In re Road from Houston to Canonsburg

8 Pa. D. & C. 89, 1925 Pa. Dist. & Cnty. Dec. LEXIS 27
CourtWashington County Court of Quarter Sessions
DecidedOctober 26, 1925
DocketCounty Road Docket No. 1, Road No. 3
StatusPublished

This text of 8 Pa. D. & C. 89 (In re Road from Houston to Canonsburg) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Washington 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 Road from Houston to Canonsburg, 8 Pa. D. & C. 89, 1925 Pa. Dist. & Cnty. Dec. LEXIS 27 (Pa. Super. Ct. 1925).

Opinion

Brownson, P. J.,

Section 20 of the Act of May 11, 1911, P. L. 244, as finally amended by the Act of May 11, 1921, P. L. 477, provides that upon petition of the county commissioners the Courts of Quarter Sessions shall have power to vacate as a county road any portion or portions of any abandoned or condemned turnpike road, or turnpike road purchased by the county, or of any road the location or improvement of which has been ordered or made under said Act of 1911, “or former acts relating to county roads,” and that “all portions of such roads so vacated shall become and be township roads;” such petition to be presented after ten days’ written notice to “the supervisors of the township or townships through which said road passes.”

We have before us a petition of the county commissioners praying for the vacation as a county road of a section, approximately 3000 feet in length, of what was formerly the Washington and Pittsburgh Turnpike Road. Prior to 1923, this section of road lay in Chartiers Township: About fifteen years ago it was improved by the county under the Act of June 26, 1895, P. L. 336 (which is one of the “former acts” referred to in section 20 of the Act of 1916). It became and has continued to be a county road. By an ordinance approved March 20, 1923, the Borough of Canonsburg annexed to itself the part of the territory of Chartiers Township in which that section of road lay (see 4 Wash. Co. Reps. 33), so that it is now within the bounds of the borough. This petition is presented under section 20 of the Act of 1911, and the question now for decision is whether, by the terms of that section, this court is given jurisdiction to make the decree of vacation prayed for. This question turns upon whether the meaning and intent of the words of that section are [90]*90that its application shall be confined to sections of road that lie, at the time the petition is presented, within the limits of a township. There is no doubt that before March 20, 1923, the court would have had jurisdiction to decree a vacation of this road. But the existence of such jurisdiction now is questioned, upon the ground that this road no longer lies within the limits of any township, and, therefore, is not capable of becoming by vacation a “township road” and going under the charge of the supervisors of a township through which it passes, and that only roads which are so capable are within the intent and scope of this section.

The expressions “township” and “supervisors,” occurring in statutes relating to public roads, have often in Pennsylvania been interpreted in a non-literal and very large and comprehensive sense, when there is nothing in the particular statute to indicate their employment with a literal or restricted meaning. In re Road in Milton, 40 Pa. 300, Lowrie, C. J., at page 301, said:

“We are not impressed by the fact that the Northumberland County Road Law of 1859 does not mention boroughs and borough officers, but only townships and township officers, and think that, notwithstanding this, it applies also to roads in boroughs. The General Road Law of 1836 has the same emission, and yet it has always been regarded as the road law for boroughs as well as for townships; this word being used as a general term, including all municipal divisions relating to roads where no special provision is made. The Act of 1859 is intended as a complete substitute for that of 1836, so far as relates to this county, and must, therefore, include boroughs and borough authorities under the terms townships and supervisors, if there be no other law for the borough.”

The thought expressed in this quotation seems to be that where the general intent of a statute apparently is to deal with roads generally (including those in boroughs), the word township can be interpreted as used in the generic sense of a sub-division of a county, and as borough authorities are ex-officio supervisors of highways within their municipality, the term township supervisors may be treated as including them.

That case was cited and followed by Judge Allison in In re Clinton Street, 7 Phila. 644, and he also referred to Smedley v. Erwin, 51 Pa. 445, as holding' (see page 449) that all of the provisions of the General Road Law of 1836 “are as applicable to Philadelphia as to any other county, except so far as they are expressly declared to be inapplicable.”

The argument for the county, then, is that the Act of 1911 was intended to deal with county roads generally — as generally as the Act of 1836 dealt with ordinary roads; and that as the words township and supervisors are by precedent and usage in Pennsylvania susceptible of a meaning which would include boroughs and borough authorities, there arises from the fact that they are used in section 20 no implication that the words which expressly authorize the vacation of “any portion of . . . any road, the permanent location or improvement whereof has been ordered or made under this or former acts relating to county roads,” are to be restrained in their operation by excepting thereout sections of roads which have come, through an annexation, to lie within a borough.

Is this argument affected by the circumstance that section 18 of the Act of 1911 makes special provisions regarding the improvement and maintenance of sections of roads lying in boroughs? (These provisions are now supplied by sections 25 to 27 of article vil of chapter VI of the Borough Code of May 14, 1915, P. L. 312, and the cost of repair and maintenance are thereby transferred to the borough.) Does the fact that section 18 deals with boroughs [91]*91separately and as distinguished from townships (though not mentioning the latter) indicate that in section 20 the word township is used in a restricted or technical sense, referring to a township as distinguished from a borough, and, therefore, should be held to imply a limitation of the prima fade meaning and scope of the preceding language?

The grant of jurisdiction to the court is in these words: “Shall have power ... to vacate as a county road any portion or portions of any abandoned or condemned turnpike road, or any portion or portions of any turnpike road purchased by the county, or of any road, the permanent location or improvement whereof has been ordered or made under this or former acts relating to county roads.” These words, if taken by themselves, embrace the piece of road now in question as clearly and unequivocally as it is possible for language to do. The question, then, is whether an exception out of the operation of these words of roads or sections of roads which are plainly within the words themselves is to be implied from two subsequent provisions, viz., a direction that all portions of roads so vacated “shall become and be township roads,” and a direction that, before the petition for vacation is presented, ten days’ notice shall be given “to the supervisors of the township or townships through which said road passes.”

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Related

Road in Milton
40 Pa. 300 (Supreme Court of Pennsylvania, 1861)
Smedley v. Erwin
51 Pa. 445 (Supreme Court of Pennsylvania, 1866)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
8 Pa. D. & C. 89, 1925 Pa. Dist. & Cnty. Dec. LEXIS 27, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-re-road-from-houston-to-canonsburg-paqtrsesswashin-1925.