64 Pa. Super. 469 | Pa. Super. Ct. | 1916
Opinion by
The action was scire facias sur municipal lien. The assignee of the city sought to recover from the defendant her proportionate share of the cost of paving the street on which her property abutted. The paving was done under a city ordinance enacted in 1913. No contest is raised as to the facts the street was paved, the assessment regularly laid, or that the property of the defendant was improved thereby to the extent of the assessment. The sole ground of defense was that the city had previously laid a first pavement on the street and paid for the improvement out of the general taxes and therefore the defendant was within the exception to the general rule. That the owner of property abutting on a city street may be lawfully assessed with his proportionate share of the cost of paving such street is undoubtedly the rule. But such liability exists only in the case of what is properly termed the “first- pavement.”
When a city, by the improvement of what was before but a rural or suburban road or highway, has unmistakably indicated its decision to convert such road into a regular city street, it must- thereafter resort to its general funds to pay the expense of keeping such street in repair. But it is to be kept in mind “the city has the exclusive right to determine, in the public interest when, how and with what material such conversion into a street shall take place,......If the purpose and intent be wanting, a mere surfacing of the road, however carefully or expensively done, will not be a paving”: Philadelphia v. Eddleman, 169 Pa. 452. This case and our own, Philadelphia v. Hafer, 38 Pa. Superior Ct. 382, have fully developed all of the legal principles that must control our judgment. What facts are established by the evidence?
In 1905 the city improved a strip sixteen (16) feet in width in the middle of Upsal street, which was a fifty (50) feet wide street, and paid the cost thereof out of its general funds without attempting to assess any portion thereon upon abutting property owners. If the work was done and paid for under the ordinance just cited, the intent of the city that such improvement was not to be considered a first pavement, withifi the meaning of the law, is clear. The able counsel for appellant rests his conclusion that this work was not done under the ordinance cited, and was in fact and in law a first pavement, upon two allégations; (a) the work actually done was more than the macadamizing or surfacing the street in that the foundation of the improved strip was what is known as “Telford work,” and upon this foundation the macadamized surface rested; (b) that the work was not paid for out of “Item 21 y2” but out of “Item 21%.” When we examine these two allegations in the light of the testimony offered by the defendant herself, they seem to furnish no warrant for the conclusion predicated upon them. Her witness, McCord, a division engineer in the Bureau of Highways, describes how what he calls a “Telford pavement” is constructed.^ When asked what was a macadam road, he replied,. “A macadam road is the same thing. There was originally a difference. A
These matters, having been thus disposed of, there remained nothing else upon which to predicate a conclusion that the work done in 1905 was done under any other authority than that contained in the ordinance of 1902. There was no other ordinance authorizing the work, no other provision of the money to pay for it. The learned trial judge affirmed the defendant’s third and fifth points. We quote the third point. “If you find that the laying of the ‘Telford’ constituted an original paving of Upsal street then, even though the municipal authorities may have paid for its laying, nevertheless the abutting property owners were thereby relieved of any liability to pay for a subsequent repaving, and your verdict must be for the defendant.” As we view it, this was certainly as favorable a direction for the defendant as she had any right to expect under the undisputed evidence. It is true the learned trial judge, in submitting the single question to the jury, expressed his own opinion there was bub little if any evidence to support'the conclusion urged on them by the defendant. This he had a right to do, as he still submitted the question to them. Speaking for myself, I should be inclined to hold that the trial judge would have been warranted in directing a verdict for the city on the ground there was no substantial evidence to warrant a finding that the work done in 1905
A careful examination of the entire record leads us to the conclusion the case was fairly tried and the judgment in favor of the city or its assignee should not be interfered with.
Judgment affirmed.