Wyalusing Township School District v. Babcock

11 Pa. D. & C. 536, 1928 Pa. Dist. & Cnty. Dec. LEXIS 149
CourtPennsylvania Court of Common Pleas, Bradford County
DecidedApril 2, 1928
DocketNo. 4
StatusPublished

This text of 11 Pa. D. & C. 536 (Wyalusing Township School District v. Babcock) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Pennsylvania Court of Common Pleas, Bradford County primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Wyalusing Township School District v. Babcock, 11 Pa. D. & C. 536, 1928 Pa. Dist. & Cnty. Dec. LEXIS 149 (Pa. Super. Ct. 1928).

Opinion

Culver, P. J.,

This equitable proceeding is to restrain the defendants from entering upon a certain school property known as the “Lyon School,” in the School District of Wyalusing Township, and from doing any damage thereto, or removing any materials taken out of or from said buildings, and from in any manner interfering with plaintiff's occupancy and use of the said buildings, and from such further relief in the premises as the court shall find to be proper and necessary to preserve the rights of the plaintiff.

An answer was filed by defendants after the plaintiff and defendants agreed upon the facts in order that there might be no dispute as to any material fact for the determination of the case. These facts, briefly stated, are as follows:

“1. That the School District of the Township of Wyalusing, the plaintiff, is a legally-constituted school district of the Commonwealth of Pennsylvania created and existing under the laws of said State, and situate in the Township of Wyalusing, County of Bradford, and State of Pennsylvania.

“2. That the said school district, the plaintiff herein, succeeded to the title and all the rights in and to the property of a former school district created by the said State under the same name and at the same place as a part of the common school system of the said State, and which said former school district had been in existence for upwards of seventy-five years.

“8. That upwards of seventy-five years ago the said former school district acquired land in what was known as the Lyon Sub-District in said township and built thereon a school-house and outbuildings and used the same for the school purposes of the said school district, and so used the same continuously, exclusively and adversely until the creation as aforesaid of the plaintiff school district.

[537]*537“4. That the plaintiff herein, from the time of its creation as aforesaid, has used said land for the purposes of the said school district, at first by continuing and maintaining a regular school at said place and later by transporting the school children of said sub-school district to other schools and using this land as a waiting-station for such school children to take the transporting vehicle.”

That the said school was not used for school purposes during the school year 1923-1924 and has not been used as such since then, except that the coal-house has been fitted up as a waiting-room for students being transported by said School District of Wyalusing Township. That on May 16, 1924, the plaintiff school district legally adopted the following resolution: “Moved by Brown, seconded by Tyler, that the Lyons and Browntown Schools be permanently closed.”

“5. That the plaintiff and its predecessor have been in the continuous, exclusive and adverse possession of the said land for upwards of seventy-five years last past.

“But for school purposes only.

“6. That the above-named defendant, Clinton Johnson, without any authority from the plaintiff, has gone upon the said premises and commenced tearing down the school-house on the said land, has tom up the floor and done other damages to the said building and threatens to tear down the whole building and take away the material.”

And it is further admitted by the parties that part of the floor of said school-house and the two outside toilets have been taken away by other persons by permission of the plaintiff.

“7. That the said Clinton Johnson claims to have purchased the said building from the said A. M. Babcock. The said A. M. Babcock claims to have sold the said building to the said Clinton Johnson, and encourages him in said demolition and has agreed to indemnify him against action for damage for so doing.

“8. That the said school lot is included within the line describing the farm of Mary and A. M. Babcock, as referred to and within the lines of the deeds of their predecessors in title from 1847 to the present date.

“9. That the school-house in question was a one-room school-house, and since the closing thereof, the pupils have been transported to a two-room school-house in Tuscarora Township.”

With these facts agreed upon, we are called upon to determine whether or not the plaintiff is entitled to the relief sought. We will first set forth the legal position contended for by defendants as justification for their acts and conduct. Defendants contend that all rights of the plaintiff in the school property in question have terminated and ended, and that because the school lot is surrounded by the farm of the defendants, Mary Babcock and A. M. Babcock, and has been so surrounded, as shown by the record titles agreed upon, since 1847, the lot and the buildings in question have reverted to the present owners of the property, Mary Babcock and A. M. Babcock, two of the defendants above named, and argue, in support of this contention, that the school district, by the resolution mentioned, has permanently closed the school and transported the pupils to a school in the School District of Tuscarora Township. Defendants further contend that these facts amount to a consolidation of the Lyon School in Wyalusing Township School District with the school in Tuscarora School District within the meaning of section 3701 of the School Code, which reads as follows: “That whenever graded schools can be made to accommodate the pupils of one or more ungraded' schools, by con[538]*538solidating said ungraded school or schools with another school, either graded or ungraded, it shall be the duty of the board of school directors to abandon the one-room school or schools, and, instead of repairing or rebuilding the one-room school-house or school-houses, they shall erect a suitable modern building for the purpose of consolidating and properly grading all of the said schools;” and, therefore, amount to abandonment of the school premises in question.

The second contention made by defendants is as follows: They claim that a school district could hold land, either by possessing the title or by condemning the same, the same as could a railroad company. In other words, that a school district can obtain title by agreement or by the right of eminent domain or by adverse possession. With this contention there is no dispute, but they further contend: “There is a presumption that any such corporation that takes land for its corporate possession does so under its high right of eminent domain and not as a wilful trespasser whose trespass may grow into a title.” Citing Covert v. Pittsburgh Ry. Co., 204 Pa. 341, and other cases in support thereof.

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Bluebook (online)
11 Pa. D. & C. 536, 1928 Pa. Dist. & Cnty. Dec. LEXIS 149, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/wyalusing-township-school-district-v-babcock-pactcomplbradfo-1928.