Daniels v. Adlof Et Ux.

89 Pa. Super. 69, 1926 Pa. Super. LEXIS 8
CourtSuperior Court of Pennsylvania
DecidedApril 19, 1926
DocketAppeal 113
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 89 Pa. Super. 69 (Daniels v. Adlof Et Ux.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Superior Court of Pennsylvania primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Daniels v. Adlof Et Ux., 89 Pa. Super. 69, 1926 Pa. Super. LEXIS 8 (Pa. Ct. App. 1926).

Opinion

Opinion by

Cunningham, J.,

Appellants, Mary L. Adlof and Frederick W. Adlof, her husband, were defendants in the court below in an action of ejectment brought by appellee, Eva S. Daniels, to recover possession of the northern half of lot No. 374 in the general plan of the Borough of New Brighton, Beaver County, Pennsylvania. Said half of said lot is 21 feet in width fronting on 5th Avenue in *71 said borough, and extending eastwardly to 6th Avenue and is bounded on the south by the southern half of said lot No. 374 and on the north by lot No. 372, which is 42' feet in width and likewise extends from 5th Avenue on the west to 6th Avenue on the east.

Eva S. Daniels, appellee, sought to recover possession of said northern half of said lot No. 374 upon the strength of her record or paper title to the same, and the appellants defended upon the ground that the said Mary L. Adlof, nee Mary L. Emmel (Emil), and her father and mother, as her predecessors in title, had acquired title to said portion of said lot by adverse possession, beginning in June, 1867. The trial in May, 1925, resulted in a verdict in favor of the plaintiff and a new trial having been refused this appeal was taken by the defendants.

The five assignments of error relate exclusively to the answers of the trial judge to three of the fifteen points for special instructions submitted on behalf of defendants.

1. The first and second assignments charge the court below with error in qualifying its ¡affirmance of defendants’ first point, which point and answer were:

“That if Christian Emil did say to Edward Houk in 1883 or 1882, that he had been paying taxes on the property in question and that one of the McGill heirs was away in the west, and that he had quit paying taxes on the property for the reason that he understood that in such circumstances he could not get the property by paying taxes on it, such statement would not prevent the running of the statute of limitations, if it had already started to run.
Answer — This is affirmed, with this qualification : That this is true in so far as he referred to the acquiring of title by the payment of taxes. *72 But if you find from the evidence that he said more than that, and stated that he had concluded not to pay taxes because he could not get title for any other reason or in any other way than by the payment of taxes, you will consider that for the purpose of determining whether or not the possession of this lot in dispute by Christian Emil, if he was in possession of it, wias an adverse possession. Of course you will disregard this, unless you find that the conversation took place as testified to by Mr. Houk. But if you find it did take place, you will consider it only as it may affect the question of whether the possession of Mr. Emil was adverse, if he had any possession at all; whether he was then holding the possession of that property with a view of getting the title to it.”

A brief reference to the issue which occasioned the submission of the foregoing point is essential to a consideration of this assignment of error. The main issue arising under the pleadings and evidence in the case was whether the defendants had shown by the fair preponderance of the evidence that they and their predecessors in title h'ad been in actual, continued, visible or open, notorious, exclusive, and hostile or adverse possession of the real estate in dispute for a period of twenty-one years.

It was contended by the defendants that the father of Mary L. Adlof, Christian Enamel, bought said lot No. 372 at sheriff’s sale in June, 1867; built a house tbereon and took possession not only of said lot No. 372 but 'also of the northern half of the adjoining lot to the south, being lot No. 374; that Christian Emmel died in 1899, intestate, leaving to survive him his widow, Catherine Enamel, who died in 1914, and one daughter, Mary L., intermarried with Frederick W. Adlof, the present defendants; that the statute of limi *73 tations began to run in 1867; and that nothing had occurred to interrupt the running of the statute down to the present time.

It was conceded that the title to said northern half of lot No. 374 had been vested in James A. McGill, who died, intestate, in 1854. It was proven by the plaintiff, Eva S. Daniels, that by deed dated June 13, 1888, the heirs of the said McGill conveyed the real estate now in dispute to Henry S. Johnston; that said Johnston by deed dated May 15, 1890, conveyed the same to F. X. Fisher, the father of the plaintiff; that said Fisher died, intestate, March 22,1909, leaving to survive him a widow, now deceased, and three daughters, Lizzie J. Gierst, Hannah M. Eainbow, and the said Eva S. Daniels; and that by deed dated July 1, 1922, the sisters of said plaintiff conveyed their interests in said half of said lot to plaintiff.

The controversy at the trial related chiefly to the question whether Christian Emmel and his heirs had ever actually taken possession of said half of said lot and, if so, what the nature of such possession had been. The evidence, taken as a whole, showed occasional uses by defendants and their predecessors of the half lot in question, such as using it for ingress and egress to their own lot, No. 372, drying clothes and dumping ashes upon it, picking fruit from trees growing thereon, and the like. But, as stated by the trial judge in his opinion refusing a new trial, the jury was fully warranted in finding from the evidence that the land in dispute was a vacant town lot unenclosed or only partly enclosed; open to common use by the neighbors from time to time for such purposes as such lots are ordinarily used; occupied and used by others than the defendants at various times as ¡a short way between the abutting streets, as a garden, as a storage place for an automobile and implements of trade, as a playground for the children of the vicinity, etc.; and in *74 concluding that the evidence was not sufficient to support the defendants’ claim to title by adverse possession.

Among other items of evidence offered for the purpose of showing that whatever possession the defendants may have had was not of the character essential to establish a title, was the testimony of Edward Houk, referred to in siadd point. He was a disinterested witness, who had lived for forty-three years on lot No. 370 immediately north of the Enxrnel home. The material part of his testimony was as follows:

£tQ. Did you ever have any conversation with Christian Emil with reference to this lot?
A. I heard him telling that he had paid taxes on this lot for a number of years, :and that he had quit paying taxes on it because — ”
(Objection, discussion, and overruling of objection.)
££Q. Go ahead.
A. He said he had paid taxes on this property for a number of years, but he had quit paying taxes on account of, that there was one of the heirs of the property who was in the west somewhere, and he didn’t know where he was, and he could not own the property; that he couldn’t gain it, by paying taxes.
Q.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
89 Pa. Super. 69, 1926 Pa. Super. LEXIS 8, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/daniels-v-adlof-et-ux-pasuperct-1926.