Whitney v. Jersey Shore Borough

109 A. 767, 266 Pa. 537, 1920 Pa. LEXIS 608
CourtSupreme Court of Pennsylvania
DecidedMarch 8, 1920
DocketAppeal, No. 178
StatusPublished
Cited by29 cases

This text of 109 A. 767 (Whitney v. Jersey Shore Borough) 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
Whitney v. Jersey Shore Borough, 109 A. 767, 266 Pa. 537, 1920 Pa. LEXIS 608 (Pa. 1920).

Opinion

Opinion by

Mr. Justice Moschzisker,

June 28, 1919, plaintiffs, on behalf of themselves and other taxpayers of the Township of Porter, Lycoming County, filed a bill in equity against the defendant borough, which was dismissed by the court below; hence this appeal.

The bill avers that defendant sought to annex certain described lands in the before-mentioned township, a copy of an ordinance to accomplish that purpose, passed and approved in 1918, being attached, wherein it is declared that the borough councils had acted pursuant to a peti[541]*541tion “in accordance -with the Act of General Assembly in such case made and provided” (see Act of 1915, P. L. 325, sections 18 and 19); this is accompanied by an averment that the transcript of the ordinance, in the record of the quarter sessions annexation proceedings, is endorsed as filed in accord with the Act of May 14, 1915, P. L. 312, — the general borough code.

While the bill states defendant borough was incorporated by a special Act of Assembly approved March 15, 1826 (see section 11 of Act of 1826, P. L. 1825-26, page 113), yet neither that statute nor the one to which it refers provides for the annexation of territory, the sole act “in such case made and provided” being the General Borough Code of 1915; the significance of which fact will appear later in this opinion, when we come to consider the applicability to the present case of a certain governing section of the last mentioned statute.

Again turning our attention to the pleadings, the bill sets forth that the Act of 1915 establishes a system of government for boroughs, providing, by chapter 1, article I, section 6, page 315, that the statute “shall apply to all boroughs incorporated under general law and to those which have accepted the provisions of the Act of April 3, 1851, P. L. 320”; it then alleges “your orators are not informed......whether the Borough of Jersey Shore......ever accepted the provisions of the said Act of 1851, or whether it ever......otherwise became subject to the provisions [of the Act of 1915]......, and [they] aver that, unless the said defendant borough shall show that, at the time of the presentation of the said [annexation] petition and at the time of the passage and approval of said [annexation] ordinance, it was subject to and being governed under the provisions of said Act of May 14, 1915, the said ordinance and attempted annexation were and are now void and of 'no' effect.”

The remaining averments charge that certain steps in, what we have previously called and shall hereinafter designate as, the “annexation proceedings” were not in [542]*542accord with the requirements of the Act of 1915, for reasons of fact and law particularly stated; but, owing to the disposition we shall make of this appeal, there is no necessity for reciting these complaints in detail.

The prayers are, inter alia, that the defendant be required to answer and show by what right it undertakes “to exercise the said power of annexation......under the provisions of said Act......'of May 14, 1915”; that various steps in the annexation proceedings be declared improper or imperfect, and the beforementioned ordinance “be adjudged and declared to be void and of no effect”; that the territory in question “be adjudged and declared to be part of the said Township of Porter, and not of defendant borough”; that defendant and all of its officials be “enjoined and restrained from exercising or attempting to exercise any jurisdiction over the said hereinbefore described territory......and from in any manner treating or attempting to treat the said territory or any part of it as a part of said borough”; finally, that defendant’s officials be restrained “from assessing or attempting to assess properties [in the annexed territory] for taxation, and from collecting or attempting to collect any taxes assessed or attempted to be assessed” by such officials. (This last demand appears to be only incidental to the real purpose of the bill, as denoted by its whole structure and the other prayers thereof; which point we shall discuss later.)

Defendant filed a demurrer and answer, under one cover, the demurrer asserting that the court below was without jurisdiction because the Act of 1915, by chapter 7, article I, section 9, page 393, provides that “Complaint may be made to the next court of quarter sessions, upon entering into recognizance, with sufficient security to prosecute the same with effect, and for the payment of costs, by any person aggrieved in consequence of any ordinance, regulation, or act done or purporting to be done in virtue of this act, and the determination and order of the court thereon shall be conclusive.”

[543]*543The answer also raises the question of jurisdiction, upon the grounds stated in the demurrer, and, after replying to other averments of the bill, has this to say: “To that part of the bill wherein plaintiffs argue ‘that unless defendant borough......shall show......it was subject to and being governed under the provisions of said Act of May 14, 1915, the said ordinance and attempted annexation were and are void and of no effect,’ defendant responds that it accepted the provisions of the said Act of April 3,1851, and, having so done, it became subject to the provisions of the said Act of May 14,1915, ......; and a copy of the record of the proceedings for the acceptance of the provisions of the said Act of April 3,1851, is hereto attached......with the same force and effect as though repeated in this paragraph.” The attached record shows an acceptance duly had and decreed under and by virtue of the Act of 1851, in and by the Quarter Sessions of Lycoming County, on August 27, 1855.

The demurrer was overruled, on the ground that “defendant demurred to the whole of plaintiffs’ bill, at the same time answering the whole bill,” and that “such practice is not allowable under the rules of equity proceeding, the demurrer being overruled by the answer”; citing Appeal of John Barbey, 119 Pa. 413. The presiding judge certifies the matter then came before him upon “bill, answer and replication”; we must take this as conclusive of that fact: Randolph’s App., 66 Pa. 178, 183.,

With the case thus before the court below, it treated defendant borough as governed by the provisions of the Borough Code — Act of 1915 — , deciding, since this statute “provides a full and adequate remedy,” equity had no jurisdiction; and, therefore, dismissed the bill.

The court was amply justified in determining defendant borough had accepted the Act of 1851 and, hence, that this case was governed by the provisions of the borough code. Although plaintiffs filed a replication, [544]*544yet, on the peculiar facts at bar, no issue was thereby raised as to defendant’s acceptance of the Act of 1851. An issue is a point affirmed on one side and denied on the other. Here the bill, while in effect recognizing the possibility of defendant borough having accepted the Act of 1851, carefully avoids averring it did not do so, and the answer not only specifically avers that it did accept, but introduces a court record demonstrating that fact. Under these circumstances, albeit ordinarily questions of jurisdiction must be determined on what appears in the bill alone (Pittsburgh, etc., Ry. Co. v. Stowe Twp., 252 Pa.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
109 A. 767, 266 Pa. 537, 1920 Pa. LEXIS 608, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/whitney-v-jersey-shore-borough-pa-1920.