Philadelphia v. Steward
Philadelphia v. Steward
Opinion of the Court
Opinion by
The proceedings brought up for review upon this appeal were as-follows : April 13,1893, municipal claim filed; April 9, 1898, affidavit of service of notice filed and scire facias issued, which was returned, made known to the registered owner and nihil habet as to the owner or reputed owner named in the claim; May 18, 1898, affidavit of defense filed by the former; February 9, 1903, scire facias to revive claim, etc., returned nihil habet; November 24, 1903, rule to show cause why the scire facias should not be quashed and the claim struck off; December 9, 1903, rule absolute, from which order this appeal was taken.
The lien of this claim was gone at the end of the period of five years from the date of issuing the first scire facias, unless the act of July 26, 1897, applies to the case: Philadelphia v. Sciple, ante, p. 64. We also held in the case cited that, in view of the legislation upon the same general subject, at the same session of the legislature, and of the omission of an express repeal of prior general or local laws, the act is to be strictly construed as applying only to the particular class of claims specifically described therein. As to all kinds of municipal claims not clearly embraced within its provisions the presumption is that the legislature intended to leave in force the former law which required that the scire facias be duly prosecuted to judgment as in the ease of mechanics’ and judgment liens. The claims specifically mentioned in the act are those which ’are based on the final assessments, made upon any property or properties to pay the costs, expenses or damages, or either of them, of any municipal improvements, whether such assessment shall have been made by the foot-front rule or according to benefits. In determining whether the claim in question belongs to that class our examination upon this appeal must be confined to the record, and, of course, the affidavit of defense cannot be considered. The claim sets forth that it is “ for work done and material furnished by the said city, and charged against the property, under authority of an ordinance thereof, in repairing defective sidewalk, and duly assessed and charged as follows.” Here follows an itemized statement of charges consisting of the cost of a certain number of feet of terra cotta pipe at certain prices per lineal foot; the price of a horizontal trap ; “permit, bureau surveys, $4.00 ; ” “ plan, board of health, $1.00; ” and a
• The urder is affirmed.
Reference
- Cited By
- 5 cases
- Status
- Published
- Syllabus
- Municipal liens — Scire facias — Defective sidewalk — Sewer—Act of July 26, 1897, P. L. 420. The Act of July 26, 1897, P. L. 420, is to be strictly construed as applying only to the particular class of claims specifically described therein. As to all kinds of municipal claims not clearly embraced within its provisions the presumption is that the legislature intended to leave in force the former law which required that the scire facias be duly prosecuted to judgment as in the case of mechanics’ and judgment liens. A municipal lien for the cost of repairing a defective sidewalk is not within the provisions of the act of July 26, 1897. . While a municipal claim need not set out the provisions of the ordinance or ordinances under which the work was done, yet the lien, being of purely statutory creation, the claim must aver upon its face all the facts necessary to sustain its validity, and unless it does so, it may be summarily stricken off on motion. To state a claim so ambiguously as to leave it in doubt whether it is for repairing a defective sidewalk, or for making a sewer connection, is not a compliance with the true intent and spirit of the rule.