Wabash Avenue

26 Pa. Super. 305, 1904 Pa. Super. LEXIS 310
CourtSuperior Court of Pennsylvania
DecidedOctober 17, 1904
DocketAppeal, No. 115
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 26 Pa. Super. 305 (Wabash Avenue) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Superior Court of Pennsylvania primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Wabash Avenue, 26 Pa. Super. 305, 1904 Pa. Super. LEXIS 310 (Pa. Ct. App. 1904).

Opinion

Opinion by

Pobteb, J.,

The assignments of error in this case might properly be quashed. The first assignment complains that the court below erred, “ in dismissing the exceptions to the report of the board of viewers.” This is a clear violation of Rule XIY of this court, for there seem to have been many exceptions filed by the appellant in the court below; he prints three in his paper-book diere, and under them his learned counsel have argued several distinct questions. When this record is remitted to the court below the record of this court will not show what questions were attempted to be raised. The second and only remaining specification of error is that the court erred “ in confirming the viewers’ report absolutely.” It was conceded that the report of viewers was in all respects regular upon its face, and the only questions argued in this case went to the alleged errors involved in the dismissal of the exceptions by court below.

The plaintiff has printed only the third, fourth and fifth exceptions filed by him in the court below, and our inquiry is necessarily limited to the questions raised by those exceptions. The third exception challenges the authority of the city to grade a street, “ except in one proceeding, which includes the whole of the street on which a grade has been established.” The answer to this exception is to be found in the Act of April 28, 1899, P. L. 100, which confers upon every municipal corporation power “ to grade, pave, curb, macadamize and otherwise improve any public street or public alley, or part thereof, within its corporate limits,” and provides for the assessment of the costs and expenses of such improvements'.

The “ fourth exception ” avers that the city of Allegheny never authorized the grading, paving and curbing of Wabash avenue, from Perrysville avenue to Crider’s west line, except by ordinance providing for but one contract, which ordinance is dated December 30,1899, but that the city, without any authority authorizing it thereto, awarded the contract for the grading, paving and curbing of Wabash avenue to two differ[308]*308ent contractors under two different contracts, “ all of which is illegal and void.” An examination of the ordinances demonstrate that the ordinance of December 30, 1899, did not authorize the grading, paving and curbing of Wabash avenue ; it merely authorized and directed the department of public works to advertise for proposals for the grading, paving and curbing of Wabash avenue, from Perrysville avenue to Crider’s west line, in accordance with specifications prepared by said department. That ordinance was tentative only, and committed the city to nothing. The power to ordain that the street should be graded and paved had not been exercised, and the advertisement for proposals for the work was manifestly for the purpose of ascertaining what the probable cost would be before the city took any definite action in the matter. The power to enter into any contract for the grading and paving of streets, by cities of the second class, was at that time vested exclusively in the city councils. This ordinance did not attempt to delegate the power to enter into a contract; the whole matter was to be returned to councils for the information of those bodies. The councils of the city, by an ordinance duly enacted, approved by the mayor January 25,1900, “ authorized and instructed the director of the department of public works to enter into a contract with James McAfee & Co. for the grading, paving and curbing of Wabash avenue, from old Franklin Road to Crider’s West Line, according to specifications,” etc. This ordinance contained the following provision : “ The cost and expense of said improvement to be assessed and collected in accordance with the provision of the acts of assembly in such cases made and provided.” The second section of the ordinance repealed so much of any ordinance as was in conflict with its provisions, and if there is any conflict between it and the ordinance of December 30, 1899, the latter was to that extent repealed. This was the only ordinance which authorized the grading and paving of that part of Wabash avenue upon which the appellant’s property abuts, and the work was done under it. This contract was let on April 11, 1900, and four days later, on April 15, another contract under another ordinance was let to another contractor for the grading and paving, with a different material, of that part of Wabash avenue between Perrysville avenue and the old [309]*309Franklin road. The improvements upon these two parts of the street were authorized by different ordinances and carried on as separate and distinct proceedings. The city had authority to proceed in this way, and the defendant was certainly not prejudiced by the manner in which the power was exercised. The part of the street from Perrysville avenue to the old Franklin road was-only 180 feet in length, but there was upon it a heavy cut, and the street was so steep that the councils determined in the exercise of their discretion that an expensive blockstone pavement was the best for that part of the street, which fact is by the defendant admitted to be true. A separate board of viewers was appointed in another proceeding to adjudicate the damages' and benefits arising from the execution of this distinct undertaking, and the cost of that improvement and the damages resulting to property from its execution were judicially determined to be $4,023.06, of which amount the city was compelled to pay $3,823.06, the abutting property being of such a character that it was benefited to only the amount of $200. No attempt was .ever made to assess any part of the expenses and damages resulting from the execution of the work between Perrysville avenue and the old Franklin road against the property of the appellant or any other property abutting upon that part of the street covered by the ordinance under which the contract was let to McAfee. The effect, therefore, of the action of the city, in dividing Wabash avenue into two parts and making the improvement of those parts distinct and separate undertakings, was to relieve the property of the appellant from all danger of assessment for the work upon that short part of the street which was proportionally the far more expensive.

The fifth exception avers that the city exhausted its power to make assessments for the grading, paving and curbing of Wabash avenue, between Perrysville avenue and Crider’s west line when it had viewers appointed at No. 579, 'August term, 1901, to assess the benefits due to the grading, paving and curbing between Perrysville avenue and the old Franklin road.” The city had elected to improve the part of Wabash avenue upon which appellant’s property abuts as a separate and distinct undertaking; and no property is liable to assessment which does not abut upon the part of the street which is the subject of that [310]*310undertaking: Morewood Avenue, 159 Pa. 20. The viewers appointed to assess the damages and benefits due to the grading, paving and curbing between Perrys ville avenue and the old Franklin road were without authority to consider the effect of that improvement upon property fronting on any other part of Wabash avenue, and without jurisdiction to make any assessment against such property.

The regularity of the advertisement for bids or proposals for the work which was done under the McAfee contract does not properly arise under any of the assignments of error here presented, although the question has been earnestly argued by counsel. The contention is that the manner in which the contract was let involved a disregard of the provision of the Act of May 28, 1874, P. L.

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Related

City of Allentown v. Ott
85 Pa. Super. 210 (Superior Court of Pennsylvania, 1924)
Philadelphia v. Bilyeu
36 Pa. Super. 562 (Superior Court of Pennsylvania, 1908)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
26 Pa. Super. 305, 1904 Pa. Super. LEXIS 310, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/wabash-avenue-pasuperct-1904.