing in the case to be held on September 28, 1965. On the latter date, an order was entered, apparently without testimony but after statements of counsel made in open court. The full text of the order is reproduced in the margin. 2 By this order, *39 “the Court finds that this system is a public system and that the Township or the Sewer Authority or both have the right to connect public sewers with any of the pipes shown on Plaintiff’s Exhibit No. 2.” Although there was no record of this hearing and nothing in the briefs as to what counsel said or what Plaintiff’s Exhibit No. 2 was, it seems clear on the basis of the subsequent trial testimony and the Chancellor’s adjudication that the sewer line which is the subject matter of this litigation is embraced in the phrase “public system” referred to in the order. No exceptions were taken to this order and no appeal was filed.

Some light is shed on the reason for the September 28, 1965, hearing by the statement of counsel for the Sewer Authority at the commencement of the trial in May, 1966. He there stated that the suit had been commenced because of the need to establish the right and title of the Sewer Authority to the line in question in order to connect it with the new sewer which the Authority was constructing under a State highway, which was then in process of being widened and repaved. This necessity apparently brought to a head the dispute between the parties and resulted in the suit. The urgency apparently became acute by Sep *40 tember of 1965, and the unusual hearing of September 28, 1965, resulted.

The trial, proper was held at two hearings in 1966, and an adjudication'was filed on May 24, 1967. Apparently considering his order of September 28, 1965 as a final disposition, of the question concerning dedication of the sewer, line, the Chancellor did not further adjudicate that question. His adjudication stated: “This court has already ruled that a portion of the interceptor [sewer] line in question is a public facility. The only , remaining question is whether Solida is entitled to damages.”

As a result, no doubt, of the Chancellor’s own consideration of the 1965 order as a final adjudication from which no timely appeal was taken, the appellees have filed a motion to quash that portion of this appeal which concerns the question of whether the sewer line had been dedicated.

. . The. 1965 order is somewhat ambiguous in its implications. It is readily susceptible to construction as only an interlocutory, emergency order entered to prevent serious harm to the Township which might have resulted had it not been permitted to install the sewer line under the State road and connect that line with the sewer line here in question. There is no express finding or conclusion in the order of September 28, 1965 that a dedication had taken place; only by implication may such a conclusion be found in it. The order does not grant the relief for which appellees prayed,- i.e., direction that the sewer line be dedicated. It is not framed as either an adjudication of any issue or as an equity decree. Finally, the order states that it is without prejudice to defendants’ claim for damages, a statement which is inconsistent with a finding of dedication, since implicit in dedication is the relinquishment by the dedicator of any right to compensation from the governmental body involved. See *41 Osterheldt v. Philadelphia, 195 Pa. 355, 45 Atl. 923 (1900). For these reasons we hold that the order of September 28, 1985 lacked the reqnisite finality to be appealable until subsequently incorporated by reference into the Chancellor’s final adjudication. From that adjudication appellants took timely exceptions, and from the dismissal of those exceptions appellants brought this timely appeal. The motion to qnash will be denied.

From the record it is evident that the Chancellor’s conclusion that the sewer line here involved was a public facility must have derived from a belief that dedication had taken place, or, at least that appellants had agreed to dedicate it by the written subdivision contract; there is, however, no formal finding of fact or conclusion of law to this effect. This appeal, therefore, presented two basic questions: (1) whether the Chancellor was correct in concluding that the sewer line had been dedicated to the Township or its Sewer Authority, and (2) whether the Chancellor was correct in his conclusions that the Township did not contract with the appellants to pay compensation for constructing this sewer line and, therefore, that appellants were not entitled to any damages.

“'Dedication of land results when a landowner offers property for public use and it is accepted by or in behalf of the public . . . the dedication largely depends on the intention of the owner of the land.” Coffin v. Old Orchard Development Corp., 408 Pa. 437, 491, 186 A. 2d 906 (1962). “Dedication has a partial analogy to a contract and requires a consideration of the elements of offer and acceptance. The offer of dedication may be made in a number of ways. It may be made by the express declaration of the party or by acts, deed or plat. . . . Dedication rests upon the intention of the owners, and the circumstances must indicate an abandonment of the property to the com *42 munity. [Citing cases.] No particular formality is requisite to constitute a dedication upon the part of the owner. Any act which clearly indicates an intention to dedicate is sufficient.” Vendetti Appeal, 181 Pa. Superior Ct. 214, 220, 124 A. 2d 448 (1956), quoted with approval in Coffin v. Old Orchard Development Corp., supra, 408 Pa. at 491-92. With these principles of dedication before us, we will consider the findings of fact made by the Chancellor to determine whether the conclusion that a dedication had taken place is correct. As we have often held, “. . .

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Bluebook (online)
255 A.2d 126, 435 Pa. 35, 1969 Pa. LEXIS 685, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/horsham-township-v-weiner-pa-1969.