50 Pa. Super. 307 | Pa. Super. Ct. | 1912
Opinion by
In 1873 one John Rumberger was the owner of a parcel of land situate in Brady township, Clearfield county. He platted into lots a portion of this tract showing the lots fronting on streets, the latter being intersected by alleys in the usual manner of such plans. Two of these lots fronted on a street now called Long avenue and were
Some years later the lots embraced in said plan became a part of the borough of Dubois. Down to that time the streets and alleys of the plan had not been improved. Buildings had been erected on many of the lots, including the two now in question, and the lines of the alley had been marked by fences and an open way thus left which was occasionally used for the delivery of coal and other like purposes by those having occasion to use it, but its use was not extensive. In 1888 the borough was visited by a disastrous fire which destroyed the buildings on both lots and the fences along the alley, so that the exact locations of the lines could not easily be determined with either certainty or satisfaction. From Spring alley westward the block in which the defendant’s lot is situate extends to a public street called Jared street, and this portion of the block should have embraced, according to all conveyances, three lots, each fronting thirty feet on Long avenue. Within a few years after the fire the portion of the town to which we have referred began to be improved in a more substantial manner. The present defendant acquired her title in 1889 and shortly thereafter erected a brick building thereon. As the latter was con
In 1897 the borough undertook to pave Long avenue in front of these properties. In locating the return curbs to define the lines of Spring alley, as it opened into the street about to be paved, a dispute arose between the borough officials and the present defendant, which resulted in the filing of a bill by the latter, against the various officers of the borough in charge of said paving, to restrain them from setting the curb in the manner proposed or taking possession of the alley or any part of it until the same had been duly established, and for such other relief as she might be entitled to. The defendants were represented by counsel and an answer was filed. After a preliminary injunction had been granted, further proceedings seem to have been suspended, apparently in the hope that the matter might be amicably adjusted, until in January, 1901, the court made a final decree in which it is declared that “the case came on to be heard on testimony and argument of counsel, and at the request of the parties a final decree is now entered with the same force and effect as a decree on final hearing, to wit, etc.” The decree then proceeds to restrain all of the parties then defendants from in any way interfering with the possession of the then plaintiff, present defendant, in any portion of the land extending eastwardly along Long avenue for a distance of three feet ten inches from the eastern wall of her building. The decree thus practically, as between the parties to that case at least, undertook to ascertain and locate the western line of Spring alley. All of the parties seem to have acquiesced in that decree and no appeal from it was ever taken by anyone, and since that time neither the borough nor any of its officers have attempted to assert that the improvement of the defendant constituted an obstruction to the alley in question.
(1) The learned counsel for defendant urges upon us the propositions that the former decree of the court of common pleas in the equity proceeding, begun by the present defendant against the borough officers, to which we have referred, adjudicated the right of the defendant to have her property maintained as it then was and that
It is further contended by the appellant that the Act of May 9, 1889, P. L. 173, protected the present defendant in the maintenance of the stairway and fence which the decree requires her to remove. We do not understand this proposition to be now seriously urged upon us, and it is manifest the act referred to can have no application to the facts of this case. The plan of Rumberger and the sales of lots according to it made by him, which together amounted to a dedication to public use of the streets and alleys therein shown, were made many years before the passage of the act, and the testimony clearly shows that from the time of such dedication there was an open way of some width used by the public generally as occasion required, and for this reason again the act could have no application: Hileman v. Hollidaysburg Borough, 47 Pa. Superior Ct. 41.
, The difficulty in the present case is not to be found in the ascertainment or consideration of the controlling legal principles involved, but in the attempt, out of the
Decree affirmed.