Court Opinion

ID: 6275700
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2022-02-18 15:58:55.61545+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T09:00:03.190953
License: Public Domain

Opinion by
Henderson, J.,
The borough of Phoenixville is subject to the general borough *8Act of- April 3, 1851, P. L. 320. That statute, among other things, gives a borough power “ to require and direct the grading, curbing, paving and guttering” of streets by the owners of the abutting property in accordance with the general regulation instructions prescribed. The second section of an ordinance adopted June 17,1858, enacted “ That on all streets ordered to be curbed and paved, the sidewalks fronting all improved property shall be paved to the full width thereof,” etc. An ordinance adopted July 22,1874, requires that the owner or owners of any lot fronting on any of the streets, lanes, alleys or avenues in said borough shall furnish the necessary materials and pave the gutter or gutters along the said streets, avenues, lanes and alleys in front of' his, her or their lots within thirty days after notice given by the council of the borough requiring said work to be done. The second section of the ordinance provides that the depth of the .gutter from the “ top of curbstone ” shall not be less than seven inches unless otherwise ordered by the town council. A supplement to this ordinance, adopted August 2, 187 9, provides in the first section that gutters shall be paved with good flat stone or hard brick on edge, and in the second section that the gutters shall not be less thau’seven inches deep “ at the curb ” and three inches on the outside unless otherwise ordered by the town council, nor of a less width than eighteen inches. By an ordinance approved August 2, 1893, the width of Bridge street was fixed at thirty feet “ between curb lines,” and the sidewalks at ten feet on each side of the street. On June 1, 1904, a resolution was passed by the borough council instructing the street committee to notify the defendant, among others, to curb and gutter his sidewalk on Bridge street, and notice was given to him to comply with that resolution. The borough performed the work after the defendant neglected so to do, and this action was brought to enforce a lien therefor. The defendant contended at the trial that the borough had no ordinance requiring curbing; that the town council had no power to compel him by resolution to curb, and that the lien was consequently entered without warrant of law. After a verdict for the plaintiff judgment was entered for the defendant non obstante veredicto, the learned judge being of tbe opinion that the borough had no ordinance or legislative enactmént requiring the curbing of its streets by abutting lot *9owners. This conclusion does not take into consideration the fact that a curb may be a necessary or usual part of a sidewalk or gutter. A borough ordinance required that the gutters along the streets be paved in the manner therein prescribed. What constitutes the pavement of a gutter is a question of fact, and evidence was offered at the trial to show that the usual and customary way of paving a gutter in this borough was with a curb and paving, and that the curb was a proper and fit part of such paving. Among the regulations of the ordinance of July 22, 1874, is the requirement that the depth of the gutter shall not be less than seven inches- from the top of the curbstone. There is both direct evidence as to the use of the curb as a part of the gutter pavement and a clear implication in the ordinance that a curbstone is to be used in connection with such paving. Moreover, it is a matter of common knowledge that curb stones are generally used in paving streets and sidewalks, and that if not absolutely necessary they are convenient and desirable in connection therewith. It is not for the court to say as a matter of law that the curb is not a part of the gutter pavement. Whether it is so is a question for a jury, and the only evidence offered on that subject at the trial was to the effect that the curb was a part of the pavement. It was held in Schenley v. Com., 86 Pa. 29, that the power to pave included the power .to furnish and do all that is necessary, usual or'fit for paving, and that whether a curbstone was usually included in paving was a question of fact. We are of the opinion that both under the ordinances above referred to and the uncontradicted evidence presented at the trial the defendant is liable for the cost of the curbing.
The judgment is, therefore, reversed,' and judgment is now entered on the verdict in favor of the plaintiff.