Goldstein v. Heirs & Assigns of Cloyd

26 Pa. D. & C.2d 235, 1961 Pa. Dist. & Cnty. Dec. LEXIS 104
CourtPennsylvania Court of Common Pleas, Chester County
DecidedMarch 10, 1961
Docketno. 6
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 26 Pa. D. & C.2d 235 (Goldstein v. Heirs & Assigns of Cloyd) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Pennsylvania Court of Common Pleas, Chester County primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Goldstein v. Heirs & Assigns of Cloyd, 26 Pa. D. & C.2d 235, 1961 Pa. Dist. & Cnty. Dec. LEXIS 104 (Pa. Super. Ct. 1961).

Opinion

Gawthrop, P. J.,

Plaintiff brought an action to quiet title to real estate. Service was made by publication under appropriate order. No answer being filed, he moved for judgment in his favor. At that time, the court raised the question whether title to the cemetery plot involved, containing bodies interred in marked graves, may be obtained by adverse possession. After argument, the matter is before us for decision. The relief sought may not properly be granted.

One James Cloyd, in 1752, became owner of certain lands in East Whiteland Township, Chester County, containing substantial acreage. During his ownership, a family burial plot was established on the premises and bodies were interred in it. In 1763, James Cloyd conveyed his lands to David Cloyd by a deed containing the following provisions: “Excepting and always reserving four perches square or sixteen perches of land in the field on the North side of the Provincial Road and contiguous thereto, with free egress and regress to and from the same for use of a graveyard or burying ground to environ or encompass the graves therein already made.” Ultimately title to 14.772 acres thereof, including the burying ground, vested in plaintiff by deed dated July 1, 1960, and is now a residential development.

The cemetery plot borders what is now Swedesford Road. That part of it in which bodies have been interred, containing about four square perches, is now surrounded by a dilapidated stone wall; three headstones are visible and the enclosure is overgrown with honeysuckle, trees and poison ivy. The remaining 12 square perches of the plot appear to contain no interments. The plot as a whole is surrounded by land now improved with new residences. Plaintiff’s avowed purpose is to obtain indefeasible title to the cemetery plot, apply to the court of quarter sessions under the appro[237]*237priate act of assembly for an order allowing removal and reinterment of the bodies found buried in the plot, and, after such removal, to improve the plot. He claims ownership of the entire burying ground of 16 square perches through adverse possession by himself and his predecessors in title for more than 21 years. In the view we take of the matter the order sought may not be entered.

No title to the burial plot passed from James Cloyd to David Cloyd by the deed of 1763. The word “excepting” with which the terms of the burial plot provision commence eliminated that tract from the lands conveyed. “ ‘An exception is always of part of the thing granted, it is of the whole of the part excepted.’ ” Lauderbach-Zerby Co. v. Lewis, 283 Pa. 250, 254. The following words “and always reserving” created and erected a new right in the part reserved. “ ‘A reservation is the creation of a right or interest which had no prior existence as such . . .’” in the part which it affects. The grantor’s intent must be disclosed by the words used: Lauderbach case, supra, 254. Thus, James Cloyd excepted and retained title to the 16 square perches and at the same time by “always reserving” it created the burial use for the “graves therein already made” in perpetuity.

Nor is such use limited to only that part in which bodies are interred and graves marked. The grantor provided that the plot was excepted and reserved to “environ or encompass” the graves therein already made. (Italics supplied.) “Environ” means “to surround, encircle, or encompass”; “encompass” means “to encircle, surround, contain or enclose in any way”: Webster’s International Dictionary, 2nd Ed. Thus James Cloyd’s undoubted intention was to surround, encircle and enclose forever by and within the whole of the 16 square perches “the graves therein already made” at the date of his deed to David Cloyd. What [238]*238those who came after him did by walling in approximately one-quarter of the plot where the graves then appeared to be cannot have the effect of delimiting or reducing the area of the perpetual use he originally impressed upon the whole plot. The whole therefore remains as the “graveyard or burying ground” surrounding the bodies there interred.

Title to a burial ground may not be obtained by adverse possession so long as the dead are buried there and the graves are marked: St. Peters’ Evangelical Lutheran Church v. Kleinfelter, 30 Dauph. 404, modified on other grounds and, as modified, affirmed, 96 Pa. Superior Ct. 146.

The facts of this case differ sufficiently from those in Davis v. Rumford, 43 Del. Co. 355, cited by petitioners, as to be easily distinguishable. In that case, the cemetery, of about the same size as that here in question, was established by mere use of part of a one-half acre tract and not as here by express exception and reservation of the whole plot. And although the decree quieting title had already been entered without notice of the cemetery’s existence, the integrity of the cemetery was preserved by the decree entered.

Petitioner’s argument based on the theory of an easement of burial rights, which might be terminated by adverse possession, has no force in the view we take of the matter.

In such an action, plaintiff must prevail on the strength of his own title: Cox’s Incorporated v. Snodgrass, 372 Pa. 148. Since he has not shown title by adverse possession to any of the burial ground of 16 square perches, he is not entitled to the relief he seeks barring defendants from asserting any right, title, lien or interest in the lands inconsistent with his claim set forth in the complaint.

The order prayed for is denied.

July 26, 1961.

Opinion Sur Exceptions

. . . In his exceptions, plaintiff raises three questions: (1) Can title to a cemetery in which bodies are interred in marked graves be acquired by adverse possession; (2) does use for burial purposes of a part of a tract impress the whole tract with such use so that title to the part not so occupied may not be acquired by adverse possession, and (3) did title to the premises in question pass subject only to an easement of burial of members of the Cloyd family?

By the language of the exception contained in the deed of James Cloyd to David Cloyd in 1763, for the reasons stated in the previous opinion the whole, and not merely the occupied part, of the plot of 16 square perches was excepted and impressed with a use for burial purposes, the unoccupied part being expressly established “to environ and encompass the graves therein already made” in the part occupied. (Italics ours.) Thus, the whole of the plot became the cemetery, title to which, by the terms of the exception, remained in the grantor: Lauderbach-Zerby Co. v. Lewis, 283 Pa. 250, 254.

Davis v. Rumford, 43 Del. Co. 355, is strongly relied upon by plaintiff in support of his argument that the integrity of the occupied portion is still preserved although the remaining three fourths of the 16 square perches becomes his property by adverse possession. We cannot agree. That case is neither controlling nor apposite, although it recognizes the principle that an owner is bound to preserve the integrity of an existing cemetery. There the cemetery was located in a small corner of a lot containing .55 of an acre, established not by express terms of a deed but by mere use of a small part of the larger tract which also had erected upon it a former school building used as a church, and [240]*240a frame dwelling house. Furthermore, the deed unto the owner during whose tenure the cemetery use began and continued was a fee simple deed containing no trust or other terms referring to use of the land.

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26 Pa. D. & C.2d 235, 1961 Pa. Dist. & Cnty. Dec. LEXIS 104, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/goldstein-v-heirs-assigns-of-cloyd-pactcomplcheste-1961.