Incorporation of West Hamburg Borough

15 Pa. D. & C. 610, 1930 Pa. Dist. & Cnty. Dec. LEXIS 143
CourtBerks County Court of Quarter Sessions
DecidedSeptember 2, 1930
DocketNo. 6669
StatusPublished

This text of 15 Pa. D. & C. 610 (Incorporation of West Hamburg Borough) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Berks 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
Incorporation of West Hamburg Borough, 15 Pa. D. & C. 610, 1930 Pa. Dist. & Cnty. Dec. LEXIS 143 (Pa. Super. Ct. 1930).

Opinion

Mays, J.,

On November 8, 1929, a petition was presented, signed by sixty resident freeholders, ten nonresident freeholders, and [611]*611forty-six qualified electors residing within the limits of the proposed borough who are not freeholders, setting forth that the village proposed to be incorporated as a borough contains a collection of houses collocated after a regular plan in regard to roads, streets and lanes; that the said village contains not more than seventy resident freeholders, and that the petitioners are desirous of having said village incorporated under the style and title of “The Borough of West Hamburg,” according to the plan or draft appended to the said petition, and as described by metes and bounds in said petition.

Said petition was directed to be filed with the clerk of said court, whereupon advertisement was duly made that the application would be presented on December 21, 1929. On January 31, 1930, a remonstrance was presented and permission granted to file the same. In accordance with the practice of this court in matters of this kind, a hearing was had and testimony heard on January 30, 1930, and on February 6, 1930, a further hearing was had, at which time it was urged by counsel for petitioners that, owing to the delay in excepting to or remonstrating against the said incorporation, the objections raised should not be considered by the court. We did not then, and cannot now, so determine. The General Borough Act .of May 4, 1927, P. L. 519, section 204, after directing the filing of the application and the giving of notice, states, inter alia, that “The court, at said term, if it shall find that the conditions prescribed by this article have been complied with, may grant the prayer of the petitioners and make a decree accordingly, but, if the court shall deem further investigation necessary, it may make such order thereon as to right and justice shall appertain.”

A proceeding such as this does not make time materially essential. The court has equitable powers. The question here is the expediency of the decree sought by the petitioners. There are a number of cases, Smithfield Borough, 23 Pa. C. C. 583, being one of them, where exceptions were permitted to be filed after the time at which the proceedings were advertised for hearing, Judge Umbel in the case cited saying: “We feel warranted in considering the questions raised by the exceptions in like manner as if the exceptions had been filed within the thirty-day limit.”

The General Borough Act, supra, provides, in section 206: “When, in any application, the boundaries fixed by the petitioners shall embrace lands exclusively used for the purposes of farming, the court may, if it deem such land does not properly belong to the proposed borough, at the request of the party aggrieved, change the boundaries so as to exclude therefrom the land used for farming purposes.”

The major portion of the land within the limits of the proposed borough is used exclusively for farming purposes. No change or modification of said plan has been applied for. All of the owners of the farm lands have joined in the prayer of the petition. Accordingly, the case presented requires the approval or rejection of the application for a borough as an entirety.

In Borough of Little Meadows, 35 Pa. 335, the Supreme Court held: “The courts have no power to incorporate a village so as to include within the boundaries of the corporation a large body of surrounding farm lands.” This case has been distinguished and somewhat modified, but not to the extent that we could entirely ignore the fact that farm lands are included within the limits of the proposed borough. In Borough of Blooming Valley, 56 Pa. 66, it was held that a charter would not be refused merely because adjacent farm lands, the owners of which joined in the petition, were embraced, and, further, that the extent and character of the land are not per se controlling objections, if the parties to be affected are willing to be included, but that the [612]*612court should in these respects exercise a sound discretion. In Tullytown Borough, 11 Pa. C. C. 97, the court, after pointing out that it had a discretion to grant a charter even though the proposed borough included lands used exclusively for farming purposes, stated that such discretion should be exercised with caré and with due regard for the rights of all the parties to be affected.

A view of the territory discloses the weakness of this application. It would require a flight of the imagination to call all of the land embraced within it, most of which is used for agricultural purposes, borough territory. These farm lands do not properly belong to nor constitute a part of the village of West Hamburg. It is rather significant too that practically all of the farm land is not connected by lines or buildings or improvements with the village of West Hamburg. In Incorporation of Highspire Village, 12 Dist. R. 272, 276, Judge Weiss said: “The proposition that 674 acres of land are necessary for corporate uses and the proper administration of the affairs of the municipality, composed of 1200 or 1500 people, refutes itself.” More confidently may we say that the proposition that 486 acres and 10! perches of land are necessary for corporate uses and the proper administration of the affairs of the municipality, composed of 270 people, refutes itself. We must, therefore, conclude that it would be an abuse of discretion to grant this charter. While the appellate courts will not ordinarily review the discretion of the lower court if it should include farm lands in the incorporation of a borough, yet the Superior Court has intimated that it would do so in a case where it appears from the testimony that the lands are not reasonably appurtenant to the built-up section, and that the expansion of the borough would not be in the direction of the farm lands in question: South Connellsville Borough, 47 Pa. Superior Ct. 350.

The foregoing would be sufficient to dispose of the case; but it may be well-to express our views on the expediency of the application.

The village of West Hamburg is situated immediately west of the western boundary line of the Borough of Hamburg, on the Schuylkill River, in the Township of Tilden, this county. The chief industry is the Berks Foundry and Manufacturing Company. There is also a marble works and the Hamburg Station of the Philadelphia and Reading Railway Company. The total acreage of the proposed borough is 486 acres and 10! perches of land, upwards of 400 acres being land suitable and used for agricultural purposes. It has between three and four miles of roadway, and contains forty-four dwelling houses, twenty-four being collocated on both sides of a state highway. There are seventy resident freeholders, sixty of whom, signed the petition for incorporation. The total population is approximately 270. The assessed valuation of the property is $150,000.

The Township of Tilden has about forty-five miles of roadway, and the total assessment is as follows: Value of property and persons taxable for county purposes, $591,658; value of all land, including exempt property, $583,658; value of exempt property, $46,400. The tax rate is 35 mills, exclusive of a $5 poll tax. The remonstrants, with the exception of one, reside in Tilden Township outside of the village of West Hamburg.

The petitioners have filed no specific reasons in support of the application. Their contention, however, according to the testimony and argument, is in effect that there should be—

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Related

Borough of Little Meadows
35 Pa. 335 (Supreme Court of Pennsylvania, 1860)
Borough of Blooming Valley
56 Pa. 66 (Supreme Court of Pennsylvania, 1867)
Prospect Park Borough
31 A. 254 (Supreme Court of Pennsylvania, 1895)
South Connellsville Borough Incorporation
47 Pa. Super. 350 (Superior Court of Pennsylvania, 1911)

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Bluebook (online)
15 Pa. D. & C. 610, 1930 Pa. Dist. & Cnty. Dec. LEXIS 143, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/incorporation-of-west-hamburg-borough-paqtrsessberks-1930.