Tustin v. Sammons

23 Pa. Super. 175, 1902 Pa. Super. LEXIS 17
CourtSuperior Court of Pennsylvania
DecidedApril 20, 1902
DocketAppeal, No. 49
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 23 Pa. Super. 175 (Tustin v. Sammons) 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
Tustin v. Sammons, 23 Pa. Super. 175, 1902 Pa. Super. LEXIS 17 (Pa. Ct. App. 1902).

Opinions

Opinion by

Beaver, J.,

Plaintiffs declared in trespass : “For that -the said defendant heretofore, to wit: from the first to the sixth days of December, A. D. 1897, or near that time, with force and arms and without authority, did enter upon the plaintiffs’ land situate in Aleppo township, said county, and did then and there wilfully and maliciously remove the top rails from several posts of a fence which the plaintiff has recently built, and in other ways did injure and damage said fence.” Notice was given of the .plaintiffs’ determination to claim damages for a continuing trespass until the date of trial. There was no amendment of the plaintiffs’ statement offered or filed. According to the testimony of one of the plaintiffs, a fence which inclosed the southern side of his farm had been in existence continuously, to his knowledge, for thirty-two years. He purchased the farm from the defendant in 1879, the deed therefor having been made October 24, 1881. The fence seems to have been considered by the plaintiffs and defendant as a line fence. In his cross-examination one of the plaintiffs said: “ Q. Now, wasn’t your agreement, you were to keep that up and Mr. Sammons was to keep the piece running from there out to Weed Bryan’s? A. There was such talk as that. Q. And didn’t you do that? A. No, sir; he did not keep his up. Q. And you kept yours up, under this agreement? A. I do not know that there was any agreement. I told him I would keep up one end and he could keep up the other. Q. You kept up the end where there was a dispute? A. Yes, sir. Q. And he did not ? A. He might have laid up a rail now and then. Q. That was your end to keep up, under your agreement ? A. We never just had it divided.”

[178]*178It became necessary to renew this fence, so maintained. The plaintiffs were uncertain as to the line. The defendant claimed that the true location of the line was about five feet north of where the old fence stood. The plaintiffs first employed James Sammons, a brother of the defendant, to run the line, who ran it in accordance with the claim of the defendant, and they built part of their new fence along the line so run and pointed out to them by the surveyor. Becoming dissatisfied with the location of Sammons, they employed Dinsmore & Throckmorton, who ran, according to their (plaintiffs’) drafts and papers, so far south of the old fence that they were not satisfied as to the location. They next employed a surveyor named Ferrell who located the line south of the old fence, partly in an old road and partly through the enclosed land of the defendant. The plaintiffs, being apparently satisfied with this location, proceeded to erect their new fence on the line fixed by Ferrell, without the consent and in spite of the protest of the defendant. After the fence, which seems to have been a post and rail fence with the posts supported by wires, was finished, the wires were cut- — -presumably by the defendant — and the fence rendered worthless. Subsequently, a new fence of fifteen or twenty panels was built by the defendant, about five feet north of the old fence, about March 7, 1898. Were the plaintiffs, under these facts, all taken from their own testimony, entitled to recover in trespass ?

The defendant at the trial presented the following point for charge: “ William Tustin, one of the plaintiffs, having testified that a fence had stood between his land and the land of the defendant for upwards of thirty years, and had been kept up by them since he owned his land, a period of upwards of twenty years; that he, the said Tustin, had used the land up to that fence from the north side, and had had no possession of the land on the south side thereof; that Bussell Sammons, the defendant, had during the same period of time used and had the exclusive possession of the land up to that fence from the south side thereof, the said William Tustin, by moving this fence in the latter part of November, 1897, over on to the land occupied and in the possession of the defendant, which fence was promptly removed by said defendant, did not, by the removal of the fence iu the mqnner in which it was done, acquire any such [179]*179actual and peaceable possession of tbe premises as would give them a right of action in trespass against the defendant for tearing down such new fence so partly erected by said plaintiffs on the land south of such original fence,” which was answered as follows: “Now I don’t affirm that point squarely, as presen ted; but, in connection with what I have said to you, you must determine that matter. I will leave that question to you as to whether or not he acquired peaceable possession under his purchase and in the manner he took possession, and in the manner in which the fences were with regard to the open roadway, and so on, and all the other facts.”

The point for charge, being based upon the testimony of one of the plaintiffs, the facts being undisputed, contained a legal proposition to which the defendant was entitled to an answer. It is not answered as a legal proposition and the defendant thereby suffered. In our opinion, this point and the defendant’s ninth point “ that, under all the evidence in this case, the verdict of the jury should be for the defendant,” should have been affirmed. The discussion of the question raised by these two points and the result reached thereby avoids the necessity for the discussion of other questions involved in the answers to the points of both defendant and plaintiffs which are set forth in other assignments of error. In Wilkinson v. Connell, 158 Pa. 126, the ground upon which a plaintiff in trespass must base his right to recover is clearly stated: “ To enable a plaintiff to maintain this action (trespass quare clausum fregit) he must have the possession, actual or constructive, of the close which he alleges has been invaded. If the land entered by the trespasser is unimproved, possession will be presumed to accompany the title, and this constructive possession will support an action. If the land is improved, that fact shows that it is in the actual possession of some one. In such case the plaintiff cannot rest on his title but must show his possession.” “ Possession of the locus in quo of a trespass is the test of the right to sue for it. For an injury to wild land the owner may maintain an action by showing his title to it, but this is on the principle that the law gives him a constructive possession. When another person has the actual occupancy, the exhibition of a paramount title is not sufficient to sustain trespass, either against the disseisor or against any[180]*180body else. The right of the true owner to the use and profits of the land is suspended, until he regains possession, either by an entry or'under a legal judgment:” Caldwell v. Walters, 22 Pa. 378. See also Enterprise Transit Co. v. Hazelwood Oil Co., 20 Pa. Superior Ct. 127. The plaintiffs in this case had no possession, actual or constructive, of the land which they invaded. They occupied, according to the testimony of one of the plaintiffs, the land north of the old fence. The defendant occupied all the land south of it. When, therefore, the plaintiffs removed their fence, they invaded the possession of the defendant. Their entry was not peaceable, it was hostile. It was contrary to the law and against the protest of the defendant. How then can they invoke the aid of the law to hold what they had then unlawfully acquired. Whether they had title to the land enclosed by the new fence is not the question. If we weie trying an ejectment, that question, of course, would enter into the very essence of the dispute, but it is not so here.

Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI

Related

Truitt v. Osler
90 A. 467 (Superior Court of Delaware, 1914)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
23 Pa. Super. 175, 1902 Pa. Super. LEXIS 17, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/tustin-v-sammons-pasuperct-1902.