Lewisburgh School District v. Harrison

138 A. 760, 290 Pa. 258, 1927 Pa. LEXIS 645
CourtSupreme Court of Pennsylvania
DecidedMay 10, 1927
DocketAppeal, 51
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 138 A. 760 (Lewisburgh School District v. Harrison) 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
Lewisburgh School District v. Harrison, 138 A. 760, 290 Pa. 258, 1927 Pa. LEXIS 645 (Pa. 1927).

Opinion

Opinion by

Mr. Justice Frazer,

The school district of the Borough of Lewisburgh, Union County, presented a petition to the court of common pleas for a rule upon appellants to show cause why viewers should not be appointed to assess damages for land owned by appellants which the school district, in the exercise of the power vested in it by section 605 of the Act of May 18, 1911, P. L. 309, known as the School Code, had entered upon, taken possession of and occupied for school purposes. Defendants opposed the action; the court, however, after hearing, made the rule *260 absolute, and from that decree this appeal is taken. Various questions were at issue at the trial relative to tbe validity of ordinances passed by tbe Lewisburgb borough council vacating streets and alleys on the land in controversy, which at the time of the taking by the school district comprised a plotted plan of lots; the disposition of these questions by the trial judge was apparently accepted by the parties, so that we have assignments of error by appellants relating only to the title to the land as acquired by plaintiffs and to the manner and adequacy of the proceedings to condemn.

We have therefore before us the single question, into which appellants’ four assignments of error resolve themselves, viz.,—whether or not the school district obtained title to the land in controversy by proceeding as it did under the provisions of section 605 of the School Code. The task of reaching a determination of this question is greatly simplified and aided by inclusion in the record of the case, as a part of the undisputed evidence at the trial, of the minutes of the meetings of the school board, in which the progressive steps taken by the board to condemn the land are successively set forth. Nevertheless, despite the inclusion of these important records of board meetings, appellants contend, and so assert in their printed brief, “the entire record is barren of any evidence of actual possession taken of any of these lots, or of any occupancy of the same, or use of the same, by the school district at any time for any purpose.” If this contention is to be sustained it must be found that either the minutes are improper and invalid, or that the school board failed to proceed in the manner required by the School Law in its efforts to secure title to the land by condemnation.

Section 314 of the School Code directs that the secretary of the school board “shall keep a correct and proper record of all the proceedings of the board.” We find in the record before us a series of minutes of meetings of the school board set forth chronologically from the in *261 ception of the plan to acquire land and erect a high school building thereon, down through the period covered by the present litigation. We have examined these minutes and see no manner of fault on the part of the secretary in setting them down; and it may be safely inferred that, if they were defective in any material degree, the alert scrutiny of the court and of counsel at the hearing would have disclosed such defect.

We learn from these minutes, as found in the record of the case, that at least five years before the beginning of this litigation the necessity of the purchase of land and the erection of a high school building had been seriously discussed by the board, and, at least two years before definite steps in that direction were taken, a tentative selection was made at a meeting of the board in January, 1923, of the land to which the title is here in dispute. Later minutes show that at successive meetings negotiations were under way for the acquisition of this property and the question as to price considered in detail. Finally, at a session of the board of directors, held June 11, 1923, a definite and final selection of the land now in controversy, a plot of lots known as Harrison’s Addition, as a proper site for the proposed school structure, was made by a unanimous vote of the members of the board. Subsequently, at a meeting held November 10,1924, a specific offer of the amount the school district would pay for the property was unanimously agreed upon by the directors. This price upon being offered was not accepted by the owners, appellants here, and, after further conference and correspondence, another price was fixed upon by the board at a meeting held, as the minutes show, June 8,1925, as the maximum sum the school district would pay for the land; and “further,” as the same minutes set forth, “that a reply to the offer for said lots be requested from the owners of said lots by June 20, 1925; and in the event that no reply is received by that time, or the owners refuse to accept the amount offered by the board, then we proceed *262 after June 20, 1925, to condemn said lots for public school purposes as provided by Act of Assembly of the Commonwealth of Pennsylvania.”

This maximum offer was not accepted by the owners of the property, and at the subsequent board meeting held July 6, 1925, the directors by an affirmative vote definitely decided to secure title to the land by condemnation proceedings as provided by the School Code, and appointed a committee, comprising three members of the board, to enter upon the land, with the solicitor and a surveyor, and take possession of the property. This motion, as unanimously adopted by the board, is plain and explicit. It directs that, since the school directors and the owners of the lots “cannot agree on terms of purchase of lands for school purposes so owned by Jane C. Harrison and Oscar Hartel, that Harry Stahl, J. F. Groover, James L. Miller, directors, Walter Frick, surveyor, and H. M. Showalter, counsel for the school board, be authorized and delegated on behalf of said board of ■directors to enter upon, take possession of and mark the boundary lines of lands for school purposes.” Conform-ably to this formal decision and direction of the school board, the committee appointed, comprising three of the members of the board, the solicitor and a surveyor, made an entry together upon the land, made a survey of it and designated and marked its boundaries by driving oak stakes in the ground at the several corners of the tract. A record of that proceeding and the proposed action for the appointment of viewers are set forth in the minutes of the meeting of the board held July 17, 1925.

We find thus in the record before us an unbroken chronological recital, in the minutes, of the successive steps taken by the school board to acquire title to the land in question; by offer to purchase at a named amount, and following a refusal to accept the price offered, by condemnation proceedings. The learned trial judge found this procedure in accord with the requirements of the provisions of the School Code governing the *263 acquisition of title to land by a school district without agreement of the owners and we concur in his conclusion.

Section 605 of the School Law provides an orderly and progressive line of action to be followed by a school board in such transactions. First, the proceedings to condemn may be instituted “whenever the board of school directors of any. district cannot agree on the terms of purchase with the owners of any real estate that the said board has selected for school purposes,” that is, there must have been a selection of the site and final disagreement as to the consideration.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
138 A. 760, 290 Pa. 258, 1927 Pa. LEXIS 645, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/lewisburgh-school-district-v-harrison-pa-1927.