Court Opinion

ID: 6278818
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2022-02-18 16:09:25.15362+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T09:00:08.643834
License: Public Domain

Opinion by
Kephart, J.,
As early as 1774 a deed from the sheriff of Philadelphia County conveyed the premises under and subject to a ground rent. Continuing from that deed, in some ten conveyances, • including the deed to the appellant’s devisors, without interruption, this same land was conveyed subject to the same ground rent. There is no deed of record, nor other writing known to exist, specifically creating this ground rent, nor is there any record evidence of the title to the premises being in the owner of the ground rent mentioned in the several conveyances. The absence of the written evidence of these grants should not defeat the appellee’s right to recover. A ground rent is an estate of inheritance in the rent, while the owner of the land has an estate of inheritance in the land out of which the rent issues. Each is the owner of a fee simple estate. The one is incorporeal, the other corporeal: Hart v. Anderson, 198 Pa. 558; Cobb v. Biddle, 14 Pa. 444. It may be bound by the lien of a judgment or mortgage: Weidner v. Foster, 2 P. & W. 23. And is inheritable: Ingersoll v. Sergeant, 1 Wharton 336. More than a century has elapsed since this ground rent was shown to exist. Apart from the evidence appearing in the conveyance mentioned, the appelleés were unable to show that the ground rent was'lawfully created. These conveyances, which were made subject to the rent in such continuous, unbroken chain, covering a long period of time, ought to furnish a sound basis on which to presume that the ground rent’s inception was contained in a lawful reservation made by the owner of the premises. Without known complaint subsequent owners have acted thereon and it is now too late to deny the existence of the grant. The ground rent will be *536presumed to have been created by grant where it appears that a long line of conveyances has been made subject to a ground rent: Trust Co. v. Hodges, 15 Pa. Superior Ct. 299; Heckerman v. Hummel, 19 Pa. 64; Wallace, et al., v. Fourth United Presbyterian Church of Pittsburgh, 111 Pa. 164. The continuous payment of the rent in this case up to the day of trial dispels any possible idea of extinguishment by presumption of law. Each subsequent grantee took title with full notice of the encumbrance against the land and after long continued submission to such outstanding estate cannot now be heard to deny its lawful origin. The presumption of an original grant would be conclusive.
There is no evidence as to how the present owners became vested with the title to the ground rent, whether, as heirs at law or subsequent assignees from the original owner. It does appear that as far back as the memory of any of the appellees can go, and that is for a period of over forty years, and by letters from prior owners of the land, this rent was regularly paid and acknowledged by these owners. Like real property; where a claimant avers title by adverse possession, so here we have a claim for an estate, which has many of the incidents of real estate, which claim is founded on all of the elements of an adverse user with no outstanding claimants appearing against them during all this period. “While the statute of limitations does not include within its express legal operation subjects which lie in grant'only, yet the courts will apply the principles of the said statutes, as an artificial rule of law, in case where such application would tend to further justice, and render titles secure, hence where an adverse enjoyment- of a ground rent has been had for twenty-one years it is the duty of the court to instruct the jury to infer a grant”: Wallace v. Fourth Presbyterian Church of Pittsburgh, supra.
The appellant, having contracted to buy this ground rent, refused to pay the purchase-price, giving as her reason that the title was not marketable. This action *537was for this purchase-price. It is conceded that the appellant was not required to take anything short of a good title, and if she was offered a title that was defective she could rescind her executory contract, but it is the policy of the law to enforce contracts fairly entered into rather than to permit their cancellation for trifling and unsubstantial reasons. The reasons would be such as would and ought to induce prudent men to pause and hesitate in accepting the title. While these grants are thus created by fiction of the law, they are none the less effective as they are based on circumstances having all the elements of a perfect title save the writings originally creating them. As has been stated, they depend on their analogy to the statute of limitations and for the purposes of this case the time was amply sufficient to have excluded conflicting owners under a disability. A title depending on the bar of the statute of limitations may be a marketable title which a purchaser will be compelled to accept when it clearly appears that the owner’s right is lost: Pratt v. Eby, 67 Pa. 396. If this undisturbed possession for a very long time had not a conclusive effect, the most valuable rights would not only be the subject of continual disputes but be liable to be divested or overthrown when, as in this case, the original evidence of title to them had become lost or decayed by time; and it has been well stated “if time destroys the evidence of title, the laws have wisely and humanely made lengthy possession a substitute for that which has been destroyed.” Conclusive presumptions that the grant exists admit of no doubt and are fictions of law in the nature of estoppel, and are founded upon public policy or convenience. Conclusive presumptions barring the owner’s rights have been held to exist in other incorporeal hereditaments, viz: The use of a road over the land of another without permission or objection: Pierce v. Cloud, 42 Pa. 102; Plitt v. Cox, 43 Pa. 486. The uninterrupted use and enjoyment of a stream of water in a particular way for a period of twenty-one years: Strick*538ler v. Todd, 10 S. & R. 63; Wheatley v. Chrisman, 24 Pa. 298. And in Newman v. Rutter, 8 Watts 51, it was held that a grant of an incorporeal hereditament may, in general, be presumed upon an adverse enjoyment of twenty-one years and upwards; that the circumstances which will justify such presumption are a matter of law for the determination of the court. These grants being founded on conclusive presumptions, they should be regarded in the same light as though the grants had been lawfully shown to exist and furnishing a complete chain of title. Such being the case this was a marketable title and should have been accepted by the appellant.
The judgment of the court below is affirmed.