Witman v. Stichter

149 A. 725, 299 Pa. 484, 1930 Pa. LEXIS 634
CourtSupreme Court of Pennsylvania
DecidedJanuary 28, 1930
DocketAppeal, 144
StatusPublished
Cited by22 cases

This text of 149 A. 725 (Witman v. Stichter) 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
Witman v. Stichter, 149 A. 725, 299 Pa. 484, 1930 Pa. LEXIS 634 (Pa. 1930).

Opinion

Opinion by

Mr. Justice Frazer,

By his bill in this case plaintiff seeks to enjoin interference with the use by defendants of a private alley ten-feet wide in the rear of his property. A preliminary injunction was dissolved, and after the final hearing the' learned chancellor dismissed the bill, plaintiff’s exceptions were subsequently overruled and a final decree entered for defendants. Plaintiff’s appeal is from that decree.

Plaintiff’s lot fronts 28 feet on Penn Street in the City of Reading and extends back 100 feet to an alley in the rear, or its northern boundary, which was included in various conveyances covering that lot and also larger tracts, for more than a century; the controversy here is based on a deed, dated June 12, 1872, whereby grantor, owner of the lot in fee, limited to grantee the right and use of the easement or private way in the rear, to a period covering the latter’s lifetime. There is no question as to the real and ancient origin of the easement. So far back as 1852 this court in Ebner v. Stichter, 19 Pa. 19, found the alley or private way was created by the terms of a deed made in 1793, by which John Bishop, owner in fee of a tract of land within the City of Reading, known as Lot No. 1, conveyed to John Schenfelder a parcel, out of that tract, 28 feet wide and 100 feet deep, bounded on the north by the alley in question and known on the general plan of the city as Lot No. 503, fronting on the south side of Penn Street; and, as set forth in the deed, “Together with the free and uninterrupted use *487 and privilege of a passage in and along the above mentioned 10 feet alley.” The passageway at that time began at a public street, ran westward, bounding first the rear of a corner lot, not owned by plaintiff here, and ending at a contiguous larger tract on the western side, known as Lot No. 2, and held by a different owner. It was thus a blind alley, being closed at the western end. About the year 1810, Shenfelder, still owner of Lot No. 503, made an arrangement with the then holder of the abutting Lot No. 2 to use the alley and a continuing covered way across the latter tract to another street, in common for their respective business purposes. By this arrangement entrance and egress were effected on two thoroughfares, and the alley was no longer a cul-de-sac.

Following the death of Shenfelder, Lot No. 303, bounded by the alley in question, passed through various transfers, until in 1841 it was conveyed by deed to John Ebner. In 1872, Stichter, predecessor in title of defendants here, was the owner in fee of the property north of Lot No. 503 and the land contiguous to the latter lot on the east. In that year, by deed dated April 1st, recorded the following day, Ebner conveyed Lot No. 503 to Stichter, “Together with all the estate, right, title, interest, property, claim, and demand of the said party hereto of the first part, of, in, or to a certain 10 feet alley, immediately north of the lot of ground herein described and conveyed.” Stichter thus obtained and held in fee the entire tract of land figuring in this controversy, with the alley easement as well. Two months after this transfer, Stichter, by deed, dated June 12, 1872, recorded June 14, 1872, in Deed Book volume 108, page 361, reconveyed Lot No. 503 to Ebner, with the following clearly expressed covenant in the instrument: “Together with the right and privilege to said John Ebner and his assigns during the lifetime of the said John Ebner, but no longer, to the use of the private way running in from Fifth Street and terminating on Penn Street jointly with the said Joseph L. Stichter, his *488 heirs and assigns in the same manner as the said John Ebner had previous to the sale of the above described premises by him to the said Joseph Stiehter.”

The claim of plaintiff to an easement in the alley in question is based on the transfer by the deed of J une 12, 1872, from Stiehter to Ebner of Lot No. 503, which plaintiff now owns, on the ground that the legal effect of the deed of reconveyance to Ebner, by bounding the premises upon the alley, conveyed to Shenfelder and his successors in title ownership to the soil of one-half of the alley and an implied perpetual easement therein. Defendants contend that, at the time in 1872 Stiehter acquired in fee Lot No. 503, including the soil beneath the alley, there resulted a unity of title in a single owner, that this unity of ownership extinguished the easement, and that by the deed of reconveyance to Ebner, the grantor revived the easement to the use of grantee, but that, by the terms of the deed, the easement was to exist and continue no longer than the lifetime of Ebner. Ebner died February 24, 1875. The court below sustained defendant’s position, and we think the facts in the case and the principles of law applicable fully justify that conclusion.

All questions for consideration here arise, as they must arise, out of the deed of 1872, by which Stiehter conveyed Lot No. 503 to Ebner. “In construing the grant or other instrument whereby the easement is created, the document itself, and that only, can, in the first instance, be looked at to discover the extent and nature of the agreement and the terms of the grant. If on the face of the document no doubt arises that the words are used in their primary sense, and if, read in that sense, they are plain and unambiguous, the matter is concluded” : Gale on Easements, page 80; Where the intention of the parties can be ascertained, nothing remains but to effectuate that intention: 2 Devlin on Real Estate 835; The terms of the grant, as they can be learned either by words clearly expressed, or by just *489 and sound construction, will regulate and measure the rights of the grantee: 2 Devlin, supra, quoting Salesbury v. Andrews, 19 Pick. 250, 252. Plainer words, or more incisive, or more comprehensive for the purpose, could not have been selected than those in which Stichter sets forth his covenant in the deed as to the nature of the easement and its limitation. What he there covenants is exactly what he means and intends to covenant, to grant the use of the alley to Ebner “during the lifetime of the said John Ebner, but no longer.” The stipulation is precise and definite, both as to the affirmative declaration that grantee shall have the use of the ease ment so long as he lives, and to the positive opposite direction that the use must end with the death of Ebner. We might indeed say, the very words shout the meaning and intention of grantor. Nor can that meaning and intention have been less positive and clear to Ebner. At the very least, it may be sensibly presumed that he read and understood the instrument, and, as evidenced by the receipt for his payment of the consideration money, he acquiesced in all its covenants. In construing a contract, the intention of the parties govern, and that rule is to be observed in construing a deed: Kynerd v. Hulen, 5 Fed. (2d) 160, 161.

It has long been held in this and other jurisdictions generally, that unity of title and possession extinguish an existing easement, such as in the present case; and it is only in instances where the use is a high, real and continuing necessity, as shown by the proved circumstances in the case, that the rule might not apply: Kieffer v. Imhoff, 26 Pa. 438. That is not, however, the case here, as we shall presently show.

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Bluebook (online)
149 A. 725, 299 Pa. 484, 1930 Pa. LEXIS 634, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/witman-v-stichter-pa-1930.