101 Pa. Super. 262 | Pa. Super. Ct. | 1930
Argued November 10, 1930. On April 2, 1897, the executor of William Kahl conveyed to William H. Nauman, a lot of ground having erected thereon a two story brick dwelling house, situated on the west side of North Mary Street, numbered No. 528 North Mary Street; containing in front on said street sixteen feet and extending in depth of that width one hundred feet. This lot was bounded on the west by the property now owned by Sarah K. Kopf, and others, the defendants in this suit. The deed contained the following grant: "Together with the right to the said William H. Nauman, his heirs and *264 assigns, to use the ten feet of ground adjoining the herein and hereby granted premises on the south as an alley in common with the other owners adjoining thereto."
On March 8, 1926, the said William H. Nauman and wife conveyed the same premises through an intermediary to William H. Nauman and Mary Nauman, his wife, by entireties. In this deed the reference to the alley is as follows: "`Together with ten feet of ground adjoining the herein granted premises on the south, which was formerly an alley, but vacated by the city and closed over twenty-one years ago.' As a matter of fact, the city never vacated this alley. These deeds were recorded on March 9, 1926."
Kahl, the predecessor in title of the parties defendant, received the deed for his lot, which as stated before was to the west or in the rear of the Nauman property, on March 14, 1911, and the reference in that deed to the alley in question is as follows: "Beginning at a point on North Pine Street, a corner of a proposed twenty feet wide public alley; thence extending eastward, along said valley, a distance of one hundred feet." This deed was recorded on March 28, 1911.
There is on the city plan an alley twenty feet wide running from North Mary Street to Pine Street, but it has never been opened by the city. The northern half of it covers the land in dispute and is the same property as the ten foot alley referred to in the Nauman deed, and the whole of it is the same as the twenty foot proposed public alley referred to in the Kahl deed. In 1902, William H. Nauman erected a fence across the alley where the Nauman property joins the Kahn property. Sometime thereafter there was a partition fence erected by Nauman and the parties who own the property to the south which fence separated the alley into two parts longitudinally and *265 left ten feet of it to the Nauman property and ten feet to the other property. Each party erected half of it. All this was done more than twenty-one years before the present suit was brought. Thereafter, the owners of the Nauman property used ten feet which had been intended for an alley as their own. The fence was continuously maintained and the alley was thereby closed, until the defendants tore down the fence which act occasioned the present suit. Plaintiffs planted shrubbery, rose bushes and trees on it. They had no right to close up the end of the alley and bar entrance thereby, but they did that without right for over twenty-one years and the question is whether they acquired title by adverse possession.
The court held to the contrary. We quote from its opinion: "It is fully established that `the right to the use of an alley granted by deed cannot be lost merely by non-user. Nothing less than an absolute denial of the right, followed by an enjoyment inconsistent with its existence for a period of twenty-one years or more can amount to an extinguishment of it.' Weaver v. Getz,
"It may be conceded that `occupation of land for twenty-one years, adverse to a right of way, — and inconsistent with it, bars the right.' Jessop v. Kittanning Borough,
"But in Bombaugh v. Miller,
There is no question that this is a correct statement of the law. The court held that Nauman was bound by the mention of the alley in his deed and that he could not establish an exclusive right to the ground which the alley would cover, if opened. Under the facts in this case, we however are of the opinion that the conclusion arrived at was unwarranted. What the plaintiffs did was sufficient to show exclusive possession. Access to the land in dispute was effectually barred. They used it as their own, solely for such purposes as convenient to them. One does not ordinarily plant trees and shrubbery on the right of way of another if he has no intention of keeping it adversely. Such acts, coupled with fencing the land, is an exercise of dominion which if persisted in continuously to the exclusion of all others having rights in the land, will grow into title in twenty-one years. Such a possession has all the elements required to attain a title by adverse possession.
In Mitchell v. Bovard,
"`When one uses an easement whenever he sees fit without asking leave or without objection, the use is adverse; and an adverse enjoyment for twenty-one years gives an indisputable title to the enjoyment': Messinger's App.,
This case is followed by Aldine Realty Co. v. Manor Real Estate Trust Co.,
We think it clearly appears from the facts in this case that the plaintiffs acquired title by adverse possession and the relief sought for should have been granted. *268
The decree of the lower court is reversed; the plaintiff's bill of complaint is reinstated, the record is remitted with direction that a proper decree in accordance to this opinion be entered. The costs to be paid by the appellees.