Wedge Et Ux. v. Schrock Et Ux.

22 A.2d 305, 146 Pa. Super. 425, 1941 Pa. Super. LEXIS 242
CourtSuperior Court of Pennsylvania
DecidedApril 16, 1941
DocketAppeal, 118
StatusPublished
Cited by9 cases

This text of 22 A.2d 305 (Wedge Et Ux. v. Schrock 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
Wedge Et Ux. v. Schrock Et Ux., 22 A.2d 305, 146 Pa. Super. 425, 1941 Pa. Super. LEXIS 242 (Pa. Ct. App. 1941).

Opinion

Opinion by

Cunningham, J.,

The subject matter of the litigation which gave rise to this appeal is the existence, and right of plaintiffs to use, a 12 foot alley opening into the east ^ide of the Meyersdale north and south public road in Summit Township, Somerset County, and extending eastward, approximately 130 feet, between the lot on the north owned by entireties and occupied by Abraham L. Wedge and his wife, Sarah J. Wedge, two of the plaintiffs, and the lot on the south, owned by entireties and occupied by Irvin Schrock and his wife, Nettie Schrock, the defendants, to an unimproved tract of about fifteen acres, owned and used for pasture by John A. Glessner, the other plaintiff, which latter tract bounds both the Wedge and Schrock lots on the east.

*427 It is not controverted that when the Wedges and Schrocks are given the full frontage of their lots on the Meyersdale road there remains a strip of land 12 feet in width running east and west between their properties and extending to the Glessner tract in the rear thereof.

The ultimate inquiry is whether the Wedges and Glessner are legally entitled to the unobstructed use of this 12 foot strip as a means of ingress and egress to and from their respective properties.

In February, 1939, the Wedges and Glessner filed a bill in equity against the Schrocks averring: that the alley had been open for use by the public for a period “beyond the memory of any living man” and had “always been used as an appurtenance to the respective lands of the plaintiffs and of the defendants and their predecessors in ownership, without let or hindrance”; that during the year 1938 defendants began to challenge and obstruct plaintiffs’ free use thereof by placing therein “lumber,” “large timbers” and “a pile of ashes” and barricading it by the erection of a “wooden gate” which was chained and locked; and that defendants persistently refused to remove the obstructions upon request.

In their answer the Schrocks denied the Wedges ever acquired “any easement or right by prescription, or otherwise” in the 12 foot strip and averred that any ,use thereof by Glessner had been permissive.

The trial before the chancellor, Boose, P. J., resulted in a final decree that the defendants be “perpetually enjoined and restrained from obstructing said alley in any manner whatsoever, and from interfering with the plaintiffs’ free and unrestricted use and enjoyment of the same.”

Under the assignments supporting the appeal of the defendants from that decree we have before us these questions of law: 1. Are the findings of fact supported by sufficient competent and substantial evidence? 2. If *428 so, do the facts as found warrant the legal conclusions drawn by the court below?

1. The common source of title of the owners of the properties involved in this case was Elias F'ike. In December, 1891, he conveyed the northern lot, now owned by the Wedges, to William Sipe and through four mesne conveyances the title vested in the Wedges in 1922. In 1897, he conveyed the southern lot, now owned by the Schrocks, to Frank W. Boyd and his wife. Through two mesne conveyances the title to this lot vested in John A. Glessner (one of the plaintiffs, and, as above indicated, the owner of the fifteen acre tract in the rear of both lots) who in 1927 conveyed this lot to Schrock and his wife, the appellants herein.

With the exception of one matter, about to be referred to, there is nothing in the descriptions contained in tihe various deeds which requires detailed consideration. Counsel for appellants contend their clients had at least an absolute right to exclude the Wedges from any use of the southern half of the alley. Their proposition is based upon the fact that when the Boyds conveyed the southern lot in 1902 to an intervening owner (Warnbaugh) they reserved “a private road way 12 feet wide running from the Meyersdale public road along the land of William Sipe [conceded to be the land now owned by the Wedges] to the Elk Lick Creek for ,t|he use of John Glessner and the grantee (Wambaugh), his heirs and assigns.” Glessner acquired title to the southern lot in 1906 and when he conveyed it to appellants in 1927 his deed contained the following paragraph: “There shall pass along with this grant a small parcel of land adjoining the above parcel on the north, and running in an easterly direction, of an equal width of six feet, along said parcel 129 feet, and is now used as a private alley.”

As to the plaintiff, Glessner, they suggest that when he acquired title to the southern lot the easement he had theretofore enjoyed in the alley was extinguished, upon *429 the principle that when the same person becomes the owner of the dominant and servient estates ex-tinguishment occurs; hence, their argument that any use thereafter by Glessner was permissive. They overlook the further proposition that this is true only where there is no intervening or outstanding interest or title held by some other person in or to the easement: 9 R. O. L. 808, Section 64. Nor can the above quoted recital in the deed from Glessner to appellants amount to anything more than the conveyance of the fee in the southern half of the bed of the alley, coupled with notice that it was being used as a private alley.

We, therefore, proceed to a consideration of the findings of fact of the chancellor and the evidence by which the plaintiffs sought to establish a prescriptive right to the unobstructed use of the alley. No exceptions were taken to the first nine findings which relate to a description of the properties involved, the respective transfers of title, and the reservations and grants to which we have referred. Findings 10 to 15 inclusive are assigned for error. They were substantially as follows:

10. The 12 foot alley was in existence and open to public use for more than 21 years prior to the filing of the bill. 11. The parties continued to use the alley for hauling coal and wood to their respective premises, and others used it in passing to and from Glessner’s land located behind the other two lots, hauling ice and crops and driving pasturing cattle thereover. 12. The location and width of the alley were well defined by physical landmarks and appellants’ deed described the frontage of their lot and its depth along the alley without including the latter. 33. Actual measurement and survey disclosed that both the Wedges and the Schrocks have the frontage specified in their deeds, exclusive of the 12 foot alley. 14. About 1908, the erection of a street railway, paralleling the public road, along the rear of the two lots separated by the alley, made the same unfit as a thoroughfare for teams beyond its june *430 tion with the railway, at which point a passenger platform was constructed, but the alley remained open to the crossing and was used by the abutting owners and the public as a means of access to the railway, and Glessner and others continued to drive cows through the alley to his pasture land and for other purposes, without hindrance or interruption until obstructed by appellants. 15.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
22 A.2d 305, 146 Pa. Super. 425, 1941 Pa. Super. LEXIS 242, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/wedge-et-ux-v-schrock-et-ux-pasuperct-1941.