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NON-PRECEDENTIAL DECISION - SEE SUPERIOR COURT I.O.P. 65.37
RANDY LEEPER AND CONNIE LEEPER IN THE SUPERIOR COURT OF
PENNSYLVANIA
Appellants
v.
WILLIAM QUEER, J.H. PORCH, JUDITH
MONROE, ADMINISTRATRIX OF THE
ESTATE OF JOSEPH C. MONROE,
DECEASED, AND PATRICK L. MONROE,
AND THEIR HEIRS, EXECUTORS,
ADMINISTRATORS AND ASSIGNS,
DEVISEES, GRANTEES, ASSIGNEES,
LIENORS, CREDITORS, TRUSTEES OR
OTHER CLAIMANTS, CLAIMING BY,
THROUGH, UNDER OR AGAINST ANY OR
ALL OF SAID DEFENDANTS
Appellees No. 54 WDA 2016
Appeal from the Order December 22, 2015
In the Court of Common Pleas of Somerset County
Civil Division at No(s): 644 Civil 2013
*****
RANDY LEEPER AND CONNIE LEEPER IN THE SUPERIOR COURT OF
PENNSYLVANIA
Appellants
v.
JAMES TINKEY, DEAN TINKEY, RALPH
TINKEY, AND HAROLD TINKEY,
INDIVIDUALLY AND/OR T/D/B/A TINKEY
BROTHERS LUMBER COMPANY, AND/OR
TINKEY BROS.; J.R. ENOS,
INDIVIDUALLY AND/OR T/D/B/A PAUL
BUNYAN TREE SERVICE; PAUL BUNYAN
TREE SERVICE; PATRICK MONROE;
JOSEPH C. MONROE; ROSALLE COTTON,
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EXECUTRIX OF THE ESTATE OF JOSEPH
A. MONROE, DECEASED; LILLIAN FAY
MONROE; EOG RESOURCES, INC.,
CROWN COMMUNICATIONS; CROWN
CASTLE USA, T/D/B/A CROWN
COMMUNICATIONS; AND CROWN
CASTLE INTERNATIONAL
Appellees No. 100 WDA 2016
Appeal from the Order December 10, 2015
In the Court of Common Pleas of Somerset County
Civil Division at No(s): 231 Civil 2006
BEFORE: LAZARUS, J., SOLANO, J., and STRASSBURGER, J.*
MEMORANDUM BY LAZARUS, J.: FILED APRIL 18, 2017
Randy Leeper and Connie Leeper (the Leepers) appeal from the
orders, entered in the Court of Common Pleas of Somerset County, which
denied their claim to quiet title to an 11-acre tract of land and dismissed
their claim that Appellees1 had converted lumber on the tract of land. Upon
review, we affirm.
The salient facts of this matter are as follows. The Leepers, husband
and wife, filed a complaint in equity to quiet title
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*
Retired Senior Judge assigned to the Superior Court.
1
The appeals at 54 WDA 2016 and 100 WDA 2016 have been consolidated.
The appeal at 54 WDA 2016 stems from an action to quiet title to the 11-
acre property that is the subject of the consolidated appeals. The appeal at
100 WDA 2016 involves an action to recover for conversion for the clearing
of timber from the 11-acre property.
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regarding an 11[-]acre parcel of unseated land in Jefferson
Township, Somerset County, which was acquired by [the
Leepers] through a private tax deed dated August 11, 1998[,]
and recorded on January 21, 1999[,] at Record Book Volume
1441, Page 203. [The Leepers] assert that they have good and
marketable title to the 11[-]acre parcel which, they maintain, is
situate[d] within a 50[-]acre tract owned by the various
[Appellees] pursuant to a “double assessment.” In essence, [the
Leepers] maintain that the subject 50[-]acre parcel became
divided into two assessed parcels, one being a[n approximately]
40[-]acre parcel and the other being an 11[-]acre parcel, which
received separate treatment in the assessment office over the
years[,] including separate tax sales. While it is undisputed that
[the Leepers] were the successful purchasers of a property
identified as “11 acres of timber[,]” the more difficult question
regards whether the tract actually exists as a separate parcel,
and if so, where [it is] located[.]
Trial Court Opinion, 1/6/16, at 1-2.
At the close of the presentation of the Leepers’ evidence, Appellees
moved for dismissal for failure to meet the burden of proof regarding having
a superior quality of title to the 11-acre parcel. The trial court granted the
compulsory nonsuit, and this timely appeal followed.
On appeal, the Leepers raise the following questions for our review:
1. Whether [the Leepers] are the fee simple owners of the
subject [11-]acre parcel of land in Somerset County,
Pennsylvania?
2. Whether the lower court committed an error of law and/or
abused its discretion in granting compulsory nonsuit where
[the Leepers] established prima facie title to the [11-]acre
parcel at issue?
3. Whether the trial court erred as a matter of law and/or
abused its discretion in finding that [the Leepers’] deed,
supplemented by parole evidence, was insufficient to
adequately describe the nature and location of the [11-]acre
parcel within the [50-]acre parcel?
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4. Whether the trial court erred as a matter of law and/or
abused discretion in relying on evidence introduced by [the
Appellees] in [the Leepers’] case in chief to support the grant
of the compulsory nonsuit?2
Brief of Appellant, 100 WDA 2016, at 2; Brief for Appellant, 54 WDA 2016,
at 4.
The issues raised address the trial court’s grant of compulsory nonsuit
on the basis that the Leepers failed to present evidence of good title to the
11-acre parcel at issue in this matter. When reviewing the entry of a
nonsuit, our standard of review is well-settled:
[Entry] is proper only if the factfinder, viewing all the evidence in
favor of the plaintiff, could not reasonably conclude that the
essential elements of a cause of action have been established.
When a nonsuit is entered, the lack of evidence to sustain the
action must be so clear that it admits no room for fair and
reasonable disagreement. A compulsory nonsuit can only be
granted in cases where it is clear that a cause of action has not
been established and the plaintiff must be given the benefit of all
favorable evidence along with all reasonable inferences of fact
arising from that evidence, resolving any conflict in the evidence
in favor of the plaintiff. The fact-finder, however, cannot be
permitted to reach a decision on the basis of speculation or
conjecture.
Billig v. Skvarla, 853 A.2d 1042, 1048-49 (Pa. Super. 2004) (quoting
Joyce v. Boulevard Therapy & Rehab. Ctr., P.C., 694 A.2d 648, 652-53
(Pa. Super. 1997)).
We note that
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2
The Leepers’ issues raised on appeal have been renumbered for ease of
disposition.
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[t]he burden of proof in an action to quiet title is on the plaintiff.
In such an action, the plaintiff can recover only on the strength
of his or her own title and not upon the weakness of the
defendant’s title. Where, as here, the trial court has determined
that the plaintiffs failed to meet their burden of proving title,
that determination will not be reversed in the absence of an
error of law or a capricious disregard of evidence.
Montrenes v. Montrenes, 513 A.2d 983, 984 (Pa. Super. 1986).
In order to prevail in this matter, the Leepers were required to present
a prima facie case that they had title to an 11-acre, timbered property with
a specific location. See Hunter v. McKlveen, 65 A.2d 366, 367 (Pa. 1949)
(tax sale of land not valid unless assessment and conveyance contain
sufficient descriptions to identify and disclose the property; metes and
bounds description not required, “but the land must be so identified that the
owner, the collector, and the public can determine what property is being
assessed or sold” (citations omitted)); see also Sarous v. Morgan, 90 A.2d
353, 354 (Pa. Super. 1952) (when conveying land in a tax sale it is
important whether the land is rural or urban, “[a]nd if the [description] does
not enable the owner, officer and public to identify and determine . . . the
exact property which is delinquent and liable to sale, the sale is void”
(emphasis in original)).
Here, real estate attorney Richard Anton, Esquire, and Joseph Perigo,
a title searcher, testified that title to the 11-acre parcel had passed via tax
sale. However, the trial court found that the identification of the property
was too speculative. We agree.
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Perigo’s testimony established that while it is likely that the 11 acres
are part of the original 50-acre parcel, no legal description was created for
the 11-acre parcel. N.T. Non-Jury Trial, 11/17/15, at 53. Where, as here,
no deed shows a legal description, a general location and tax map are used
to determine location. However, nothing definite could be established for
the 11-acre parcel. See id. at 53-55. Perigo conceded that he had “concern
as to where the property lines may be” id. at 57, going as far as to say there
is “no way of determining what the property lines may be.” Id. at 63.
Moreover, there are no adjoining landowners, to show where the property is,
since this is an area of unseated land. See id. at 121-23. As surveyor
Richard Cross indicated, there are no monuments to determine the exact
location of the property. Id. at 137-38. The only thing available to make a
determination, essentially, is acreage, which is last in the hierarchy of things
considered in determining the location of a property, according to Cross. Id.
at 140. Cross testified that he never found the forested-11 acre parcel. Id.
at 142.
Attorney Anton testified that no metes and bounds description exists,
but that title still passed to the Leepers for the 11-acre parcel. See N.T.
Non-Jury Trial, 12/10/15, 209-10. However, Attorney Anton confirmed that
a parcel appearing on a tax map or a tax assessment cannot create good
title. See id. at 229, 232. Randy Leeper testified that he observed the size
of trees and stumps and believed he had identified the general area of the
11-acre parcel based on his knowledge of clearing forests for lumber.
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However, his testimony did not definitively establish the location of the
parcel. See id. at 253-66.
Thus, the Leepers established that an 11-acre parcel of timbered land
was conveyed and redeemed multiple times from the 1800s until 1998,
when they purchased the parcel in a tax sale. Some testimony was
presented that makes it appear that the 11-acre parcel came from
somewhere within the southeastern portion of the 50-acre parcel. Even
assuming, however, that the 11-acre parcel was carved out of a particular
area within the original 50-acre parcel, its actual location within the original
parcel is entirely speculative and the Leepers cannot quiet title on this
basis.3 Hunter, supra; Sarous, supra. Accordingly, the trial court’s
determination was not a capricious disregard of evidence nor was it an error
of law. Montrenes, supra.
Finally, the Leepers argue that the court improperly considered
evidence provided by Appellees in granting nonsuit, asserting that the court
relied upon records introduced through cross-examination to show that the
11-acre parcel was not located within the 50-acre parcel. As the trial court
did not solely rely on this rationale in coming to its conclusion in its Pa.R.A.P.
1925(a) opinion, and since our basis for affirming the trial court is the
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3
We note that in the case at docket number 100 WDA 2016, the cause of
action is for conversion of the timber on the 11-acre parcel. However, since
the Leepers are unable to present a prima facie case to quiet title to the
parcel, their conversion cause of action is moot.
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imprecise description of the 11-acre parcel, any error in this regard was
harmless. See Blumenstock v. Gibson, 811 A.2d 1029, 1033 (“we are not
limited by the trial court’s rationale and [ ] we may affirm on any basis”).
Order affirmed.
SOLANO, J., joins the memorandum.
STRASSBURGER, J., files a dissenting memorandum.
Judgment Entered.
Joseph D. Seletyn, Esq.
Prothonotary
Date: 4/18/2017
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