173 A. 329 | Pa. | 1934
Argued April 9, 1934. Bridget Brunacci was injured by falling into a deep, open surface water drain located a few feet from the edge of the paved cartway of a state highway, but within the lines of the highway. There was a sidewalk between the property line and a concrete gutter which was connected with the paved cartway, and this deep drain, used to convey water under the highway, formed a break in the sidewalk. It was without protection. The woman was compelled to use this side of the street because of the heavy traffic on the highway and because there was no sidewalk on the other side of the highway, it being occupied by a trolley road. In her suit against the township she was denied recovery in the court below. The *393 question involved is not that of negligence for maintaining the dangerous condition of the drain by reason of its location, but whether the township was liable for an injury occurring on a road taken over by the State under the Sproul Act of May 31, 1911, P. L. 468.
Plains Township is a township of the first class and may become liable for injuries occurring because of the defective condition of a sidewalk, but ordinarily there is no duty on the part of a township to maintain a sidewalk along a state highway. Such duty may be imposed by statute: Shaw v. Plains Twp.,
It was early decided in this State that the liability of a municipality for failure to maintain and repair roads and streets is purely a matter of legislative intention and springs from the various powers and duties of the municipal officers on the theory of "principal and agent" or "master and servant." "The road is their road, the expense of making and repairing it is thrown upon them [the township], not . . . . . . in their collective capacity . . . . . . but by means of the supervisors who are their chief executive officers": Dean v. New Milford Twp., 5 W. S. 545. *394
Originally, the road in question was a township road. It was later improved as a county road, being a main highway between Wilkes-Barre and Scranton. When this was done, the township no longer became responsible for the construction, maintenance and repair of the road, as it was taken over for its entire width by the county. It remained within the county's jurisdiction until the Sproul Act was passed, and it is now a state highway, being Route No. 5. There is no question but what the township would be liable for an injury occurring through the negligent condition of the highway when the road was under township control, but, when complete jurisdiction, control and authority over the road was taken by the county under legislative enactment, thereafter the liability was placed on the county, whose duty it was to construct, maintain and repair: Act of 1911, P. L. 244, section 1; Clark v. Allegheny Co.,
The Township Act of 1917, P. L. 840, section 660, as amended by the Act of 1927, P. L. 493, section 1 (b), and repeated in the Act of June 24, 1931, P. L. 1206, section 2013, is not in conflict with this rule when it provides that "All public roads or highways shall at all seasons be kept clear of all impediments to easy and convenient traveling, at the expense of the township," since it applies to township roads which are under the supervision of the township and not to those taken over by the State pursuant to the Sproul Act. There is no connection between the acts; each treats of a different matter.
Appellants cite the cases of Winegardner v. Springfield Twp.,
Our conclusion is that there was no duty upon the township to keep the traveled way or the land contiguous thereto in a condition safe for easy passage by the public.
Judgment affirmed.