Phila. v. T. B. Rice & Sons Co.

118 A. 14, 274 Pa. 256, 1922 Pa. LEXIS 678
CourtSupreme Court of Pennsylvania
DecidedMay 8, 1922
DocketAppeal, No. 371
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 118 A. 14 (Phila. v. T. B. Rice & Sons Co.) 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
Phila. v. T. B. Rice & Sons Co., 118 A. 14, 274 Pa. 256, 1922 Pa. LEXIS 678 (Pa. 1922).

Opinion

Opinion by

Mr. Justice Simpson,

The City of Philadelphia, to the use of its contractor, who had paved Delaware Avenue in front of defend[258]*258ant’s property, issued a scire facias upon a municipal claim, filed to recover the cost of the paving; defendant raises no question regarding the contract between tbe city and contractor, or touching the character of the work done, but alleges that the paving wa's part of a comprehensive scheme for the improvement of the port of the city, that the benefit to defendant’s property, if any, was only incidental, not intended to be and in fact not taken into consideration in making the improvement, and hence payment should not be required of it. Upon this issue the case was tried twice, defendant recovering a verdict each time; on the last verdict judgment was entered and plaintiffs appealed.

At the trial, plaintiffs’ point for binding instructions was refused; after verdict, their motion for judgment non obstante veredicto' was dismissed; these two rulings are among those assigned for error, and are the only ones we find it necessary to consider. There is no substantial dispute regarding the facts; but in determining the controversy it must be steadily borne in mind that the defense is affirmative in character, and also that section 20 of the Act of May 28, 1915, P. L. 599, 605, makes the claim “prima facie evidence of the facts averred therein;” hence the burden was upon defendant to produce sufficient evidence to require the issue to be submitted to a jury for its consideration.

Delaware Avenue is a wide thoroughfare, adjoining and paralleling the Delaware River, and is principally used by cars and other vehicles carrying freight to and from the vessels which dock at the wharves of the river. Defendant owns a property at the northeast' corner of Delaware Avenue and Mifflin Street; prior to the comprehensive improvements hereinafter detailed, it fronted on Commercial Avenue, — a plotted but unopened street 100 feet wide, — but by these improvements Delaware Avenue was extended Southward in front of and past defendant’s property, and the bed of Commercial Avenue [259]*259became part of the bed of Delaware Avenue, which was made 200 feet wide at this point.

By an ordinance dated June 25,1912, the Department of Public Works of the City was authorized, inter alia, to revise the lines and grades of Delaware Avenue, southward from Queen Street to beyond defendant’s property, and of the streets intersecting therewith and adjacent thereto. When this revision was completed, the department was directed, by the ordinance of January 23, 1913, to notify the owners of property fronting on those streets that, at the expiration of three months, they would be opened at their increased width; this was in fact done and defendant claimed and was paid the damages which his property sustained by reason thereof.

By an ordinance, approved February 25, 1913, a loan of $7,000,000 was authorized, $250,000 of which was to be for the improvement of South Delaware Avenue; and by an ordinance approved May 2, 1913, from this loan that amount was directed to be set apart for the purpose stated, to be used “as council shall hereafter authorize.”

By an ordinance approved July 3, 1913, “the Director of the Department of Public Works was authorized and directed to enter into contracts for the work necessary for the physical widening, grading and paving of...... Delaware Avenue, to its full width, as now upon the city plan, from Christian Street to Bigler Street and to charge the cost of the said work to [loan] Item 133 of the appropriation to the Department of Public Works.” Defendant’s property is between the points named, but no paving was done in front of it under the authority of this ordinance.

By an ordinance approved February 13, 1914, the mayor of the city was authorized to execute, acknowledge and deliver a contract (fully set forth in the ordinance) between the City and the Philadelphia, Baltimore and Washington Railroad Company, the Pennsylvania Railroad Company, the Schuylkill River East Side Rail[260]*260road Company, the Baltimore and Ohio Railroad Company and the Philadelphia Belt Line Railroad Company. A fair abstract of its numerous provisions will be found in our opinion in Chew v. Philadelphia, 257 Pa. 589; for present purposes it' suffices that the railroad tracks in the Southern part of the city were to be elevated, thereby abolishing present and avoiding future grade crossings; the existing railroads, and others later entering the city, were to be authorized, on equitable terms, to use any of the railroad tracks, no matter by whom owned; Delaware Avenue was to be widened and extended southwardly so as to pass defendant’s property, and was to be paved a part of the distance but not to that point; this latter part of the improvement being made in order to enlarge the port facilities by providing an avenue along the river, wide enough for the probable needs, present and future, of the individuals and railroads carrying freight to and from the vessels, docked at wharves made sufficiently large to safely hold the vessels and allow them to be easily loaded and unloaded, whatever their size might be.

The last ordinance offered in evidence was that of July 6, 1914, and by it the Department of Public Works was authorized to enter into a contract for the paving of Delaware Avenue, with granite blocks, between the south side of Reed Street and the north side of Mifflin Street, the cost of the paving to be paid by assessment bills against the.properties in front of which the work was to be done. Defendant’s property is between the points designated. Under this ordinance, the city, on July 23,1917, entered into a contract with use-plaintiffs to do the work, and, defendant not having paid for that done in front of its property, a municipal claim was duly filed and this scire facias issued to compel its payment.

Recognizing that under these ordinances the city was under no contractual obligation to do this paving, as part of the improvement of the river front, or to pay for [261]*261it out of the public treasury when the work was done, defendant called two witnesses for the purpose of showing that the paving was an integral part of the improvement, and hence should be considered as a general rather than a local benefit. One of these witnesses had been Assistant Director and later Director of the Department of Docks and Wharves of the city covering the time when the foregoing ordinances were passed, but not at or after the date of the contract; and the other, a civil engineer not connected with the municipal government, but acquainted with what had been done in the course of the development of that part of the city. In order that we may do no injustice to defendant, we will quote; and adopt for present purposes, the evidence given by these witnesses as abstracted in its paper-book.

Prom this source we learn that the first one testified: “That it was his duty to study the needs of the port and provide means for taking care of those needs; that one of the first studies undertaken was that of the proper location and width of the marginal avenues so-called, for the water front — in this instance Delaware Avenue.

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Bluebook (online)
118 A. 14, 274 Pa. 256, 1922 Pa. LEXIS 678, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/phila-v-t-b-rice-sons-co-pa-1922.