Ladner v. Siegel

146 A. 710, 296 Pa. 579, 1929 Pa. LEXIS 557
CourtSupreme Court of Pennsylvania
DecidedFebruary 11, 1929
DocketAppeal, 203
StatusPublished
Cited by18 cases

This text of 146 A. 710 (Ladner v. Siegel) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Pennsylvania primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Ladner v. Siegel, 146 A. 710, 296 Pa. 579, 1929 Pa. LEXIS 557 (Pa. 1929).

Opinions

Opinion by

Mr. Justice Kephart,

This appeal is from an order of the Superior Court reversing the court below adjudging the appellees in contempt for violating an injunction decree.

Appellees contemplated the erection of a garage on land situated between 47th, 48th, Spruce and Pine Streets. The garage when built was to be a one-story building with basements underneath, located approximately 65 feet from the street line and having an extension or entrance therefrom to Pine Street. It was to be 160 by 200 feet and would accommodate 429 cars. Surrounding this construction, units of apartment houses were to be erected. They would enclose the. garage, starting from the opening on Pine Street and extending along the street lines around the block.

Some twenty-one property owners in the neighborhood instituted an action to enjoin the construction and use of the building then being erected. At the hearing these facts were found: more people in the neighborhood live in apartment houses than in private residences; there are no stores or business places except a drug store, restaurant, commercial swimming pool and the Garden Court Apartment; so much of the neighborhood as is built up is residential in character, the tendency being toward apartment house sections rather than individual residences; private garages, and in a number of cases as many as ten such garages are built in clusters having a common driveway; the neighborhood is not exclusively private and quiet, the streets are used by traffic of all kinds, and some three to four hundred motor vehicles, including trucks, pass every hour on Pine Street; Spruce Street has double car tracks, and many cars are parked in front of Garden Court, where two taxi stands are located.

*584 No apartment unit had been started around the garage building and until the units were all constructed the building was to be used temporarily for the storage of cars generally. The use of this building as a public garage was enjoined and, on appeal to this court, the action of the court below was affirmed: Ladner v. Siegel, 293 Pa. 306. Later, appellees wishing to have an interpretation of the decree of the court below, petitioned for a declaratory judgment, to ascertain if the building could be used for the storage of cars from the Garden Court Apartment House, owned or leased by one of the appellees, and located across the street; and, as one of the apartment units around the garage was then in course of construction, whether tenants of this unit would be permitted to use the garage building. We held on appeal that the Declaratory Judgments Act was not to be used to modify or elucidate decrees of court. Appellees thereafter leased one-third of the floor space of the garage for the use of Garden Court Apartment tenants. Possession was taken by 22 auto owners; this precipitated the contempt proceeding, which resulted adversely to appellees. The cause was appealed to the Superior Court where the contempt order was reversed.

A review of our authorities prior to Burke v. Hollinger, supra, page 510, handed down February 4, 1929, will show that in considering the question of nuisance as related to a building used for garage purposes, the most important consideration was the location where the use or proposed use was to he harried on. The use of a building for the storage, service or repair of a number of automobiles is not a nuisance per se in a section devoted to business purposes (Phillips v. Donaldson, 269 Pa. 244) as this statement is further explained in the Hollinger Case, but such use for any of these purposes does become a nuisance per se in a residential section. In considering the place where the use was to be made, the primary question was and still is whether the section is exclu *585 sively residential; as to such the use was and still is a nuisance per se.

Where the locality was shown to be residential, the effect of the proposed use within that locality was established from the reappearance in evidence of a chain of circumstances of use, aided by common experience and general knowledge. The courts could thereafter take judicial notice that in certain localities certain pursuits or businesses were universally injurious to health and damaging to property, no matter how carefully conducted. Such pursuits or businesses were in given places styled nuisances per se: Penna. Co. v. Sun Co., 290 Pa. 404, 410. Garages in residential districts fell under this ban.

It was found as a fact in Prendergast v. Walls, 257 Pa. 547, that the usual accompaniment of a building used for storing and servicing a number of cars was noise, odor, danger, pounding metal, testing engines, speeding motors, smoke, danger to pedestrians, sounding of horns and danger to school children. These same disturbing and destructive features have been continually and consistently found to exist in all our later cases, and our rule was as consistently applied, except in Burke v. Hollinger, 296 Pa. 510, and Burke v. Bassett; 296 Pa. 524, where a distinction was made as to regions bordering on a commercial district in conjunction with the elimination of many of these distracting and destructive features by present day operation. These accompaniments in the earlier cases followed the use of a building as indicated, regardless of the number of cars.

We did not attempt in any of them to classify the persons who made use of the building, and the term “public garage” was not intended to signify such a classification, but to denote a general use creating a condition that amounted to a nuisance interdicted in a residential section. Thus in the Prendergast Case the public without limit, save as to the building’s capacity, was invited *586 to store its cars (it was in this case that the term “public garage” first appeared), while in Hohl v. Modell, 264 Pa. 516, 24 cars were to be stored. In Slingluff v. Tyson, 280 Pa. 206, a very close case, there was no storage of cars but merely an attempt to provide service and minor repair work for a class of individuals who owned Paige cars and who lived within a convenient radius. The disturbing features above noted pursued the use in such a place and the injunction was sustained because the place was a residential district. The same situation existed as to a similar service for owners of Hudson-Essex cars in Mitchell v. Guaranty Corp., 283 Pa. 361, and as to a gasoline service station in Carney v. Penn Oil Co., 291 Pa. 371. Where a community garage for 20 cars was to be erected, each stall to be leased to individuals, without service, sale of supplies or attendants, the use was prohibited in a residential district because of the accompanying disturbing features and resulting property damage: George v. Goodovich, 288 Pa. 48.

In some of the uses (for instance, the Slingluff and Mitchell cases), the purposes were very similar to that now urged in the instant case. In those cases the sales of the particular cars were to be advanced, while here the renting of the apartments was to be aided by the proposed garage service. In some instances the building was not erected, but the contemplated use was either admitted, or proof of the effect of the use was offered.

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Bluebook (online)
146 A. 710, 296 Pa. 579, 1929 Pa. LEXIS 557, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/ladner-v-siegel-pa-1929.