Gutelius v. Coldwell Et Ux.

22 A.2d 100, 146 Pa. Super. 226, 1941 Pa. Super. LEXIS 212
CourtSuperior Court of Pennsylvania
DecidedApril 15, 1941
DocketAppeal, 107
StatusPublished

This text of 22 A.2d 100 (Gutelius v. Coldwell 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
Gutelius v. Coldwell Et Ux., 22 A.2d 100, 146 Pa. Super. 226, 1941 Pa. Super. LEXIS 212 (Pa. Ct. App. 1941).

Opinion

Opinion by

Keller, P. J.,

This was an action of ejectment to recover possession of a strip of land fronting two feet on North Front Street in the Borough of Punxsutawney, and extending in depth of that width, eastwardly, one hundred and fifty feet to a twenty foot alley known as Snyder Alley. It was tried by the 'court without a jury under the Act of April 22, 1874, P. L. 109, and resulted in findings and a decision for the defendants. Exceptions of the plaintiff to the findings, conclusion, etc. of the court were dismissed and judgment entered for defendants. Plaintiff appealed.

Both parties claim from a common source.

*228 The strip in question and the adjoining lands of both plaintiff and defendants form part of a large tract of land owned by one P. W. Jenks. Mr. Jenks, it seems, first granted to the Buffalo, Rochester & Pittsburgh Railroad Company (now the Baltimore & Ohio Railroad Company) for its right of way a piece of land one hundred feet wide. This deed is not in evidence, but in another deed its course at this point was described as running north 53% degrees east. It seems to be conceded, however, that the course described an arc which approximated that direction. The grant to the railroad is not in dispute in this action.

Out of his remaining land Jenks then conveyed to John and Mary Hennigh, by deed dated December 22, 1882 and recorded March 17, 1883, a lot of ground in Young Township fronting on the east side of the Punxsutawney and Luthersburg turnpike road (now known as North Front Street 1 in the Borough of Punxsutawney), 75 feet, and extending in depth of that width eastwardly 150 feet. This deed made no reference whatever to the distance of the lot from the railroad right of way, or the location of the lot with reference to it, the north and south points on the turnpike road being described only as posts.

Jenks subsequently conveyed all of his land south of the railroad, inter alia, to Henry A. Ham, by deed dated February 3, 1883, recorded April 17, 1883. The description was as follows:

“Also all that certain piece of land on East side of Punxsutawney & Luthersburg road in said Township of Young and adjoining grant of land given to R. & P. R. R. Beginning at a post on said L. Turnpike road; thence N. 53% East along said Railroad grant 42 perches to Mahoning Creek; thence down the bank *229 of said Creek following the meanderings thereof on North side thereof to lot conveyed to H. Ernest; thence along line of Ernest lot to Punxsutawney and Luthersburg Turnpike road; thence North along said road to place of beginning, containing 6 acres 120 perches, neat measure, excepting and reserving out of said pieces of land the lot sold and conveyed to John and Mary Hennigh, said lot being seventy-four feet on Turnpike road by one hundred and fifty feet in depth.”

It will be noted that the reservation of the lot conveyed to John and Mary Hennigh was for a lot fronting only 74 feet on the turnpike instead of 75 feet as had been conveyed to them. The description in the Hennigh deed will govern, as the deed to them was recorded within six months 2 after its execution and before the deed to Ham was recorded.

The difficulties present in this case grew out of the fact that Mr. Ham and his successors in title conveyed more frontage on North Front Street than he or they owned, and the question arises who inust bear the shortage.

In an endeavor to solve this question, in so far as it might affect the strip of land in controversy, the defendant appellees and the court below insisted on making the railroad right of way the basic starting point from which the lots to the south of it must be measured; while the plaintiff contends that as none of the land of either plaintiff or defendants was conveyed with any reference to the railroad right of way, the lot conveyed to the Hennighs, now known as the Eentschler lot, which was unquestionably the first or oldest conveyance of the lots on the east side of North Front Street laid out by Jenks or Ham, must be the starting point. On this, we agree with the plaintiff. If the location of the lot conveyed to John and Mary Hennigh — now known *230 as the Reutschlex* lot — can be fixed, the respective measurements of the plaintiff’s and defendants’ lots will be easily established, for they are all governed by their distance from the south line of the Rentschler lot, and are not based on their respective distances from the railroad right of way.

The following plan shows the lots conveyed by Jenks and the Hams respectively, the numbers representing the order in which the conveyances were made. (See Figure 1)

The plaintiff, J. M. Gutelius’s claim is based (1) on his title to No. 4 (50 feet) conveyed by Ham to H. C. Gutelius, September 17, 1888, (recorded September 24, 1888); and sold by the sheriff, as the property of H. O. Gutelius to J. M. Gutelius, July 28, 1930 ^acknowledged August 8, 1930, recorded December 11, 1930); and (2) on his title to the southern two feet of No. 5 (58 feet) 3 , which No. 5 was conveyed by Ham to Shields, May 1, 1893, (recorded May 22, 1893) and by Shields to Mrs. Sophia Ham, May 2, 1893, (recorded May 22, 1893). Mrs. Ham conveyed the northern 36 feet of No. 5, adjoining the Burgen lot (No. 3) to Kurtz, November 1, 1895, (recorded December 26, 1895), which became vested in Shaffer, August 11,1896, (recorded August 13, 1896). She conveyed the southern 22 feet, adjoining H. O. Gutelius (No. 4) to H. C. Gutelius, March 1, 1906, (recorded March 5, 1906). H. O. Gutelius conveyed the northern 20 feet of this

*231

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Bluebook (online)
22 A.2d 100, 146 Pa. Super. 226, 1941 Pa. Super. LEXIS 212, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/gutelius-v-coldwell-et-ux-pasuperct-1941.