42 A.2d 187 | Pa. Super. Ct. | 1945
Argued March 12, 1945. The Borough of Carlisle filed a municipal lien to recover the costs of constructing a sidewalk in front of the property of John Fladger, appellant herein. He, in an affidavit of defense to a sci. fa. issued thereunder, denied liability. The facts, upon which the court, sitting without a jury, upheld the validity of the lien, are not disputed.
In 1936 an application was made by the Pennsylvania Department of Highways to the Public Service Commission to remove a track of the Pennsylvania Railroad Company in the Borough of Carlisle, which traversed the entire length of High Street, reconstruct the paving between the curbs and replace a bridge near the south borough line. Florence M. Gardner was then the owner of a property located on the south side of that street. In front of her premises was a brick *208 sidewalk, which had not been laid in accordance with any borough ordinance or regulation, but apparently conformed to the prevailing grade of the sidewalks laid along East High Street. In pursuance of the order of the Public Service Commission the railroad track was removed and the grade in front of the Gardner property was raised approximately fifteen inches. The borough removed the paving bricks, filled up and leveled the ground. Thereafter pedestrians used a cinder path as a sidewalk until one was laid by the borough.
On October 14, 1940, John Fladger purchased the Gardner property from the heirs of the late owner. Three years thereafter, in 1943, the borough under Ordinance of August 16, 1941, directed him to lay a sidewalk in front of his premises; that he refused to do. The borough thereupon laid a concrete pavement to conform with the new grade. Fladger contends that as there had been a suitable sidewalk, the borough was without authority to compel him to lay, or to pay for the cost of, a new one. He concedes that our decisions uniformly hold that the right to recover damages resulting from a lawful entry upon land under a statutory proceeding, or an unlawful entry in the nature of a trespass, is personal, belonging to the owner of the land when the entry and injury takes place and does not run with the land, or pass by subsequent conveyance, although not specifically reserved: McFadden v. Johnson,
The appellant contends, however, "that he stepped into the shoes of his predecessor so far as the ownership and the incidents of ownership are concerned;" that his predecessor could not have been forced to put down a new sidewalk and neither can he as successor in title. He places considerable, but unwarranted, reliance *209
on Philadelphia to use, v. Henry,
Under sections 1805 and 1807 of the Borough Code of May 4, 1927, P.L. 519, 53 P. S. § 14035, 14037, the borough had authority to notify Fladger to construct a sidewalk and upon his refusal, cause the pavement to be laid at his cost; that is what was done.
Judgment is affirmed. *210