¶ 1 This is an appeal from the judgment entered in the Court of Common Pleas of Clinton County which denied appellant’s claim that he had acquired a portion of-appellee’s property through adverse possession. Upon review, we affirm.
¶ 2 The relevant facts and procedural history are as follows: Appellant, Samuel D. Watkins, filed an action to quiet title on October 13, 1998, and an amended complaint to quiet title on November 30, 1998. Appellant sought to acquire title by adverse possession to a triangular shaped parcel on the eastern boundary line of his property. Appellee, Josephine V. Watkins, is the record owner of the disputed property and appellant’s neighbor. Appel-lee filed a counterclaim and requested that the lower court award her damages in the amount of $1,800 to repair damage to her property that appellant allegedly caused when bulldozing a portion of the disputed property. Appellee and her husband, Samuel Watkins, Jr., (“Tink,” now deceаsed) purchased their property in 1969. In the early 1970s, they installed a fence to keep their horses, cows and goats enclosed. According to appellee, they did not place the fence so that it followed the boundary line of their property. Rather, they placed the fence on a line with more trees so they would nоt have to buy as many posts and also to avoid being too close to the property of Tink’s grandfather, Daniel Watkins. Appellant claims ownership to the area between the fence and his boundary line by adverse possession.
¶ 3 The parties in this dispute are not related by blood. However, appellant is the cousin of apрellee’s late husband, Samuel “Tink” Watkins. Appellant presented evidence that members of the Watkins family have owned appellant’s property for years. The record owners were Daniel Watkins (from 1941-83, the grandfather of appellee’s late husband and appellant’s great-uncle), David Watkins, Sr., (from 1983-90, appellant’s grandfather), Josеph Watkins (from 1990-94, appellant’s brother) and appellant from 1994 to present. Appellant admitted that the property in dispute is not referenced in any of the deeds that appear in his chain of title. However, he presented evidence that members of his family have used the disputed portion of property in several ways. Appellant testified that he believed a portion of his grandfather’s home was over the boundary line and on the disputed property. He also testified that his grandfather kept an outhouse and some dog pens in the disputed area and that he also stored old motorcycle frames and lawn mowers on the disputed property. Appellant also presented testimony that he and his brothers maintained the disputed area by mowing it when their grandfather became too old to do so and that, when appellee’s animals escaped the fenced-in area, appellant and his brother, Roy Watkins, would get the animals back into appellee’s enclosure. Additionally, Roy Watkins testified that a portion of their grandfather’s garden was in the disputed area and that he helped to cultivate it.
¶ 5 Appellant did not file a mоtion for post-trial relief following the entry of the lower court’s order. However, fifteen days after the entry of the order, on October 22, 1999, appellant filed a motion to reconsider which was denied by the trial court on October 25, 1999. Appellant filed a notice of appeal on November 3, 1999, and a concise statement of matters complained of on appeal on November 18, 1999. Appellee filed a motion to quash the appeal on March 17, 2000, asserting that appellant’s appeal should be quashed for failure to file a timely motion for post-trial relief. On May 5, 2000, we denied appel-lee’s motion but allowed appellee to raise the issue before the panel assigned to the case.
¶ 6 Appellant presents the following issues for our review:
1. Whether the lower court erred in finding that [appellant’s] predecessor in title was an immediate family member?
2. Whether the lower court erred in finding that [appellant] did not establish privity between himself and his predecessors in title?
3. Whether the lower court erred in finding that [appellant] fаiled to establish that the possession of the premises was hostile?
Appellant’s brief, p. 6.
¶ 7 When reviewing a trial court’s decision regarding an action to
¶ 8 It is well settled that a party claiming title to real property by adverse possession must affirmatively prove that he or she had actual, continuous, distinct, and hostile possession of the land for twenty-one years. Fred E. Young, Inc. v. Brush Mtn. Sportsmen’s Ass’n,
¶ 9 Additionally, where, as here, the claimant of the disputed land has not possessed the land for the required twenty-one year period, the claimant must tack its predecessor’s period of adversе possession for adverse possession to exist. In order for possession to be tacked, there must be privity between the successive occupants of the property. Glenn,
¶ 10 Keeping these principles in mind, we address appellant’s first claim that the trial court erred in finding that appellant’s predecessor in title was an immediate family member. Appellant claims that the lower court incorrectly found that Daniel Watkins, owner of appellant’s property from 1941 1983, was the grandfather of appellee’s husband, Tink Watkins, and the great-uncle of appellant. Appellant asserts that Daniel Watkins was his grandfather and that this mistake is critical because it bears on whether the use of the disputed land was permissive, and therefore not hostile, given that Daniel Watkins was an immediate family member of appellant, not appellee. Preliminarily, we find that the testimony in the record supports the lower court’s finding that Daniel Watkins was the grandfather оf appellee’s late husband. However, we must also point out that appellant’s assertion of the law is incorrect. The use of the disputed land is deemed permissive when a familial relationship exists. There is no need for the predecessor in title to be an immediate family member. In fact, in Waltimyer, supra, we noted that permissive use may be established in a variety of relationships. We stated:
A use will be presumed to be permissive in a variety of situations involving familial or fiduciary relationships. See e.g., Ingles v. Ingles,150 Pa. 397 ,24 A. 677 (1892) (grantor/grantee); Appeal of Norris,71 Pa. 106 (1872) (executor/heirs); Clark v. Trindle,52 Pa. 492 (1866) (family); Martin v. Jackson,27 Pa. 504 (1856) (agent/principal); Hart v. Gregg,10 Watts 185 (Pa.1840) (co-heirs); Union Canal Co. v. Young,1 Whart. 410 (Pa.1836) (vendor/vendee); Priester v. Milleman,161 Pa.Super. 507 ,55 A.2d 540 (1947) (bailor/bailee). However, when no special relationship exists between the parties, a sufficiently notorious use will be presumed to be enough to alert the owner of the land to an adverse claim, and it will be incumbent upon the owner of the land to establish the alleged permissive use.
Id.,
¶ 11 We agree with the trial court’s conclusion that because a familial relationship exists between the parties, the use of the disputed land was not hostile. See also Sterner v. Freed,
¶ 12 Next, we address whether the trial court erred in finding that appellant did not establish privity between himself and his predecessors in title. Appellant acquired ownership to his land in 1994
¶ 13 Appellant maintains that if he tacks on the periods during which other members of his family were in possession of the disputed land, he will have met the twenty-one year requirement for continuous use of the property in dispute. He concedes that there was no reference to the disputed land in the deed conveyed to him, yet he maintains that privity existed despite the lack of evidencе to show that each predecessor claimed title to the land.
¶ 14 We agree with the trial court’s finding that appellant failed to establish privity. In Moore, supra, we re-stated the principle that
Acceptance of a deed describing boundary lines confinéis] the premises [conveyed] to the area within the boundaries, and ... such a deed does not convey inchoate rights acquired by in-сompleted adverse possession. Each predecessor must have claimed title to the property in dispute, and in transferring to his successors must have purported to include it.
Id.,
¶ 15 We agree with the trial court’s conclusion that because there was no reference to the disputed parcel in the deed, that appellant was required to independently establish possession for the required twenty-one years. Thus, because he has only been in possession of the land since 1994 and there was no reference to the disputed parcel in thе deed conveying the property to him, we agree that he has failed to establish privity between himself and his predecessors in title.
¶ 16 Appellant lastly claims the trial court erred in finding that possession of the disputed parcel was not hostile. We have addressed this claim in our discussion of appellant’s first claim regarding the familial relatiоnship of the parties and our conclusion that a familial relationship creates a presumption of permissive use of the property. Accordingly, because appellant has failed to establish that the use of the disputed property was hostile and continuous for a period of twenty-one years, we find that his adverse possession claim fails.
¶ 17 Judgment affirmed.
Notes
. On appeal, appellee argues that we should quash this appeal because instead of filing a timely motion for post-trial relief within ten days of the final order, appellant filed a motion to reconsider fifteen days after the entry of the order and before filing notice of appeal. We deny appellee's motion to quash. We find that appellant’s motion was treated as an untimely motion for post-trial relief incorrectly captioned as a motion to reconsider. Appellant's motion raised substantive issues which the lower court considered and denied within the thirty day period in which the court still had jurisdiction over the casе. Ap-pellee did not object or allege any prejudice by the trial court’s consideration of the motion. "Whenever a party files post-trial motions at a time when the court has jurisdiction over the matter but outside the ten-day requirement of Pa.R.C.P. 227.1, the trial court’s decision to consider the motions should not be subject to review unless the opposing party objects.” Mammoccio v. 1818 Market Partnership,
