42 Pa. 9 | Pa. | 1862
The opinion of the Court was delivered, February 10th 1862, by
Independence Square was not one of the original squares left open for public use by William Penn in his platform of the city of Philadelphia, but consisted of various lots purchased at different times under the authority of the legislature of the province. The intention was to erect a State House and other public buildings upon it, and that the residue of the square should be and remain a public green and walk for ever. The old court-house had been built in 1707, in Market street above second street, and was used not only as a hall of justice, but also as a legislative hall, in which the Provincial Assemblies transacted their business, and the general elections were held there. By
On the 28th February 1780, the General Assembly of the Commonwealth vested the State House, and the whole lot between Walnut and Chestnut and Fifth and Sixth streets, in the Commonwealth, to the uses and trusts theretofore appointed and and limited. The legal title was therefore in the State of Pennsylvania. From a club called the Junto, originated in 1727, by Benjamin Franklin, sprung a proposition to form a society composed of virtuosi or ingenious men residing in the several colonies, to be called The American Philosophical Society, to be held at Philadelphia, being the city nearest to the centre of the continent colonies, communicating with all of them northward and southward by post, and with all the islands by sea, and having the
Out of another Junto, established in 1750, arose another body in 1756, called “The American Society for Promoting and Propagating Useful Knowledge,” held at Philadelphia; and in November 1768, the name being changed to the American Society held at Philadelphia for Promoting Useful Knowledge, Dr. Benjamin Franklin was elected its President. The first institution, The American Philosophical Society, was also revived about the same time, and on the 9th February 1768, ex-Governor Hamilton was elected President of this body.
On the 2d January 1769, these two institutions having merged themselves into one body, being the present “American Philosophical Society held at Philadelphia, for Promoting Useful Knowledge,” Dr. Benjamin Franklin was elected President, and Dr. Thomas Cadwalader, Dr. Thomas Bond, and Joseph Galloway, Esq., were elected Yiee Presidents. The Society, aided by the General Assembly of the Province, erected three temporary observatories, one at Philadelphia, the other at the residence of Mr. Rittenhouse, in Newton township, Montgomery county, about twenty miles north-west of Philadelphia, for observing the expected transit of Venus that was to occur on the 3d of June 1769.
Measures were also taken for making observations at Cape Henlopen, on the Delaware Bay, where a building was found that could be used for the purpose. The observations at these different places were all successful, and the account of them, and of the results to which they led, is given in full detail in the first volume of their transactions, published in 1771, from the press of William & Thomas Bradford, in this city.
Upon their application, the General Assembly on the 15th March 1780, passed an act incorporating them, and one of its provisions, as indicative of the liberal policy, humane spirit, and wise forethought of our forefathers in the midst of a war for existence, is too remarkable to be omitted. That it shall be lawful for the “ society, by their proper officers, at all times, whether in peace or war, to correspond with learned societies as well as individuals, learned men of any nation or country, upon matters merely belonging to the business of the society, such as tho
On the 15th April 1782, the General Assembly transferred the property and moneys of the Silk Society to the Philosophical Society, who were to be accountable, and redeliver the same whenever a majority of the subscribers to the Silk Society shall request it, in order to revive their institution. The Philosophical Society having represented to the legislature the necessity of their having a public hall, library, and other accommodation, and prayed that they would grant to them a lot of ground suitable and convenient for erecting a hall and other buildings, an act was passed on the 28th March 1785, granting to them a lot on Fifth street, being a part of the State House Square, for that purpose. The third section is in these words: “ Provided always, and it is the intention and meaning of this act, that the said lot of ground shall not be sold, leased, or transferred, by the said. Philosophical Society or their successors, to any other person or persons, or bodies corporate; nor shall the same be applied by the said society to any other use or purpose but that of erecting buildings for the accommodation of the said society, as herein-before specified.” Upon a further representation from the society, that the restriction in the.preceding act, as to the letting parts of the building, was disadvantageous and unreasonable, the House thought it was founded in reason, and on the 17th March 1786, passed an act authorizing the society to let or lease such vaults or cellars as they may think proper to make, under the building by them to be erected on the lot aforesaid, and to let any other parts of said building for such purposes as may have affinity with the design of their institution, and no other: the issues and profits to be applied to the purposes for which the society was originally instituted, and to no other.
By the Act of the 8th April 1785, the commissioners of the county of Philadelphia, and the wardens of the city of Philadelphia, having respectively paid to the treasurer of the state the sum of fifty pounds each, the lots at the corners of Sixth and Fifth streets were severally vested in the said parties respectively, agreeably to the Act of 1762. The act also provided that the old jail and work-house should be sold, and three thousand pounds of the purchase-money be applied to the purpose of erecting the county court-house, on the north-west corner of the State House
By an Act of the 30th September 1791, the governor was authorized to contract for paving the footway round the State House Square, at such times as the city commissioners shall be paving the cartways of the several streets which surround the State House. The same act, after reciting that it would contribute to the embellishment of the public walks in the State House garden, and may conduce to the health of the citizens by admitting a free circulation of air if the east and west walls of the said garden were lowered, and palisadoes placed thereon, authorized the city corporation, at their expense, to take down the wall on the east and west sides of the State-House yard, within three feet of the pavement, and to erect thereon good and substantial palisadoes of iron, fixed on a stone capping, to be placed on such wall so prepared.
The City Hall was occupied by the executive, legislative, and judicial authorities of the city ; whilst the Congress of the United States, on their removal from New York to Philadelphia, in 1790, occupied the county court-house, the use of which was offered to them by the commissioners of the city and county of Philadelphia, for their accommodation during their residence in Philadelphia, until their final removal to Washington, in 1800. The State House had been used by the General Assembly of the province and state for their place of meeting from 17 35 until the removal of the seat of government to Lancaster, in November 1799. The Congress of the Confederation had also used it during t he Revolutionary war, and continued its occupation until the 24th of December 1784, when they adjourned to meet in the city of New York. The east room on the first floor of this building was the scene of the Declaration of Independence, on the 4th July 1776.
By a resolution of the General Assembly of the 17th March
On the 24th March 1812, the legislature authorized the county commissioners to occupy the east and Avest AA'ings of the State House for the accommodation of the public offices of the city and county, and to convert the same into fire-proof buildings, or if found most convenient, to rebuild the same upon a'more extended plan; which latter was adopted; and a fire-proof and one other suitable portion of said building were appropriated exclusively to the safe-keeping of the records of the office of the prothonotary of this court, and for his use; but it was provided that the title in fee simple to the lot on which said offices may stand, be reserved to the Commonwealth.
By an Act of 13th March 1815, the legislature authorized the county commissioners to take charge of the State House, and to let the rooms, giving a preference of the upper part to Mr. Peale, but no lease to exceed one year; and repealed so much of the resolution of 1802 as made it the duty of Mr. Peale to take charge of the State House; and. after the sale to the city on the 23d March 1818, they directed the commissioners to give up possession of the loAver part to the city.
On the 11th March 1816, the legislature passed a very dis-gracious act, providing for the sale of the State House and State
The two lots reserved and excepted out of the State House Square, Avere the county court-house lot and the lot on the northeast corner, reserved for the use of the city, and the lot on the east side of the square, granted to the American Philosophical Society under the Act of the 28th March 1785; “ and the two public offices which, by the Act of March 24th 1812, were put into the possession of the commissioners of Philadelphia county, which said offices are thereby released from the claim of the state, and given and granted in fee simple, in lieu of the expense laid out in repairs on the State House yard, and the offices and ground on Avhich they stand, or on which they are alloAved by the said act to stand, are thereby granted and confirmed to the said city and county of Philadelphia for ever.”
By the Consolidation Act, the whole of this entire square, with all the buildings on it, Avith the exception of the lot of the American Philosophical Society, is vested in the city of Philadelphia, subject, of course, to the public use re-declared by the Act of 1816, as to all the ground lying south of the State House.
By an Act of 16th March 1847, the county commissioners and the Select and Common Councils, Avhose poAvers are now all merged in the consolidated city, were severally authorized to erect a new court-house and a new city hall on parts of the State House Square; but the authority thus given has never been exercised, and the Act of the 2d April 1860 Avas never carried into effect; a fortunate circumstance, in the present state of our finances.
It will be perceiAred. by this statement and their present occupation, that all the buildings belonging to the city on the State House Square are devoted entirely to public purposes — to the courts of justice, including the Supreme Court, Avho are expressly provided for in the Consolidation Act, and to all the public offices of the county and of the city into which they are practically merged, and by whose authority they are provided Avith a local habitation.
The state, bearing in mind the services rendered to science by this society, and at the same time determined that this lot should never be held by private owners, nor devoted to any but
On the 25th April 1857, the legislature gave their consent to the United States purchasing the lot and buildings in pursuance of the Act of 1842: the United States to hold the same for the purposes and business of courts of justice, and the offices and officers connected therewith. The vaults and cellars were allowed to be rented like those under the City Hall and under many of our churches, for the storage of goods and groceries; the rooms in the lower parts were often lawyers’ offices. At one time the Athenaeum was located there; and now, we believe, they are occupied solely by the United States; the issues and profits have always been applied to the furtherance of the scientific objects of the society. The number of scientific men is always small, in any community; their means are generally limited, and their pursuits are of a character not to enlist the sympathies or enthusiasm of the wealthier classes of society. It would seem impolitic and unwise, therefore, for the state that fostered it, or the city, which should be proud of it, to cut off their limited resources by taxation, even if it be legal, which was never dreamed of by anybody until 1853.
The taxes claimed are for city and state for 1853 to 1858, both inclusive, amounting, without interest or costs, to $1203.
All taxes on real estate, in the city and county of Philadelphia, are declared to be a lien on said real estate; the nature of which real estate is, to a certain extent, defined by the priority given to them over any recognisance, mortgage, judgment, debt, obligation, or responsibility which such real estate may become charged with or liable to. Now the eventual legal title to the society lot is in the Commonwealth, whilst the society have the use of it for what may be called a public purpose, the erection
It is clear, then, that the society could not charge .this lot by any recognisance, mortgage, judgment, debt, obligation, or responsibility, nor could they create any lien upon it; because it could not be sold by any form of execution, and this being the case, no taxes could be a lien upon it, and no form of proceeding to recover the same could create a lien upon this lot, because it could not be sold under any such judgment. It seems stronger in the ease of taxes levied under the authority of the very government that has expressly prohibited any sale of it, except in the cases specially pointed out, and by the character of its public uses as expressly declared. The uses for which it was given are public, and can neither be affected nor destroyed by the adverse action and process of a court of law. The court below were therefore right, and their judgment must be affirmed.
Judgment affirmed.