In re Private Road in Juniata Township

61 Pa. D. & C. 418, 1948 Pa. Dist. & Cnty. Dec. LEXIS 423
CourtPerry County Court of Quarter Sessions
DecidedJanuary 27, 1948
Docketno. 11
StatusPublished

This text of 61 Pa. D. & C. 418 (In re Private Road in Juniata Township) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Perry County Court of Quarter Sessions primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
In re Private Road in Juniata Township, 61 Pa. D. & C. 418, 1948 Pa. Dist. & Cnty. Dec. LEXIS 423 (Pa. Super. Ct. 1948).

Opinion

Rice, P. J.,

— This is a proceeding for a private road under section 11 of the General Road Act of June 13, 1836, P. L. 551, as last amended hy section 1 of the Act of April 28,1927, P. L. 485, 36 [419]*419PS §2731, the applicable portions of which are as follows:

“The several courts of quarter sessions shall, in open court as aforesaid, upon the petition of one or more persons, . . . for a road from their respective lands ... to a highway or place of necessary public resort, . . . direct a view to be had of the place where such road is requested, and a report thereof to be made, in the same manner as is directed by the said act of thirteenth June, one thousand eight hundred and thirty-six.”

Viewers were appointed on the petition of S. Roy Campbell and Annie E., his wife, setting forth their ownership of a tract of land in Juniata Township, Perry County, having thereon a dwelling house and outbuildings, their need for a private road to a public road leading from Markelsville to Newport at a designated point, the name of the owner, namely, Elizabeth Bealor, of the land over which such proposed private road is to be laid out, and other facts not in issue. The viewers presented their report to the court, and it was confirmed nisi. Mrs. Bealor has filed exceptions to the report, and the matter comes before the court on the exceptions.

The report states, inter alia: (a) That the land of petitioners ... is surrounded by lands of other persons; (b) that petitioners . . . have no road or right-of-way from their land and dwelling house to a public highway or place of necessary public resort or to any private way leading to a public highway or place of necessary public resort; (c) that it is a matter of strict necessity that petitioners have a private road as prayed for in their petition. The report then proceeds to say:

“The undersigned viewed the ground proposed for said private road and agree that there is a strict necessity for the same and to return for private use the following road,” and then follows a description of a road by courses and distances, beginning at a point on the [420]*420line of lands of petitioners on one side and Elizabeth Bealor on the other to a point on or at a public road designated. The report then states: “That a road south of the road hereinabove laid out and along Big Buffalo Creek would be impracticable because of flood and low and wet ground; that a road north of the road herein-above laid out would be of greater distance and both impracticable and inaccessible; and that a road across the Big Buffalo Creek would be impracticable and unusable a greater (great) part of the year because of floods, high water and ice”. The report, after stating other matters not material to the exceptions, assesses the amount of damages to be paid by petitioners to Elizabeth Bealor at the sum of $275.

Mrs. Bealor did not apply for a review within the time prescribed but filed nine exceptions to the report. By agreement of counsel, certain testimony in support of and against the exceptions was taken and reduced to writing. The first five exceptions allege substantially, but not in these words, that petitioners have available for their use to and from their property two ways or roads, to wit: (1) a road from their line, which is at or in the Big Buffalo Creek, south across the Creek by means of a fording and through lands of Samuel Adams to the State Road; and (2) a road from their line north over the lands of others to a public road on or across Hominy Ridge. This description of these roads is not in the language used in the exceptions but substantially states the averments. The testimony of exceptant and her witness substantially shows that two such ways have been in existence at times and have been used for access to and from the Campbell property. The testimony of petitioners and their witnesses does not materially differ and the report of the viewers indirectly recognizes the existence of these two ways. But the testimony also shows that the first mentioned road crosses the creek by a fording and is unusuable at times on account of floods, ice and wet ground and that the second mentioned road is long [421]*421and hilly and has been little used. There is no evidence that petitioners have a legal right to use either way. These conditions are in accord with the findings of the viewers last quoted above. These exceptions aver that, by reason of these two ways, there is no necessity for the proposed private road through the lands of exceptant.

Supposing that petitioners have one or two rights of way, by express grant or by prescription or otherwise, is that sufficient to show that there is no necessity for a statutory road? The answer to that depends on the meaning of the word necessity, or the word necessary.

“As used in jurisprudence, the word ‘necessary’ does not always import an absolute physical necessity, so strong that one thing, to which another may be termed ‘necessary’, cannot exist without that other. It frequently imports no more than that one thing is convenient or useful or essential to another.”: Black’s Law Dictionary (3rd ed.) 1227.

In County of Lancaster v. Y. W. C. A., 92 Pa. Superior Ct. 514, 518, a case involving the taxability of real estate allegedly devoted to charitable purposes, it was said: “The word ‘necessary’ as used in the statute does not mean ‘absolute necessity’ but rather a ‘reasonable necessity’, ‘convenient and useful’ to the purpose of the charity.”: quoted also in U. Pres. W. Assn. v. County of Butler, 110 Pa. Superior Ct. 116, 122, 123. In Lutz et ux. v. Allegheny County et al., 302 Pa. 488, the word “advisable” was held to mean “necessary”. In First Baptist Church v. Pittsburgh et al., 341 Pa. 568, 576, another tax case, it was said:

“The word ‘necessary’ does not import an absolute necessity, but its meaning cannot be broadened so as to comprehend that which is merely desirable. As used in this statute, the meaning is limited to a reasonable necessity . . .”

[422]*422In Poeopson Road, 16 Pa. 15, the report of viewers laying out a private road stated that there was “occasion” for the proposed road, and the Supreme Court held it to be a sufficient finding that the road was “necessary”. In Brecknock Twp. Road, 2 Woodward 437, it was held that a petitioner for a private road has the right to have one laid out over the lands of his neighbors, even though he may have access to a public highway over his own lands, if such a route be specifically difficult and burdensome. That the existence of a private road by grant does not necessarily bar a statutory proceeding for a private road, see Boyd et al. v. Negley, 40 Pa. 377, 383, Stewart’s Private Road, 38 Pa. Superior Ct. 339, Fayette Co. Commissioners’ Petition, 289 Pa. 200, 207, Kraft’s Petition, 33 Lanc. 386. Considering both the report of the viewers and the testimony, we cannot conclude that there is not a reasonable necessity for the proposed road. Both the report of the viewers and the testimony convince us that petitioners do not have the legal right to use either of the two roads above mentioned across the lands of others intervening between petitioners’ lands and the public highways to the south and north, respectively, that the road across the Big Buffalo Creek would not be usable at all times in the year unless a bridge were constructed and, without a bridge, would not be usable by motor vehicles, and that the road to the north, not having been used for 25 years or more, according to testimony of Mrs.

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Related

Lutz Et Ux. v. Allegheny County
153 A. 903 (Supreme Court of Pennsylvania, 1930)
First Baptist Ch. of Pbgh. v. Pbgh.
20 A.2d 209 (Supreme Court of Pennsylvania, 1941)
Fayette County Commissioners' Petition
137 A. 237 (Supreme Court of Pennsylvania, 1927)
United Presbyterian Women's Ass'n v. County of Butler
167 A. 399 (Superior Court of Pennsylvania, 1933)
Pocopson Road
16 Pa. 15 (Supreme Court of Pennsylvania, 1851)
Boyd v. Negley
40 Pa. 377 (Supreme Court of Pennsylvania, 1861)
In re Private Road in Redstone Township
5 A. 383 (Supreme Court of Pennsylvania, 1886)
County of Lancaster v. Y. W. C. A.
92 Pa. Super. 514 (Superior Court of Pennsylvania, 1928)
Stewart's Private Road
38 Pa. Super. 339 (Superior Court of Pennsylvania, 1909)

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Bluebook (online)
61 Pa. D. & C. 418, 1948 Pa. Dist. & Cnty. Dec. LEXIS 423, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-re-private-road-in-juniata-township-paqtrsessperry-1948.