Spring Garden Township's Annexation

10 Pa. D. & C. 629
CourtYork County Court of Quarter Sessions
DecidedJuly 1, 1927
StatusPublished

This text of 10 Pa. D. & C. 629 (Spring Garden Township's Annexation) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering York 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
Spring Garden Township's Annexation, 10 Pa. D. & C. 629 (Pa. Super. Ct. 1927).

Opinion

Stock, J.

Certain taxable inhabitants who are freeholders residing within a certain part of the Township of Spring Garden presented their petition to this court on Aug. 1, 1927, expressing their desire for the annexation of that part of said township to the City of York. On the same day, an order was made providing for the publication and service of notice of the filing of said petition.

The petition set forth the following averments:

“1. That they are bona fide residents, taxable inhabitants and freeholders of that part of the third district of Spring Garden Township, York County, Pa., as designated upon a draft hereto attached and made part hereof.
“2. That your petitioners are in excess of twenty-five per centum of the taxable inhabitants and resident freeholders of the territory, as set forth in the draft hereto attached and made part hereof, being a portion of the third district of said Spring Garden Township, York County, Pa.
“3. That said portion of the third district of said Spring Garden Township is adjacent to and contiguous to the City of York, a city of the third class in the State of Pennsylvania.
“4. That your petitioners desire annexation of that portion of the third district of said Spring Garden Township as lies within the confines of the draft hereto attached, with the City of York, Pa.”

It is verified by three of the petitioners, who made affidavit that the facts set forth in said petition are true and correct, and “that the signatures to said petition represent at least twenty-five per centum of the bona fide residents and taxable inhabitants who are freeholders in that part of Spring Garden Township, York County, Pa., as shown by the draft hereto attached.” Attached to the petition is a draft of the part of the township of Spring Garden proposed to be annexed, describing its boundaries by metes and bounds.

[630]*630The Township of Spring Garden, through its solicitor, presented its motion on Aug. 15, 1927, asking for the revocation of the order made Aug. 1st on said petition and assigning as reasons therefor (1) that the petition does not show that it had been signed by the subscribers thereto within three months immediately preceding ■ its presentation; (2) that a description by metes and bounds of the part of the township proposed to be annexed was not attached to the petition; (3) “that it was not signed by at least twenty-five per centum of the taxable inhabitants, as shown by the assessor’s list for the last preceding assessment;” and (4) that the advertisement made under said order is not sufficient. At the time of the argument it was conceded that the fourth objection could not be raised at this time.

At the argument, petitioners presented an amended affidavit, executed by three of their number, containing two additional averments, (1) a description by metes and bounds, in words, of the part of the township proposed to be annexed, and (2) an averment that the “petition was subscribed by the persons whose names are appended thereto within three months immediately preceding its presentation to said court.” Petitioners moved to file this amendment. This was objected to by the solicitor for the township. The allowance of this amendment would cure the defects in the petition, if such existed, as are complained of in the first two objections raised by the township.

This procedure is under the Act of July 11, 1923, P. L. 1047. This act does not require an averment in the petition that the subscribers had signed within three months immediately preceding its presentation. It is not contended by the township that the signatures were not so procured within that time limit. The objection is only that the petition does not contain an averment to that effect. The allowance of the amendment averring signing within three months would, in the absence of a denial of this fact, establish it as a fact for the purpose of this proceeding.

In the petition for the annexation of the Borough of Sheraden to the City of Pittsburgh, there was no distinct averment as to the time of the signing except that the signatures were affixed “since the first day of June, 1906.” It does not appear in the opinion when the petition was filed, but it is to be presumed that this date was within the period of three months required by the act, and it is held that this was a sufficient averment of the time of signing. The Superior Court, however, indicated in this case that this act should be liberally construed, and where the petition lacked an averment of contiguity of the borough to the city and an averment that both municipalities were located in the same county, which averments were required by the statute, the lower court was permitted to supply these facts by taking judicial notice of them: Sheraden Borough, 34 Superior Ct. 639:645. The Sheraden Borough case arose under the Act of April 28, 1903, P. L. 332, which is a general act regulating annexation to any city, and has been repealed by the Act of 1923 in so far as it relates to annexation to cities of the third class. The language of the two acts and the provisions relative to averments in the petition are similar.

The second objection raised is based upon the provision in the last clause of section 1 of the Act of 1923: “There shall be attached a plot showing such portion, with a description by metes and bounds,”

The plot attached to the petition describes graphically the part of the township proposed to be annexed. The courses and distances are noted in Arabic figures and surveyors’ symbols. The boundaries are noted in printed words. “St.” and “Ave.” are used as abbreviations of “street” and “avenue,” respectively. The description on the plot is as complete as any that could be given in words, and contains all the information set forth in the proposed amend[631]*631ment, except that the name Edgecombe does not appear on the plot to identify the avenue by that name. The proposed amendment gives the description by words. It supplies no new information, but would clarify that already given and meets the objection of the township that one untutored in reading surveyors’ drafts might be unable to understand the description contained on the plot.

These first two objections are merely as to matters of form. It would seem proper to allow the amendment.

The third objection is made to a matter of substance. At the argument, counsel agreed to the following facts:

There were approximately 93 freeholders who were taxable inhabitants of the part of the township proposed to be annexed, as shown by the assessor’s list for the last preceding assessment made in the year 1927; that 45 of these signed the petition for annexation.

There were 314 taxable inhabitants resident within the part of the township proposed to be annexed who were on the registry list of voters for the last preceding general election of the township, to wit, the general election held November, 1926; that 70 of these signed the petition.

That in the 3rd Ward of Spring Garden Township, in which ward the part of the township proposed to be annexed lies and is included, there were 553 taxable inhabitants, according to the registry list of voters for the last preceding general election of the township, held November, 1926.

The township maintains, first, that while the signers to the petition must possess both qualifications, (a) that of a freeholder, (b)

Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
10 Pa. D. & C. 629, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/spring-garden-townships-annexation-paqtrsessyork-1927.