Shillington Borough Annexation

73 Pa. D. & C. 596, 1949 Pa. Dist. & Cnty. Dec. LEXIS 151
CourtBerks County Court of Quarter Sessions
DecidedJuly 20, 1949
Docketno. 806
StatusPublished

This text of 73 Pa. D. & C. 596 (Shillington Borough Annexation) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Berks 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
Shillington Borough Annexation, 73 Pa. D. & C. 596, 1949 Pa. Dist. & Cnty. Dec. LEXIS 151 (Pa. Super. Ct. 1949).

Opinion

Per Curiam,

The Borough of Shillington, on April 20, 1949, filed an annexation ordinance in the Court of Quarter Sessions of Berks County, which provides for the annexation of 371 [597]*597acres, 149.25 perches, property of Berks County Institution District, situate in Cumru Township, Berks County, Pa.

The ordinance was passed pursuant to a petition presented to the council of the borough by Berks County Institution District, alleging that it was the only freehold owner of the 371 acres, 149.25 perches.

On May .13, 1949, the Township of Cumru filed its appeal.

The Berks County Institution District has also petitioned the Borough of Kenhorst to annex another and smaller portion of land, lying generally to the east of the 371' acre tract and the Borough of Kenhorst has adopted an ordinance annexing this additional tract to the Borough of Kenhorst.

There are many issues involved. Because of the disposition made of this matter, it is not necessary to discuss all of them. The following are the ones that now will receive our attention:

1. Does the Township of Cumru have a legal right to appeal?

2. Is the Berks, County Institution District “a freeholder” under the statute relating to annexation?

3. Is the act of the Berks County Institution District ultra vires?

What the institution district and the Borough of Shillington are undertaking to do is to change the boundary lines of the Township of Cumru and the Borough of Shillington by annexing land that is now in the Township of Cumru. We are not in accord with the claim of the institution district that the Township of Cumru is not aggrieved and without the right of appeal. No municipality, whether it be the County of Berks, the institution district, or the Borough of Shillington has any power to do any act that would inter fere with another governmental unit, unless the municipality that seeks to interfere proceeds in accordance [598]*598with the powers given to it by the legislature. The Township of Cumru alleges that the institution district had no power to do what was done. If this be so, and their action is without warrant of law, it goes without saying that the governmental unit that would be affected by it has not only the right but a duty to contest the matter. If the institution district had no authority or right to do what was done and we should conclude that the Township of Cumru had no right to appeal, we would strip the public of that protection which the law plainly intended to give. If courts were to hold that the institution district acted without legal right, we could not overlook this by concluding that appellant had no right to appeal. To do otherwise we would establish a principle that while the thing was without legal right, we could not correct it because the one who raises the question was not aggrieved. See In re Annexation of Land to Ephrata Borough, 41 Lane. 513: “. . . the supervisors of a township are proper parties to contest the annexation of part of the township by a borough.” (syllabus.)

The City of Reading, upon its petition, was allowed to intervene in the nature of an amicus curias, on the allegation that the City of Reading might be adversely affected by the annexation in question.

It is not necessary to point out just to what extent the city, if at all, is interested in the litigation. It is sufficient to say the Borough of Shillington now purchases from the City of Reading some of its water. If the land in question should be annexed to the Borough of Shillington, and developed as a residential area, it is fair to assume that the City of Reading would be called upon to supply water to the residents of the area. The drainage of a large portion of the tract is toward the east, toward the City of Reading, and surface drainage of the tract will eventually be accomplished by the storm sewer facilities of the City of Reading. The city [599]*599may have an interest in the future development of this land. It surely has a technical one given to it by virtue of the Third Class City Law of June 23, 1931, P. L. 932, 53 PS §12198-4001-4005, which grants to the city planning commission of a third class city, jurisdiction over land adjacent to the city for a distance of three miles beyond the corporate limits.

The Act of May 4, 1927, P. L. 519, sec. 425, 53 PS §12461 states:

“Any borough may, by ordinance, annex adjacent land situate in the-same or any adjoining county, upon petition of a majority of the freeholders of the territory proposed to be annexed.”

The Berks County Institution District is a public corporation created by statute (Act of June 24, 1937, P. L. 2017, 62 PS §2255) and, as such, it holds title to what was formerly known as the “County Poor Farm” and now as the “County Hospital Farm.” This tract lies between the City of Reading and the Borough of Shillington to the south of Lancaster Avenue, a very heavily traveled thoroughfare. The institution district, the alleged freeholder, although it is governed by the County Commissioners of the County of Berks, has less authority in many respects than the County of Berks, the Borough of Shillington or any school district.

We have been unable to find any decisions of the appellate courts of this State holding that even a county or a school district are freeholders and proper petitioners under the section of the act of assembly providing for annexation.

In the case of Reber v. Haas, 6 Schuyl. 345, a petition was presented to the Borough of Pinegrove for the annexation of land in Pinegrove Township and lying adjacent to the borough. One of the petitioners was the school district. President Judge Shay said:

“This we do not think would be such a freehold owner as is contemplated by the Act of Assembly. The free[600]*600hold is owned by the municipality and is not of such a nature, and does not have such an interest in the question presented, as in our judgment, would make them one of the signers.”

In Tiffany on Real Property, 3rd edition, vol. 1, chap. 3 §25, freehold estates are defined as follows:

“The primary classification of estates is into ‘estates of freehold,’ or ‘freehold estates,’ and ‘estates less than freehold.’ Freehold estates, the distinctive characteristic of which is that the period of their duration is not positively ascertained, obtain the name of ‘freehold’ from the fact that the typical holding by a free man under the feudal system, a ‘free tenement,’ as it was called, was always associated with a right in the land enduring for such a period of uncertain termination.”

The institution district is not the owner of this land in the sense that it, as a district, has a right in the land enduring for a period of uncertain termination. On the contrary, because of the provisions of the Act of 1937, supra, the institution district, a State agency, does not have the same rights as does an individual owner or a corporation.

“. . . the Commonwealth has absolute control over such agencies with power to add to or subtract from the duties to be performed by them or to abolish them and take the property used for public purposes without compensating the agency therefor”: Pennsylvania Turnpike Commission Land Condemnation Case, 347 Pa. 643, 648.

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Related

Pennsylvania Turnpike Commission Land Condemnation Case
32 A.2d 910 (Supreme Court of Pennsylvania, 1943)
Baldwin Township's Annexation
158 A. 272 (Supreme Court of Pennsylvania, 1931)
Poor District Case (No. 1)
197 A. 334 (Supreme Court of Pennsylvania, 1938)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
73 Pa. D. & C. 596, 1949 Pa. Dist. & Cnty. Dec. LEXIS 151, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/shillington-borough-annexation-paqtrsessberks-1949.