50 Pa. Super. 260 | Pa. Super. Ct. | 1912
Opinion by
The city filed this bill in equity alleging that the defendant corporation was unlawfully maintaining an awning of iron with a glass roof, attached to the front of its building and extending over the sidewalk on the south side of Chestnut street, immediately west of Thirteenth street, which awning the defendant had erected notwithstanding the refusal of the chief of the bureau of highways to issue a permit therefor and notice from that officer not to erect the same. The bill prayed for an injunction restraining the further maintenance of said awning and requiring the defendant to remove the same. The court below after a hearing decreed that a mandatory injunction issue requiring the defendant to remove the awning within thirty days, and from that decree the defendant appeals.
The highways belong to the commonwealth in trust for the great body of the people, and he who claims a peculiar privilege to invade them must establish his right under some statute, or valid municipal regulation, ordained in pursuance of statutory authority: Livingston v. Wolf, 136 Pa. 519; Com. v. Harris, 15 Phila. 10; Kopf v. Utter, 101 Pa. 27; Com. v. Kembel, 30 Pa. Superior Ct. 199. “The right of passage along or over a street has connected with it certain incidents which are essential to the proper enjoyment of it, such as light and air and view. If a highway should be covered over, for instance, by the owners of property fronting on either side of it, so as to shut out the light from above, its enjoyment would not only be greatly interfered with, but it might often be rendered dangerous and practically useless. ... It cannot be successfully maintained that owners of property fronting on a highway have any such right as this:” Reimer’s App., 100 Pa. 182. If an abutting owner has the right to cover one-fifth of the street, in the absence of any statute or valid municipal regulation authorizing him to do so, he might with equal propriety assert the right to cover the half of it. If the owner upon one side of the street has this right, the owner upon the opposite side would also possess it, and so they might roof in the entire street.
The burden was upon this defendant, there being admittedly no statutory warrant, to show a valid municipal regulation authorizing this structure. The only municipal ordinance referring to the subject is admitted to be that of March 22, 1900. If that ordinance was invalid,
The decree is affirmed.