Opinion by
Rice, P. J.,Allusion is made in the defendant’s printed argument to averments contained in the affidavit of defense. But in the absence of a rule of court providing otherwise, the affidavit had served its purpose in preventing judgment by default; it could not have been offered by the defendant on the trial as *359evidence of the facts therein alleged; and, a fortiori, cannot be considered on this appeal, it not having been offered in evidence by either party.
The action was brought under a borough ordinance requiring inspection by the police department of the mains and. pipes within the borough of all artificial and natural gas companies, water companies and other companies, and imposing an annual license fee of $30.00 for each mile of pipes or mains.
It is asked, can the borough impose a license tax on pipes and mains located on private property, over which the borough has no control, although within the limits of the borough? As no claim was made or recovery had for pipes or mains laid on private property, this question does not legitimately arise on this appeal. Granting that the ordinance may be construed as applying to such pipes and mains, as well as to those laid in the public streets and alleys of the borough — which is doubtful — and that to that extent it exceeds the lawful powers of the borough, it does not follow that the ordinance is wholly void, but only that the enforcement of it must be restricted to the pipes and mains concerning which the borough council had power to legislate : Kittanning v. Western Union Telegraph Co., ante p. 346.
The power of a borough governed by the general borough law, to provide by ordinance for police supervision and inspection -by its officers and servants of pipes laid and maintained under its streets by incorporated gas companies, and, as part of and incidental to such provision, to ordain the payment by such companies of a reasonable annual license fee or tax, is derived from the same source, and is sustained and governed by the same general principles, as its power to enact similar ordinances relative to the police supervision and inspection of poles and wires of telegraph, telephone and electric light companies, which have been sustained in numerous cases. The fact that the latter are maintained upon the surface of the streets and the former are laid underneath the surface does not prevent the application of these principles. Moreover, the use of the streets by gas companies is not confined to the maintenance of pipes beneath the surface, but includes the breaking of the surface to lay the pipes, to make house connections and repairs, and to inspect the line. But we are not disposed to rest *360the decision upon that ground alone. The right of the public in a city or borough street is by no means confined to the surface of the way, and this all who set apart land for a street are conclusively presumed to know: Elliott on Roads (2ded.),see.l7. To say that the police power of a city or borough over streets does not extend beneath the surface would be contrary to sound principle, and be justified by no decision to which our attention has been called. Indeed, it would seem to be in plain conflict with the principles enunciated in McDevitt v. People’s Nat. Gas Co., 160 Pa. 367, and kindred cases. Except as restricted by the act under which such companies derive their powers, the police power of a borough or city extends to such occupancy and use of the streets, whether upon or beneath the surface, as in its nature requires or justifies supervision at the hands of the municipality in order to safeguard the public in their rightful use of the same streets. “ The right of a private corporation to break up ” — and, we add, to occupy or use — “ the public highways of a municipality in the exercise of a franchise conferred upon them by an act of assembly is necessarily subject to the reasonable municipal regulations of the district, enacted for the common good of all its inhabitants, unless specially excluded by the act conferring the right: ” Commissioners, etc., of Northern Liberties v. Northern Liberties Gas Co., 12 Pa. 318; Frankford & Phila. Pass. Ry. Co. v. Phila., 58 Pa. 119; Phila. Steam Supply Co. v. Phila., 15 W. N. C. 57; Lansdowne Boro. v. Springfield Water Co., 16 Pa. Superior Ct. 490. In the last cited case we said: “ A company that is required to obtain municipal consent, and after obtaining it has entered upon the streets, is in precisely the same situation so far as its being subject to police regulation is concerned as a company that is not required to obtain such consent. The municipality has no greater authority to abridge or interfere with the franchises granted by the legislature in the one case than in the other. According to the doctrine of the above cited cases and many others that might be cited, its power to make reasonable police regulations is independent of, and not merely incidental to, the power to grant or withhold consent to the use of the streets by the corporation.” It is true that the twelfth section of the Act of May 29, 1885, P. L. 29, prescribes a mode of determining certain disputes that may arise between the municipality and *361the gas company, but this section cannot fairly be construed as taking away the power of the municipality to supervise and inspect the line for the purpose of ascertaining whether it is maintained in a safe condition. To what extent it may be regarded as restrictive of the police power of boroughs in other respects need not be considered in this case. As has been said concerning telegraph companies engaged in the business of interstate commerce, so it may be said here, if a corporation “ so carries on its business as to justify, at the hands of any municipality, a police supervision of the property and instrumentalities used therein, the municipality is not bound to furnish such supervision for nothing, and may, in addition to ordinary property taxation, subject the corporation to a charge for the expense of the supervision : ” Atlantic & Pacific Telegraph Co. v. Philadelphia, 190 U. S. 160 (23 Sup. Ct. Repr. 817).
The form in which the charge is, imposed or the name by which it is designated does not conclusively determine the character of the charge: Braddock v. Allegheny Co. Telephone Co., 25 Pa. Superior Ct. 544. If it is in reality an annual tax, under the guise of a police regulation, and is imposed for revenue only, the municipality must show some express legislative authority to impose it. We are not bound to uphold an ordinance adopted ostensibly as a police measure but used as a mere subterfuge for the purpose of raising revenue. Courts will not sustain municipalities in such abuse of their powers, if it be shown. But if the purpose of the ordinance is police regulation, and it tends to accomplish the object sought, then, under the power to regulate, the ordinance may be sustained, although the municipal charter does not, in so many words, confer authority to license. “ Certainly, if a municipal regulation is adopted, which would be lawful if intended for one purpose, and unlawful if for another, the presumption is that the purpose was lawful, unless the contrary clearly appears : ” per Shakswood, J., in Johnson v. Philadelphia, 60 Pa. 445; Lansdowne Boro. v. Springfield Water Co., 16 Pa. Superior Ct. 490. This presumption was not rebutted by any testimony offered by the defendant, but, rather, was strengthened by the testimony introduced by the plaintiff as to the actual supervision and inspection given by its police officers under and pursuant to the ordinance.
*362The most difficult question in the case is as to the amount of the charge. We have held in Kittanning Borough v. Western Union Telegraph Co., ante, p. 346, that in an action to recover such a charge as this the borough is not required to show the cost of such supervision in the presentation of its case in chief. Presumably, borough officers will act in good faith, and exercise their best judgment and have regard only to the purpose for which it may lawfully be exacted, in fixing the amount; for that is their duty. But their power is not absolute, nor their action irreviewable by the courts. This is plain enough; the difficulty is in laying down a rule whereby the reasonableness of the amount can be determined in any case that may arise. Necessarily any rule that may be adopted must leave some latitude for the exercise of the discretion of the borough officers. Unless this has been exceeded; unless the court is able to say from the facts of which it may take judicial cognizance, or from the undisputed or admitted facts, or if there be a conflict of evidence, then from the duly ascertained facts, that the ordinance is a revenue measure under the guise of a police regulation, or that the license fee is grossly in excess of what was necessary to cover the reasonably to be anticipated expense of proper police supervision, it is not justified in interfering. Even if it be conceded that where there is a conflict of evidence, the controverted facts are to be determined by the jury, still, the burden of proof being on the defendant, the court cannot be convicted of error in giving binding instructions in favor of the borough where the defendant has not furnished evidence from which the jury could find facts which would justify the court in declaring the ordinance unreasonable. For it is to be borne in mind that this is not an action on a quantum meruit, and that where an ordinance is not unreasonable on its face, it is incumbent on one who alleges its invalidity upon the ground of unreasonableness, to aver and prove the facts that make it so. If the decision of the state courts that an ordinance is not unreasonable, involves a federal question, as, for example, whether or not, by reason of the amount of charge the ordinance imposes an unlawful burden upon interstate commerce, the decision is undoubtedly reviewable by the Supreme Court of the United States, and its decision of that question is binding upon us in all cases similarly *363situated as to tlieir facts even though, it may be in conflict with previous decisions of our own court dr of our Supreme Court: Com. ex rel. v. Butler, 19 Pa. Superior Ct. 626; Harrisburg v. McPherran, 14 Pa. Superior Ct. 473, 491. But upon all questions of purely state law, it is our duty under the act creating this court, and would be so even though there were no express statutory provision to that effect, to receive and follow the decisions of the Supreme Court of the state “ as of binding au-> thority.” By the law of this commonwealth, as declared by that court, the tribunal having jurisdiction to decide whether or not, under an agreed or duly ascertained state of facts— there being no conflict of evidence as to essential facts — an ordinance is unreasonable, is the court: Kneedler v. Boro. of Norristown, 100 Pa. 368; New Hope v. W. U. Tel. Cable Co., 16 Pa. Superior Ct. 310; s. c., 202 Pa. 532; Com. v. Phila., Harrisburg, etc., R. R. Co., 23 Pa. Superior Ct. 205. And we are not convinced that as to cases tried in the state courts, this rule has been abrogated or changed, or was intended to be, by the decision of the Supreme Court of the United States in Atlantic & Pacific Tel. Co. v. Philadelphia, 190 U. S. 160 (23 Sup. Ct. Repr. 817). It certainly has not been changed in cases arising under our state laws in which no federal question is involved.
The learned judge below upon a view of all the facts in evidence and with better knowledge of the surrounding local conditions than we have, has determined that there was not sufficient evidence to warrant a finding that the ordinance is unreasonable. We have carefully re-examined the evidence in the light of the foregoing principles, and are not convinced that he ought to have held otherwise, or ought to have submitted the question to the jury. The ordinance being prima facie valid, it would be contrary to sound principle to declare it void for unreasonableness in respect of the amount of the license fee, without proof of facts from which it could be determined, approximately at least, what sum would be sufficient to meet the expenses arising from proper and lawful municipal supervision. Here the proof fails. It falls far short of what was alleged in the telegraph cases decided by us in July last, or in the United States cases cited in those opinions.
Judgment affirmed.