60 Pa. Super. 538 | Pa. Super. Ct. | 1915
Opinion by
It was decided in Furniss v. Furniss, 29 Pa. 15, that “Where a public road has been opened, and worked on ground different from that marked out and reported by viewers, it will be a safe rule to extend its-breadth, when
The appellant urges that there was not sufficient evidence of the location of the opened portion of the road as being within the lines of the old survey to submit to the jury. There was evidence from persons resident in the neighborhood, who had known the used road and property in question for a number of years, that there had been in» existence fences along both sides of and outside the traveled way, showing a road approximately of the width the road was directed to be opened by the court. The traveled part of the roadway between these fence lines was eighteen to twenty feet in width. These fences and fence posts were in existence since the road was surveyed in 1872. It is further testified that the appellees’ father built his fence pursuant to a survey made by the county surveyor many years ago, on the line of the road as it existed before the borough improved the street. This would not have the effect of concluding the matter, and of itself would not be sufficient to establish the location of the viewers’ line, but in connection with the other evidence was material. The existence of the center line of the survey of 1872 has
The assignments of error are overruled and the judgment is affirmed at the cost of the appellant.