18 Pa. Super. 199 | Pa. Super. Ct. | 1901
Opinion by
The finding of fact which is the subject of the first assignment of error is not strictly in accordance with the evidence, but the element thereof against which the appellant complains
The learned judge of the court below found that the strip of ground in controversy had been dedicated to public use and added to Huey street, and upon the correctness of that finding this appeal depends. We cannot pass upon the credibility of the witnesses, who upon material facts were not in accord. If there was evidence of the facts in dispute which, if believed, was sufficient to support the finding, it must stand. It seems to be assumed by the parties that Huey street had originally been located of the width of twenty feet, but whether it had ever been opened does not appear. Commissioners were appointed under the act of assembly approved May 24, 1873, P. L. 1874, 379, and the width of Huey street was duly fixed at forty feet, the additional twenty feet being taken from the land on the west side of Huey street, as originally located. The west line of the street, as widened, is referred to in these proceedings as the “ Commissioners’ Line.” In 1882, Delano, under whom the plaintiff claims, was the owner of a tract of land which embraced the strip of ground included by the widening of Huey street, as located between J eróme street and the Baltimore & Ohio Railroad. In that year he subdivided his land and laid out a plan of lots showing Huey street to be of the width of forty feet, the westerly side being marked “ Commissioners’ Line of Huey street,” and with a line drawn along the center of Huey street, dotted lines extended from the ends of this line, at Jerome street and the Baltimore & Ohio Railroad respectively, to the ends of the commissioners’ line at the same highways. The lots as marked on the plan ended at the
When, in 1885, Mr. Dunshee came to sell lot No. 15, to Taylor, the street had been opened and in use as a public highway for a number of years. He recognized the fact that the public had rights in the street, and although the deed describes the lot as of the same depth as recited in the Delano deed to him, he made the grant “ subject to whatever right the public may have in and over Huey street as located along the front of the same.” It cannot be maintained that this was a mere reservation in favor of his adjoining lot, No. 14 in the plan, for there is an express recognition that the public had existing rights in the land. When Taylor sold to the appellant, in 1889, the deed contained this express reservation: “ But subject to the location of Huey street and the public rights upon and over said street.” This was not a mere reference to a street which
The decree is affirmed and the appeal dismissed at cost of the appellant.