238 Pa. 504 | Pa. | 1913
Opinion by
The purpose of appellant’s bill is to restrain the ap
Under the provisions of an act of assembly approved April 11, 1866, P. L. 592, the Borough of Lawrenceville, through its regulator, prepared, during the year 1866 and in the early part of 1867, a plan of the streets and alleys of the Second ward of the borough. This plan was submitted to and adopted by the borough council at a meeting held March 22, 1867. Lothrop street (now Forty-ninth street) and Hulburt alley (formerly Hemlock alley) are shown on the plan so adopted. The second section of the Act of April 11, 1866, provided as follows: “The said burgess and town council shall have authority to lay down and adopt a general plan of said borough, in sections, or otherwise, embracing all the streets and alleys, now existing in said borough, and such other streets and alleys as the future convenience of the citizens of said borough shall require, with the width of said streets and alleys marked thereon, in feet and inches, and with such reference to known landmarks as shall be necessary to identify the location of the said streets and alleys; the said plan, when made, shall be deposited in the office of the burgess of said borough, for public examination and inspection, of which notice shall be given, by publication, in two newspapers in the City of Pittsburgh, one English and the other German, during at least two weeks; the ground embraced within the lines of said streets and alleys shall be reserved by the owner, or owners thereof, subject to be opened as public highways, whenever the public exigencies shall require it; and all plans of lots, which shall be hereafter laid out, shall be arranged so as to correspond with the general plan of said borough.” The appellee is the owner of all the property on each side of Forty-ninth street, between Harrison street and
The contention of the appellant is that Miller’s sale of lots Nos. 25 and 28 to Smith and Harrison, by deeds dated March 21, 1867, and acknowledged five days later, was a dedication by him of the streets and alleys on his plan to the use not only of his said two vendees, but to all subsequent purchasers of lots on the plan, and the City of Pittsburgh cannot, therefore, vacate any of the said streets or alleys without the consent of all the owners of lots on the plan. If the situation were what appellant seems to conceive it to be, many authorities would sustain her, for if anything is to be regarded as settled, it is that, when one who is the owner of a tract of land in a municipality cuts it up into lots and sells them as laid out on a plan which he has adopted, showing streets and alleys thereon, there is not only an implied covenant by him to the owner of each lot that the streets and alleys, as they appear upon his plan, shall
While the deeds from Miller to Smith and Harris are dated March 21, 1867, — the day before the regulator’s plan was approved by the borough council — they were not acknowledged by Miller until March 26 — four days after the borough plan had been adopted — and the presumption, therefore, is that they were not delivered until March 26,1867. The unavoidable inferences under the undisputed facts are that Miller’s plan was prepared to conform to the regulator’s plan, as he was required to make it conform by the Act of 1866, and that no sale of lots was consummated by him until after the borough had adopted its plan. If, in adopting that plan, it appropriated his land for streets to be subsequently opened, the municipality would become liable to him for damages when they were opened, unless his claim for the same was released: In re Opening of Brooklyn Street, 118 Pa. 640; but, if, as the appellant contends, Miller himself had dedicated the streets and alleys to public use, he could have no such claim. The question before the court in the Brooklyn Street case was, “Does one who, in making a deed of his land, refers as a boundary to a street laid out but not opened, thereby dedicate so much of his land as lies within the street limits to the public, and thus deprive himself of a right to compensation when his land is actually taken?” In holding that he was entitled to compensation when his land was actually taken by the opening of the street, we said: “If the question were one between a grantor and grantee, and involved a right of way over the street upon which the land conveyed bordered, of course the grantor must make good his covenant that there was a street corresponding with the one described in the deed. But that is the law, not upon the theory of a dedication to public use, but upon the implied contract between the parties. As between them, every consideration required that if the ground conveyed is described as bordering upon a
As the appellant has manifestly misconceived the real situation, the many authorities cited by her learned counsel have no application to the existing state of facts. As an illustration, it may not be inappropriate to refer to Dobson v. Hohenadel, 148. Pa. 367, — the case upon which main reliance is placed as an authority calling for a reversal of the decree. The sole question before the court in that case was as to the right of the Dobsons, grantors of Hohenadel, to assert, as against him, title to the bed of a street which they had plotted, and to the centre of which, along his lots, they had, by their deed to him, conveyed all their interest, in the absence of an express reservation of it. When the City of Philadelphia surrendered its right to take the plotted site for a street, nothing reverted to the Dobsons, and that was all the case decided, for there was nothing else before the court. Such is not the question here. To sum up the situation before us, the streets appearing on the Miller plan were highways laid out by the Borough of Lawrenceville; they were not thoroughfares created by Miller for the benefit of the owners of the lots on his plan, and the City of Pittsburgh, the successor of the Borough of Lawrenceville, was, therefore, fully authorized to vacate the streets and alleys without violating any implied covenant by Miller to his grantees of a right to use them forever. No distinct private right, different from the rights of the public generally, was conferred by Miller upon any one of the lot owners, and the appeal from the decree dismissing plaintiff’s bill is, therefore, dismissed with costs.