Byrne v. Williams

11 Pa. D. & C. 415, 1928 Pa. Dist. & Cnty. Dec. LEXIS 120
CourtPennsylvania Court of Common Pleas, Greene County
DecidedMay 14, 1928
DocketNo. 84
StatusPublished

This text of 11 Pa. D. & C. 415 (Byrne v. Williams) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Pennsylvania Court of Common Pleas, Greene County primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Byrne v. Williams, 11 Pa. D. & C. 415, 1928 Pa. Dist. & Cnty. Dec. LEXIS 120 (Pa. Super. Ct. 1928).

Opinion

Saybrs, P. J.,

The facts in this case as gleaned from the depositions are very meagre and poorly developed, and the exhibits recited in the depositions were not attached to them or submitted to the court. No brief was filed on behalf of plaintiff. From the depositions and such admissions as appear in the pleadings the court finds the following

Facts.

In 1923 the plaintiff was the owner of a lot in Greensboro Borough, Greene County, Pa., fronting on County Street, which runs through said borough from northwest toward the southeast (apparently about 40 degrees), and bounded in part on the northwest by Second Street, which intersected County Street at right angles. Seventy-four and one-half feet of the back of the lot in controversy fronted on Second Street. On Aug. 17, 1923, the plaintiff appears to have conveyed to R. M. Clovis a part of this lot at the southeast corner of the intersection of Second and County Streets, apparently fronting on County Street 24h feet, and extending northeast along Second Street a distance of 74 feet. The plaintiff, about Oct. 15, 1923, sold, and on Oct. 18, 1923, by deed, which appears as an exhibit in the petition to open judgment in this case, conveyed to defendant the lot described in said deed.

The description of the lot sold defendant begins at a point on County Street at the Clovis line and 5 feet northwest of the store building on the lot sold to defendant; from thence the line runs to the northeast along the Clovis lot 74 feet; thence northwest along the Clovis lot 24J feet to Second Street; thence in the same direction 74J feet along Second Street to lot of Eli Boone; thence southeast along lot of Boone 74J feet to lot of Dr. A. L. Eddy; thence by lot of Eddy southwest 1481 feet to County Street; thence northwest along County Street 50 feet to the beginning. There was on the lot a store building 24 feet wide, with a story above the storeroom, used in part by a lodge of Independent Americans. Apparently, there was another small frame building on the lot, of which we have neither location nor description.

The dwelling-house on the Eddy lot fronted on County Street and extended back along the southeast line of the lot conveyed to defendant, and was a brick building of some description.

In order to make the 50-foot front on County Street, the corner of the lot sold by plaintiff to defendant was pointed out as down on the Eddy house, according to various witnesses, from 2 to 9 feet, and this line would cut a strip off the Eddy house along the northwest side. This strip, to reconcile [416]*416the testimony of all the witnesses, would be about 5 feet wide at the front on County Street. Nothing appears as to the width of the strip on the rear of the building, and there are no surveys exhibited to show any measurements or plan.

When the survey was made for the Clovis lot, plaintiff pointed out to Clovis the southwest corner of his whole lot as being down on the Eddy building at County Street 5i feet. That is the best evidence of the location of this corner by defendant’s witness. Dr. Eddy, who is interested, says this corner was 7 feet down on him, and that he had been in possession of his building about twenty-one years. He did not see the surveyor point out the mark which was chiseled on the sidewalk.

According to the surveyor who made a plan of the town for the borough council, quite a little property encroached on the lines of the streets and alleys in the borough, and, as a consequence, in surveying the lot sold by plaintiff to one Clovis, he relocated Second Street and the property-lines south of it intersecting County Street and moved them all south 5 or 6 feet, and, as a result of this relocation, the corner of the lot sold defendant was located by his survey about 5 feet over on the Eddy house. The borough council, of which plaintiff and Dr. Eddy were members, adopted the engineer’s plan as a working plan for the borough, and the survey in this case was made to conform to that plan.

That was the working plan or borough survey in effect when plaintiff sold the lot in suit to defendant. Defendant bought the lot on Oct. 15, 1923, and at the same time he bought with the lot the house, storeroom and goods (presumably belonging to defendant) for a lump sum of $9000. On that day plaintiff pointed out to defendant the location of the southeast line of his lot, cutting off from the Eddy lot and through the Eddy building a strip about 5 feet wide. They recognized that Eddy was in possession of this strip, and presumably knew that the relocated borough survey pushed the line down on Eddy.

When the location of the Eddy corner was pointed out to defendant before he got his deed, he stated that he knew where the corner was and he was satisfied; that he was relying on his general ^warranty deed and expected to get possession when he was ready for it; and he also said, that “if that is where the line went, I knew there would be no trouble with Dr. Eddy;” “I felt satisfied Dr. Eddy and me would get along without any trouble.” Later, he said, speaking of Dr. Eddy, “I knew he was in possession of it. I did not know he claimed it.”

The lump consideration for the store, stock of goods and lot was $9000, and when the deed was delivered defendant paid plaintiff $4000 in cash and gave him the judgment exemption note under seal for $5000, on which the judgment in this case was entered. Judgment was entered for $5000, Oct. 18, 1923, in the Common Pleas of Greene County on warrant and confession and defendant paid the entry fee. The note was payable one day after date, with interest, and recites that it is for balance of purchase money. The defendant says the note was for the balance of the $9000 paid in the trade for the house and lot purchased at the time the note was delivered. The fact that the note was for $5000 was discussed between them, and that the consideration in the deed was $4200 or less than the note given, defendant saying: “I told you that the value you had put on the property would look like an entry against the property for more than the deed called for.” Defendant stated, also, that he had other property against which the judgment would be a lien. The real estate evidently was sold for $4200, and the store goods were sold for the [417]*417balance of $9000, or $4800. The judgment was to secure the balance of purchase money on both. The defendant says that $4200 was a very reasonable consideration for the house and lot.

The defendant paid $2000 on the judgment on Feb. 15, 1924, and $300 on Jan. 6, 1925. He says that sometime after he paid the $2000 he got a verbal notice from Dr. Eddy’s wife. “She came in one morning and asked me about this; I told her where this line was, and she told me I had better look my title up before I paid the rest of it.” There is nothing to indicate when this conversation or notice was with reference to the payment of Jan. 6, 1925, the presumption being that it was before that date.

Nothing was paid thereafter and execution issued on the judgment on Nov. 3, 1926, almost eleven months after the last payment was made, more than a year after defendant had notice his line might be disputed, more than three years after the judgment was entered and defendant went into possession of his property.

On Nov. 29, 1926, defendant petitioned to open the judgment, alleging that there was a failure of consideration by reason of plaintiff not having the quantity of ground in possession, which he described in his deed from 5 to 7 feet wide running back from County Street.

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Bluebook (online)
11 Pa. D. & C. 415, 1928 Pa. Dist. & Cnty. Dec. LEXIS 120, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/byrne-v-williams-pactcomplgreene-1928.