Whitehall Borough Incorporation Case

55 A.2d 70, 161 Pa. Super. 397, 1947 Pa. Super. LEXIS 412
CourtSuperior Court of Pennsylvania
DecidedJuly 16, 1947
DocketAppeals, 20, 21 and 22
StatusPublished
Cited by8 cases

This text of 55 A.2d 70 (Whitehall Borough Incorporation Case) 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
Whitehall Borough Incorporation Case, 55 A.2d 70, 161 Pa. Super. 397, 1947 Pa. Super. LEXIS 412 (Pa. Ct. App. 1947).

Opinion

Opinion by

Rhodes, P. J.,

The affirmance of the orders and decree of the Court of Quarter Sessions of Allegheny County might well be rested upon the clear and comprehensive opinion of Judge Soffel.

The court below had before it for determination three petitions — one which proposed to create out of portions of Baldwin and Bethel Townships a new borough to be known as the Borough of Whitehall; and two which had as their objective the incorporation of the entire Township of Baldwin into a borough.

The petitions for the incorporation of the Township of Baldwin, as described in said petitions, into the Borough of Baldwin were dismissed, and a decree was entered incorporating the Borough of Whitehall.

On April 22, 1947, appeals were taken to this court from the orders (Nos. 20 and 22, April Term, 1948) and decree (No. 21, April Term, 1948); and July 16, 1947, was fixed for a special session to hear argument.

On October 14, 1946, 1,320 of the 1,627 resident freeholders residing within the proposed Borough of Whitehall filed the petition at No. 33, October Sessions, 1946, seeking to incorporate a portion of Baldwin Township into the Borough of Whitehall. This petition also included a small tract of land located in the adjoining Township of Bethel. Two days before the filing of the Whitehall petition, or on Saturday, October 12, 1946, at 10 o’clock p.m., the Commissioners of Baldwin Town *400 ship held a special meeting at which they passed a resolution authorizing the filing of a petition for the incorporation of Baldwin Township into a borough. This petition was executed on Sunday, October 13,1946, and filed the next day, Monday, October 14, 1946, at No. 32, October Sessions, 1946. Subsequently, on October 31, 1946, a second petition, signed by the majority of the freeholders of Baldwin Township, seeking incorporation of the entire township as a borough, was filed at No. 161, October Sessions, 1946. The three proceedings were heard before the court and considered as one matter; they will be treated together on appeal.

Baldwin Township, located in the south central portion of Allegheny County, has an area of 10.2 square miles, or 6,835 acres. The formation of the Borough of Whitehall would reduce the area of Baldwin Township by 3.1 square miles, or 2,043 acres. The population of Baldwin Township was 7,738 according to the 1940 census. (The Baldwin Township petitions averred that the population of Baldwin Township wras 8,000 or more at the time of filing.) Baldwin Township’s assessed real estate valuation for 1946 was $13,899,711, while that of the proposed Borough of Whitehall for the same year would be $6,582,676.

The court below found that the proposed Borough of Whitehall was a region intensively developed for residential purposes; that the area consisted of numerous plans of lots for single dwellings; and that it included the grounds of the-South Hills Country Club. It expressly found: “We have within the present Township [of Baldwin] two districts which seem to require different methods of government. The people of the Whitehall area have a homogeneity and community of interest that does not extend to the residents of the remainder of the Township.”

In granting the petition for the incorporation of the Borough of Whitehall, the court considered in detail the effect of the loss of territory on the remainder of Bald *401 win Township, and concluded that Baldwin Township could continue to function efficiently as a separate governmental unit.

The Baldwin Township High School, with over 900 students, is situate wholly within the proposed Borough of Whitehall. Two hundred of the high school students presently live in the Whitehall district, five hundred 'in the remainder of Baldwin Township, and the balance in adjoining townships. Only one of the eight elementary schools in Baldwin Township is located in the proposed Borough of Whitehall. The court concluded that the new Borough of Whitehall, having a population of less than five thousand, would, as a fourth-class school district, remain a part of the Baldwin Township School District for some time to come, and that the incorporation of the Borough of Whitehall would cause no disruption of the school system.

The court below, in dismissing the two petitions for the incorporation of Baldwin Township in its entirety into a borough, held that they were defective because the description of the territory to be incorporated erroneously included lands located in the adjoining Borough of West Mifflin, and also lands in Jefferson Township.

Appellants contend that, under the 1941 amendment to the General Borough Act (Act of May 4, 1927, P. L. 519, Article II, §201; Act of August 6,1941, P. L. 881, 53 PS § 12251) , 1 it was mandatory upon the court to grant the petition where a majority of the inhabitants of an entire first-class toAvnship seeks incorporation as a borough. Appellants’ theory seems to be that a court has no discretion or poAver to grant incorporation of a part *402 of a township into a borough where, as here, there is filed simultaneously a petition for incorporation of the entire first-class township under the 1941 amendment. We find no indication of any intent upon the part of the legislature to limit to such an extent the action of the court of quarter sessions.

The discretionary power of the court of quarter sessions, in cases where a town or village seeks incorporation as a borough, is well established; and a decree incorporating a borough will not be disturbed by an appellate court unless illegality appears on the record, or an abuse of discretion is distinctly charged and clearly shown. Incorporation of Swoyerville Borough, 12 Pa. Superior Ct. 118, 124;. South Connellsville Borough Incorporation, 47 Pa. Superior Ct. 350, 353; Incorporation of the Borough of Narberth, 171 Pa. 211, 33 A. 72; Pleasant mils Borough Incorporation Case, 161 Pa. Superior Ct. 259, 53 A, 2d 882. Proceedings of this nature involve, largely, issues of fact and questions of expediency for the court of quarter sessions. Helen Parle Borough Incorporation, 158 Pa. Superior Ct. 40, 43, 43 A. 2d 529.

The 1941 amendment, permitting the incorporation of an entire first-class township into a borough where the requirements have been met, does not deprive the court of quarter sessions of its discretionary power to determine between a petition to incorporate an entire township and another petition, simultaneously presented, to incorporate a portion thereof. Practical considerations of governmental structure may, as here, weigh more heavily in favor of granting the petition for the incorporation of the smaller unit.

The petition for the incorporation of the Borough of Whitehall and those seeking incorporation of Baldwin Township into a borough are, of necessity, mutually exclusive, and the court so treated them in making its findings. If the former petition was granted, the latter had to be refused. The court could not grant the petition for *403

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Bluebook (online)
55 A.2d 70, 161 Pa. Super. 397, 1947 Pa. Super. LEXIS 412, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/whitehall-borough-incorporation-case-pasuperct-1947.