280 Pa. 417 | Pa. | 1924
Opinion by
In anticipation of, and during the war with Germany and her allies, Congress, by various statutes, authorized the President to secure the performance of a number of needed war activities, through the usual executive channels, or, in his discretion, 'to organize corporations for the purpose. Included in this list were the Acts of May 16,1918 (40 Stat. at L. 550), and June 4,1918 (40 Stat. at L. 594) ; the former empowered him, whenever it became necessary to provide proper housing for government employees engaged in war work, to obtain real estate, by gift, lease, purchase, or condemnation, and to erect buildings thereon; the latter authorized him to
Under the authority of the statute last cited, and to the end designated, the President directed that a charter be obtained in this Commonwealth. This was the genesis of defendant. The application for the charter set forth that the purpose of incorporation was the “purchasing, holding, leasing, mortgaging and selling real estate, improving the same, and erecting the necessary buildings and structures thereon,” but was silent as to the Government’s connection with the enterprise. In pursuance of its real purpose, however, defendant purchased the property described in the municipal claim filed in this case, took title in its own name, and erected buildings thereon for the housing of the particular character of government employees to which reference has been made.
Nearly two years after the conclusion of the war, the street upon which the property fronted was duly paved, and the single question raised on this record is whether or not, under the facts stated and upon a proper construction of the relevant statutes, the property is liable to pay its proportionate share of the cost of the paving. The court of common pleas answered this question affirmatively, and entered judgment for plaintiff, for want of a sufficient affidavit of defense to the scire facias issued on the municipal claim filed to recover defendant’s share of the cost; the Superior Court answered it likewise and affirmed the judgment; we now resolve it in the same way.
Apparently driven thereto by the opinions in Haines v. Lone Star Shipbuilding Co., 268 Pa. 92, and Sloan Shipyards Corporation v. United States Shipping Board Emergency Fleet Corporation, 258 U. S. 549, appellant concedes that it can be sued upon its contracts and for Its torts; that this particular property, and all others owned by it, can be sold upon any judgment recovered in either kind of action, and that the Government’s in
When it purchased the property, defendant knew it could not contract for paving the street, which could be done only by virtue of a contract made by the city, acting in the interest of each property owner and of the public generally, each property (but not any owner personally) being liable for the special benefits thereby accruing to it, not exceeding, however, its pro rata share of the cost of the improvement. Appellant does not challenge the fact that the property was enhanced in value to the full extent of the present claim, and hence its contention necessarily is that, although the Government has, by the course pursued, waived much of the immunity it might otherwise have had as to this property, which would have been liable for its full share of the cost of the paving, if defendant itself had had the work done, nevertheless, although benefited to the full amount claimed, it is not liable solely because the work was contracted for in the only legal way, i. e., by a municipal contract covering the entire improvement. It is of course true that this may result from the language of the statutes, but its improbability suggests that they be carefully scanned in order to determine whether or not they so provide.
An examination of them shows, however, that the Government does not expressly waive its immunity in any respect. The conclusion that this was intended, is drawn from the fact that no other reason appears for the creation of a corporation to transact the particular business. In Haines v. Lone Star Shipbuilding Co., supra, we said (pages 99, 100) that “when the Government wishes to embark in industrial enterprises......it places its money and its sovereign position in the same plane as any other stockholder buying stock in the same corporation, ......and [citing from the opinion in Gould Coup
In a vain attempt to antagonize this conclusion, largely by the citation of prior cases there, as here, called to the court’s attention, appellant contends that the principles stated should be applied only to the extent it has conceded them to be applicable, namely, to claims resulting from its voluntary acts, whether contractual or tortious, and not to an alleged liability for taxes, which latter designation, it asserts, includes special assessments. It is true that general taxation and these local assessments have their basis in the taxing power, but there the similarity ends. Payment of the former results in no return to the treasury; while, in nearly every instance, all that is expended for the latter, and, not infrequently, much more, comes back when the property is sold. The former had no basis in contract and is limited only by the necessities of the government; the latter is quasi-contractual and is expressly limited to the benefits accruing to the property affected. These distinctions are clearly pointed out in Illinois Central Railroad Co. v. City of Decatur, 147 U. S. 190, and, as shown thereby, “have been recognized and stated by the courts of almost every state in the Union.”
In the instant case the street was paved nearly two years after the need had passed for which defendant was organized as a governmental agency. The property is not now being held for its original purpose, but only that it may be sold, as directed by the Act of May 16, 1918, supra, “as soon after the conclusion of the war as
Evidently Congress passed that statute because it recognized the injustice of compelling municipalities either to defer making needed local improvements until years after the war had ceased, and until the properties, purchased by the Government for temporary uses, had been sold, or else to pay from their own treasuries the cost of making such improvements, which, although greatly enhancing the value of the properties, were possibly of such a character that no recourse over could be had. It therefore provided by the act that, after the war was over, defendant, and others in like situation, should not only care for and sell the properties formerly used for housing purposes, but should “conclude, execute, settle and adjust all contracts or other obligations made, or incurred during the war, or in carrying out the provisions of this act, including contracts or other obligations made or incurred with municipalities or other political subdivisions for the furnishing of service and facilities to the property of such corporations, and for the construction of public utilities by such municipalities or other public subdivisions in pursuance of the terms of said contracts or other obligations.” It will be noticed at once that this statute applies to obligations
To avoid misapprehension, it should be said also that our affirmance of the judgment does not determine the right to maintain execution on it, while the Government’s interest in the property continues; under our practice this will be decided by the court below, subject to an appeal, when, if ever, plaintiff issues an execution and defendant moves to set it aside.
The judgment of the Superior Court is affirmed.