Valmont Developing Co. v. Rosser

146 A. 557, 297 Pa. 140, 1929 Pa. LEXIS 381
CourtSupreme Court of Pennsylvania
DecidedJanuary 30, 1929
DocketAppeals, 182 and 193
StatusPublished
Cited by17 cases

This text of 146 A. 557 (Valmont Developing Co. v. Rosser) 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
Valmont Developing Co. v. Rosser, 146 A. 557, 297 Pa. 140, 1929 Pa. LEXIS 381 (Pa. 1929).

Opinion

Opinion by

Mr. Justice Kephart,

Plaintiff prior to 1926 became the owner of a large tract of land lying between Market and Pierce Streets, in Kingston, Luzerne County. A public highway on which the land, now divided into lots, fronts, extended from Market Street by bridge across the Susquehanna River to Wilkes-Barre. The county commissioners, believing the bridge insufficient to accommodate existing travel, petitioned the court of quarter sessions to reconstruct it. The grand jury on January 31, 1919, approved the project and the court below gave a qualified approval without committing it “to any suggested plan or detail of construction, all of which will be determined without haste and after full deliberation.” In 1926 a contract was let and approved by the court for erecting the bridge and approaches. The latter extend from the *145 river bank on Market Street into Kingston 450 feet and adjoin appellant’s land 370 feet.

The elevation of the approach at the river bank, the borough limits, is 20 feet and runs out on a regular grade to nothing on Market Street. The average elevation in front of appellant’s land is about six feet. Market Street, originally fifty feet wide, is now 93 feet and the approach covers the entire width along appellant’s land.

The decorative or ornamental projection outside of the regular lines of the approach extends in a circle into appellant’s land an extreme width of forty-nine and one-half feet from the general line, gradually reducing to nothing at the general line, and is one hundred and forty feet long. The extreme width of the approach at the farthest point of the circle, including the width on the other side, is about two hundred feet. A railing or balustrade is erected along the property lines as a protection to pedestrians; it also prevents ingress and egress to and from the land facing it, now below the grade of the approach, and deprives Kingston Borough of a connection with a street along the river, also below grade. The commissioners proceeded with the work until July, 1928, when this proceeding was instituted to enjoin further construction, particularly of certain parts of the bridge.

The reasons given for the injunction were: the county was attempting to take land without acquiring title thereto or without lawful appropriation or condemnation thereof; there was nothing of record to determine the part of appellant’s land taken, though entry thereon had been made; the new bridge contained decorative features not a part of the bridge and not necessary for public travel or use, but merely adding beauty and ornamentation, and for that purpose the county took a large piece of appellant’s land, for which taking there was no warrant in law; the bridge or street was of greater width than authorized by law; and, in laying out and *146 building the approach, its grade was so elevated through the Borough of Kingston as to cut off free communication with an important public street necessary for public travel, and with the land of appellant. Other questions raised by this appeal become immaterial and resolve themselves into ones for damages if it is found the county can take the land in question.

The court below, after the hearing, dissolved the injunction and dismissed the bill.

The power of a municipality or a quasi-municipal corporation to appropriate land for roads and bridges or other public improvements must be found in some enabling statute. “The right of eminent domain......is an incident of government and exists in municipal or other corporations only as direct authority from the government by act of assembly may be shown therefor. The exercise of a certain function of municipal government to which the acquisition of real property is necessary will not of itself give rise to the right of eminent domain to condemn property......Acts of assembly granting this right must be construed strictly. The language of the act should be clear and unmistakable, and questions of doubt should be resolved against the existence of this right”: Philadelphia’s Petition, 60 Pa. Superior Ct. 594, 596; Solar Electric Company’s Appeal (No. 1), 290 Pa. 156; Philadelphia’s Petition, 253 Pa. 434. It may possibly be that the exercise of certain functions of government might (compel the taking of land for the purpose, but here we need not infer an authority to appropriate land to construct bridges, because the legislature by positive enactment has conferred that power, and resort should never be had to an inference of the right of eminent domain, however imperative the demand, where enabling authority may be found in a statute or the inference otherwise avoided. Such power ordinarily will not be presumed to exist: Phillips v. Dunkirk, Warren & Pittsburgh Railroad Co., 78 Pa. 177.

*147 We do not have a record of what took place before the court of quarter sessions, the county commissioners or the grand jury; only a very meagre outline is presented and it does not show the authority pursued. We can only decide the case from this record and statements made in the argument as they supplement the record. Ample power to condemn or appropriate land for the construction of bridges and approaches is lodged in the county under the Act of April 29, 1891, P. L. 31, as amended, aided by the Act of February 14, 1907, P. L. 3, and the Act of the same year, P. L. 523; see Carrere v. Schmidt, 278 Pa. 457; the Act of May 28, 1913, P. L. 368, and also Westmoreland Chemical & Color Co. v. Public Service Commission, 294 Pa. 451, 462. The approach is part of the bridge. The Act of 1891 states that the county is authorized, after resolution, to construct a public bridge between any city, borough or township, and to that end may take and appropriate property; it requires plans to be prepared and submitted to the court of quarter sessions for approval. We conclude from the foregoing acts of assembly, together with our decisions above noted, that ample power is given to appropriate appellant’s lands for the bridge and the approaches.

The words “take and appropriate,” or others of similar import, in eminent domain statutes, contemplate an orderly and regular proceeding by the authorities in whom the power is lodged. It has in view a precedent resolution, ordinance or other affirmative act, defining the scope and extent of the proposed taking, with the purpose for which it is to be exercised. Members of council or the mayor, or the county commissioners individually or collectively, cannot in an informal manner take the action necessary to complete a lawful appropriation. Formality of procedure is here essential just as in the case of condemnation by quasi-public corporations: Foley v. Beech Creek Extension R. R. Co., 283 Pa. 588, 594. In that case, the adoption of the center line, with the statute fixing the outside lines, determined *148 the quantity of land taken by the company. Here, where a bridge is to be reconstructed and additional land is necessary for approaches, there must be some act descriptive of the proceeding; the land taken, with the purpose for so doing, should be recorded on the minutes of the county commissioners and filed with the proceedings of the court.

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Bluebook (online)
146 A. 557, 297 Pa. 140, 1929 Pa. LEXIS 381, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/valmont-developing-co-v-rosser-pa-1929.