Vlachos v. Witherow

3 Pa. D. & C.2d 698, 1954 Pa. Dist. & Cnty. Dec. LEXIS 154
CourtPennsylvania Court of Common Pleas, Washington County
DecidedNovember 1, 1954
Docketno. 128
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 3 Pa. D. & C.2d 698 (Vlachos v. Witherow) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Pennsylvania Court of Common Pleas, Washington County primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Vlachos v. Witherow, 3 Pa. D. & C.2d 698, 1954 Pa. Dist. & Cnty. Dec. LEXIS 154 (Pa. Super. Ct. 1954).

Opinion

Weiner, J.,

This case comes before the court on a motion by defendants for a new trial alleging, in substance, that the court was in error in directing a verdict in favor of plaintiffs at the trial of this proceeding.

This is an action in ejectment, brought by plaintiffs against defendants above named, alleging that plaintiffs held title to and had the right of possession of a portion of land in Peters Township, Washington County, Pa. It is not disputed that Robert N. Donaldson, now deceased, did by deed dated November 26, 1927, convey a tract of land to his daughter Clara B. McClure. It is not disputed that the grantor in that deed continued to use a portion of the lot included in the deed to Clara B. McClure from the date of that deed until the date of his death on April 19, 1931.

It also is not disputed that Robert N. Donaldson was not aware of the fact that the portion of the lot now in dispute was included in the deed to Clara B. McClure. It is also not disputed that at his death, Robert N. Donaldson devised to his son, Walter, the homestead occupied by him and adjacent to the lot conveyed to his daughter Clara, for the duration of Walter’s life, with remainder to his children, defendants herein. The date of that will was July 22, 1929, and it can be admitted for the purpose of this case that his devise to his son, Walter, included that portion of the lot conveyed to his daughter, Clara, which is now in dispute.

Walter E. Donaldson continued in possession of the homestead and the portion of the lot in dispute from the date of the death of his father on April 19, 1931, [700]*700until the date of his own death on November 11, 1950. For the purpose of this case it can be admitted that Walter E. Donaldson remained in exclusive and continuous possession of the disputed premises between the dates aforesaid. Also, for the purpose of this proceeding, it can be admitted that defendants came into possession of the homestead and the land in dispute upon the death of Walter E. Donaldson on November 11, 1950, and that they continued in actual and exclusive possession until the date of the trial.

Clara B. McClure died May 7, 1936. The lot which had been conveyed by her father, Robert N. Donaldson, to her on November 26, 1927, was conveyed by the heirs of Clara B. McClure to plaintiffs above named in July 1945. It may be admitted for the purpose of this ease that neither plaintiffs nor Clara B. McClure nor her heirs ever enjoyed actual possession of the portion of the lot in dispute.

The crux of this case, in the opinion of this court, lies in the fact that defendants never discovered that the disputed premises were included in the deed aforesaid to Clara B. McClure until two or three years after the same was conveyed to plaintiffs in 1945. The entire testimony of defendants shows that their grandfather, Robert N. Donaldson, was unaware of the fact that he had included the land in dispute in the deed to his daughter, Clara; that their father, Walter E. Donaldson, life tenant, was also unaware of that fact, and that defendants were unaware of that fact until it was discovered about 1948 when a lot adjoining the lot of plaintiffs on the west was conveyed.

The basis of the defense of defendants to the action in ejectment which was filed June 4, 1952, was that the inclusion of the portion of the lot in dispute to Clara B. McClure was in error and that this inclusion was never intended by their grandfather, Robert N. Donaldson, and that in any event, defendants had [701]*701acquired title by adverse possession since it is admitted that they and their immediate predecessors in title had been in possession thereof for more than 21 years.

With respect to the first contention of defendants that Robert N. Donaldson never intended to convey the land in dispute to his daughter, Clara, by the deed of November 26, 1927, we need only to point out that in an ejectment proceeding, there is only one issue, that of the right of possession. The court cannot in such proceeding be concerned with an attempt to reform a deed on the ground of error or mistake. For such reformation, the parties must bring their action in a court of equity.

We are therefore only concerned in this action with the second defense raised by defendants, i.e., the right of possession resulting from their alleged acquisition, of title by adverse possession.

In answer to that contention this court is compelled, to point out that one of the essential elements of title by adverse possession is that the possession must be hostile. Where, as here, the parties holding legal title were unaware of that ownership and the parties in actual possession were likewise in ignorance of the record legal ownership, how can it be argued that there was any element of hostile possession until all the parties apparently became aware of such legal ownership of the disputed land about 1948.

While the word “hostile” has been held not to mean ill will or hostility, it does imply the intent to hold title against the record title holder. Clara B. McClure was the record title holder after the conveyance to her of the disputed land by her father in 1927. The entire case of defendants is to the effect that she never knew that this portion of the lot had been conveyed to her. This bring the case clearly within the principle laid down in Milnes v. Van Gilder, 197 Pa. 347, which holds that the grantee must have notice of the hostile [702]*702Intent of the grantor or those claiming through the grantor, in this case being both predecessors in title of defendants, to wit, Robert N. and Walter E. Donaldson.

Since Clare B. McClure died in 1936 and the ejectment action was brought in 1952, then clearly, no matter what the duty might be between Walter E. Donaldson and defendants to the heirs of Clara B. McClure, there was only a period of 16 years between the date of her death and the institution of this action in ejectment, or five years short of the required 21 years to make title by adverse possession possible.

This principle, that notice of the hostile intent must be brought home to the grantee, is particularly applicable where the vendor continues in possession after the conveyance of the land to the grantee. It has long been the law in Pennsylvania that as between a grantor and a grantee in a deed, the continued possession of the grantor after the date of the delivery of the deed can never give rise to title by adverse possession unless and until the privity between the vendor and vendee is severed by some unequivocal act: Olwine v. Holman, 23 Pa. 279.

To create any possible title by adverse possession it has been held that the grantor must manifest his intention to hold adverse to the grantor by some act of hostility to the title of his vendee: Ingles et al. v. Ingles et al., 150 Pa. 397.

This act of hostility to the title of the vendee, to make the continuous possession of the vendor adverse and hostile, must be brought to the knowledge of the owner of the property: Cadwaladers Appeal, 81 Pa. 211.

The possession of the vendor, Robert N. Donaldson, is considered the possession of the vendee, Clara B. McClure, until such hostile act takes' place. Since there [703]*703is no evidence in this case of any such hostile act on the part of Robert N. Donaldson or of Walter E. Donaldson, adverse possession in this case never began to run during the lifetime of either of these parties. It is admitted that subsequent to the execution of the deed to Clara B. McClure, Robert N.

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Bluebook (online)
3 Pa. D. & C.2d 698, 1954 Pa. Dist. & Cnty. Dec. LEXIS 154, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/vlachos-v-witherow-pactcomplwashin-1954.