Petition of Conshohocken Borough

90 Pa. Super. 109, 1927 Pa. Super. LEXIS 22
CourtSuperior Court of Pennsylvania
DecidedDecember 9, 1926
DocketAppeal 278
StatusPublished

This text of 90 Pa. Super. 109 (Petition of Conshohocken Borough) 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
Petition of Conshohocken Borough, 90 Pa. Super. 109, 1927 Pa. Super. LEXIS 22 (Pa. Ct. App. 1926).

Opinion

Opinion by

Keller, J.,

The Borough of Conshohocken, Montgomery County, was incorporated by special act of assembly approved May 15,1850, P. L. 1051.

Section 17 of the Act provided for the appointment of six designated persons as commissioners with “full power and authority to lay out any and all streets in said borough, which they shall think proper for the improvement thereof, or necessary for the convenience of its citizens or the public, and [they] shall have also full power and authority to vacate, alter and extend such streets, lanes and alleys as are already laid out, talcing care in the performance of said trust to do no unnecessary damage to private property; and the said commissioners shall have power and authority to name the streets so laid out by them, and also all others *111 widened, altered or extended by them, and shall make report of their proceedings within one year from the passage of this act, which report shall be accompanied by a plan or plot of all the streets, lanes and alleys, as well of those previously laid out, as of those laid out by them in pursuance of this act, designating therein the alterations and extensions by them made, and the width and names of the respective streets, lanes and alleys, with such other matters as may be necessary, in order to form a complete plot of the said borough, to the Court of Quarter Sessions of said County of Montgomery, and the said report shall be recorded in the recorder’s office in said county, and a certified copy thereof shall be evidence in all matters in which such record is pertinent; and the streets, lanes and alleys so laid out, shall from thenceforth be opened for public use, in the same manner as if they had been laid out by an order of the court in the usual way. ’ ’

Section 18 provided for the payment of the damages sustained by any person by such laying out, etc., according to the'14th section of the Act of April 6,1802; and section 19 for the filling of a vacancy among said commissioners by appointment by the court of quarter sessions on petition of the burgess and town council.

This method of plotting or laying out of the streets of a newly incorporated borough by commissioners seems to have been a common procedure in Montgomery County, for we find the same method adopted in the incorporation or improvement of Morristown (Act of February 24, 1834, P. L. 86, Secs. 1, 2 and 3; Act of April 7, 1845, P. L. 328, Sec. 4); and Pottstown, (Act of April 5, 1848, P. L. 339, Secs. 1, 2 and 3); with virtually the same provisions except that they contain one clause, apparently overlooked in the Conshohocken Act, to wit, “which report the said court, in their discretion, may order to be amended of corrected, and when finally approved and confirmed, shall be record *112 ed,” etc. "While this clause did not specifically provide for the filing of exceptions to the report by persons interested it was recognized in Yost’s Report, 17 Pa. 524, that exceptions might be filed by them and that the final confirmation and approval of the court awaited the disposition of such exceptions.

The Court of Quarter Sessions of Montgomery County apparently considered that the same procedure applied to the Conshohocken Act of 1850, for it permitted the filing of exceptions to the report of the Commissioners filed in court pursuant to said act, and on April 20, 1852, referred the report back to the Commissioners, apparently for reconsideration and amendment or correction, and subsequently approved and confirmed the report as amended by the supplemental report filed by them, containing certain modifications and changes from the original draft.

The appellant contends that the report as originally filed by the Commissioners was conclusive; that as no action of the court was provided for under the act, their report was not subject to exceptions or confirmation by any one, and not subject to revision.

There would seem to have been no necessity for the provision that the Commissioners should make report of their action to the court of quarter sessions, if that court had nothing to do with its confirmation or approval ; the simple direction that the report be filed and recorded in the recorder’s office would have been sufficient if the report were not to be considered and approved by the court. But the Legislature in 1870 passed an act (March 22, 1870, P. L. 522, See. 1) construing the Act of May 15, 1850, supra, and declared that the intent and meaning of so much of said act as declared that the streets, lanes and alleys laid out by the Commissioners named in said act should thenceforth be opened for public use in the same manner as if they had been laid out by an order of court, to be, *113 “that from, the time of the filing of the said report and plan or draft of the streets, lanes and alleys in said Borough of Conshohocken, hy the Commissioners aforesaid, <md the acceptance and confirmation of the same by the Court of Quarter Sessions of the County of Montgomery, thenceforth all the streets, roads, lanes and alleys, so approved by said court, shall be forever deemed, adjudged and taken to be public highways.” We are of opinion that this act of assembly, whether it be considered merely as declaratory of the meaning of the Act of 1850, supra, or as ratifying and validating the action of the Court of Quarter Sessions with reference thereto, is efficacious and, in connection with Yost’s Eeport, supra, justifies the action of the court in permitting exceptions to be filed to the report and recommitting it to the Commissioners, and establishes the modified report of the Commissioners filed August 21, 1852, and confirmed and approved by the court, as the basis or authority for the subsequent opening and laying out of streets within the borough.

It is unfortunate that the original papers, including the report and the proceedings subsequent to its filing, have been lost, and that we have only the entries on the docket to furnish us with the information necessary or desirable for a complete understanding of the court’s action in the premises in 1851-2. It may be that the originals would have explained the unusual delay in entering the decree of confirmation nisi (6 months), and in the filing of exceptions (nearly 7 months); or would have supplied omissions from the docket which would account for the apparent delay. As they are lost, after a lapse of seventy-four years we think the maxim, omnia praesumuntur rite esse acta, is applicable : Com. ex rel. v. Dickey, 262 Pa. 121, 124. But in any event, the Legislature of 1870 was in possession of the facts, at least as fully as we know them, and with such knowledge passed the statute above referred *114 to (P. L. 522) which, recognized the action of the Court of Quarter Sessions in the premises as valid; and after its acceptance and recognition all these years, we will not disturb it.

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Related

Yost's Report
17 Pa. 524 (Supreme Court of Pennsylvania, 1851)
Hilltown Road
18 Pa. 233 (Supreme Court of Pennsylvania, 1852)
In re Road in South Abington Township
109 Pa. 118 (Supreme Court of Pennsylvania, 1885)
Haines v. Hall
58 A. 125 (Supreme Court of Pennsylvania, 1904)
Randal v. Gould
73 A. 986 (Supreme Court of Pennsylvania, 1909)
Commonwealth v. Dickey
104 A. 870 (Supreme Court of Pennsylvania, 1918)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
90 Pa. Super. 109, 1927 Pa. Super. LEXIS 22, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/petition-of-conshohocken-borough-pasuperct-1926.