Pennsylvania Mutual Life Ins. v. Philadelphia

88 A. 904, 242 Pa. 47, 1913 Pa. LEXIS 836
CourtSupreme Court of Pennsylvania
DecidedJune 27, 1913
DocketAppeals, Nos. 169 and 173
StatusPublished
Cited by42 cases

This text of 88 A. 904 (Pennsylvania Mutual Life Ins. v. Philadelphia) 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 Mutual Life Ins. v. Philadelphia, 88 A. 904, 242 Pa. 47, 1913 Pa. LEXIS 836 (Pa. 1913).

Opinion

Opinion by

Me. Justice Mestbbzat,

By Section 1 of the Act of June 8, 1907, P. L. 466, cities of the Commonwealth are authorized to purchase, acquire, use and appropriate private property for the purpose of making, enlarging, extending and maintaining public parks, parkways and playgrounds whenever councils shall determine thereon. Section 2 confers like authority on cities for appropriating “neighboring private property, within two hundred feet of the boundary lines of such property so......appropriated for...... parkways......in order to protect the same by the resale of such neighboring property with restrictions, whenever the councils shall......determine thereon: provided, that in the said ordinance......the councils shall declare that the control of such neighboring property ......is reasonably necessary, in order to protect such......parkways......their environs, the preserva* [50]*50tion of the view, appearance, light, air, health, or usefulness thereof.” Section 3 confers upon cities the right “to resell such neighboring property with such restrictions in the deeds of resale in regard to the use thereof as will fully insure the protection of such......parkways......their environs, the preservation of the view, appearance, light, air, health and usefulness thereof, whenever the councils shall.....; determine thereon.” Section 4 declares the appropriation of property for such purposes “to be taking......for public use.”

Pursuant to the authority conferred by the act and for the purposes therein specified the councils of Philadelphia passed an ordinance on July 3,1912, section one of which appropriated certain described private property located outside and within two hundred feet of the parkway, a projected street extending northwestward from City Hall to Pairmount Park, which appropriation includes property owned by the plaintiff company declared to be necessary to protect the parkway. By an ordinance of January 16, 1913, the mayor was authorized on behalf of the city to enter into an agreement with the Bell Telephone Company of Pennsylvania by which the company should.convey in fee to the city for the consideration of one dollar three certain lots of ground at the northeast corner of North Seventeenth and Arch streets and abutting on the parkway, and the city should acquire by deed or condemnation proceedings the property outside of and adjacent to the parkway and adjoining the property of the telephone company, Arch street, Appletree street and property then owned by the city, which includes plaintiff’s property, and with certain restrictions convey the same and the lots agreed to be conveyed to the city by the company, except the small portion thereof included in the parkway, to the telephone company. The consideration to be paid by the company to the city was ninety per cent, of the cost of acquiring the property by condemnation.

[51]*51The Pennsylvania Mutual Life Insurance Company filed this bill against the city, averring, inter alia, that it is the owner in fee of two certain lots together with the brick houses erected thereon, located on the north side of Arch street, containing in front sixty-six feet, and extending northwardly to the south side of Apple-tree street, a depth of one hundred and sixty feet; that the city has authorized the proper officials to acquire title to the property within the lines of the parkway and within two hundred feet thereof; that the parkway passes diagonally across the rear of the plaintiff’s lots; that the property taken under the ordinance of July 3, 1912, includes not only the portion of the plaintiff company’s lots included within the lines of the parkway but also the entire balance of its property which lies within two hundred feet of the parkway; that the portion of its property lying outside of the parkway was taken by the city to resell to the Bell Telephone Company of Pennsylvania, a private corporation, or to other private parties; that it objects, to the city taking so much of its property as lies outside the parkway, and avers its intention to improve such property by the erection of new structures thereon with such uniform restrictions as the city may constitutionally impose; that it is advised that the proposed taking of its property beyond the lines of the parkway is without authority of law, as the same is not being taken for public use, and because plaintiff’s property is being taken to an extent greater than the city is legally authorized to appropriate. The bill prays that the Act of 1907, section 1 of the ordinance of July 3, 1912, and the ordinance of January 16, 1913, be declared unconstitutional, null and void, and that the mayor and director of the department of public works be enjoined from condemning and taking and from selling or transferring to any person such parts of the plaintiff’s property as are not within the lines of the parkway. The answer admits substantially such averménts of the bill as are necessary to the disposition of the case here. [52]*52It denies that the part of the plaintiff’s property outside of the parkway was appropriated to sell to the telephone company, but admits that it was taken to secure the control of the property in order to protect the parkway as authorized by the Act of 1907. This denial must be read in connection with the ordinance of January 16, 1913, which became effective after the answer of the city was filed, authorizing the mayor to execute an agreement selling the property appropriated outside the parkway, including plaintiff’s property, to the telephone company.

The view we take of this case requires us to determine the single question whether the purpose or use for which the city intends to take the plaintiff’s land is a public use within the constitutional provision permitting its appropriation under the power of eminent domain. Under our former constitutions, it was declared that no man’s property can be justly taken from him or applied to public use without his consent and just compensation being made. The present Constitution, however, provides that private property shall not be taken or applied to public use without authority of law and without just compensation being first made or secured. The right, therefore, to appropriate private property in this State for a public use must now be conceded, and it is equally true that private property cannot be taken for a private purpose. The difficulty is in determining in the particulár case what is a public use for which such property may be taken. Primarily this is a question for the legislative department of the government, but ultimately for the courts. “Whether it be expedient or wise for the legislature to exercise this authority, to take property for public use,” says Mr. Justice Dean, in Philadelphia, Morton & Swarthmore Street Railway Company’s Petition, 203 Pa. 354, 362, “is purely a political question and one solely for the legislature. But whether the use to which it is sought to appropriate the property authorized to be taken is a public use is a judicial question for [53]*53the determination of the courts.” There is no constitutional or statutory definition of the words “public use,” and none of the adjudicated cases has given a definition of the Avords which can have universal application. It has been held that the words are equivalent to public benefit or advantage, while numerous other cases hold that to constitute a public use the property must be taken into the direct control of the public or of public agencies, or the public must have the right to use in some Avay the property appropriated. See 1 Lewis Em. Dom. (3d Ed.), para. 257.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
88 A. 904, 242 Pa. 47, 1913 Pa. LEXIS 836, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/pennsylvania-mutual-life-ins-v-philadelphia-pa-1913.