Tosh v. Witts

113 A.2d 226, 381 Pa. 255, 1955 Pa. LEXIS 476
CourtSupreme Court of Pennsylvania
DecidedApril 18, 1955
DocketAppeal, 101
StatusPublished
Cited by28 cases

This text of 113 A.2d 226 (Tosh v. Witts) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Pennsylvania primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Tosh v. Witts, 113 A.2d 226, 381 Pa. 255, 1955 Pa. LEXIS 476 (Pa. 1955).

Opinion

Opinion by

Mr. Chief Justice Horace Stern,

This is an appeal from the lower court’s refusal to order defendants to remove a fence which they had erected in order to block an alleged right of way of plaintiffs over defendants’ land. The court dismissed the bill of complaint at the conclusion of plaintiffs’ testimony.

Fourth Avenue intersects Fourth Street at right angles in the Borough of Freedom, Beaver County. Fourth Avenue runs in a northwesterly and southeasterly direction, Fourth Street from northeast to southwest. Plaintiffs own several contiguous lots fronting on Fourth Avenue southeast of Fourth Street, and they also owned a lot fronting on Fourth Street southwest of Fourth Avenue. On one of their Fourth Avenue lots they erected a two-story building containing on its upper story five garages which opened out onto Fourth Avenue, but, because of a sharply descending grade toward the southwest, four garages which were on the lower floor and which, being below the *257 street level of Fourth Avenue faced downhill, were accessible to motor vehicles from Fourth Street only-through the rear of the lot. Accordingly plaintiffs had laid out and for many years maintained and used a driveway extending from Fourth Street southeastwardly toward the rear of the Fourth Street lot and then in a northeasterly direction upgrade to the garages on the first floor of the Fourth Avenue building.

Plaintiffs sold and conveyed the Fourth Street lot to defendants. The deed of conveyance was prepared by a loan association to which defendants had applied for a mortgage. When it was presented to plaintiffs for execution they found that no right to the use of the driveway had been reserved therein and they therefore returned it for correction. As redrafted it contained a clause the wording of which is the principal subject of the present controversy. As recorded in the Recorder’s Office it reads as follows: “Subject to the driveway now existing on the premises and extending from Fourth .................... to the rear of the premises herein described.” But when the deed itself was produced by defendants at the hearing before the Chancellor it appeared plainly that the blank space after the word “Fourth” had originally contained the word “Avenue,” which, being obviously erroneous, had been erased and the word “street,” and above it the abbreviation “St.,” inserted in pencil. How this came about does not appear in the evidence. At any rate the deed was delivered to - defendants and .they went into-possession of the-Fourth Street lot.. .Plaintiffs continued for more than two years thereafter to use the drive.wny over the lot as-theretofore:'in order-to gain access' to the lower floor garages of their Fourth Avenue structure, but then defendants, denying their right thereto, erected a wire-rope.fence, across the driveway, thereby provoking the institution of the present action.

*258 From plaintiffs’ testimony it appears that the driveway was clearly and visibly laid out on the ground. It was paved with concrete where it started at the curb line of Fourth Street and the rest of it was covered with slag and ashes all the way up the hill to plaintiffs’ garages; it was described as being about 12 to 14 feet wide at its Fourth Street end, that it then ran approximately of that same width in a southeasterly direction parallel with defendants’ house on its downhill side for a distance of about 40 feet, and then turned in a northeasterly direction between the rear of defendants’ house and the front of their garage on the rear of their lot, widening out after this turn to about 30 feet. The driveway being thus sharply defined it would seem that plaintiffs had brought their case well within the established principle * that, where an owner of land subjects part of it to an open, visible, permanent and continuous servitude or easement in favor of another part and then aliens either, the purchaser takes subject to the burden or the benefit as the case may be, and this irrespective of whether or not the easement constituted a necessary right of way. Defendants had inspected the premises prior to the purchase and thus had actual notice of the existence of the driveway and the use which plaintiffs had made of it as the means of entrance to, and exit from, the lower level garages on their Fourth Avenue lot.

In plaintiffs’ bill of complaint they set forth all the above facts but at the hearing their counsel stated that they did not- base their claim-'on a right gained *259 by “prescription” arising from the use of the driveway for 21 years or more, but relied on the express reservation contained in their deed to defendants. Of course one' does not gain a prescriptive right by adverse user during the period when he himself is the owner of the property. But apparently the court construed counsel’s somewhat ambiguous concession as constituting an abandonment of any claim to an easement by implied reservation and, since there was some ground for such an interpretation, we proceed to a consideration of the express reservation in the deed.

There is no doubt but that, ordinarily, a party producing an instrument which shows apparent alterations has the burden of explaining them, particularly where they are to his benefit. In the present case, however, there does not arise any difficulty in that respect. The deed was produced at the hearing by the defendants and, admittedly, had been in their possession from the time of its original delivery to them, so that the penciled word “street” and the penciled abbreviátion “St” must have been contained therein at that time, that is, before its execution, for certainly the defendants would not have written them in thereafter. And of course the fact that they were written in pencil would not make them any less a meaningful and valid part of the deed than if typed or written in ink. It is true, as already stated, thát the record of the deed in the Recorder’s Office showed merely a blank after the word “Fourth,” but this was explained by counsel as due to the fact that, linder-the prevailing practice in ' Beaver- County the Recorder’s' office- did riot trariscribe any 'words written in péricil ■" if this were trrie the-court might have taken judicial notice'of-the fact.' However, even - were rive to assuirie that thé -pene-i-I notations were not in the deed, and that only á' blank space was'left after-the word “Fourth,” nevertheless *260 the law permits such an omission to be supplied, if, from the context, it appears with certainty what word was omitted. It was said in Oleon v. Rosenbloom & Co., 247 Pa. 250, 253, 93 A. 473, 474, that “In supplying omitted words which the context clearly shows must be read in connection with it, to make the instrument the full expression of the manifest intention and understanding of the parties to it, the same is neither altered, varied nor contradicted, but merely put in the shape in which it was intended it should be at the time it was executed.” And so in William B. Rambo Building & Loan Association v. Dragone, 305 Pa. 24, 156 A. 311, where there was likewise an omission of a significant word, it was said (p. 26, A. p. 312) : “. . .

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Bluebook (online)
113 A.2d 226, 381 Pa. 255, 1955 Pa. LEXIS 476, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/tosh-v-witts-pa-1955.