Gerhart Et Ux. v. Hilsenbeck

63 A.2d 124, 164 Pa. Super. 85, 1949 Pa. Super. LEXIS 274
CourtSuperior Court of Pennsylvania
DecidedOctober 4, 1948
DocketAppeal, 96
StatusPublished
Cited by13 cases

This text of 63 A.2d 124 (Gerhart Et Ux. v. Hilsenbeck) 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
Gerhart Et Ux. v. Hilsenbeck, 63 A.2d 124, 164 Pa. Super. 85, 1949 Pa. Super. LEXIS 274 (Pa. Ct. App. 1948).

Opinion

Opinion by

Reno, J.,

Plaintiffs sued in equity to compel defendants, who are owners and their tenant, to remove obstructions from an alley in the rear of their respective properties. The chancellor found for plaintiffs, and defendants’ exceptions were dismissed by the court en banc.

Plaintiffs secured title to No. 6316 Norwood Street, Philadelphia, by a deed dated July 22,1942. It describes premises fronting on Norwood Street 14 feet 6 inches wide and extending 87 feet “to a certain three feet wide alley, which leads Southwardly and into another three feet wide alley, which leads Eastwardly into another three feet wide alley, which leads Eastwardly into said Norwood Street. Together with the free and common use, right, liberty and privilege of the aforesaid alleys as and for a passage way and water course at all times hereafter ■ forever.”

The Hilsenbecks own No. 6312 Norwood Street, which they secured by a sheriff’s deed dated June 25, 1934. It describes premises of the same width as plaintiffs’, ex *87 tending 57 feet “to a certain three feet wide alley which leads Southwardly and into another three feet wide alley leading Eastward into- Norwood Street; thence extending Northward along the-first above mentioned alley -Four feet to a point; thence extending further Westtoard along the North side of a certain other three feet toide alley Thirty feet to a point; thence extending Northward along the East side of a Certain other Three feet wide alley Ten feet Six inches; thence extending Eastward along a line at right angles between parallel lines to the said Norwood Street Eighty-seven feet to Norwood Street; thence extending Southward along the said Norwood Street Fourteen feet ¡six inches to the place of beginning. . . . Together with the free and common use, right, liberty and privilege of the aforesaid' alleys as and-for passageways and water courses at all times hereafter forever.” (Emphasis added.) The sheriff’s deed was made pursuant 'to a sale of the premises upon a mortgage given by the then’ owners, to the Hilsenbecks on October 16, 1923. The description contained in the mortgage does not appear in the record, but at the argument we were informed that customarily the sheriff’s office follows the descriptions included in mortgages.

The Hilsenbecks defended upon the ground that the easement in the alley had been extinguished by the adverse possession of themselves and their predecessors for the period of the Statute of Limitations. The burden of proof was upon them, and they were required to show by the fair preponderance of the evidence the essentials of adverse possession.- They failed to establish a case, and the decree will be affirmed.

Obstructions of "some character were placed in that portion of the alley déscribed in-the Hilsenbecks’ deed as a “three feet wide alley thirty-feet [long]” as early as 1919. The Hilsenbecks did not take possession until 1934, but they contend that they were permitted to tack the adverse possession: of their predecessors to their own, and thereby'make out the full prescriptive period.

*88 Their proposition is not tenable. Their deed, describes their premises-as bounded by the alley.- Neither it nor the mortgage purported to convey more, land than that contained within the boundaries fixed by the alley. There was no attempt in the deed to convey any portion of the alley, and there was no evidence, of an intention aliunde the deed to convey more than was described in the deed. The deed recognized the existence of the. alley, and subjected it to a “free and common use”. Continuity of possession may be established by a sheriff’s deed. Scheetz v. Fitzwater, 5 Pa. 126. But “A deed does not of itself create privity between the grantor and the grantee as to land not described in the deed • but occupied by the grantor in connection therewith, although the grantee enters into possession, of the land not described and uses it in connection with that conveyed. . . . The deed, in itself, creates no privity as to land outside its calls. Nor is privity created by the bare taking of possession of land previously occupied by the grantor. - Likewise, where a deed expressly excludes certain property occupied by the grantor in connection with that conveyed,. the grantee,, even though he succeeds to the possession of that property, cannot tack the grantor’s possession to his own”: 1 Am. Jur., Adverse Possession, §156. See also 1 Thompson on Real Property, §446; 5 Id. §2653; 46 A. L. R., Annotations, p. 792.

This general rule, supported by decisions in many states, is the law in Pennsylvania. As early as 1859, the Supreme Court said in Schrack v. Zubler, 34 Pa. 38, 41: “No doubt, a succession may be. kept up by tacking possessions ; but each succeeding occupant must show title under Ms predecessor, so as to preserve a unity of possession. If this were not so, the first intruder might abandon his intention of holding adversely and leave the possession, and a succeeding one might enter and claim, without authority, a quality in the predecessor’s possession which he had abandoned. Zubler could only claim Herring’s possession as enuring to his use, by virtue of *89 some conveyance of it, which we havé seen he had not.” On the second appeal, of the same case, Zubler v. Schrack, 46 Pa. 67, 72, Mr. Justice Thompson said: “. . . an adverse possession .begun and-continued for a time, in Order to be available to a successor, must be transferred to such successor in some lawful manner. This is as true as that property can only be rightfully acquired with the assént of its Owner, or vested by .operation of law. As therefore ah-adverse possession of ah occupier, although not ripened into a complete title, is a step towards title, and is property, like property it must be transmitted, so as to vest in a successor a'right-to that which had been gained by such occupation: Overfield v. Christie, 7 S. & R. 173; [Scheetz v. Fitzwater] 5 State Rep. 126.”

The principle has been applied several times by this Court. In Shaffer v. Lauria, 50 Pa. Superior Ct. 135, 141, the defendant relied upon adverse possession by him and his predecessors, but a verdict for plaintiff in ejectment was affirmed, and this Court said: “Even if .there was room under the testimony . ; . for a finding that any possession by'Gehner of the strip in dispute, which was wholly ohtside the lines of his deed, was so adverse to the real owner as to. create what has been called a sprouting-title to the strip of land in dispute, it is also, clear that he made no attempt 'to convey any such interest to the present, defendant.” In the more recent case, Masters v. Local Union No. 472, U. M. W., 146 Pa. Superior Ct. 143, 22 A. 2d 70, Judge Hirt reviewed the foregoing authorities, followed them, and speaking for this Court, held that acceptance of a deed describing boundary lines confines 'the. premises to the area within the boundaries, and that such a deed did. not convey inchoate rights acquired by- uncompleted advérse possession.

The two cases upon which defendants rely do not controvert the rule.. They rest upon another phase of the rule to which we have already adverted, whereby an intent to convey more than the described premises may be inferred; from circumstances; aud perhaps from-the

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
63 A.2d 124, 164 Pa. Super. 85, 1949 Pa. Super. LEXIS 274, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/gerhart-et-ux-v-hilsenbeck-pasuperct-1948.