218 Pa. 126 | Pa. | 1907
Opinion by
Since nothing appears in the evidence to the contrary, we must assume that the action of the borough council in accepting the bid for lighting the public streets, awarding the contract for the same, and directing its execution, was preceded and based upon an ordinance regularly adopted establishing a permanent system of public lighting. The bill contains no averment that such ordinance had not been adopted; nor is there any admission in the answer, even impliedly, of an omission in this regard, except that the defense set up is reliance upon the regularity and sufficiency of the resolutions attacked. Judicial action should rest on facts definitely ascertained. The learned judge in dismissing the bill in the court below said: “ Even if objection is made that the resolution accepting the bid was invalid because there was no ordinance authorizing the contract, the burden is upon the person making the objection to prove the nonexistence of the ordinance.” The answer made by appellants to this, as we find it in their brief of argument, is: “ This we consider to be good law, but not applicable to this case, in which there was no allegation that the contract was invalid, because there was no ordinance authorizing its
The appeal is dismissed.