22 Pa. Super. 641 | Pa. Super. Ct. | 1903
Opinion by
This was an action of ejectment for a small piece of land in Loyalsock township, Lycoming county, Pennsylvania. The verdict was in favor of the plaintiff and judgment being entered thereon the defendant, appellant, took this appeal. The history of the case as stated by the learned counsel for the appellant is as follows : Henry Greenewald and B. H. Detwiler, M. D., were the sole owners as tenants in common of a lot of land situated in Loyalsock township, Lycoming county, Pennsylvania, containing eighty-one acres and sixty perches more or less.
Prior to April 9, 1878, Detwiler and Greenewald agreed to an amicable partition or division of said land so held by them and fixed upon a rail fence then on the ground running eastwardly through said land as the division line between them. Greenewald to take the land north and Detwiler the land south of the fence, as their respective purparts. In accordance with their agreement Greenewald and Detwiler employed Charles Stewart, a surveyor, to go upon the ground and run the division line as fixed by the fence. Stewart ran the line on the ground along the old rail fence, as agreed upon as the division line between Greenewald and Detwiler, beginning at the corner of the land of Mrs. Andrew Hepburn, thence by the following courses and distances, to wit: N. 80E. 15 perches to a post along lands of said party of the first part; thence N. 73|° E. 4 perches to a post; thence N. 46|° E. 4 perches to a post; thence N. 67° E. 12 perches to a post; thence N. 70° E. 6 perches to a post; thence N. 76° E. 24 perches to a post; thence N. 83° E. 2 perches to a post; thence N. 75° E. 85 perches to land of Striebly or Rudino.
Charles Stewart, the surveyor, in making draft of the survey as run by him on the ground and from which the respective deeds of Greenewald and Detwiler were drawn, copied the
We have thus stated the appellant’s contention in substantially the language of his learned counsel, and, if the question in dispute as to whether the line as written in the deed or the alleged line as marked on the ground is to be determined by the weight of evidence under the ordinary rule in regard to disputed facts, then we think the appellant fairly sustained his contention and was entitled to have the matter submitted to the jury under adequate instructions so that they could find which was the true line of division between the land of the appellant and appellee, that is, whether it was to be controlled by the old fence above referred to, or whether it was as indicated in the deed.
The learned judge below tried the case on the theory that in order to establish the line on the ground different from what it was written in the deed, the evidence must be clear, precise and indubitable, and must in fact be strong enough to remove all reasonable doubt from the minds of the jury. Referring to the facts in evidence in regard to the line fixed by the old fence, the learned judge said: “ If they are so established you would he warranted in finding a verdict in favor of the defend
Again the court said : “ The defendant seeks by this evidence to overcome the courses and distances described in the deed between the parties. In order to be successful in this effort, the court feels it is his duty to instruct you that the evidence offered by the defendant must be clear and satisfactory. It must be evidence of an extremely strong character, because when a man gives or takes a deed it generally means precisely what it says.” The defendant’s first point was as follows: “If the jury find from all the evidence that B. H. Detwiler and Henry Greenewald, when they divided the land owned by them in common, agreed that the old rail fence running up the hollow should be the division fine between their respective purparts now owned by the plaintiff and defendant, that Charles Stewart was employed to survey and run the line between the respective lots to be conveyed to each other in severalty by Detwiler and Greenewald, did run said line upon the ground and along the old rail fence up the hollow, according to its several courses and distances, and fixed a post as the east corner or termination of said mutual line, and that B. H. Detwiler and his successors in title, including the plaintiff and defendant have down to the time of bringing the suit, recognized the old fence running up the hollow, in selling, cultivating and occupying their respective lots of land, as the common line, then the verdict of the jury must be for the defendant.” The learned judge answered this point as follows: “ Gentlemen of the jury, we charge you substantially as that point is drawn, with this modification: that if this fence and the posts were actually upon the ground, and were adopted by these parties as monuments, marking their common division line at that time, and have smce been recognized as such by this plaintiff, your verdict should be for the defendant.”
We find ourselves compelled to hold that this answer was erroneous. We think the defendant was entitled to have this point affirmed without qualification. We also hold that the instructions to the jury that “ it must be evidence of an extremely strong character because when a man gives or takes a deed it generally means precisely what it says” was too strong against
If the contention of the appellant in regard to the old fence being the true line is correct then the deed raises a latent ambiguity. This ambiguity arises out of collateral matter not in the deed, to wit: the fence line on the ground. In our opinion the appellant was entitled to have this question determined by the jury on the weight of the evidence: Insurance Co. v. Sailer, 67 Pa. 108. On page 115, Sharswood, Justice, says: “ The reason assigned for the defendant’s tenth point, the answer to which is the ground of this specification, is that the parol evidence was not clear, precise and indubitable, but is contradictory and open to doubt, and therefore the question should not be submitted to the jury. The learned judge affirmed the rule of evidence as stated in the point, but declined to withdraw it from the jury. That rule is correctly stated if it had been-an attempt to reform a written instrument by evidence of mistake. But there is no such rule as to evidence to explain a latent ambiguity. The latent ambiguity having been shown to exist, it became necessary to give parol evidence to explain
There is another question in this case which has not yet been alluded to. At the trial the evidence strongly tended to show that the appellant and his predecessors in title had been in open, notorious and hostile possession of the land in dispute for about twenty-four years. This fact if found by the jury upon sufficient evidence would have been a complete answer to the plaintiff’s case. But it is conceded that the learned counsel for the appellant stated to the court that the defendant could not defend on that ground because of a prior action of ejectment and judgment therein for the land in dispute in favor of the plaintiff, appellee. The learned counsel was led into this admission by the case of Brolaskey v. McClain, 61 Pa. 146, on page 166. Mr. Justice Williams speaking for the court said: “ If Wester and his heirs had the continued and adverse possession of the lot during all this time, it would be sufficient to give them a title under the statute. But, as we have already seen, Richard Peters brought an action of ejectment against Henry Wester in 1818, and recovered a verdict and judgment therein in 1825. This recovery stopped the running of the statute, and even if the Westers held adverse possession of the lot thereafter until the house was tom down in 1838, they acquired no title under the statute of limitations.” We think the general rule upon this subject is that the mere recovery of a judgment will not of itself stop the running of the statute of limitations; that there must be an actual change of possession by virtue of such'judgment. The judgment in ejectment does not change the relation between a plaintiff and defendant so far as the possession is concerned, without surrender, an entry, or the issu- „ ing of habere facias, the judgment does not toll the statute of limitations and interrupt adverse possession: Duffy v. Duffy, 20 Pa. Superior Ct. p. 25. In view of the position taken by the counsel for the appellant we cannot reverse the court below on' this ground, but inasmuch as the judgment must be reversed
So far as in harmony with this opinion the assignments of error are sustained. Judgment reversed and venire facias de novo awarded.