Pennsylvania Mut. Life Ins. Co. v. Cuyler

129 A. 637, 283 Pa. 422, 1925 Pa. LEXIS 419
CourtSupreme Court of Pennsylvania
DecidedApril 20, 1925
DocketAppeal, 206
StatusPublished
Cited by10 cases

This text of 129 A. 637 (Pennsylvania Mut. Life Ins. Co. v. Cuyler) 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
Pennsylvania Mut. Life Ins. Co. v. Cuyler, 129 A. 637, 283 Pa. 422, 1925 Pa. LEXIS 419 (Pa. 1925).

Opinion

Opinion by

Me. Justice Wauling,

What is known as the Parkway extends through the City of Philadelphia in a northwesterly direction from the City Hall to Fairmount Park. It was first placed on the city map in 1892, but was removed therefrom two years later. The project was renewed and assumed shape in 1903, when in a more definite form it was again placed on the city map. Other city ordinances were enacted, among them that of 1909, revising the lines of the Parkway, also ordinances appropriating the land, etc. In sympathy with the movement, statutes were enacted, including that of June 8, 1907, P. L. 466, section 1 of which expressly authorizes the taking of land for the *425 Parkway. True, other sections of the act, purporting to authorize the taking of land within two hundred feet of the Parkway by the city, to resell, were declared unconstitutional in Penna. Mut. Life Ins. Co. v. Phila., 242 Pa. 47, but that did not invalidate the first section. See Opening of Parkway, 249 Pa. 367. Streets of the city as laid out and opened cross at right angles and are intersected diagonally by the Parkway, leaving points of land at the crossings. The city in making condemnations for the Parkway, went outside of what we will call its street lines and took over these points of land in the form of triangles, which are of little if any use for traffic, but are of great value for purposes of ornamentation. What we call the street lines are those extending along the general property line on each side of the Parkway, excluding the spaces or triangles on the outside. The Pennsylvania Mutual Life Insurance Company, plaintiff, owned lots Nos. 1619 and 1621 Arch Street, extending from that street north to Appletree Street, the north part of which lots was taken by the city for the Parkway. The entire lot adjoining on the east, being number 1617 Arch Street, owned by another, was also taken over by the city, including, as the Parkway was opened, a triangle bounded on the south by Arch Street, on the west (being the base of the triangle thirty - three feet in length) by plaintiff’s land and on the northeast by the so-called south-west street line of the Parkway. The city took possession of this on or before 1915 and, inter alia, laid a walk of the width of twelve feet, near the base of the triangle, extending from Arch Street to the southwest street line of the Parkway.

Formerly the Parkway was under the control of the Department of Public Works, but in 1915 the city, pursuant to legislative authority (see Act of April 17,1913, P. L. 93), placed it under the control of the defendants as commissioners of Fairmount Park, who took possession thereof including this triangle, intending to place thereon, near plaintiff’s east line, a statue of President *426 McKinley, and started to remove the walk above-mentioned when restrained by ¿n injunction granted in the instant case. Prom the bill, answer and testimony, the chancellor made findings of facts, etc., on which in due course a final decree was entered permanently enjoining the defendants from the erection of the statue or any other structure in such proximity to plaintiff’s property as to prevent the use of the triangle as a means of access thereto, and defendants brought this appeal.

The decree cannot be sustained. The Parkway is neither exclusively a street nor exclusively a park but partakes of the character of both. The statutes, the ordinances and the decisions of this court have all treated it as more than a street, as, in fact, in a class by itself. That is why it was placed in the hands of the Commissioners of Fairmount Park, and why we held the property owners could proceed at once to have their damages assessed, before it was formally opened or taken over by the city (Philadelphia Parkway, 250 Pa. 257), which could not have been done in case of a street (Volkmar Street, Philadelphia, 124 Pa. 320; Whitaker v. Phœnixville Boro., 141 Pa. 327), and is why the city took over these numerous spaces, outside of the street lines of the Parkway which must be regarded in the nature of parks, for it is unthinkable that the city expended vast sums in acquiring these spaces with no power to use them except as cartways and walks, for which they are practically useless. Treating them as parks, the commissioners may improve them so as to prevent their use for public travel or as a means of approach to abutting property, for there is no implied reservation of a right of way over land taken for park purposes: Prowattain v. City of Philadelphia, 17 W. N. C. (Pa.) 261. If plaintiff can prevent the use of the triangle in question as a park, so may the abutting owners of the other triangles and spaces along the Parkway, which might greatly interfere with the proper development thereof. Plaintiff’s land abuts sixty-four feet on Arch Street and more *427 than that on the southwest street line of the Parkway, so the contention that it is necessary to use the triangle as a means of approach thereto is untenable. Had the city not acquired the triangle plaintiff’s east line might still be the center of a party-wall; it is therefore not easy to see how it could be hurt by the use of the triangle as a park. The averment in the bill that plaintiff received less compensation from the city because of an understanding that the triangle was to afford a means of access to its property is denied in the answer and not sustained by any proof.

The ordinance transferring the control of the Parkway to defendants provided that it should be, “Without interfering, however, with the authority of the Departments of Public Works and Public Safety to complete the construction of the street improvements and the installation of the street fixtures required upon the opening of the Parkway or the jurisdiction of the police to enforce the criminal laws in any of said grounds.” While this prevented the defendants from interfering with the completion of work then in progress, possibly including the construction of the walk across the triangle adjoining plaintiff’s property, it did not render such improvements immune to changes by the Park Commissioners.

The proceedings to assess the damages for property taken for the Parkway were in the court of quarter sessions and called it a street, but the proceedings were properly in that court whether the land was taken for street or park or both. See Opening of Parkway, supra; also section 7 of the Act of April 21, 1855, P. L. 264, 266; section 4 of the Act of May 13,1857, P. L. 489, and section 5 of the Act of April 23, 1841, P. L. 287. The city’s title to the land in question is not controverted nor is its character determined by the name given to the condemnation proceedings. The land lying inside and outside the so-called street lines was taken in the same proceeding and that it was all taken nominally as *428 a street does not change its character or preclude the city from using parts thereof for park purposes.

Moreover, the decree is wrong, even treating the entire Parkway as a street. An abutting landowner has not an absolute right of access to his property at every point where it may touch the highway; if so he could prevent any adornment thereof by the city.

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Bluebook (online)
129 A. 637, 283 Pa. 422, 1925 Pa. LEXIS 419, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/pennsylvania-mut-life-ins-co-v-cuyler-pa-1925.