17 Pa. Super. 293 | Pa. Super. Ct. | 1901
Opinion by
There was, under the evidence, but one question in dispute at the trial of this case in the court below. Was the building operation out of which this litigation arose, the construction of a new building; or an addition to arid repair and alteration of an old one ? The facts as to the extent of the addition, and the nature of the. alteration and repair of the old structure were not disputed. The old dwelling house had consisted of a two-story frame building, twenty by thirty-six feet in size, having a small kitchen at the rear and a porch in front. The small one-story kitchen was torn down and there was erected on its site a two-story frame addition, eighteen by twenty-three feet in size, having upon the ground floor a kitchen and pantry and on the second floor a bed room and bath room, connected with the main building and designed to be used as a part of the dwelling. The porch in front was removed and a larger one constructed in its place. In the main building these changes were made: the rafters were spliced and the crest of the roof raised so as to give it a greater pitch, and dormer-windows were
The judgment is reversed.