Miller v. Silk Service Stations

10 Pa. D. & C. 553, 1927 Pa. Dist. & Cnty. Dec. LEXIS 309
CourtPennsylvania Court of Common Pleas, Beaver County
DecidedAugust 5, 1927
DocketNo. 5
StatusPublished

This text of 10 Pa. D. & C. 553 (Miller v. Silk Service Stations) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Pennsylvania Court of Common Pleas, Beaver County primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Miller v. Silk Service Stations, 10 Pa. D. & C. 553, 1927 Pa. Dist. & Cnty. Dec. LEXIS 309 (Pa. Super. Ct. 1927).

Opinion

McConnel, J.,

In this case, the plaintiffs, A. S. Miller and others, who are residents of the Borough of Beaver Falls, filed a bill in equity against the Silk Service Stations, Frank G. Garvin, proprietor, and Frank G. Garvin, on July 25, 1927, praying for a preliminary injunction, to be made permanent upon final hearing, to restrain the defendants from erecting and maintaining above ground upon certain premises in the Borough of Beaver Falls tanks for the storage of gasoline. A preliminary injunction was issued and a hearing fixed for Aug. 2, 1927, with the consent of all parties in interest. The hearing was held on Aug. 2, 1927, and testimony presented on the part of both plaintiffs and defendants; and the question is whether, under [554]*554the evidence produced upon said hearing, the preliminary injunction should be continued or dissolved.

The evidence showed that the defendant has leased from the Pittsburgh & Lake Erie Railroad Company a small tract of land in the Borough of Beaver Falls, bounded on the northeast by the right of way of Pittsburgh & Lake Erie Railroad Company; on the southeast by Fifth Avenue; on the southwest by Twenty-first Street, and on the northwest by a considerable tract of vacant land owned by the Pittsburgh & Lake Erie Railroad Company. Upon the tract of land so leased, the defendant intends to erect three steel storage tanks having a capacity each of about 10,000 gallons of gasoline; also a pumping station for the purpose of unloading the gasoline from the tank-cars ; and intends to load tank-trucks with gasoline from the tanks, running it into the trucks by gravity.

The nearest tank to be constructed by the defendant to any public highway is 40 feet from the northern line of Twenty-first Street, which is a public highway in the Borough of Beaver Falls. The nearest dwelling-house to the tanks is one erected on the south side of Twenty-first Street, near the comer of Fifth Avenue, which is also a public highway in said borough; and this dwelling-house is located 100 feet from the nearest tank. There is another house on the northern side of Twenty-first Street, 143 feet from the nearest tank, and various dwellings on the western side of a 20-foot alley (which is called Thomas Alley, according to the evidence), and the nearest of these houses to the said tanks is 132 feet.

The district in which the tanks are to be erected and this station maintained is exclusively a residence district in the Borough of Beaver Falls, and it is alleged by the plaintiffs that the operation of thisi gasoline station at this place will greatly endanger the lives and property of the petitioners and others residing in proximity to said tanks, and that the maintenance of the same will be a common nuisance becaúse of the annoyance and distress to the plaintiffs' and those residing in the immediate neighborhood of this location, and that it will ruin the said district for residence purposes and materially depreciate the value of the plaintiffs’ properties.

The evidence as introduced by the plaintiffs showed that their properties would be considerably depreciated in value through the location of these storage tanks as proposed on account of the fear which persons would naturally have of explosion and fire which might arise from the storage and handling of gasoline at this place by the defendant, although this fact was denied by the defendants’ witnesses. The evidence also showed that an application had been made by the defendant to the Bureau of Fire Protection, Pennsylvania State Police, at Harrisburg, for the approval of this location for the storage and handling of volatile inflammable liquids, and, after a hearing was had before the State Fire Marshal, a permit, No. 31774, was granted to the defendant, allowing the construction above ground of three 10,000 gallons capacity tanks and one Viking twin rotary blind pump, or drawing-off device, at Twenty-first Street and Fifth Avenue, Beaver Falls, Beaver County, Pennsylvania, upon certain conditions enumerated in the permit as follows:

“(a) That the tanks be located at least 30 feet farther north and 10 feet east of the position as now shown on plan.
“(b) That unless the contour of the ground will prevail as a natural barricade against the spread of liquid, that suitable retaining wall or embankment be provided and maintained around the tanks to safely hold not less than 1£ times the capacity of the three tanks.
[555]*555“(c) That all grass, weeds and vegetable growth on the property be cut down and so maintained.
“(d) That tanks be electrically grounded in approved manner.
“(e) That no less than three 2i gallons capacity chemical fire extinguishers, suitable for oil fires, be provided on the premises.
“(f) That entire property under lease be surrounded with wire mesh or equivalent fence or enclosure to prevent access thereto by unauthorized persons.
“(g) That approval is provisional that no buildings or structures, other than tanks and pump-house now proposed, be erected on the property leased, nor on adjoining property within 60 feet of the tanks.”

These conditions, as prescribed by the Bureau of Fire Protection, will have to be complied with, of course, by the defendant; otherwise the plaintiffs can at any time, upon complaint to the State Fire Marshal, prevent the maintenance and operation of the defendant’s station at this location.

There was no evidence introduced at the time of the hearing in this case which would show that there is any real danger arising to any of the properties of the plaintiffs by reason of the maintenance and operation of this plant; but there is a natural feeling of apprehension of danger which makes this plant obnoxious to the plaintiffs arid would naturally deter any person from wanting to purchase property or hold property in this vicinity, and we have every sympathy with the plaintiffs in this case. But the rights of an owner of property to the use, improvement and development of it cannot be interfered with unless the owner is doing something unlawful thereon or which will unlawfully do injury to the property of some other person. This feeling and principle is exceedingly well-expressed by Judge Ferguson in the case of Braun et al. v. Atlantic Refining Co., 27 Dist. R. 451, as follows:

“In this case, we have presented the familiar problem of apprehension among real estate owners and occupiers over the proposed use of neighboring real estate. When it is intended to erect a new structure in the vicinity of private residences, unless the newcomer acts in accordance with the wishes of the neighbors, the interposition of a court of equity seems at once to be required. Few persons have escaped annoyance of this kind. Owners of residences erect private garages in the rear or at the side of their properties which are more or less offensive to adjoining owners. Others, in residential sections, ignore building lines mutually and tacitly agreed upon, but not obligatory, or establish levels and grade lines differing from those adopted by others. Architectural eccentricities often offend, and frequently there is introduced into a residential neighborhood buildings to be used for commercial purposes.

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Bluebook (online)
10 Pa. D. & C. 553, 1927 Pa. Dist. & Cnty. Dec. LEXIS 309, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/miller-v-silk-service-stations-pactcomplbeaver-1927.