Ross v. Golden Et Ux.

22 A.2d 310, 146 Pa. Super. 417, 1941 Pa. Super. LEXIS 241
CourtSuperior Court of Pennsylvania
DecidedApril 17, 1941
DocketAppeal, 48
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 22 A.2d 310 (Ross v. Golden 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
Ross v. Golden Et Ux., 22 A.2d 310, 146 Pa. Super. 417, 1941 Pa. Super. LEXIS 241 (Pa. Ct. App. 1941).

Opinions

Opinion bx

Cunningham, J.,

This case is a sequel to the ejectment case between the same parties, reported in 122 Pa. Superior Ct. 234, 186 A. 249, under the title of Golden et ux. v. Ross — one difference being that the parties are now reversed. The Goldens, who were the plaintiffs in the former case, are now the defendants, and Ross, the defendant in that case, is plaintiff here.

The parties live in adjoining houses; fronting upon the north side of Aspen Street in the City of Pittsburgh and connected by a party wall. The premises of the Goldens (owned by entireties) are designated as No. 534 Aspen Street and the Ross property as No. 536 —the Golden house being the central unit, and the Ross the western one, of a block of three two-story dwelling houses.

Stated in general terms, the question involved in the present (as well as in the former) case is where does the law, applicable to the facts developed by the testimony, place the dividing line between their lots which extend some 50 feet from the rear end of the party wall to a private alley, 100 feet north of and parallel with Aspen Street. The controversies between these adjoining property owners arose out of the discovery of the unfortunate circumstance that the party wall between their dwellings was not built at a true right angle with the front line of their lots along Aspen Street.

In 1921, the Goldens owned both properties and by their deed, dated August 2d of that year, conveyed to Ross the property numbered 536. The material portion of the description in that deed is set forth in the former case at page 236. For present purposes it is sufficient to say that it describes the lot as having a frontage of 21 feet on Aspen Street, extending at right *419 angles directly back and preserving the frontage width evenly throughout to the private alley. The description further specifies that on the lot thereby conveyed is a third of a two-story and mansard frame dwelling house.

A few years after this conveyance, it was found, as the result of a survey, that the center line of the party wall and the deed line do not coincide. The deed line is perpendicular to Aspen Street and some six inches on the Ross side of the party wall line. Because, as above stated, the party wall is not at right angles with Aspen Street the two lines are not parallel, and the gap between them widens to about twenty-two inches as they reach the rear boundary. About 1925, Ross rebuilt the kitchen at the rear of his house, extending it laterally to the center of the party wall. Previously the rear extension had been entirely on his side of the deed line. In 1932, before any controversy had arisen, the Goldens erected a concrete wall and a fence extending from the reconstructed portion of the Ross house back to the alley, but along the deed line shown by the survey.

With this condition existing, the Goldens brought the prior action in ejectment in 1933 against Ross, claiming that the reconstructed portion of his dwelling encroached upon their land. The ground then in dispute was the strip occupied by the addition, about 15% feet in length and varying in width from 7% to 15 inches. The trial court held that the description in the deed — “abutting 21 feet on......Aspen Street” — did not control, since'it did not carry the line of the lot thus conveyed by the Goldens to Ross to the center of the party wall, and accordingly entered a nonsuit against the Goldens. On their appeal, this court, in an opinion by Baldrige, J., affirmed the judgment of non-suit. In so doing, we held that the true boundary between the lots was the center line of the party wall. While we were there only concerned with the area in dispute, we indicated that this line, extended the entire length of the property, constituted the real boundary. *420 Our decision was based principally upon the ruling of the Supreme Court in Medara v. DuBois, 187 Pa. 431, 41 A. 322.

Less than a year after that decision, Ross brought the present action in ejectment against the Goldens for the remainder of the strip now occupied by them, — being the area bounded on one side by the deed line and on the other by the party wall line as extended. The wall and fence erected by the Goldens is within this area. The trial Judge, Rimer, P. J., specially presiding, directed a verdict for plaintiff. Defendants’ motions for judgment n.o.v., or a new trial, were denied by the court, in banc, and they now appeal from the judgment on the verdict.

The court below held that the principle adopted by us in our previous decision was controlling. It ruled that the center line of the party wall, extended the entire length of the properties, is the true boundary, and rejected defendants’ contention that they were entitled to go to the jury upon the question of the existence of a consentable line.

In reaching this conclusion, the court below did not treat our prior decision as res judicata of the present controversy, as defendants complain. On the contrary, it expressly recognized the inapplicability of that doctrine, since the subject matter of the present litigation was not included in the former case. It merely determined that the principle enunciated in our prior opinion, and supported by at least three earlier cases, was decisive of the present issue. Accurately speaking, it applied the doctrine of stare decisis. Therefore the pertinent question upon this appeal is whether the facts here presented require the application of the general principle that ordinarily the center of a party wall, extended the entire length of the lots between which it has been erected, is the true dividing line between those lots, though it varies from the line indicated in the description in the deed for one of them. The only other *421 question requiring consideration is whether a prima facie case of a consentable line was made out by defendants.

That party wall lines ordinarily are extended to the full depth of the lot appears to be the settled law in Pennsylvania. The leading case is Medara v. DuBois, supra. The facts are identical with the instant case in that there were row houses erected on a property, parts of which were later sold. A survey disclosed that the party wall did not correspond with the description in the deed, and also that the party wall was not perpendicular with the street, as is the fact in this case. The court stated (p. 439) :

“...... the owner and builder of the twin houses designed to be occupied as separate dwellings, having located and constructed the dividing wall between them as he did, must be held to have intended the same for a party wall, and the center line thereof extended longitudinally from street to street, to be the dividing line between the two properties;......”

To the same effect are Rook v. Greenewald, 22 Pa. Superior Ct. 641, 648; Lodge v. Barnett, 46 Pa. 477; Thompson v. DeLong, 71 Pa. Superior Ct. 282, 286.

The extent to which this doctrine has been carried is illustrated by the case of Hutchinson et al. v. Chisler et al., 275 Pa. 380, 119 A. 534. There, the deed called for a boundary “thence with creek,” but also specified a course and distance.

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Bluebook (online)
22 A.2d 310, 146 Pa. Super. 417, 1941 Pa. Super. LEXIS 241, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/ross-v-golden-et-ux-pasuperct-1941.