Rook v. Greenewald

22 Pa. Super. 641, 1903 Pa. Super. LEXIS 283
CourtSuperior Court of Pennsylvania
DecidedMay 4, 1903
DocketAppeal, No. 12
StatusPublished
Cited by18 cases

This text of 22 Pa. Super. 641 (Rook v. Greenewald) 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
Rook v. Greenewald, 22 Pa. Super. 641, 1903 Pa. Super. LEXIS 283 (Pa. Ct. App. 1903).

Opinion

Opinion by

Morrison, J.,

This was an action of ejectment for a small piece of land in Loyalsock township, Lycoming county, Pennsylvania. The verdict was in favor of the plaintiff and judgment being entered thereon the defendant, appellant, took this appeal. The history of the case as stated by the learned counsel for the appellant is as follows : Henry Greenewald and B. H. Detwiler, M. D., were the sole owners as tenants in common of a lot of land situated in Loyalsock township, Lycoming county, Pennsylvania, containing eighty-one acres and sixty perches more or less.

Prior to April 9, 1878, Detwiler and Greenewald agreed to an amicable partition or division of said land so held by them and fixed upon a rail fence then on the ground running eastwardly through said land as the division line between them. Greenewald to take the land north and Detwiler the land south of the fence, as their respective purparts. In accordance with their agreement Greenewald and Detwiler employed Charles Stewart, a surveyor, to go upon the ground and run the division line as fixed by the fence. Stewart ran the line on the ground along the old rail fence, as agreed upon as the division line between Greenewald and Detwiler, beginning at the corner of the land of Mrs. Andrew Hepburn, thence by the following courses and distances, to wit: N. 80E. 15 perches to a post along lands of said party of the first part; thence N. 73|° E. 4 perches to a post; thence N. 46|° E. 4 perches to a post; thence N. 67° E. 12 perches to a post; thence N. 70° E. 6 perches to a post; thence N. 76° E. 24 perches to a post; thence N. 83° E. 2 perches to a post; thence N. 75° E. 85 perches to land of Striebly or Rudino.

Charles Stewart, the surveyor, in making draft of the survey as run by him on the ground and from which the respective deeds of Greenewald and Detwiler were drawn, copied the [645]*645fifth course so that it read, “N. 70° E. 6 perches” instead of “ S. 70° E. 6 perches ” as run by Stewart on the ground along the line of the old rail fence. On April 9,1878, Henry Greenewald and B. H. Detwiler conveyed to each other their respective purparts and Greenewald went into possession of the land on the north side' of the said fence, and has continued in possession to the present time, cultivating the land and making valuable improvements thereon. On March 14,1879, Detwiler conveyed the lands south of the fence to William G. Mather by deed, which describes the land as commencing at the corner of land of Mrs. Andrew Hepburn; thence north 80^° E. 15 perches to a post along land of Henry Greenewald ; thence north the several courses and distances as described in the deed from Henry Greenewald to B. H. Detwiler and Mather, took possession of the land thus purchased and treated the old rail fence as the division line between him and Greenewald. William Newton occupied and worked the land as a tenant for Mather until its sale to Rook, appellee, November 3, 1883. Greenewald and Mather, by mutual agreement stipulated which part of the fence each would build, Mather building with boards that part of the fence that began on the west line next to Hepburn corner and ran east therefrom, in the exact location of the old rail fence, the rails of the old fence being. divided between Greenewald and Mather. Mather showed William Newton, his tenant, and his sons the old rail fence on the- ground, and the post driven between the hickories at the northeast corner, as his line. On November 3,1883, W. G. Mather conveyed the land south of the fence to Joseph S. Rook, the appellee, by deed which is an exact copy of the deed from Detwiler to Mather. Prior to the sale by Mather to Rook, Mather notified William Newton, his tenant, that he was going to sell the land; that Joseph S. Rook, the appellee, would come to examine the land, and directed Newton to show Rook the lines, which Newton did, showing Rook the division line between Greenewald and Mather, which was the same line that was run on the ground by Charles Stewart, the surveyor, marked by the old rail fence. Newton told Rook that the post and stones between the hickories at the northeast corner was the corner of the land between Greenewald and Mather. Before Rook, the appellee, purchased the land he called on Henry Greenewald, the appellant, who showed [646]*646Rook the original line on the ground made at the time "of the division and survey. After Rook took possession of the land he worked up to and recognized the fence built in the place and stead of the old rail fence agreed upon by Greenewald and Detwiler, and run by Stewart, the surveyor, as the line between their land until 1895, when Rook brought his first action of ejectment. Rook removed a part of the board fence and built in the place and stead thereof a stone wall in exactly the same position as the old rail fence. Rook cut off the limbs of the cherry trees growing on Greenewald’s land, which extended- over the line fence, and threw them over the fence on Greenewald’s land. The appellant contended at the trial of the case that the line agreed upon by Detwiler and Greenewald, and run on the ground by Charles Stewart, the surveyor, “ S. 70° E. 6 perches to a post ” must govern the description in the deed,'which reads, “thence N. 70° E. 6 perches to a post,” and the strip of land embraced in the plaintiff’s description, which is the result of running the line according to the deed, and not according to the actual survey, is the land of the defendant and not of the plaintiff.

We have thus stated the appellant’s contention in substantially the language of his learned counsel, and, if the question in dispute as to whether the line as written in the deed or the alleged line as marked on the ground is to be determined by the weight of evidence under the ordinary rule in regard to disputed facts, then we think the appellant fairly sustained his contention and was entitled to have the matter submitted to the jury under adequate instructions so that they could find which was the true line of division between the land of the appellant and appellee, that is, whether it was to be controlled by the old fence above referred to, or whether it was as indicated in the deed.

The learned judge below tried the case on the theory that in order to establish the line on the ground different from what it was written in the deed, the evidence must be clear, precise and indubitable, and must in fact be strong enough to remove all reasonable doubt from the minds of the jury. Referring to the facts in evidence in regard to the line fixed by the old fence, the learned judge said: “ If they are so established you would he warranted in finding a verdict in favor of the defend[647]*647ant. If they are not so established then it would be your duty, under the evidence in this case, to find a verdict in favor of the plaintiff.”

Again the court said : “ The defendant seeks by this evidence to overcome the courses and distances described in the deed between the parties. In order to be successful in this effort, the court feels it is his duty to instruct you that the evidence offered by the defendant must be clear and satisfactory. It must be evidence of an extremely strong character, because when a man gives or takes a deed it generally means precisely what it says.” The defendant’s first point was as follows: “If the jury find from all the evidence that B. H.

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Bluebook (online)
22 Pa. Super. 641, 1903 Pa. Super. LEXIS 283, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/rook-v-greenewald-pasuperct-1903.