14 Pa. Super. 214 | Pa. Super. Ct. | 1900
Opinion by
The defendants were indicted for maintaining a public nuisance, by the erection of buildings upon the line of an alleged public alley, in the borough of West Pittston. The ruling of the court which is the subject of the first assignment of error was an absolute denial of the right of the commonwealth to
The second and third assignments of error are without merit, and the requests .for charge upon which those assignments are based might very properly have been flatly refused. The deeds referred to in those points called for the alley in question as a boundary, but they were not conclusive of the fact of dedication, nor acceptance by the public. As between the grantors
The court gave binding instruction to the jury to find a verdict of not guilty, which instruction was based upon the ground that there was no evidence of the acceptance by the borough of this street, and that the offense complained of was not upon the open and traveled way, which instruction is the ground of complaint in the fourth specification of error. We are convinced that this specification of error must be sustained. That the public, may acquire the right to a highway by adverse user, as such, without the intervention of the municipal authorities, is well settled. When the right is dependent upon adverse user alone, it does not become complete until the expiration of twenty-one years. When a dedication to public use, and the opening of a street to public travel by the owner, is followed by its actual use by the public as a highway, the right in the public may become complete and absolute Within a much shorter period and without any affirmative act of acceptance by municipal authority: Commonwealth v. Cole, 26 Pa. 187; Root v. Commonwealth, 98 Pa. 170; Commonwealth v. Railroad
Judgment reversed and venire facias de novo awarded.