26 Pa. Super. 364 | Pa. Super. Ct. | 1904
Opinion by
The plaintiff brought this action to recover damages for encroachment upon a private right of way, alleged to have been acquired by prescription, leading from his lands over th'e right' of way of the defendant company and between the supports of a trestle work upon which the tracks of the company were located. The statement contained an averment that the fill at the end of the trestle work had slipped and diverted the flow of water from a spring to such an extent as to damage the roadbed of said right of way, and that at one time the slip had extended on to the road, but the evidence upon this branch of the case was not such as would have warranted a finding that the slipping was the fault of the defendant company, nor that the right of way in question had been materially injured. The statement further averred that this slipping had extended onto the lands of the plaintiff, thus constituting a physical intrusion upon his property, but at the conclusion of the presentation of the evidence at the trial the court, upon the motion of the plaintiff, withdrew that element of the ease from the consideration of the jury; and the plaintiff based “ his whole claim for recovery here on the encroachment by the defendant company on his roadway leading from the pike to his farm.”
The only averment of an encroachment which was supported by any evidence worthy of consideration related to the location of the bents or supports of the trestle work which sustained the tracks over which the defendant company operated the main line of its road. The statement averred that an “encroachment was made upon said road or passageway by said defendant company about the year 1885 when the passageway immediately under the trestle work was made narrower by said company by the insertion of an extra bench or set of upright timbers for the support of the tracks of said defendant company, so that whereas, previous to that.time two teams could pass with safety immediately under said trestle work, at the present time it is difficult to get one loaded wagon through said opening between the uprights of said trestle work where said roadway or passageway goes through said trestle work.” The complaint that the encroachment upon the passageway was “ by narrowing same immediately under the trestle work by inserting an additional set of upright timbers,” is reiterated in the statement.
The plaintiff did not allege in his statement, nor prove that previous to the entry of the railroad upon the land there had been any apparent servitude imposed upon the strip, over which he now claims a private right of way, and we. do not have to deal with such pre-existing rights, appurtenant to other lands, in the lands which are the subject of the appropriation, and subsequently recognized and continued by the railroad company, as were considered in Penna. R. R. Co. v. Jones, 50 Pa. 417; Neff v. Penna. R. R. Co., 202 Pa. 371. The statement averred that the private roadway “ or passageway above mentioned having been constructed about the year 1856 and having, since that time down to the present, been used by himself and his ancestors as a roadway or passage, from the farm across the railroad company’s right of way and on to the national pike, said use having been peaceful and uninterrupted by the defendant railroad company or its predecessors in possession of said railroad property, although said use has been open, adverse, continuous and notorious for the period above mentioned, above forty-six years, therefore said roadway or passageway is by prescription a right of way belonging to the farm as a means of getting from said farm to a public road.” The averment is not of a way created by grant or reservation, but by adverse user alone, and that that use originated in 1856. The plaintiff’s statement avers that the construction of the railroad was commenced in 1855, and the evidence conclusively establishes that thó railroad company appropriated the land and entered upon the construction of its road through this property prior to May 31, 1855, and made compensation to the owners, received a release of damages, and a conveyance of the land in accordance with the decree of the orphans’ court upon that
Assuming for the present that a right of way by prescription may be acquired through adverse user by a private individual over lands appropriated to a public use, there can be no doubt that it is incumbent upon the claimant of such a right to show that he has enjoyed it to the extent asserted" for twenty-one years. The evidence in this case establishes the undisputed fact that the bents or supports of the trestle between which the alleged road of the plaintiff passes were placed in their present positions in 1885 and have there remained ever since that time; the plaintiff has not during that period used, either adversely or otherwise, a wider road, and is not therefore entitled to have that period counted as a part of the adverse user upon which he founds his prescriptive right. If the plaintiff ever acquired the right'to have those bents placed at a greater distance apart, it must have been prior to the alleged change in 1885. What were the conditions prior to 1885 ? The defendant company called many witnesses who testified that during the entire period prior to 1885 the bents had been in exactly the same positions which they have occupied since that time, but leaving that out of view for the present let us consider the testimony produced by the plaintiff. The plaintiff called a number of wit
The plaintiff called a number of witnesses who testified as to the width of the space between the bents immediately prior to 1885, but only two who gave definite testimony as to the conditions which had existed immediately under the trestle prior to 1871. The testimony of those two witnesses was fatal to plaintiff’s right. John Jenkins testified, in 1908, that he had known the farm now owned by the plaintiff between thirty and thirty-five years, and the alleged road for nearly that time. When asked as to the width of the road when he first knew it he replied: “Well, if .... I don’t know exactly, but I know it was' pretty wide; I know they called it twenty-eight feet, but I never measured it or seen it measured; there was a bent in the middle and they went around each side of it sometimes. Q. They went on each side of the bent in the middie ? A. Yes, sir.” It thus appears that within thirty-five years prior to 1903
The lands over which the plaintiff claims a right of way are and have been for many years appropriated to a public use. The railroad company lawfully acquired the right of way and has constructed upon it a railroad which has been operated for over forty years. The company was under its charter invested with the right of eminent domain, it was authorized to acquire its right of way by purchase as well as by condemnation proceedings. The nature of the right did not depend upon the manner in which it was acquired, so long as it was lawfully acquired. The nature of the use gave to the right a public character, without regard to whether it was acquired by purchase or adverse proceedings. There is certainly grave doubt
The judgment is reversed.