25 A.2d 828 | Pa. Super. Ct. | 1941
Argued November 19, 1941. In this action of ejectment the verdict was for plaintiffs. *482 Defendant has appealed from the refusal of her motions for new trial and judgment n.o.v. The following sketch offered in evidence by appellees will assist in clarifying the issues:
[EDITORS' NOTE: SKETCH IS ELECTRONICALLY NON-TRANSFERRABLE.]
The land in controversy consists of the narrow lane or roadway between tracts No. 1 and No. 2 of the property of appellant, the successor in title to Sarah King. Appellees, successors in title to Jacob Funk, claimed title to the lane subject merely to appellant's easement. Appellant claims a good record title, and, in the alternative, that she owns the lane by a possession adverse since 1890. The controversy arose when appellees attempted to construct telephone poles along the lane.
The common grantor, Michael Miller, conveyed to both Jacob Funk and Sarah King on March 25, 1835. The deed to Funk called for over seventy-seven acres and described the property by metes and bounds. The description included the lane, but excepted "the privilege of a road or Cartway for Sarah King her Heirs and Assigns, on that part of the premises hereby Granted which divides and runs through the Lots intended to be Conveyed to the said Sarah King, to the public Road leading to Blacks Ferry. . . . . ." The deed *483 to Sarah King called for twenty-five acres. It described two tracts, each marked off by metes and bounds and also conveyed the privilege of a road or cartway "over that part of the Land and premises intended to be conveyed to Jacob Funk which divides the Lots above described and which runs through between them to the said road leading to Blacks Ferry. . . . . ." Appellees acquired title to the Funk property May 12, 1939, and their deed as well as the four intervening deeds in their chain of title used the identical description in metes and bounds contained in Miller's deed to Funk.1
Upon the death of Sarah King, her executor, Alfred Moyer, with court approval, sold her realty to pay her debts and purchased it himself. The clerk's deed to him, dated May 6, 1889, recited: "All That Certain Messuage, Tenement And Two Tracts Of Land, now constituting one tract each joining the other. . . . . ."
(Italics supplied.) Appellant acquired title from Alfred Moyer's executor on April 15, 1890, and the deed to her also contained this language. Appellant's first contention is that, since the tracts could not join without absorbing the lane, the deed transferred title to it. But the metes and bounds description in both deeds was of two tracts exactly as described in the original deed from Miller to Sarah King, and, in addition, the deeds perpetuated the original language granting the easement over the lane. We think these deeds construed as a whole don't evenpurport to grant title to the lane. But even if they did, they could not have that effect because it is fundamental that neither the deed from the court clerk to Alfred Moyer nor the *484
subsequent deed from his executor to appellant could grant more than Sarah King owned. In re Nebel,
Appellant's argument based on the fact that her tracts consist of less than twenty-five acres — the amount recited in the deed — unless the lane is included, is entirely without merit because the description by metes and bounds controls. Bosler v. Sun OilCo., 325. Pa. 411, 415, 190 A. 718; Phillips v. Crist,
Appellees are entitled to their judgment in ejectment upon proof of good title even though appellant has an easement.Tillmes v. Marsh,
Although we have not discussed all the assignments of error, we have considered them, and in our opinion they are without merit.
All the assignments of error are overruled and the judgment is affirmed.