49 Pa. Super. 334 | Pa. Super. Ct. | 1912
Opinion by
The plaintiff brought an action of ejectment against defendant for a lot of ground in the borough of Mill Creek, Huntingdon county, fronting fifty feet on the public road leading from Huntingdon to Mount Union, and extending back in a southerly direction to the line of the Pennsylvania Railroad Company, and bounded on the west by land of the defendant and on the east by an open way
The evidence at the trial clearly demonstrated that the record title to the strip of land in question was in the plaintiff, and that the only right therein possessed by the defendant was such as he held by virtue of adverse possession, The defendant presents on this appeal two con
The second contention of the appellant is that the evidence as to his possession was such as to sustain a finding that he had acquired title, under the statute, by adverse user, to the fee in the strip of ground. The entire lot of land for which the action was brought had long been uninclosed and all persons who desired so to do passed over it at will. It had formerly been part of a furnace property and had been used as a private way giving access to the furnace, and the furnace having been abandoned and the use of the ground for that purpose discontinued, the lot remained uninclosed. The station of the Pennsylvania Railroad being near., many persons availed themselves of this lot as a means of access to the station from the turnpike. This was the condition of affairs when, in 1881, the defendant became the owner of the lot of land bounding this strip on the westward, and since that time he has used the lot which he then acquired as a residence. The line between the lot in question and the lot upon which the residence of the defendant is situated has been during nearly all the period, since 1881 marked by either a fence or a hedge, and the defendant used the lot to the west of that fine so marked for a residence, as his own private property. The defendant asserts that he has used the strip of ground now in question since 1881, but all the evidence indicates, and indicates only, that he used it for a limited and well-defined purpose. The defendant himself testified as to the character of the use which he had made of the land in question. The Pennsylvania Railroad had,
The judgment is affirmed.