54 Pa. Super. 242 | Pa. Super. Ct. | 1913
Opinion by
The city having under the provisions of a single ordinance constructed a main sewer in West liberty avenue, with branch sewers on Brookline boulevard, Willison avenue, Brew avenue, Boyer avenue, Penn alley, Woodward avenue, and Templeton avenue, after the completion of the work petitioned the court below for the appointment of viewers to ascertain the costs, damages and expenses and assess the benefits by reason of said improvement, subject to the provisions of the Act of May 16, 1891, P. L. 75, and the supplements and amendments thereof. The viewers were appointed and the report which they subsequently filed discloses that they proceeded in strict compliance with the provisions of the statutes. The report found that no property had ■been damaged by the execution of the work and that the cost and expenses of the several sewers had been $25,825.17 of which amount $1,971.32 was assessed against the city, "being the difference between the total amount of cost and expenses of said improvement and the total amount of special or peculiar benefits.” The appellants, being the owners of several lots of ground which were assessed for benefits by the report, filed exceptions, which after argument the court below dismissed, and confirmed the report of viewers.
The properties owned by the appellants consisted of a number of separate and distinct lots, all in one general plan, some of which lots fronted upon the main sewer on West liberty avenue and others abutted upon the branch sewers laid in the streets of the plan. The exceptions to the report of viewers, the dismissal'of which is made the subject of the several specifications.of error, raised only a question of fact, did the aggregate of the assessment of
The report in the present case certainly does not indicate that the city has been permitted to make a profit out of this improvement, for the viewers have assessed almost $2,000 of the actual cost of the sewer system against the city. This was probably due to the fact that there was a fifteen-inch sewer on West Liberty avenue, and ten-inch sewers on Brookline boulevard and Boyer avenue, the increased size of these sewers being due to the fact that the branch eight-inch sewers upon which some of the lots owned by appellants abutted had to have an outlet through these larger sewers, and the viewers may have considered it inequitable to assess the properties upon the streets where the larger sewers were located for more than the amount of the cost of a sewer sufficient to give the property on that street all the benefit it derived from the main sewer. A property owner cannot be assessed with the cost of a fifteen-inch main sewer where it appears that a ten-inch local sewer would have been sufficient to give the property all the benefit it derives from the main sewer: Park Avenue Sewers, Appeal of Parker, 169 Pa. 433. We cannot, therefore, assume that the viewers made a mistake when they refused to assess the property on West Liberty avenue at a higher rate than they assessed the property which abutted on the eight-inch branch sewers. The allegation of the appellants that the assessment of benefits against properties fronting on each side of Willison avenue is shown by
The order is affirmed, and the appeal dismissed at costs of the appellants.