Millvale Borough's Petition

190 A. 546, 126 Pa. Super. 66
CourtSuperior Court of Pennsylvania
DecidedOctober 5, 1936
DocketAppeal, 93
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 190 A. 546 (Millvale Borough's Petition) 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
Millvale Borough's Petition, 190 A. 546, 126 Pa. Super. 66 (Pa. Ct. App. 1936).

Opinion

Opinion by

Parker, J.,

This case comes to us on an appeal from an order of a court of common pleas dismissing exceptions to a viewers’ report assessing benefits for the construction of a joint trunk sewer in two boroughs and two first class townships in the county of Allegheny.

The sewer in question empties into another sewer that the borough of Millvale had constructed at a former time and was intended to accommodate parts of the boroughs of Millvale and West View and parts of the townships of Shaler and Ross. While it was laid for the most part under public roads, streets, and alleys, it was necessary to cross some private properties. The four municipalities had entered into a contract dated May 10, 1932, ratified by the necessary ordinances, providing for the construction of a joint sewer, fixing the size and location of the sewer, and determining the shares of expense of construction to be borne by the respective municipalities. Millvale was to receive $25,000 for the use of the sewer it had theretofore constructed and was to furnish some engineering service. West View undertook to pay 36.74 per cent, Shaler 21.87 per cent, and Ross 41.39 per cent of the cost of construction beyond the Millvale sewer, the $25,000 paid to Millvale, and any damages awarded to property owners in those three municipalities irrespective of the location of such properties. The contract also provided for a division of the cost of maintenance and repairs.

In proceedings at No. 555 January Term, 1934, on a joint petition of the several municipalities, viewers were appointed to assess the damages and benefits occasioned by the improvement. To the report of those viewers these exceptions were filed. A short time earlier, at No. 1930 October Term, 1933, viewers were appointed on a like joint petition to determine the damages occasioned to private property by the construction *69 of the sewer over private properties. Both proceedings were referred to the same board of viewers and reports were made to court at the same time and were confirmed nisi on the same date.

The exceptions were based on four complaints: (1) that the court was without authority to entertain a joint petition from the four municipalities to have benefits and damages assessed against properties in the different municipalities in one proceeding; (2) that the appointment on separate petitions of the same board of viewers to assess the damages occasioned by the taking of private property and to assess the benefits and damages occasioned by the cost of construction was unlawful; (3) that private property in one municipality was assessed “for the benefit of another municipality without express statutory authority”; and (4) that the ordinances providing for the improvement were defective because they did not expressly provide for the assessment of any private property and did not specifically fix the method to be adopted for collecting the cost of improvement.

(1) We cannot discover any merit in the contention that the benefits in the four municipalities could not be assessed in one proceeding or that to do so would be fatal to the proceedings. “The First Class Township Law”, Act June 24, 1931, P. L. 1206 (53 PS 19092), by §2440 (53 PS 19092-2440) provides that such townships may enter into agreements with municipalities or other townships “for the purpose of building sewers, including trunk line sewers.” This was a reenactment of provisions in the Township Code of 1917. A similar provision is contained in the “General Borough Act” of May 4, 1927, P. L. 519, §2120 (53 PS 14301), later amended by Act April 4, 1935, P. L. 15. It is clear that the legislature by these acts contemplated that the construction of a trunk line sewer might be undertaken and pursued as one single undertaking *70 crossing the lines of the different boroughs or townships for they were authorized to make agreements so to do. In presenting a joint petition by all the municipalities affected and in disposing of the matter in one proceeding they were but pursuing to a conclusion what they were authorized to do.

The contract fixed the proportion of the total cost which should be paid by each borough. The viewers in their report took into account such division of costs and in no case was the total of the assessment against individual properties in any one municipality as much as the share which such municipality agreed to pay. That is to say, in each case a portion of the cost allocated to such municipality was placed upon the municipality as a whole. The result actually achieved when the report was filed was no different than if four separate petitions had been presented and four separate boards of viewers had acted independently of each other for the report segregated the assessments for the respective political subdivisions.

In Petition of City of Pittsburgh, 110 Pa. Superior Ct. 310, 168 A. 196, we upheld a separate petition involving the construction of a trunk sanitary sewer which affected the city of Pittsburgh and an adjoining borough and township. There the work was done under contract by the city of Pittsburgh and largely involved a sewer constructed on a street forming the boundary line between the city and the borough and township. The conclusions there reached are not inconsistent with our present conclusion. Pour separate petitions might have been presented but it does not follow that it was not permissible to follow the course here pursued. In fact there is much to be said in favor of proceeding by one petition. As we shall later show, the legislature provided for the assessment of benefits in both boroughs and townships in the manner adopted here.

(2) It is next contended that it was fatal to these *71 proceedings that a previous petition had been presented asking for the appointment of viewers to assess damages for private property taken in the construction of the sewer and that viewers were so appointed. However, the court appointed the same board to act as viewers and in both proceedings the reports were made and confirmed nisi at the same time. Certainly when these two petitions were presented the court might have consolidated them. The result attained was no different than if the court had so done and proceeded as if there was one petition. Our attention has not been called to, and we have not been able to discover, any fact which would indicate that the parties against whom benefits have been assessed have been deprived of any right or harmed in any respect by the presentation of separate petitions or by the manner in which the proceedings were conducted. The objection is extremely technical and we think the court below properly dismissed the exceptions covering this branch of the case.

(3) It is next urged that the report should be set aside because private property in one municipality has been assessed for the benefit of another municipality without express statutory authority. In the first place, the factual premise is without support. We do not understand that in the case of any of these properties assessed with benefits such assessments were for the benefit of any other municipality. Just as in any case where assessments are made on the basis of benefits, the particular property is assessed for the special benefits received by such property or its owner. That property is charged with no more than the benefits that accrue to it.

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Related

Upper Moreland-Hatboro Joint Sewer Authority v. Wilson
18 Pa. D. & C.2d 171 (Montgomery County Court of Common Pleas, 1958)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
190 A. 546, 126 Pa. Super. 66, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/millvale-boroughs-petition-pasuperct-1936.