Lead Opinion
Opinion by
The City of Erie appeals from an order of the court below sustaining exceptions to the report of a jury of view, and deciding that the city, and not the abutting properties, was liable for the cost of certain paving work done on Kahkwa Boulevard. The decision is right.
Originally the boulevard was part of a tract of land belonging to a development company, and had been graded, curbed and paved in a substantial and suitable manner at the expense of the abutting owners. After the tract became part of the city, the development company conveyed to the city the bed of the streets, including the boulevard, by a deed which stated that “This conveyance is made to the [city] for the purpose of having said streets accepted, dedicated and used as public streets of the City of Erie.” The deed was accepted by the city under the authority of a municipal ordinance.
For more than six years after the boulevard became a public street of the city, no work was done upon the pavement, despite unusually heavy traffic over it, though the city officials knew repairs were needed, and were told how they should be made. The result was that it fell into a serious state of disrepair. Subsequently the city ordered the work done which resulted in the present dis *137 pute. As testified to by the city’s chief paving inspector, it consisted of taking the “loose material out of the base course,” “levelling up with bituminous concrete the portion of the street that had fallen into decay, and covering it with an asphalt top.” It is evident from this brief statement, and the court below, from all the evidence, found as a fact, that what the city did was not to construct a new and original pavement, but to repair one that, through her neglect, had “fallen into decay.” There was ample evidence to sustain this finding. But, says the city, “repair implies the existence of the thing repaired.” Of course it does, but here the existing thing that was repaired was the pavement laid by the developing company on a highway later accepted by the city as a public street, Avith the resultant duty to keep it in reasonable repair, as in the case of all public streets, and for a failure of which duty the city might become liable in damages to those injured by reason of such neglect.
Who then was liable for the repair? Appellant admits, compelled thereto by Hammett v. Phila.,
The order of the court below is affirmed at appellant’s cost.
Dissenting Opinion
Dissenting Opinion by
The pavement laid by the realty company was not a municipal pavement. This court has never deviated from the proposition expressed in many cases that “the controlling consideration [in determining whether a pavement is a municipal pavement] is affirmative municipal intention”: Phila. v. Muller, 293 Pa.
360;
Phila. v. Eddleman,
The court’s finding of no municipal adoption of the pavement should logically have led to the sustaining of the exceptions. But the court departed from the path of logic and said: “We believe that what the city did
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was not to construct a new pavement but to repair the old, and a city cannot assess property for the cost of repairs”: Williamsport v. Beck,
The work done by the city on the Kahkwa Boulevard Avas not a repair job either in law or in fact. In law, that pavement as a municipal pavement never existed. “Repair implies the existing of the thing repaired”: Gulf City Street Railway and Real Estate Co. v. Galveston,
In view of the opinion of this court in this case I know of nothing to prevent other real estate companies or private individuals from laying some kind of alleged pavement in front of their properties, without regard to the future grade of the street or to the needs and plans of the municipality, and then, after the municipality decides to pave that street in a uniform and adequate manner, contending successfully that the city could not assess the benefits of that pavement upon the abutting property owners. There is not a particle of evidence in this case to show that the City of Erie ever adopted the pavement laid down by the realty company. The city having never adopted as its own the paving product of the private corporation, it was not under the slightest obligation to give it legal recognition. It had an undoubted right to proceed as it did in 1927 to pave the streets according to its own plans and specifications and in a manner adequate to its traffic needs, and had the right to assess the benefits of the same upon the abutting property owners. A realty company cannot exercise municipal functions. The ordaining and constructing of pavements is a governmental function of a city. The City of Erie never abdicated any of its functions to the Kahkwa Park Realty Company. I would frustrate this (now apparently successful) attempted usurpation of *141 municipal functions by this company and deny to it the power to take away from the City of Erie the latter’s right to control the paving of its own streets.
