Pittsburgh & Lake Erie R. R. v. McKees Rocks Borough

135 A. 227, 287 Pa. 311, 1926 Pa. LEXIS 352
CourtSupreme Court of Pennsylvania
DecidedSeptember 29, 1926
DocketAppeal, 86
StatusPublished
Cited by21 cases

This text of 135 A. 227 (Pittsburgh & Lake Erie R. R. v. McKees Rocks Borough) 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
Pittsburgh & Lake Erie R. R. v. McKees Rocks Borough, 135 A. 227, 287 Pa. 311, 1926 Pa. LEXIS 352 (Pa. 1926).

Opinion

Opinion by

Mb. Chief Justice Moschzisker,

The Pittsburgh & Lake Erie R. R. Co. sued the Borough of McKees Rocks on a written contract, under which the former covenanted to construct and the latter agreed to maintain a bridge to carry one of the streets *315 of the borough across the railroad. This, suit was brought to recover the cost of necessary repairs, which, on order of the Public Service Commission, were made and paid for by plaintiff, because of defendant’s failure to maintain the bridge. The court below entered judgment for plaintiff, on a case stated, in the amount claimed, and defendant has appealed.

In 1902, there was a dangerous grade crossing over plaintiff’s railroad, part of the crossing being within the limits of defendant borough. By ordinance dated April 26, 1902, the borough officers were authorized and directed to enter into a contract with the railroad company. This contract, on which the present suit is based, provides, in brief, for the erection by plaintiff, entirely within the borough limits, of “an overhead bridge,” to take the place of the grade crossing, the bridge to be constructed “in a proper and substantial manner, with a double street railway track,” the approaches to be furnished by the railroad company; and that, when the improvement should be completed “and accepted by said borough,” the latter should “maintain said bridge or passageway thereafter.”

The case stated shows that, pursuant “to the terms of the contract aforesaid, the railroad purchased the necessary land for approaches......and constructed the bridge, [which] was duly accepted by the borough and became and continued to be a public highway.” In acquiring the land and constructing the bridge the railroad expended approximately $165,000.

By ordinance approved February 6,1903, the borough, in consideration of the payment to it of $5,000, gave a franchise in the car tracks over the elevated crossing to a street railway company. In this ordinance, it was recited that the bridge, then in course of construction, was to become, after its completion, the property of the borough, and to be under its exclusive control as a public highway. The bridge was occupied by the street railway for some time, and remained in general use until *316 about May, 1920, when, through lack of repair, it became dangerous and was closed to the public.

In April, 1920, several manufacturing corporations, located in the vicinity petitioned the Public Service Commission of Pennsylvania that the borough, the railroad company and the street railway be compelled to place the bridge in proper repair for public use.

On May 11, 1921, the Public Service Commission ordered the railroad company to make all necessary repairs to the bridge, in accordance with certain specifications filed of record in the proceedings; at the same time it assessed the County of Allegheny $12,500, and the borough $5,000, on account of the repairs so ordered and specified. The street railway company, having long since abandoned the use of the crossing, was not assessed for its maintenance.

The repairs thus directed were made by the railroad company at an expense of $30,611.79; the county and the borough each contributed the amounts assessed against them by the commission, leaving a balance of $13,144.79, to recover which this suit was brought against the borough, on its contract of 1902 to maintain the bridge.

The right of the railroad company to make the expenditure in controversy is not questioned, nor is the justice of the amount claimed; the borough’s defense is that (1) the decision of the Public Service Commission, fixing the amount which the borough was to pay, is res judicata of its legal obligation in that regard; (2) “the contract of 1902 is void for want of consideration”; (3) “the contract......is ultra vires.” There is also a suggestion that the contract is “unenforceable because against public policy,” but this last point is not argued in appellant’s brief and calls for no discussion here.

On defendant’s first point, while we find no principle of law or practice which prevents plaintiff from enforcing the claim in suit, nevertheless we cannot agree with all the reasons given by the court below for excluding *317 the doctrine of res judicata, particularly the reasons, stated by it, that “the parties were not the same nor is the Public Service Commission a court of record.”

As to the parties not being the same, discussing the subject of res judicata, we recently pointed out, in Tasin v. Bastress, 284 Pa. 47, 51, “It is not necessary that exactly the same parties shall appear in both cases; it is sufficient if all those in the later Case were parties in the former one.” Both plaintiff and defendant in-the present action were parties before the commission. True, they were codefendants there, but a judgment may be res judicata as between coparties if they asserted adverse interests in the former proceeding (Hertzel v. Weber, 283 Fed. 921, 929; Renfro v. Hanon, 297 Ill. 353, 130 N. E. 740, 742; 34 C. J. 1040); and we are of opinion that the parties here concerned were sufficiently adverse, when before the commission, to satisfy the requirements of the doctrine under discussion in this regard.

As to the Public Service Commission not being a court of record, that is an insufficient reason for denying the application of res judicata: Marsteller v. Marsteller, 132 Pa. 517, 523. Judgments of justices of the peace, unappealed from, are res judicata of matters within their jurisdiction (Marsteller v. Marsteller, supra; Gilboy v. Duryea Boro., 228 Pa. 252, 258-9), and the judicial and quasi-judicial acts of public officers and boards, acting within their jurisdictions, have on many occasions been held to fall within the doctrine: Dennison v. Payne, 293 Fed. 333, 341; People v. Hall, 80 N. Y. 117, 126, 127; Longinette v. Shelton (Tenn.), 52 S. W. 1078, 1084, 1085; Conn., etc., R. R. Co. v. Bailey, 24 Vt. 465, 58 Am. Dec. 181, 186; 24 Am. & Eng. Encyc. Law 723 (2d ed.); 34 C. J. 759. It is unnecessary, however, to decide at this time whether an award such as the one at bar could operate as res judicata on the principle of the above cases, since, in this instance, the Public Service Commission had no authority, nor did it attempt, to adjudi *318 cate the claim here sought to be enforced, as we shall now show.

The facts involved, having been reduced to a case stated, are undisputed, so there is not properly before us any question as to whether they are fixed by a prior judgment or an order in the nature of a judgment. Appellant’s contentions are that the order of the commission, directing payment, by plaintiff railroad company, defendant borough and the County of Allegheny, of the expense of the repairs to the bridge, is so determinative of the amount it is to pay on that account as to render its legal obligation in this respect res judicata in all subsequent judicial proceedings other than an appeal from the order itself, and that the railroad company, having failed to take such an appeal and having accepted from the county and borough the amounts named by the commission, is bound by such order, since it supersedes the terms of the contract in suit.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
135 A. 227, 287 Pa. 311, 1926 Pa. LEXIS 352, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/pittsburgh-lake-erie-r-r-v-mckees-rocks-borough-pa-1926.