Matthews v. Bagnik

41 A.2d 875, 157 Pa. Super. 115, 1945 Pa. Super. LEXIS 319
CourtSuperior Court of Pennsylvania
DecidedMarch 6, 1945
DocketAppeals, 15 and 16
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 41 A.2d 875 (Matthews v. Bagnik) 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
Matthews v. Bagnik, 41 A.2d 875, 157 Pa. Super. 115, 1945 Pa. Super. LEXIS 319 (Pa. Ct. App. 1945).

Opinion

Opinion by

Baldbige, P. J.,

The plaintiff brought this bill in equity alleging ownership of certain described land, covered by water, located in South Canaan Township, Wayne County. It is an artificial body of water known originally as Bronson’s Pond, later as the reservoir of the Scranton Pishing Club, and now as Lake Quinsigmond. She averred that the defendants, their agents, employes, or guests have been trespassing intermittently upon, and using the water of, the lake. The defendants in their answer denied that the plaintiff is the owner of all the land mentioned in her bill and asserted a legal title to part thereof, and that they have riparian rights extending to the middle of the lake. They averred also that they have used the lake from 1905 to the present time adversely, continuously, notoriously, and hostilely for fishing, boating, swimming, cutting ice, that they permitted their friends and others to do likewise, and that they used the lake water for their stock and domestic purposes. The learned trial judge, after several hearings, filed an opinion in which all the issues involved were fully discussed. Definite findings of fact and conclusions of law were included therein, and a decree was entered granting plaintiff the relief she sought. His action will be affirmed.

About a century ago John Jessup and Gabriel Howell, predecessors in title of both parties to this action, were engaged in the lumbering business. To provide increased water power for a newly erected sawmill and a gristmill, they built a dam, which enlarged Bronson’s Pond. In 1849 they purchased 5 tracts of land to be flooded. The boundaries of 4 of these tracts were fixed by the flow line of the lake, the surface of which was to be raised to a level of 3 feet 1 inch above “Pond Rock.” The tract upon which the dam was located ealled for courses and distances. The others did not.

In 1937, J. Bailee Rutherford, a registered engineer, made surveys of the properties purchased by Jessup *117 and Howell and blueprints thereof were offered and read in evidence without objection. He testified that by using certain of the old deeds, which described the original flow line of the enlarged lake, and still older deeds in the chain of title, which contained calls for courses and distances, and also the original warrants, he was able to connect all these properties and to fix the original shore or flow line. During the winter of that year, he made on the ice of the lake a survey, which he superimposed upon the one he had made from the deeds, warrants, etc., and found that the present flow line coincides with the original.

The plaintiff on August 8, 1932, by deed recorded in Deed Book Yol. 135, p. 277, acquired her title from her mother, Fannie V. Steell. She and her husband had been record owners of this lake property since 1902, and had maintained a summer cottage nearby.

Mary Bagnik acquired title to the land defendants claim by deed dated December 6, 1905, and recorded in Wayne County, Deed Book Yol. 94, p. 252. She and her husband conveyed it to Anthony Bagnik, Jr. and Josephine Bagnik, by deed dated July 8, 1936, recorded in Deed Book Vol. 140, p. 462, reserving a life use to the husband, Anthony Bagnik. It is not contended that there has been any change in the shore line of the lake since 1905. The Bagniks’ deeds give no courses or distances and describe the property as follows, to wit: “Bounded on the northwest by the reservoir of the Scranton Fishing Club [now Lake Quinsigmond]; on the northeast by the lands formerly of Huida Carey, but now of B. F. Swingle; on the southeast by the main road leading from Archbald to South Canaan; and on the southwest by lands of John Beers, containing sixty acres, more or less.” It will be noted that no mention is made of any water rights. The defendants introduced a map in evidence showing that 36.2 acres of their land was outside the flow line of, and projected the *118 remainder, 23.7 acres, of the claimed 60 acres into, the lake.

The learned court below calls attention to the fact that in examining the description in some of the old deeds of the defendants’ predecessors, which were not printed in this record, he found that 91 acres, bounded on the northwest by the reservoir of the old Jessup and Howell mill property, were deeded in 1865, and in 1898 the same tract was conveyed and the acreage given then was 95 acres; that Hiram Swingle, the grantor in Mary Bagnik’s deed, conveyed to Lester Kizer in 1900 the southeast portion containing '50 acres of the 91 acre tract, leaving Swingle with but 41 acres. In 1905 he deeded the remainder of the tract, designating it as containing 60 acres, to Mary Bagnik, one of the defendants, thus apparently showing an error in the acreage of defendants’ land. Be that as it may, as the defendants’ deeds call for the reservoir of the Scranton Fishing Club as their northwest boundary, they are not entitled to any land beyond that line.

It is a well recognized rule of law that if a deed describes land by natural boundaries, or if artificial permanent objects are mentioned as monuments, they control; even courses, distances and quantities of land called for must yield: Large v. Penn, 6 S. & R. 488; Andrews v. Kissinger, 60 Pa. Superior Ct. 599; Collins v. Clough, 222 Pa. 472, 71 A. 1077; Miles Land Co. v. Hudson Coal Co., 246 Pa. 11, 91 A. 1061; Keech et al. v. Delaware County Trust Co., Adm., 297 Pa. 442, 147 A. 96. The flow line of this unnavigable, private lake was the boundary of defendants’ property. The description given in their deed is perfectly clear. The natural boundary called for is readily ascertainable and its location was definitely determined. They had no more right to claim property beyond that line than if this land had not been covered with water or to assert that their land overlapped B. F. Swingle’s property on the northeast boundary.

*119 We are fully aware that title to land bordering on a navigable stream extends to the low water marks, subject to certain public rights, and where land abuts on creeks and unnavigable rivers, the owner’s title extends to the middle of the stream. In the case of an unnavigable pond or lake as here, when the land covered by water is owned by others and no riparian rights attach to the property bordering on the lake, if one attempts to exercise such rights, the use of the lake is as much a trespass as if an unauthorized entry were made upon the dry land: Miller et al. v. Lutheran Conference and Camp Association, 331 Pa. 241, 247, 200 A. 646.

It has been expressly held that the mere ownership of the strip of land gives no right of ownership in the pond or lake upon which it borders: Baylor v. Decker, 133 Pa. 168, 19 A. 351. Nor does ownership of land bordering on a lake confer a right upon the owner to fish in the lake, much less to give a license to others therefor.

We find no justification for defendants’ claiming a title to the middle of the lake. They are entitled to the land within the boundaries called for in their deeds, but nothing more.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
41 A.2d 875, 157 Pa. Super. 115, 1945 Pa. Super. LEXIS 319, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/matthews-v-bagnik-pasuperct-1945.