Douglass v. Commonwealth

The opinion of the court was delivered by

Smith, J.

— On the 6th of June, 1796, the mayor, aldermen, and citizens of Philadelphia, passed an ordinance, to prevent the erection of wooden buildings within certain limits of the.city of Philadelphia. William Douglass became the tenant and occupant of a certain frame building within the limits, and at the June sessions, 1826, was indicted in. the Mayor’s Court of this city, for erecting and causing to be erected, T. A wooden shop. 2. A wooden warehouse; contrary to the provisions of that ordinance. On the trial, the jury found and returned a special verdict, upon which the' court *264rendered judgment against the defendant. He has thought proper to bring the proceedings for revision into this court, and has assigned for error, that the special- verdict does not set forth any offence within the meaning of the law or ordinance, alleged, to have been violated: That each count of the indictment contains and sets forth two distinct offences, punishable in different modes, and under different sections of the ordinance: That, in the, indictment it is not averred, that the erection was on a lot or piece of ground; and lastly, that the indictment should have been preferred against the owner of the house, and not against his tenant.

The special verdict states distinctly, that after the enactment of the ordinance, the defendant occupied a wooden building, (then a legal one,) which, shortly before he was indicted, he materially altered and enlarged, adding, to its height on its-west side four.feet, and on its east ten feet, and extending its lower story nine' inches further to the south, converting it' thereby from a blacksmith’s shop into a cabinetmaker’s ware-house and shop. The ordinance enacts, that no wooden shop, ware-house, &c. shall'be erected or built within certain stated limits of this city. The meaning, of this prohibition cannot be mistaken,, And the question is, did the defendant erect such a wooden building as is prohibited by this ordinance, when he erected or altered, enlarged and added to the blacksmith’s shop, what the jury have found, and as, they have found it? . It.is contended, that he did not, ¡as he only altered and enlarged the'old frame building; in short, that all he did was to repair it, that the ordinance never was intended to destroy wooden houses then existing, but merely to prevent their increase.. But I cannot view the material, important and extensive alterations and additions in question, in the light of mere repairs. To repair a building is' to replace it as it was, or to restore it after an injury or dilapidation, not to enlarge or, elevate it, by raising it from one to two, or more stories, or extending its sides. When by his alterations and additions, the defendant converted the blacksmith’s shop into a cabinet-maker’s ware-house and-shop, as set forth in the verdict, I would say, as the court below did, that he erected, or built a wooden building, within the clear intent and meaning of the ordinance in question, the main object of which was to diminish the danger of fires in a populous city. , • ,

Another objection, not more plausible than the one we have been considering, is the second -error assigned. .It is said, that it is not averred in the indictment, that the erection -of the building was on a lot or piece of ground, although this is necessary to constitute the offence. But if the. building mentioned, was not erected or built on a lot or piece of ground, on what was it placed, or on what does it stand? It is idle to answer on the blacksmith’s shop, for that is no longer existing, but has been enlarged, altered and converted, in the words of the special verdict, into a cabinet ware-house and shop, and forms within the purview of the ordinance, a new wooden *265building, erected on a lot or piece'of ground, within the limits of this city. If the construction of the defendant were true, and this ordinance were only prohibitory of new frame buildings,' erected on vacant lots or pieces of ground, the consequence would be, that on frame buildings of every kind, used heretofore for any purpose, and however small in their dimensions, or decayed and dilapidated, might be raised one or two stories, or more, extending the front or depth of the original structure without limitation; so that, although a new wooden building of the smallest size, erected on a vacant lot, would be indisputably illegal, yet the most spacious wooden building, ware-house, or factory, built upon an old ruined shed, would be conformable to the provisions of an ordinance, the professed object of which is to prevent, as much as possible, the occurrence of conflagrations, by prohibiting the future erection of edifices of wood. Such a construction is a perversion of the plain intent of the ordinance. We are accordingly of opinion, that the averment alleged to be essential, is not necessary.

’ I do-not perceive, that two distinct offences, punishable in different modes, and under different sections of the ordinance are set forth in the indictment. Indeed, this error, as well as the fourth and last, was not pressed-on the argument.

The indictment will lie against the tenant, for he, and not the owner of the house or lot, erected the building complained of. The words of the ordinance are, “ If any person or persons shall erect and build,” &c. Here it is found, that the tenant, the defendant, did erect and build. In this particular, there is no error. We, therefore, are of opinion that the judgment of the Mayor’s Court should be affirmed.

Judgment affirmed.