72 Pa. Super. 16 | Pa. Super. Ct. | 1919
Opinion by
This is an appeal by the defendant from the decree of the court below restraining him from fencing or in any manner obstructing an alley upon which the property of the plaintiff abutted. The defendant acquired title to a tract of land containing two acres in the Borough of DuBois, in the year 1881, under the will of his mother; he was at that time a minor and Fred Tracy was his duly appointed guardian. In 1883, Tracy, the guardian, presented his petition setting forth the ownership by his ward of the tract of land in question, that the ward had no personal estate to pay his debts and maintain him and it was necessary to sell said real estate for the maintenance and education of the ward and pay some debts that had been contracted for his boarding and medical treatment. The petition prayed the court to grant an order to make sale of the said “described real estate or any part thereof that may be necessary for said purposes.” The orphans’ court granted the order as prayed for. The guardian, on January 14,1884, made return to the order of sale setting forth that, he had sold to Charles Schwem a part of said tract of land, to wit, a lot, the description of which in said return, and in the deed made in pursuance thereof, called for a frontage of fifty feet on an alley at the rear end of said lot. The court confirmed the sale nisi and no exceptions having been filed, the same was confirmed absolutely. The guardian in accordance with the order of the court executed a deed conveying to Schwem the lot and describing it as abutting on an alley at the rear. The guardian in his account filed some years afterwards accounted for the purchase money received from Charles Schwem for this lot. The title to the lot as thus described has by sundry mesne conveyances become vested in the appellee. The facts thus far stated were found by the court below and were not disputed.
The court found the following facts, upon evidence amply sufficient to sustain such findings. The guardian had, prior to the sale of the lot to Charles Schwem, in
There may be a question whether under the record of the orphans’ court and the deed, standing alone, there passed to Schwem and his successors in title a right to the use of the alley in connection with the lot. When the court made the order authorizing the sale of the tract or any part of it, it would seem that it was competent for the guardian to sell a part of the lot and to grant in connection therewith the right of a private way, but if he did so proceed it was incumbent upon Mm to make clear to Uie court the fact that he was conveying a right-of-way in
The decree is affirmed and the appeal dismissed at cost of the appellant.