Irwin Borough Annexation Case

90 A.2d 365, 171 Pa. Super. 256, 1952 Pa. Super. LEXIS 381
CourtSuperior Court of Pennsylvania
DecidedJuly 17, 1952
DocketAppeals, Nos. 176 and 182
StatusPublished
Cited by8 cases

This text of 90 A.2d 365 (Irwin Borough Annexation Case) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Superior Court of Pennsylvania primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Irwin Borough Annexation Case, 90 A.2d 365, 171 Pa. Super. 256, 1952 Pa. Super. LEXIS 381 (Pa. Ct. App. 1952).

Opinion

Opinion by

Dithrich, J.,

Upon petition of a majority of the freeholders of the territory proposed to be annexed, the Borough of Irwin, Westmoreland County, on February 13, 1950, enacted an ordinance annexing a section of North Huntingdon Township, Westmoreland County, adjacent to and east of the Borough. The action was taken by authority of and pursuant to the provisions of article IV, §425, of The General Borough Act of May 4, 1927, P. L. 519, as amended by The Borough Code of July 10, 1947, P. L. 1621, 53 PS §12461.

A certified copy of the ordinance, together with the required description of boundaries, was duly filed in the Court of Quarter Sessions and one month later, to wit, March 28,1950, a complaint was filed by the Township, the School District and six freeholders of the Township. When the matter came on for hearing August 23, 1950, the Borough moved to dismiss the complaint on the ground that the complainants had not entered into a recognizance with “sufficient security” as required by §23 of the Act, 53 PS §12900. The section provides in part that “Complaint as to the legality of any ordinance or resolution may be made to the court of quarter sessions, upon entering into recognizance with sufficient security to prosecute the same with effect and for the payment of costs . . .” The motion [259]*259was overruled and the court proceeded with the taking of testimony. Bo die the Borough School District was permitted to intervene. Testimony closed August 25, 1950, and on October 10, 1950, complainants filed an amended recognizance “with the original petitioners as parties to the proceedings and Mabel L. Broker and Mary Emma Herold . . . added as sureties.” (Emphasis added.) On motion of counsel for complainants and over objection by counsel for the Borough and the School District of the Borough, the amended recognizance was approved and ordered filed nunc pro tunc as of March 28,1950.

One of the questions raised on this appeal is the power of the court below to permit a recognizance to be filed more than seven months after the effective date of the ordinance. But since we are deciding this case on the merits we will not pass on the question of the sufficiency of the original recognizance, except to say that we do not agree with the learned court below that “no sureties are required in this type of case.” To our way of thinking it is inconceivable that the Legislature would have required the “entering into recognizance with sufficient security” if the words “sufficient security” did not denote sufficient “sureties” in the usual and customary adaptation of the term.

On August 17,1951, after argument before the president judge and the three associate judges of the court sitting en banc, the complaint was sustained and the ordinance decreed to be illegal and void, one judge dissenting. The Borough and the School District of the Borough have appealed. While the Township and the Borough are parties of record, the real parties in interest are the respective School Districts of the Township and the Borough.

For a clear understanding of the controversy it is necessary to go back to the proceedings in the court [260]*260below where complaint was filed by the Township and the Township School District, lut no freeholders, to an ordinance of the Borough enacted February 20, 1948, annexing substantially the same territory. The complaint was upheld by this Court in Irwin Borough Annexation Case (No. 1), 165 Pa. Superior Ct. 119, 67 A. 2d 757. In the opinion of Laird, P. J., for the lower court en banc in that ease, the controversy still being waged had its inception in a controversy between the two School Districts, as more clearly appears in Irwin Borough School District v. North Huntingdon Township School District, Appellant, 358 Pa. 78, 55 A. 2d 740. Two judges who heard the testimony being unable to agree as to the merits of the complaint, the question was placed on the court en banc’s argument list and heard by three judges of the court. President Judge Laird, speaking for the majority, said: “We are of opinion that this unfortunate controversy arose as an aftermath of the deplorable dispute between the School Boards of these two School Districts, which was only settled by the decree of the Supreme Court, reported in 358 Pa. 78, and that by reason of the divorcement in that case and the subsequent property settlement, the assets of the Borough School District have become considerably increased.”

The “deplorable dispute” was the outgrowth of an agreement entered into by the two School Districts to establish and maintain a joint high school on a site partly in the Borough and partly in the Township and to be known as Norwin High School. The cost of acquiring the land and erecting the building was to be shared equally and the expense of maintaining the school was to be proportioned according to the relative attendance of pupils from each district. Years later the main portion of the building was destroyed by fire and, the parties being unable to agree upon a building program, the Township School Board, by appropriate [261]*261resolution and notice to the Borough School Board, terminated the agreement; and, its action having been upheld by the Supreme Court, the Borough School District has since conducted its own high school and the Township has conducted its high school in what remained of the joint high school building following the fire. The Township School District subsequently entered into an agreement and lease with the North Huntingdon Township Municipal Authority for an addition to the high school building.

In the present proceeding the lower court said: “It is to be noted that the increase in millage for school purposes from 18 mills, had its inception in the year following the establishment of a separate high school in the Borough of Irwin.” And, further, “The testimony offered by the School Authorities of the Borough . . . shows nothing more than a need of the School Districts [sic] of Irwin Borough for an increased school population.” The court then found as a fact “(1) That the School District of the Township of North Hunting-don will be seriously handicapped by the annexation, if approved by the State Department of Education, as the School District will lose an annual revenue of approximately f29,114.02, about l/7th of its usual revenue, while its schools will lose only 115 students, approximately l/18th of its total enrollment.” In the light of the background as illuminated by the opinion of the lower court in the former proceeding, we are constrained to agree with the statement in the dissenting opinion by McWherter, J., that “In the majority opinion the question of the propriety of the annexation appears to have been weighed on the scales of the alleged proposed loss of revenue to the School District of North Huntingdon Township.”- And we unhesitatingly agree with him that “Thé question of whether the School District shall be changed-and become a part of the School District of the Borough of Irwin is a matter to be de[262]*262termined by tbe State Council of Education, not by this Court.” As further stated by Judge McWherter: “Here we are confronted with the question of the propriety of the physical annexation of the territory proposed to be annexed to the Borough of Irwin. A majority of the citizens of the territory proposed to be annexed have signed the petition. Council for the Borough of Irwin has approved the petition for annexation.

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Bluebook (online)
90 A.2d 365, 171 Pa. Super. 256, 1952 Pa. Super. LEXIS 381, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/irwin-borough-annexation-case-pasuperct-1952.