Rockledge Borough's Annexation

8 Pa. D. & C. 19, 1926 Pa. Dist. & Cnty. Dec. LEXIS 315
CourtMontgomery County Court of Quarter Sessions
DecidedJanuary 18, 1926
DocketApplication No. 321
StatusPublished

This text of 8 Pa. D. & C. 19 (Rockledge Borough's Annexation) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Montgomery County Court of Quarter Sessions primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Rockledge Borough's Annexation, 8 Pa. D. & C. 19, 1926 Pa. Dist. & Cnty. Dec. LEXIS 315 (Pa. Super. Ct. 1926).

Opinion

Miller, P. J.,

So long ago as June 2, 1924, there was presented to this court that which purported to be a petition under the Act of July 11, 1923, P. L. 1030, expresssly praying for the annexation of the Borough of Rockledge to Philadelphia County.

The application met with the opposition of the City and County of Philadelphia, the County of Montgomery and sundry qualified electors and owners of real estate in Rockledge, all of whom filed answers and earnestly objected to its being granted.

At the first hearing on May 18, 1925, it was represented that both the City and the County of Philadelphia had changed their attitude and desired to file, a joint amended answer to that effect. Such was never done, however.

The matter was in due course heard and afterwards argued by counsel.

The questions involved are as follows:

1. Is the paper that was presented on June 2, 1924, a petition within the meaning of the act?

2. Is, or is not, the Act of July 11, 1923, ,P. L. 1030, constitutional?

3. Was the petition signed by not less than two-thirds of the qualified electors of Rockledge?

4. Was the petition signed by not less than two-thirds in number and interest of the owners of real estate in that borough?

5. Was the genuineness of the signatures subscribed to the petition verified by a qualified electgr of the county? and

6. Is it to the best interests of the inhabitants of Rockledge for it to be annexed to Philadelphia?

These questions should be considered in the order in which they are set forth. If, and as soon as, a negative conclusion is reached as to any of them, it is fatal to the whole proceeding.

1. Is the paper that'was presented on June 2, 1924, a petition within the meaning of the act? A valid petition is, of course, absolutely essential to give the court jurisdiction. It serves as the very foundation of the whole proceeding.

Certain citizens of Rockledge, having satisfied themselves that it was desirable to have the borough detached from Montgomery County and attached to Philadelphia, were, of course, aware that there was no law then in existence whereby the same could be accomplished. They knew that its area did not [20]*20exceed 250 acres and that its population was less than 2000. Their counsel was a member of the legislature.

Remarkable as it may appear to the unsophisticated, the legislature, at its ensuing 1923 session, passed that which purports on its face to be a general act, but which fits exactly this particular case, and it obtained the approval of the Governor. The most serious difficulty in the way of the citizens active in the movement was believed, thus accommodatingly, to have been removed. The next step in regular course was to have prepared and presented to the court the petition designated by the act, and this involved its circulation for signatures. This was no easy task. It had to be signed by not less than two-thirds of the qualified electors of, and the same proportion in number and interest of the owners of real estate in, the Borough of Rockledge. Quite reasonably, it was sought to simplify and systematize this work.

Counsel prepared a typewritten petition, which covered in full three pages, and from it about 100 copies were printed by a multigraphing process. To each copy was then temporarily attached a number of blank sheets of paper. Those actively in charge of the movement had appointed eight captains, under each of whom there were five canvassers, and copies of the petition were distributed amongst them for the purpose of obtaining the necessary signatures.

When this had been done, all were returned to counsel. He then removed from each copy the attached sheets bearing the subscribed signatures and fastened permanently all of these to another multigraphed copy of the petition, which had not been circulated at all, destroying all the copies to which names had been subscribed. One of the subscribers then, by affidavit on a separate sheet, verified the genuineness of the signatures, and the whole, when assembled and backed, was presented to court as the “petition” under the act. There is not, and, in view of counsel’s well-known character and professional standing, there cannot be, even an insinuation — let alone a charge — of fraud or that he acted otherwise than honorably. The signatures attached to the document before the court are genuine, and it is not denied that the copies to which these signatures had been attached originally were precisely similar to that now before us. These are not the contentions of the remonstrants. They assert only that, under the testimony, none of the persons whose names are found attached to the document before us ever actually signed it at all — in other words, that it was never signed by any one. The petitioners contend only that, as the subscribers had all signed exact copies of the document filed, no harm was done by assembling their signatures in the manner stated and that the requirements of the law have been sufficiently complied with.

Neither side has directed our attention to any reported Pennsylvania case that throws light on the interesting question involved, and we, in our independent search, have been unsuccessful in finding such. Reliance in disposing of it must, therefore, be placed on the reasoning of cases from foreign jurisdictions, and it must not be forgotten that this is not a case in which a number of complete and precisely similar petitions have, without mutilation, been assembled, backed or fastened together and then filed as a single document, to which no reasonable objection could be urged: Smith et al. v. Patton et al., 45 S. W. Repr. 459. It is, to the contrary, one in which the petitions were mutilated in the process of assembling, It is on this fact of mutilation that the distinction in the cases appears to depend.

Adams v. Woods, 19 Manitoba Reps. 285, is an illustration of the latter class. There, the petition to the municipal council for an election for the adoption of a local option by-law had fourteen signatures subscribed to it. Another sheet, bearing signatures, had been gummed to its bottom; to this, [21]*21in turn, had been gummed another such sheet, and so on, all the sheets being thus gummed together and making one continuous whole. At the top of each of such sheets so gummed on there had been originally some printed matter. The court assumed that this printed matter had been identical with that at the top of the first sheet, but noted that, in pasting these on, the printed matter had been cut off, mutilated and destroyed, so that this fact could, not be established without oral evidence. It found also that the signatures had been obtained to the several sheets, and, as it was thought more convenient to gum them together, it was then that the mutilation had taken place. The fourteen names subscribed to the original petition were not sufficient to justify the council in ordering the desired election. The matter came before the court on a motion to restrain.

The lower court, in answer to its own query — Has a petition been filed in this case? — said, in part: “Here, the prayer to which most of the subscribing electors attached their signatures was not filed, but, in lieu thereof, what was said to be a copy. Whether it is or is not a copy depends upon parol evidence.

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Related

Likins's Petition
223 Pa. 456 (Supreme Court of Pennsylvania, 1909)

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Bluebook (online)
8 Pa. D. & C. 19, 1926 Pa. Dist. & Cnty. Dec. LEXIS 315, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/rockledge-boroughs-annexation-paqtrsessmontgo-1926.