Titusville Amusement Co. v. Titusville Iron Works Co.

134 A. 481, 286 Pa. 561, 1926 Pa. LEXIS 592
CourtSupreme Court of Pennsylvania
DecidedMay 4, 1926
DocketAppeals, 178 and 200
StatusPublished
Cited by18 cases

This text of 134 A. 481 (Titusville Amusement Co. v. Titusville Iron Works Co.) 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
Titusville Amusement Co. v. Titusville Iron Works Co., 134 A. 481, 286 Pa. 561, 1926 Pa. LEXIS 592 (Pa. 1926).

Opinion

Opinion by

Mr. Justice Simpson,

In 1922, the City of Titusville passed an ordinance reciting that, “for the public good and benefit of the said city,” a specified portion of Washington Street “is hereby vacated and closed as a public street”; following which, a jury of viewers was appointed to assess the damages and benefits thereby caused. Shortly thereafter the Titusville Amusement Company, Robert A. McKie and the United Natural Gas Company, filed the bill in equity in this case, against the city, its mayor, its councilmen and the members of the board of viewers. At a later date, Albert E. Hobart was allowed to intervene as a party plaintiff.

The bill averred that in 1861, the then owner of a tract of land, — which included that part of the city through which ran the vacated portion of Washington Street, — had the tract surveyed and a plan thereof made; that certain streets appeared on the plan, with lots fronting on them, which lots were thereafter sold and conveyed by the lot numbers, as well as by description; whereby, as plaintiffs alleged, “there was an irrevocable *565 dedication, of all the streets......shown on said plan to public use......[the grantees taking] from said grantors by implied covenant the right to have the......[streets] remain and be left open forever for the use of the public and for their own use, the easement thus created [being] appurtenant to every lot and a property interest or private contract right [with]....... all purchasers of said lots.” The bill further averred that, at the time the plan was made, so much of Washington Street as appeared on the plan, was not then a public street, and that some lots were sold before and some after it was accepted as such; that the vacation was at the instance and for the benefit of the Titusville Iron Works Company (which owns property on both sides of the vacated portion of Washington Street, and whose ownership of it is derived through conveyances made in accordance with said plan), in order that it might be able, as it intended to do, to take possession of the vacated portion of the street, and build thereon and thereover, thus excluding plaintiffs from any use of the street. The bill prayed an injunction to prevent each and all of. the defendants “from in any manner howsoever acting or proceeding under or in pursuance” of said ordinance, and the Titusville Iron Works Company “from in any manner howsoever taking or holding possession of, or obstructing or constructing any structure or building on, over or upon any part of or all of that portion” of the street specified in the ordinance.

The case proceeded in due course; after answers were filed and a trial had, the court below decided the city had the right to vacate, but not to close the street, and entered a final decree perpetually enjoining all the defendants “from in any manner howsoever acting or proceeding under or in pursuance of [said] ordinance...... for the closing of the street”; the Titusville Iron Works Company “from in any manner howsoever taking or holding possession of, or constructing any structures or *566 buildings on, over, or upon or obstructing or occupying any part or all of [the vacated] portion of Washington Street”; the mayor and councilmen “from in any manner howsoever doing any act or thing pursuant to said ordinance concerning the closing of said portion of Washington Street”; and the members of the board of viewers “from in any manner howsoever doing any act or thing or performing any duty under the order of court appointing them......[so far as related to] the proposed closing of said street pursuant to said ordinance.” From this decree, the City of Titusville and the Titusville Iron Works Company have prosecuted these separate appeals ; and, in considering them, we will exclude, for the present, all reference to the United Natural Gas Company, whose status and rights will be passed on hereinafter.

Save the averment as to the passage of the vacating ordinance, the bill does not allege, nor does the evidence show, anything done, or proposed to be done, by the city or its officials, from which injury to any of the plaintiffs could possibly arise. The ordinance only provides for the vacation of the street “as a public street,” leaving undisturbed whatever private rights, if any, plaintiffs may have because of the sale of lots according to the plan. They strenuously contended, however, both below and here, that sustaining the ordinance would result in the taking of private property (e. g. the private easement above referred to) for private use; but this is an evident mistake, so far as concerns the city and its officials, for, as already shown, the vacation was only “as a public street,” and with nothing else had or have these particular defendants anything to do. The city could not irrevocably bargain away the right and duty to vacate, when occasion required it, even for a valuable consideration, any more than it could, under like circumstances, barter away its power to open streets: Penna. Hospital v. Phila., 254 Pa. 392; affirmed on appeal in 245 U. S. 20. Moreover, we have here not only *567 the recital in the ordinance that it was passed “for the public good and benefit of the said city,” a declaration “entitled at least to great respect” (Block v. Hirsh, 256 U. S. 135); but, beyond and above this, the courts do not inquire into a municipality’s purpose in doing that which it has a legal right to do: McGee’s App., 114 Pa. 470, 477; Scott v. Pittsburgh, 266 Pa. 52; Phila. v. T. B. Rice & Sons Co., 274 Pa. 256; Redstone Township School District, 284 Pa. 325. Penna. Mutual Life Ins. Co. v. Phila., 242 Pa. 47, does not militate against this view, for there the question raised and decided was whether or not a statute, authorizing the taking of land, was unconstitutional, since it was to be taken to be resold to private parties, and hence could not possibly be a taking for public use. Here, however, the ordinance does not authorize the taking of anything, but only the giving up of the city’s rights in “a public street,” without reference to any other rights in or over the soil thereof; and hence, in the absence of a controlling statute, the consequential loss, if any, must be borne by those who suffer it: McGee’s App., supra.

It follows that the decree should not have been entered against the city, or its mayor and members of council, and would, for the reason stated, be reversed, so far as concerns them, though sustained as to the other defendants, were it not for our conclusion that it must be reversed generally. We are not unmindful that, in Jessop v. Kittanning Borough (No. 1), 225 Pa. 583, the municipality’s appeal from an injunction was dismissed, because the real wrongdoer was decreed to pay the costs, and, it was said, the borough, though innocent, was not harmed by the injunction, if it did not intend to do the thing which it was enjoined from doing. It is clear to us, however, that this is a palpable misapplication of a well settled legal principle. The fact that the borough was not awarded the statutory costs allowed- to it, was in itself a financial hurt, but the objection to the conclusion there reached is far greater. If a plaintiff may *568

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Bluebook (online)
134 A. 481, 286 Pa. 561, 1926 Pa. LEXIS 592, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/titusville-amusement-co-v-titusville-iron-works-co-pa-1926.