York City v. Stauffer
York City v. Stauffer
Opinion of the Court
Opinion by
The opinion of the learned judge of the court below, in disposing of the motion of the appellant for judgment non obstante veredicto, which will appear in the report of this case, so satisfactorily sustains the conclusion which he reached that extended discussion of the question presented by this appeal is not necessary. The improvement for which the city'filed this claim against the property of the defendant involved the paving of only one square of a street. The middle of the street was occupied by a double-track street railway and the petition, the ordinance and the contract for the paving required that the part of the street between the outer tracks of the railway should be paved by the street railway company; thus leaving only a strip, between the railway tracks and the curb, on each side of the street, to be improved by the city and the cost assessed upon abutting property. The petition, which this defendant signed, authorized the city to do the work contemplated and assess the cost thereof upon abutting property “according to the foot-front rule,” in so far as the signers of the petition were competent to confer that authority. The city by ordinance duly passed authorized the pavement of South George street from King street to Princess street, one square in length, as prayed for in the petition, said ordinance providing that the cost of the improvement should be assessed by the city engineer “at the completion of the improvement by apportioning the
The city having discovered, after the contract was let but before the work had proceeded far, that certain property owners who had not signed the petition had signified their intention to refuse to pay any part of the cost of the paving, upon the ground that it was a repaving, not properly assessable against abutting property, directed the contractor not to pave in front of the properties whose owners had not signed the petition. The contractor acquiesced in this arrangement, and the result was that the street was paved in spots, and not in the manner contemplated by the petition of the property owners and authorized by the ordinance under which the work was done. The part of the street immediately in front of the property of this defendant was paved, but no work whatever was done between the street car track and the curb on the other side of the street, directly opposite the property of the defendant. The city did no paving whatever, on either side of the street, for a distance of over fifty feet, near the center of the square, and within seventy-five feet of defendant’s property. Let it be conceded that, because the defendant signed the petition for the improvement, he must be held estopped to assert that the street had formerly been paved and that his property was not liable for the cost of the repaving. This defendant is not seeking to escape liability upon the ground that this was a re
The judgment is affirmed.
Case-law data current through December 31, 2025. Source: CourtListener bulk data.