94 Pa. Super. 512 | Pa. Super. Ct. | 1928
Argued October 10, 1928. This is an appeal from the entry of judgment for want of a sufficient affidavit of defense to a scire facie sur municipal lien for the cost of street paving apportioned according to the front-foot rule. The defense interposed was that the paving for which the assessment was levied was not an original paving of Durham Street. The affidavit avers upon information and belief derived from examination of official records of the Highway Bureau of the city, the ordinances of Council and the original owners of property abutting the aforesaid street, as well as the original contractor, that this highway prior to 1908 was a dirt road; that it was first paved in the year 1908 by consent and permission of the Department of Public Works of the city; that a contract was made for such paving, the cost to be assumed by the owners of the abutting properties; that such pavement was passed upon, accepted and approved by the Bureau of Highways of the Department of Public Works of the city in the year 1908; that the pavement torn up to make way for the present pavement was composed of successive layers of stone, graduated in size, the smallest being on top, with a top dressing, and extended from curb to curb, with stone gutters; that this paving changed the then existing country road into a paved and improved street and was accepted by the city with the intent that it become a paved street for public use; and that from 1908 to 1926 this macadam *515 pavement was in full and complete public use and was cared for and repaired from time to time by the city.
The question before us is whether the affidavit sets forth sufficient facts to show that the paving of 1908 was such a paving as exempts abutting property owners from assessment for a subsequent paving. Two elements are necessary to evidence the fact that an improvement of a highway or street was such a paving, "the character of the construction and the intention of the municipality to convert a common road into a permanently improved street. The controlling consideration, however, is affirmative municipal intention": Easton City v. Hughes,
The judgment is affirmed.