Larkin v. City of Allegheny

162 F. 611, 89 C.C.A. 369, 1908 U.S. App. LEXIS 4475
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Third Circuit
DecidedMay 25, 1908
DocketNo. 26
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 162 F. 611 (Larkin v. City of Allegheny) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Third Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Larkin v. City of Allegheny, 162 F. 611, 89 C.C.A. 369, 1908 U.S. App. LEXIS 4475 (3d Cir. 1908).

Opinion

GRAY, Circuit Judge.

The appellant and complainant below, being a citizen of the state of New York and an owner of real estate in the city of Allegheny, in the state of Pennsylvania, and as such a taxable in that city, filed her bill in the Circuit Court of the United States for the Western District of Pennsylvania, to restrain, by injunction, the said city of Allegheny, a corporation and citizen of the state of Pennsylvania, its officers and servants, from executing a certain contract set out in said bill with the Pennsylvania Company, afterwards the intervener in said suit, and “from conveying, releasing or otherwise impairing the title” of the said city to certain real property, by deed or any other instrument of writing executed and delivered to the said company. The contract sought to be restrained was embodied in an ordinance passed by the legislative authority of the said city of Allegheny, the material parts of which were, as follows:

“Section l. Be it ordained and enacted by the select and common councils of the city of Allegheny, and it is hereby ordained and enacted by the, authority of the same, that the proper officials of the said city be and they are hereby authorized and empowered in the name and on behalf of the said city of Allegheny, to make and enter into a contract with the Pennsylvania Company, lessee of and operating the railway of the Pittsburgh, Ft. Wayne & Chicago Railway Company, in the form following, to wit:
“Contract.
“ ‘This agreement made this-day of-, A. D. one thousand nine hundred and five, between the city of Allegheny, hereinafter called the city, as first party, and the Pennsylvania Company, lessee of and operating the railway of the Pittsburgh, Ft. Wayne & Chicago Railway Company, hereinafter called railway company, as second party, witnesseth:
“ ‘Whereas, by an ordinance dated October 12, 1853, the Ohio & Pennsylvania 'Railroad Company, predecessor in title to the said Pittsburgh, Ft. Wayne & Chicago Railway, was granted a right of way throiigh certain lots in the city of Allegheny, and the same right of way was continued through the commons to Federal street; and whereas, the Pennsylvania Company, lessee of and operating the Pittsburgh, Ft. Wayne & Chicago Railway, has in accordance with its contract with the city of Allegheny dated the 1st day of November, 1901, and for the safety, security and convenience of the public, duly elevated the grade of its tracks over and across Federal street in said city, and partly as a result of such track elevation and partly on account of the growth and development of the city, there has arisen a necessity for a larger, better and more modern passenger station at Federal street; and whereas, the Pennsylvania Company being desirous of conforming fully to the requirements of said city in respect thereto, .has duly submitted plans for a passenger station of such character and size as would be a credit to the city and in every way satisfactory to the public and the company, except that in order to better serve the convenience of both, it is desirable that the general waiting rooms, etc., thereof should be larger and more commodious and the driveway and approach thereto wider, and it is greatly to the interest [613]*613of the public and of the city that such a station thus wholly suitable and satisfactory should be constructed and maintained at this point; and whereas, in order to properly attain such result it is necessary for said Pennsylvania Company to occupy and use for building purposes a small portion of said right of way hitherto granted as aforesaid and also the narrow strip of the common ground or South Parle remaining between the new south line of Stockton avenue, as lately widened by said city and the line of the grant made to the said Ohio & Pennsylvania Railroad Company by said ordinance dated October 12, 1853, which said strip of land has been so reduced in width by said city as to be no longer in any way adapted to or valuable for l>ark purposes:
“ ‘Now therefore, this agreement witnesseth: That for and in consideration of their respective covenants hereinafter set forth, it is agreed by and between said parties as follows, to wit: First. That so far as their right to so do exist the city hereby grants to the Pennsylvania Company as lessee and the Pittsburgh, Ft. Wayne & Chicago Railway Company as lessor, their successors and assigns, the right to occupy and use for the relocation and reconstruction of the passenger station, buildings, sheds, tracks, driveways and other appurtenances suitable for the accommodation of their business in connection with the proposed new station at Federal street, that part of the south common ground or South Park described as follows,’ ” etc.

The bill avers that the proposed alienation of the strip of land described in said contract is wholly without authority of law, and charges that the right and title vested, or attempted to be vested in the said railroad company, pursuant to said ordinance and the execu-'tiou of said agreement, would be a fraud upon complainant and other taxpayers of said city, and prays equitable relief: (1) That the rights of the city of Allegheny in the property described and proposed to be alienated, be declared and affirmed; (2) that the city of Allegheny, its officers and servants, be restrained, by injunction, from executing the contract set out in the foregoing ordinance, etc.

After the filing of the bill, the said Pennsylvania Company was, upon its petition, allowed to intervene as a party defendant, and made answer to the bill. The defendant, the city of Allegheny, filed no answer. Subsequent to the answer of the intervener, the complainant filed an amendment to her bill, adding averments to the following effect; That an act of the state of Pennsylvania for the government of cities of the second class provided that the city solicitor shall prepare all contracts to be made with the city, or any of its departments, and indorse on each his approval of the form thereof, before the same shall take effect; that the said act further provided that all such contracts shall be in writing, signed and executed in the name of the city by the city recorder and head of the proper department; that the said city is a city of the second class; that in this instance the proper department was the department of public works, and that the head of the same did not sign and execute in the name of the said city of Allegheny, or otherwise, the contract mentioned in the bill of complaint; that its city solicitor did not in fact prepare the contract mentioned in the bill of complaint, nor indorse thereon his “approval of the form thereof.

To this amendment, the intervener filed a demurrer, which was overruled by the court below, without prejudice however to the de-murrant, and “with leave to raise all the questions of law made by said demurrer at the final hearing of the cause.” The court below [614]*614adjudged that the contract proposed was within the power and authority of the city of Allegheny to make, and that the objections made to the validity of this particular contract, raised by the averments of the said amendment, were, in consideration of the frame of the bill, without merit, and did not warrant the injunction prayed for. The bill was therefore dismissed, and the case has been brought before us by the appeal of the complainant.

The questions here involved, as raised by the assignments of error, are, as stated by the appellant: First.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
162 F. 611, 89 C.C.A. 369, 1908 U.S. App. LEXIS 4475, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/larkin-v-city-of-allegheny-ca3-1908.