In re Southgate Shopping Center, Inc.

41 Pa. D. & C.2d 769, 1967 Pa. Dist. & Cnty. Dec. LEXIS 296
CourtWashington County Court of Quarter Sessions
DecidedJanuary 6, 1967
Docketno. 31
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 41 Pa. D. & C.2d 769 (In re Southgate Shopping Center, Inc.) 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 Southgate Shopping Center, Inc., 41 Pa. D. & C.2d 769, 1967 Pa. Dist. & Cnty. Dec. LEXIS 296 (Pa. Super. Ct. 1967).

Opinion

McCüNE, J.,

The Commonwealth has taken an appeal from a viewers’ award in the above captioned case. The appeal is filed under section 515 of the Eminent Domain Code of June 22, 1964, P. L. 84, which permits raising objections of law or fact as well as a request for jury trial. A jury trial has been requested, and one will follow as a matter of course.

There are three questions, however, which have been raised by the appeal. They relate to matters which the viewers considered in making their award which, according to the Commonwealth, should not have been considered. These are really objections, therefore, to be dealt with under section 517 of the code, which states that all objections, other than the amount of the award, raised by the appeal shall be determined by the court preliminarily. We are, in effect, deciding in ad[771]*771vanee of a jury trial whether a jury will be allowed to consider the same things the viewers elected to consider. We have the additional duty of deciding whether to return the case to the viewers for further consideration or whether to allow it to proceed.

The first question is whether the viewers were correct in assessing against the Commonwealth the cost incurred by plaintiffs in having a composite map prepared for use at the viewers’ hearing. The amount involved is $276. The first petition for the appointment of viewers was filed by the Commonwealth, to which there were attached the usual prints showing the taking in red for highway construction through the tract of plaintiffs. Plaintiffs then filed their own petition (perhaps without knowledge of the one already filed), and the two were consolidated and heard as one. Plaintiffs’ counsel felt the need of a more complete plan and procured one from an engineer of his own choice which, in some respects, was more satisfactory and particularly showed the complete perimeter of the properties in dispute. As nearly as we can ascertain, plaintiffs’ counsel did not ask the Commonwealth for more complete maps or plans; nor did the viewers. The viewers did use plaintiffs’ plan, which was la-belled “Viewers’ Plan”. No one asked the court to approve the expense involved in acquiring the plan.

Section 509 of the code, which governs, states that condemnor shall furnish the viewers at or before the view with a plan showing the entire property involved, the improvements thereon, the extent and nature of the condemnation and such other physical data, including grades, as may be necessary for the proper determination of just compensation. If, in the opinion of the viewers, the plans are insufficient, they may require the submission of supplemental plans. Copies of the plans shall be furnished at the same time, without cost, to condemnee upon written request. If condem[772]*772nor does not furnish a plan, or condemnor’s plans are insufficient, the court, on application of condemnee, may tax to condemnor as costs reasonable expenses for plans furnished by condemnee.

The comments under this section state that it is contemplated that the court, upon petition, will permit condemnee to have plans made and charged to condemnor if condemnee neglects to furnish proper plans: Rush v. Allegheny County, 159 Pa. Superior Ct. 163 (1946).

In our judgment, the costs of plaintiffs’ plans cannot be assessed to condemnor. Plaintiff was obligated to petition the court for approval before having his own plans drafted if he intended to charge the Commonwealth for them.

The second objection is more serious. Plaintiff contends that the tract affected by the taking was composed of two parcels: “A”, which was a tract of 83.791 acres owned by the Falconi brothers at the time of taking, and “B”, which was a tract of 6.299 acres owned by Harry Deaktor at the time of taking on August 1,1958. Plaintiffs’ petition was filed on behalf of Southgate Shopping Center, Inc., alleged to be the equitable owner of both parcels. The Commonwealth admits, we take it, that Southgate had equitable title to parcel “A” and, in fact, the deed to Southgate from the Falconis assigns condemnation damages to South-gate, but the Commonwealth contends that at the time of condemnation, Southgate had no equitable interest in parcel “B” but, in fact, it was Harry Deaktor’s land and, although it now belongs to Southgate, it must be valued separately. The Commonwealth contends, and plaintiffs admit, that the parcels treated separately are less valuable than the tract treated as a whole.

It is admitted that if Southgate really had a property interest in both parcels, the viewers were correct in treating them as one tract.

[773]*773The evidence produced, which tended to show that Southgate was the real party in interest as to both parcels, was as follows:

Southgate was incorporated July 16, 1958 (prior to the condemnation). Falconis gave an option on parcel “A” to Perry Lane July 12, 1957. Perry Lane and Harry Deaktor agreed in writing on September 24, 1957, to develop the two tracts as a shopping center. (Although this agreement was supposed to have been made a part of the record as Exhibit “A”, we cannot find it and are thus handicapped because we cannot ascertain its content.) Deaktor took title to parcel “B” October 10,1957.

Falconis deeded parcel “A” to Southgate August 28, 1958, and Perry Lane assigned his interest under the option to Southgate in parcel “A” on August 25, 1958.

Deaktor conveyed parcel “B” to Southgate July 3, 1959, and in the deed said he was a straw man for Southgate and held title for Southgate. He did not assign condemnation damages, but he testified on behalf of Southgate and stated he intends Southgate to have the damages.

Both Lane and Deaktor say they have always held title for Southgate and not individually, that they had planned the shopping center before the date of their agreement in 1957, and that they have never had an interest in the land as individuals. They state they have always planned to develop the parcels together as one tract. They both are now officers of Southgate.

The Commonwealth contends that the part of the testimony which is not supported by writing is self serving and violates the statute of frauds. Of course, no one invokes the statute of frauds except the Commonwealth.

In our judgment, the Commonwealth may well be faced with the necessity of treating the parcels as one tract, because the owners of record say they held the [774]*774parcels in trust for Southgate, the real owner, and the Commonwealth cannot invoke the statute of frauds. In Schuster v. Pennsylvania Turnpike Commission, 395 Pa. 441 (1959), a plaintiff in condemnation asserted a property interest in coal and the right to mine it based on an oral agreement, and the Turnpike Commission invoked the statute of frauds. The Supreme Court held that it could not be invoked by the commission and held that the oral agreement gave plaintiff property rights which had been condemned and which were compensable. The court stated the following:

“ ‘ [Ilf the title holder admits either in his pleadings or his testimony, that he did in fact enter into the contract, the purpose of the statute of frauds is served and the oral agreement will be enforced by the court.’ Since the title holder of both surface and mineral rights has never seen fit either to deny the . . .

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Related

Kling Appeal
249 A.2d 552 (Supreme Court of Pennsylvania, 1969)

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Bluebook (online)
41 Pa. D. & C.2d 769, 1967 Pa. Dist. & Cnty. Dec. LEXIS 296, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-re-southgate-shopping-center-inc-paqtrsesswashin-1967.