Pittsburg v. Biggert

23 Pa. Super. 540, 1903 Pa. Super. LEXIS 111
CourtSuperior Court of Pennsylvania
DecidedNovember 16, 1903
DocketAppeal, No. 29
StatusPublished
Cited by9 cases

This text of 23 Pa. Super. 540 (Pittsburg v. Biggert) 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
Pittsburg v. Biggert, 23 Pa. Super. 540, 1903 Pa. Super. LEXIS 111 (Pa. Ct. App. 1903).

Opinion

Opinion by

Rice, P. J.,

This was an action of assumpsit brought in 1897 to recover the cost of laying a sidewalk and setting a curb in front of the [543]*543defendant’s premises. It is urged that an action of assumpsit for such a claim will not lie. The question is to be determined by the Act ojLMay, 16, 1891, P. L. 75; it was squarely raised, and decided against the defendant’s contention, in Pittsburg v. Daly, 5 Pa. Superior Ct. 528. The principal grounds upon which the defense was rested in the court below were: first, that no notice to lay the sidewalk and set the curb was served on the defendant; second, that even if such notice had been given, it would have been impossible for the defendant to comply with it without doing more grading and filling than, under the decision in Steelton Borough v. Booser, 162 Pa. 630, she could be compelled to do. The jury rendered a special verdict in which they found, inter alia, that the amount expended by the city for the sidewalk and curb was “ not greater than it would have cost the owner to lay the same,” and that “ the sidewalk was laid by the city without notice having been served upon the defendant as required by the act of jVlay 16, 1891.” The eleventh section of that act reads as follows: “ The municipal authorities may require sidewalks, boardwalks and curbstone to be laid, set and kept in repair, .and after notice to the^ owner or owners of property to lay, set or repair such .walks or stone in front ~o"f~his, her or their • property, and his, her or their failure to do so, the said municipal authorities may do the necessary work and assess the cost thereof upon the property of said owner or owners in front or along which said walk or curbstone so laid, set or repaired shall be situate and file a lien therefor or collect the same by action of assumpsit.” The ordinance under which it is alleged the work was done, empowered and directed the department of public works “ to require the laying of flagstone sidewalks and setting of curbstone on Sylvan avenue from Hazelwood avenue to Tredegar street, and if, after twenty days’ previous notice in writing, the owner or owners of property .... fail to lay such sidewalks and set such curbstone as required within twenty days after service of such notice, the said department is hereby directed to cause said work to be done, the cost thereof to be assessed upon the property of such owner or owners so in default in front or along which said sidewalks may be laid or curbstone set, in manner provided by law.” An ordinance requiring lot owners to lay sidewalks is a police regulation. A duty is imposed, the neglect of which [544]*544creates a liability — if it be so ordained — to the municipality for the cost it has been put to in doing that which they ought to have done. It is not a tax or a local assessment in the nature of a tax based on special benefits accruing or supposed to accrue to the landowner; although, ordinarily, these are a full equivalent for the cost: Pittsburg v. Daly, 5 Pa. Superior Ct. 528; Greensburg Boro. v. Young, 53 Pa. 280 ; Wilkinsburg Boro. v. Home for Aged Women, 131 Pa. 109; Philadelphia v. Pennsylvania Hospital, 143 Pa. 367 ; Philadelphia v. Weaver, 14 Pa. Superior Ct. 293. “ These footwalks are not only required, as a rule, to be put and kept in proper repair for the use of the adjacent proprietors, but it is quite customary to confer by municipal charters full authority upon municipalities to order the walks, of a kind and quality by them prescribed, to be constructed by the owners of adjacent lots at their own expense, within a time limited by the order for the purpose; and that, in case of their failure so to construct them, it shall be done by the public authorities, and the cost collected from such owners or made a lien upon their properties. When this is done, the duty must be looked upon as being enjoined as a regulation of police, made because of the peculiar interest such owners have in their walks, and because their situation gives them peculiar fitness and ability for performing, with promptness and convenience, the duty of putting them in proper state and of after-wards keeping them in a condition suitable for use: ” Cooley on Taxation, 398. While it is true that one consideration, upon which laws authorizing boroughs and cities to require property owners to pave the footway in front of their premises are sustained, is that, such improvement is supposed to be more immediately beneficial to them, yet it is clear that in the absence of such statute or ordinance no undertaking to reimburse the municipality for making it can be implied from the mere fact that the properties of the abutting owners have been correspondingly benefited. Where the personal liability of the property owner, as well as the liability of his property to a charge, for the cost, is purely statutory, and is conditioned upon his failure to obey the municipal regulation, it would seem equally clear that he cannot be held liable for the whole cost, or any part of it, unless he is in default. Whatever may be said of the duty of the abutting property owner with respect fo the [545]*545repair of the sidewalk laid in front of his premises, it surely cannot be contended that it is his duty, in the absence of an ordinance, to lay a particular kind of sidewalk and support it with a curb. Such duty arises under the statute when, and not until, the municipality by a valid ordinance has “ required ” him to make the improvement, and, in order that he may have opportunity to perform it, has notified him. The right to do the work himself, if he is able to do it properly, or if not, to make the best bargain he can for the materials and work required, is a valuable right, of which the municipality cannot arbitrarily deprive him, and then hold him liable for what, according to the estimate of a jury based on evidence of the going prices of such work and materials, it would have cost him. In the absence of waiver or ground of estoppel notice seems to be as essential to the imposition of the duty to make the improvement as the enactment of the ordinance ; and where there is no duty there can be no default, and, therefore, no consequent liability to reimburse the municipality for the amount it voluntarily expended. The second section of the borough act of 1851 vests in boroughs the power to prohibit and remove obstructions in the highways, “ and to require the removal of the same by the owner or occupier of such grounds, in default of which the corporation may cause the same to be done, and collect the cost thereof with twenty per centum advance thereon ” by filing a claim as a lien. In Connellsville Boro. v. Gilmore, 15 W. N. C. 343, the Supreme Court affirmed an order striking off such a claim upon the ground, inter alia, that notice was not averred. Justice Paxson who delivered the opinion of the court said: “ The act of 1851 oidy empowers the borough to file such a claim after the default of the owner or occupier to remove the obstruction after a demand upon him by the borough authorities to do so. Such demand being a prerequisite, should have been averred in the claim.” So in Philadelphia v. Dungan, 124 Pa. 52, it was held that a municipal claim filed in Philadelphia county for the cost of the abater ment of a nuisance, which does not aver notice to the registered owner to abate the nuisance and noneomplianee therewith, is fatally defective and may be stricken off. The case of Philadelphia v. Edwards, 78 Pa. 62, is directly in point. An ordinance of the city (May 3, 1855) required owners to pave the [546]

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
23 Pa. Super. 540, 1903 Pa. Super. LEXIS 111, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/pittsburg-v-biggert-pasuperct-1903.