23 Pa. Super. 332 | Pa. Super. Ct. | 1903
Opinion by
The plaintiff with others, constituting a majority in number and interest of the owners of property abutting on the proposed improvement, petitioned the borough “ to grade, curb and pave that portion of Ross street, lying between the north line of the property of the Pennsylvania Railroad Company and the south line of Kittanning street in said borough, charging the cost, damages and expenses thereof to our several properties.” The ordinance passed pursuant to the petition provided that the grading, curbing and paving between the points above named, should be of the material thereafter to be determined upon; that the work should be done in accordance with the plans and specifications furnished by E. C. Hulbert, engineer, prepared for that purpose, adopted by the council and “ made a part of this ordinance;” and that the cost and expenses (no mention being made of the damages) of the grading, curbing and paving should be borne by the property owners (not simply the petitioners) on the street, “ and the several amounts shall be collectible, due and payable, from the property owners in accordance with the act of the general assembly in such case made and provided.” The proceeding which culminated in the issue tried in the court below had its inception in the petition of the borough, filed after the completion of the work, for the appointment of viewers “to ascertain the damages and
It is argued that the prayer of the petition is the selection of one of several schemes for providing for the damages and in terms excludes all but that one. Conceding this to be so, what was the scheme contemplated ? The borough had the general power to make the improvement at its own expense (Commonwealth v. George, 148 Pa. 463), or it might ordain that a fund should be raised for the purpose by assessment upon the abutting properties of the cost, damages and expenses according to benefits as provided in the act of 1891. It is doubtful whether the petitioners intended more than to express their willingness to have the latter method adopted. Taking this view, the learned judge below interpreted the language to mean “that each property’s share of the expense, if any, should be ascertained in the manner provided by law, and when so fixed, be charged to the property,” and held that there was “ nothing in the petition as a whole to indicate, either by express terms or by necessary implication, an intent upon the part of the signers to release their right to damages.” If, on the other hand, we give the language of the petition a literal interpretation, the proposition was that the entire cost of the improvement, including the damages to properties of owners who were not petitioners, should be charged against the properties of the petitioners. Notwithstanding the generality of the language we hesitate to believe that such was the meaning of the petitioners. But suppose it was, it was optional with the borough to accept the offer, or, disregarding this part of the petition, to provide for the ascertainment and assessment and collection of the cost, damages and benefits in the statutory mode; and it is quite clear from the language of the ordinance, that, either the council interpreted the petition substantially as stated by the court below, or, if it interpreted it literally, chose to provide
There is still another view of the case that seems to us conclusive, even though the interpretation of the petition and the ordinance contended for by the appellant’s counsel be accepted. A lot owner who joins in a request to the borough authorities to grade a street is not estopped thereby from claiming compensation for an injury to his property by the grading. “ The consent which relieves a borough from its constitutional obligation to the owner for an injury to his property, means something more than nonresistance. It should be given to the municipality by the party interested, and it should embrace, in express terms, or by necessary implication, a release of the right to damages: ” Jones v. Bangor Borough, 144 Pa. 638. The burden of proving not only the release or facts from which a release is necessarily to be implied, but also that the damages, to which the lot owner would otherwise be entitled, are within it, rests upon the borough. Failure of proof in the latter particular is as fatal to the defense as in the former. Counsel for appellant insist that the ordinance was worded in the way it was, “ because the borough was accepting a contract not imposing a duty.” Looking at the case from this standpoint, the contract was complete when the ordinance was approved. The rights and liabilities of the parties with respect to claims for damages were then fixed; that is to say, if the contract thus formed contemplated only the ordinary preparation of the surface to receive the pavement, it was not within the power of the borough’s agents employed to supervise and do the work to enlarge the implied release of damages so as to- include damages from a substantial change of grade not authorized by the ordinance. But it appears that in making the improvement the borough changed the grade of the street, cutting it down in front of the plaintiff’s property to the extent of several feet, whereby access thereto was impaired. Whether this change of grade was authorized by the ordinance does not affirmatively appear in the evidence, the plans and specifications referred to in the ordinance not having been produced at the trial, and not being before us. If, as the appellant’s counsel
Judgment affirmed.