34 Pa. Super. 275 | Pa. | 1907
The plaintiff alleged an obstruction of a private way and supported his case by evidence of the existence of a lane along the line between his land and the defendant’s, which had been used by their predecessors in title for about forty years. It was not shown that the right was created by grant, but evidence was introduced to establish a prescriptive use. The plaintiff was called as a witness in his own behalf and in his examination testified to the existence of the lane and that the defendant, against his protest, erected a fence along it and near the middle thereof, thus depriving the plaintiff of its use and compelling him to drive over other portions of his land in performing his farm work. The defendant undertook to show on the cross-examination of the plaintiff that before the latter bought his farm he asked the owner from whom he was about to buy to attempt to secure an agreement from the adjoining owner, the defendant, to have the lane closed, the owner and the defendant to agree to release or surrender any rights they might have in the lane, the plaintiff not desiring to have it remain open as a joint way, and that Mr. Flinchbaugh, the owner, consulted with the defendant with reference thereto as a result of which consideration it was agreed by Flinchbaugh, the plaintiff and the defendant that the lane should be closed and the fence placed on the dividing line and that subsequently, after the plaintiff bought from Flinchbaugh, in pursuance of the arrangement theretofore made, a fence was constructed along the line, the plaintiff assisting the defendant in its construction; that the fence was built by the defendant with the knowledge, con
The first and second specifications- assign this action as error. We think the defendant was entitled to the evidence as proposed in these assignments. The pith of the plaintiff’s evidence was the existence of the way and the defendant’s unlawful obstruction of it against the plaintiff’s protest and request and his claim for damages was based wholly upon the allegation that the defendant without any right or justification had deprived him of the use of a way which his predecessors in title had acquired by prescription. He claimed further that he was entitled to exemplary damages by reason of the manner in which the defendant had proceeded. It was pertinent, therefore, to ascertain whether the defendant’s action was not in accordance with the agreement made before the plaintiff acquired title and whether the closing of the lane was not with his consent, at his request and with his co-operation. The questions did, indeed, introduce the defendant’s case but they were in line with, and suggested by, the plaintiff’s evidence in chief and had a direct bearing on the bona fides of his case as presented in his testimony. If the plaintiff demanded an abandonment of the lane as a condition precedent to his purchase from Flinchbaugh by reason of which all the parties in interest agreed that the fence should be placed on the line between the lands and this was done after the plaintiff acquired title, a sufficient consideration existed for the alleged agreement: Hudson v. Watson, 5 Pa. Superior Ct. 456.
Upon like consideration the offer contained in the third specification was admissible as made. It had a bearing not only on the question of the amount of damages, but on the allegation of abandonment or surrender of the easement which if established would defeat the plaintiff’s right of action. The
The plaintiff having denied that he had any arrangement with the defendant by which the lane was to be closed or that it was closed with his concurrence or consent the offer of evidence contained in the fifth specification seems clearly competent. The declaration of the plaintiff there referred to was made before the fence in the lane was built and bears directly on his intention with reference thereto and is corroborative of the defendant’s claim that the fence was not made against the will of the plaintiff and in violation of his right, but because he had abandoned the easement.
The twelfth, fourteenth and fifteenth specifications are based upon evidence introduced by the defendant tending to show that the use of the lane had its beginning in the friendly and intimate association of a father-in-law and son-in-law- who owned the adjoining properties; that the use of it was for mutual accommodation, by permission, and so continued thereafter and was, therefore, not adverse. It is a well-established rule of law that mere possession will not give title though such possession may have continued for a long period. The possession necessary to accomplish this result must.be adverse to the title of the owner. Where one enters in subordination to another’s title the statute will not begin to run in his favor until he does some act which destroys the relation: Wheeler v. Winn, 53 Pa. 122; Cadwalader v. App, 81 Pa. 194; The Tin
The judgment is reversed and a venire facias de novo awarded.