Carter, P. v. Fanning, R. v. Range Resources

Related Cases

    J-A27023-17
    
    
    NON-PRECEDENTIAL DECISION - SEE SUPERIOR COURT I.O.P. 65.37
    
    PATRICIA CARTER, AN ADULT              :  IN THE SUPERIOR COURT OF
    INDIVIDUAL, CAROL BETH WILSON,         :        PENNSYLVANIA
    AN ADULT INDIVIDUAL, JOHN ALLEN        :
    WILSON, AN ADULT INDIVIDUAL            :
    AND ELIZABETH WILSON, AN ADULT         :
    INDIVIDUAL                             :
                                           :
                      Appellants           :
                                           :
                v.                         :
                                           :
    RICHARD M. FANNING AND DEBRA J.        :
    FANNING, HUSBAND AND WIFE,             :
    JEFFREY J. DUTTON AND LISA A.          :
    DUTTON, HUSBAND AND WIFE,              :
    LARRY N. CERCIELLO AND KANDY S.        :
    CERCIELLO, HUSBAND AND WIFE            :
                                           :
                v.                         :
                                           :
    RANGE RESOURCES-APPALACHIA,            :
    LLC                                    : No. 584 WDA 2017
    
    
                      Appeal from the Order March 16, 2017
               In the Court of Common Pleas of Washington County
                      Civil Division at No(s): No. 2014-5859
    
    
    BEFORE: BENDER, P.J.E., SHOGAN, J., and MUSMANNO, J.
    
    MEMORANDUM BY SHOGAN, J.:                      FILED JANUARY 30, 2018
    
         Patricia Carter, Carol Beth Wilson, John Allen Wilson, and Elizabeth
    
    Wilson (collectively “Appellants”), appeal from the order entered March 16,
    
    2017. The order granted summary judgment in favor of Richard M. Fanning
    
    and Debra J. Fanning, husband and wife, Jeffrey J. Dutton and Lisa A.
    
    Dutton, husband and wife, and Larry N. Cerciello and Kandy S. Cerciello,
    J-A27023-17
    
    
    husband     and    wife    (collectively   “Appellees”),   and   Range   Resources-
    
    Appalachia, LLC1 (“Intervenor-Appellee” or “Range”).2 We affirm.
    
           The trial court set forth the relevant facts and procedural history of
    
    this matter as follows:
    
                 On September 24, 2014, [Appellants], filed a four (4)
           count complaint against individual [Appellees] Fanning, Dutton
           and Cerciello. The Complaint requested that the Court quiet
           [Appellees’] Fanning, Dutton and Cerciello’s title either
           completely or by “one-half” in certain real property. The
           Complaint also sets forth claims of unjust enrichment and
           slander of title. [Appellants] contended that they succeeded to
           the title of Berdie Wilson, daughter of Hugh Hanna, a prior
           record owner of the Hanna Tract [or “the property”].
           [Appellants] advanced that Hugh Hanna made a parol gift of the
           oil and gas estate to Berdie Wilson. On November 26, 2014[,]
           this court granted Range’s petition to intervene as a party
           defendant.
    
                 On November 24, 2014, [Appellees] Fanning, Dutton and
           Cerciello filed preliminary objections. On December 3, 2014
           Range filed separate preliminary objections. [Appellees] Fanning,
           Dutton and Cerciello alleged that the recorded “chain of title”
           from 1825 to 2014 does not indicate that a severance of oil and
           gas occurred. By virtue of three (3) separately recorded deeds
           and their record chain of title, [Appellees] Fanning, Dutton and
           Cerciello claim exclusive ownership of all right title and interest
           in the oil and gas [underlying] the Hanna Tract. (See Paragraphs
           3, 4 and 5 Fanning-Dutton Cerciello Preliminary Objections to
           the Original Complaint). [Intervenor-Appellee] Range filed
    ____________________________________________
    
    
    1
      Range intervened as a current lessee of the oil and gas underlying the
    property.
    2
      As will be discussed in greater detail, the March 16, 2017 order disposed of
    all claims and all parties, and it made final an earlier order sustaining
    preliminary objections in favor of Appellees with respect to Count II of
    Appellants’ Amended Complaint. Pa.R.A.P. 341(b)(1).
    
    
    
    
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         preliminary objections that included a demurrer and a claim of
         lack of specificity.
    
               On May 7, 2015, this court issued an opinion and order
         sustaining [Appellees’] preliminary objections. The court did not
         dismiss the action. Instead, [Appellants] were given twenty (20)
         days to file an amended complaint.
    
                On May 27, 2015[,] [Appellants] filed an Amended
         Complaint. In the Amended Complaint, [Appellants] reiterated
         their previous allegation that as the heirs of Berdie Wilson’s
         Estate[,] they owned “100%’’ of the oil and gas underlying the
         Hanna Tract. Specifically, Carter and Wilson asserted that Hugh
         Hanna “gifted” the oil and gas estate to Berdie Wilson. (See
         Amended Complaint ¶[¶] 57 and 58). [Appellants] did not plead
         the existence of a writing that specifically provided for the gift.
         Instead, [Appellants] alleged that circumstantial evidence
         demonstrated the existence of a parol gift. (See Amended
         Complaint ¶[¶] 11-56)[.] In the alternative, [Appellants] alleged
         that the “Will of Hugh Hanna severed the surface of the farm and
         the coal of the Property (Hanna Tract) from the oil and gas.”
         (See Amended Complaint ¶ 82) [Appellants] further alleged that
         the interests in the oil and gas passed “pursuant to the laws of
         intestacy.” (See Amended Complaint ¶ 83) [.] On that basis,
         [Appellants] assert they are the heirs of Berdie Wilson and
         entitled to a one-half interest in the oil and gas lying beneath the
         Property. (See Amended Complaint, ¶[¶] 83-85). [Appellants]
         filed preliminary objections to the Amended Complaint.2
               2
                 On June 12, 2015, [Appellees] Fanning, Dutton and
               Cerciello filed objections which raised a demurrer to
               all 4 counts of the Amended Complaint; sought a
               more specific pleading with regard to the time, date
               and place of the alleged parol gift of oil and gas
               interests and moved to strike all counts of the
               complaint. On June 16, 2015[,] [Intervenor-
               Appellee] Range filed 4 objections to the Amended
               Complaint. In each, Range asserted a demurrer to
               each of the counts of the Amended Complaint.
    
               On December 31, 2015, this court issued a memorandum
         and order sustaining objections to Count II of [Appellants’]
         Amended Complaint and overruling all other objections.3 With
         regard to the dismissal of Count II of the Amended Complaint,
    
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           this court determined that [Appellants] insufficiently pleaded the
           severance of the oil and gas estate from the surface of the
           “Property.” More specifically, this court sustained preliminary
           objections to Count II of the original complaint and Count II of
           the amended complaint because neither the Hugh Hanna Will nor
           the later Deed of Distribution contained a reservation of oil and
           gas for the Hanna Tract. In Count II, [Appellants] pleaded “in
           the alternative.” (See Amended Complaint ¶ 80) [.] [Appellants]
           alleged that Hugh Hanna’s Will did not specifically provide for the
           distribution of the oil and gas estate and contained no residuary
           clause. On that basis, [Appellant] advanced that the oil and gas
           estate passed by the laws of intestacy and they had succeeded
           to Berdie Wilson’s one-half interest.
                  3
                    By Amended Order of January 6, 2016 this court
                  confirmed that it did not grant [Appellants] further
                  leave to amend their complaint.
    
                  Relying on the Dunham Rule[3] and the decision of Butler v.
           Powers Estate ex.rel. [Warren], 65 A.3d 885, 896 ([Pa.] 2013)[,
           which reaffirmed the pronouncement in Dunham], this court
           could not overlook the significance of the absence of an oil and
           gas severance provision in the Deed of Distribution. Pursuant to
           the Dunham Rule, the express language of the Deed of
           Distribution showed that Berdie Wilson had conveyed her
           interests in her late father’s estate to include any inheritable
           interest in the Hanna Tract without a reservation of the oil and
           gas estate. Thus, [Appellants] could not rest their claim upon the
           laws of intestacy but would have to prove that the rights to the
           oil and gas estate were transferred to Berdie Wilson prior to
           Hugh Hanna’s death. Having previously afforded [Appellants] the
           opportunity to amend the original complaint for the same
           deficiency, this court found that a further amendment would not
           cure a “fatal defect” in [Appellants’] pleading of Count II.4
                  4
                    The parties when describing this court’s decision
                  have consistently restricted the ruling to a
                  determination of the intent of Hugh Hanna’s Will.
    ____________________________________________
    
    
    3
      The Dunham Rule provides that a reference to minerals in a reservation of
    rights in a private deed does not include oil and gas. Dunham & Shortt v.
    Kirkpatrick, 101 Pa. 36 (Pa. 1882).
    
    
    
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    J-A27023-17
    
    
              Such an interpretation is not entirely accurate. The
              following passages from this court’s last opinion
              determining preliminary objections provided:
    
              [Appellants] must plead that the intent of Hugh
              Hanna in executing his devise, and the intent of his
              heirs in executing the distribution, was to sever the
              oil and gas rights to the property. They have not
              pleaded such facts. Instead, they pleaded a pattern
              and practice of use over the land by Berdie Wilson
              and her heirs and assignees. They pleaded that the
              will and the deed of distribution did not provide for
              the distribution of oil and gas underlying the
              property, and this failure to address such a portion of
              Hugh Hanna’s estate evidences an intention to sever
              these interests. The established case law of the
              Commonwealth of Pennsylvania does not permit this
              assumption to be made; instead it requires the
              opposite. Hugh Hanna’s will and the Deed of
              Distribution demonstrate no intention to sever the oil
              and gas rights sufficient to overcome the Dunham
              Rule.
    
         (See Memorandum Opinion 12/31/2015)
    
               The parties conducted discovery with regard to Counts I,
         III and IV of the Amended Complaint. Those counts include an
         action to quiet title (Count I), a claim of unjust enrichment
         seeking the imposition of a constructive trust and an accounting
         (Count [III]), and an action seeking damages for slander of title
         (Count IV).
    
               Following discovery, both [Intervenor-Appellee Range] and
         [Appellees] filed motions for summary judgment.5 [Appellees
         Fanning and Cerciello] asserted in their motion that “The paucity
         of evidence to support [Appellants’] claim is alarming.” (See
         [Appellees’] Brief in Support p. 7) In summary, [Appellees]
         Fanning and Cerciello contend that no documentation or direct
         evidence supports [Appellants’] claim that Hugh Hanna prior to
         death, completed a parol inter vivos gift of oil and gas interests
         to Berdie Wilson. To the contrary, [Appellees] Fanning and
         Cerciello point out that the Property was encumbered by an oil
         and gas lease prior to Hugh Hanna’s ownership. Identified as the
         “Gourley Lease,” such lease was according to [Appellees]
    
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    J-A27023-17
    
    
          Fanning and Cerciello subject to numerous assignments of
          record from 1889 to 1945. Such assignments did not include
          Berdie Wilson or her late husband Alex Wilson. [Appellees]
          Fanning and Cerciello charge that [Appellants’] claims are
          premised upon “unsupported inferences, conjecture and
          assumptions” that lack documentation memorializing, or the
          testimony of a living witness to the alleged oral gift. [Appellees]
          Fanning and Cerciello assert that the Statute of Frauds and the
          Pennsylvania Recording Act support the granting of summary
          judgment.
                5
                   [Intervenor/Appellee Range] filed its motion on
                June 24, 2016. [Appellees] Fanning and Cerciello
                filed their motion for summary judgment on June 29,
                2016. [Appellees] Jeffrey Dutton and Lisa Dutton did
                not file a motion for summary judgment. The
                Dutton[s] requested that counsel representing
                [Appellees] Fanning and Cerciello withdraw from
                representation of the Duttons who wished to proceed
                pro se. Such withdraw of counsel was granted on
                April 4, 2016.
    
                In response, [Appellants] claim that “[t]he evidence
          garnered, when considered as a whole” demonstrates that Hugh
          Hanna made a gift of the oil and gas lying beneath the Hanna
          Tract to his daughter, Berdie Wilson. Specifically, [Appellants]
          allege that Berdie Wilson asserted dominion and control over the
          oil and gas during Hugh Hanna’s lifetime. On that basis,
          [Appellants] proffer that ‘‘Berdie Wilson’s actions with respect to
          the oil and gas underlying the Property evidenced her father’s
          intention to make an immediate gift of the oil and gas to her.”
          (See [Appellants’] Omnibus Brief p. 4)[.] Further, [Appellants]
          advance that the oil and gas lying beneath the property was not
          an asset of the estate of Hugh Hanna and was not “provided for”
          in Hugh Hanna’s Will. ([Appellants’] Omnibus Brief p. 8)[.]
          [Appellants] claim they are the descendants of Berdie Wilson and
          have “100% ownership over” the oil and gas underlying the
          Property.     [Appellants] assert that [Appellees’] summary
          judgment motions are nothing more than invitations for the
          court to weigh evidence. On this basis, [Appellants] contend that
          material issues of fact exist that a finder of fact at trial must
          determine.
    
    Trial Court Opinion, 3/16/17, at 2-8.
    
                                         -6-
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          On March 16, 2017, the trial court granted Appellees’ motions for
    
    summary judgment, and dismissed Appellants’ Amended Complaint with
    
    prejudice. The March 16, 2017 order made final all prior interlocutory orders
    
    including the December 31, 2015 order that sustained Appellees’ preliminary
    
    objections to Count II in Appellants’ Amended Complaint.      The March 16,
    
    2017 order disposed of all claims and all parties pursuant to Pa.R.A.P.
    
    341(b)(1), and on April 12, 2017, Appellants filed a timely appeal.        Both
    
    Appellants and the trial court have complied with Pa.R.A.P. 1925.
    
          On appeal, Appellants raise the following issues for this Court’s
    
    consideration:
    
          1. Did the Trial Court err when it granted summary judgment,
          dismissing Appellants’ Amended Complaint with prejudice, by
          usurping the factfinder role and weighing Appellants’ evidence to
          find that Appellants could not establish a parol inter vivos gift
          from Dr. Hugh Hanna to his daughter, Berdie Wilson?
    
          2. Did the Trial Court err when it sustained the preliminary
          objections in the nature of demurrer as to Count II of Appellants’
          Amended Complaint by finding that the oil and gas underlying
          the property was encompassed within the surface estate and
          was not severed by the Will of Dr. Hugh Hanna, when such
          conclusion was not supported by the plain language in the
          instrument itself, the testator’s intent, or the circumstances
          surrounding its execution?
    
          3. Did the Trial Court err when it sustained the preliminary
          objections in the nature of demurrer as to Count II of Appellants’
          Amended Complaint by finding that the oil and gas underlying
          the property did not pass pursuant to the laws of intestacy when
          the oil and gas was not distributed as part of Dr. Hanna’s Estate?
    
    Appellants’ Brief at 5.
    
    
    
    
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           Appellants’ first issue challenges the trial court’s grant of summary
    
    judgment. Our standard of review when evaluating a trial court’s grant or
    
    denial of summary judgment is well settled:
    
           We view the record in the light most favorable to the nonmoving
           party, and all doubts as to the existence of a genuine issue of
           material fact must be resolved against the moving party. Only
           where there is no genuine issue as to any material fact and it is
           clear that the moving party is entitled to a judgment as a matter
           of law will summary judgment be entered. Our scope of review
           of a trial court’s order granting or denying summary judgment is
           plenary, and our standard of review is clear: the trial court’s
           order will be reversed only where it is established that the court
           committed an error of law or abused its discretion.
    
    Hall v. CNX Gas Co., LLC, 137 A.3d 597, 601 (Pa. Super. 2016) (citation
    
    omitted).
    
           The   trial   court   provided     an   exhaustive   analysis   and   rationale
    
    supporting its order granting summary judgment.             Trial Court Opinion and
    
    Order, 3/16/17, at 8-68. After review, we are satisfied that the trial court
    
    thoroughly addressed and correctly disposed of Appellants’ first issue on
    
    appeal.     Accordingly, we affirm the order granting summary judgment in
    
    favor of Appellees on the basis of the trial court’s opinion.4
    
    
    
    
    ____________________________________________
    
    
    4
      The parties are directed to attach a copy of the March 16, 2017 opinion
    and order in the event of further proceedings.
    
    
    
    
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           In Appellants’ next two issues, they assail the trial court’s order
    
    sustaining Appellees’ preliminary objections.5 Our standard of review for an
    
    order sustaining preliminary objections in the nature of a demurrer is as
    
    follows:
    
                  A preliminary objection in the nature of a demurrer is
           properly granted where the contested pleading is legally
           insufficient. Preliminary objections in the nature of a demurrer
           require the court to resolve the issues solely on the basis of the
           pleadings; no testimony or other evidence outside of the
           complaint may be considered to dispose of the legal issues
           presented by the demurrer. All material facts set forth in the
           pleading and all inferences reasonably deducible therefrom must
           be admitted as true.
    
                 In determining whether the trial court properly sustained
           preliminary objections, the appellate court must examine the
           averments in the complaint, together with the documents and
           exhibits attached thereto, in order to evaluate the sufficiency of
           the facts averred. The impetus of our inquiry is to determine the
           legal sufficiency of the complaint and whether the pleading
           would permit recovery if ultimately proven. This Court will
           reverse the trial court’s decision regarding preliminary objections
    ____________________________________________
    
    
    5
      We note that while Appellants third issue concerns the laws of intestacy,
    Appellants’ concise statement of errors complained of on appeal pursuant to
    Pa.R.A.P. 1925(b), never mentions intestacy. It is well settled that any
    issue not raised in a court-ordered Pa.R.A.P. 1925(b) statement is deemed
    waived on appeal.     Lazarski v. Archdiocese of Philadelphia, 926 A.2d
    459, 464 (Pa. Super. 2007). However, to the extent that intestacy is fairly
    suggested by the tangential issues set forth in the Pa.R.A.P. 1925(b)
    statement, and in light of the fact that the trial court discussed intestacy in
    disposing of Appellees’ preliminary objections, we will overlook this
    deficiency.
    
    
    
    
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         only where there has been an error of law or abuse of discretion.
         When sustaining the trial court’s ruling will result in the denial of
         claim or a dismissal of suit, preliminary objections will be
         sustained only where the case is free and clear of doubt.
    
               Thus, the question presented by the demurrer is whether,
         on the facts averred, the law says with certainty that no
         recovery is possible. Where a doubt exists as to whether a
         demurrer should be sustained, this doubt should be resolved in
         favor of overruling it.
    
               Where the complaint fails to set forth a valid cause of
         action, a preliminary objection in the nature of a demurrer is
         properly sustained. The complaint need not identify specific legal
         theories, but it must provide essential facts to support the claim.
         Assertions of legal rights and obligations in a complaint may be
         construed as conclusions of law, which have no place in a
         pleading.
    
    Estate of Rothberg, 166 A.3d 378, 382 (Pa. Super. 2017) (citation
    
    omitted).
    
         As noted above, the trial court sustained Appellees’ preliminary
    
    objections to Count II of Appellants’ Amended Complaint.        In Count II of
    
    their Amended Complaint, Appellants alleged, in relevant part, the following:
    
         81. The Will of Hugh Hanna severed the “surface of the farm”
         and the coal of the Property from the oil and gas, but did not
         provide for the distribution of the oil and gas underlying the
         Property.
    
         82. Because Hugh Hanna did not provide by specific bequest for
         distribution of the oil and gas underlying and being produced on
         the Property and because the Will did not contain a residuary
         clause, the oil and gas interest passed pursuant to the laws of
         intestacy.
    
         83. Hugh Hanna’s wife, Elizabeth Hanna, elected against the Will
         of Hugh Hanna. As a result, the sole intestate heirs of Hugh
         Hanna’s estate were Howard T.E. Hanna and Berdie H. Wilson,
         son and daughter, respectively.
    
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         84. The entirety of the oil and gas underlying the Property was
         owned, in equal shares, by Howard T.E. Hanna and Berdie H.
         Wilson.
    
         85. [Appellants] are the heirs of Berdie H. Wilson, and
         [Appellants] now own a one-half interest in the oil and gas
         underlying the Property.
    
         86. Despite this, through their actions, [Appellees] have
         continued to assert right, title and ownership over oil and gas
         underlying the Property through the execution of various oil and
         gas leases, such that the [Appellants’] right, title and interest in
         the oil and gas underlying the Property has been clouded and
         the [Appellants] have been precluded from fully enjoying their
         rights.
    
         87. [Appellees] have no right, title or ownership to [Appellants’]
         one-half interest [in the] oil and gas underlying the Property.
    
         88. [Appellants] are the rightful and legal owners of a one-half
         interest in the oil and gas underlying the Property and are
         therefore entitled to quiet enjoyment of their rights.
    
         89. Accordingly, [Appellants] request this Court quiet title to the
         one-half interest of the oil and gas underlying the Property in
         favor of [Appellants] and against [Appellees] and for any and all
         additional relief this Court deems just and proper.
    
         WHEREFORE, [Appellants] respectfully demand that this
         Honorable Court quiet title to the oil and gas underlying the
         Property, and award judgment in their favor and against
         [Appellees] as follows:
    
         I. Quieting Title to a one-half ownership interest in the oil and
         gas underlying the Property against [Appellees] and all persons
         claiming under [Appellees];
    
         II. For a decree to declare and adjudge [Appellants] own in fee
         simple the one-half (50%) ownership in the oil and gas
         underlying the Property and that [Appellees] have no estate,
         right, title, lien or interest in or to said property or any part
         thereof;
    
    
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         III. For decree to permanently bar [Appellees] and persons
         claiming under [Appellees] from asserting any estate right, title,
         lien or interest in or to the one-half interest of oil and gas
         underlying the Property adverse to [Appellants];
    
         IV. For such other relief as the Court may deem just and proper,
         including attorney’s fees and costs.
    
    Appellants’ Amended Complaint, 5/27/15, at ¶¶ 81-89.
    
         While the trial court’s conclusions with respect to its rationale for
    
    sustaining Appellees’ preliminary objections are referenced in the March 16,
    
    2017 opinion adopted above, the trial court previously provided a thorough
    
    explanation in its December 31, 2015 opinion following the filing of
    
    Appellants’ Amended Complaint:
    
                Count II of the Amended Complaint alleges [Appellants]
         own a 50% interest in the property resulting from the laws of
         intestacy and an election Elizabeth Hanna took against the will of
         Hugh Hanna. [Appellants] claim that Hugh Hanna, by continually
         referring to the “surface” of his property in his will, “severed” the
         surface of the property from the oil and gas lying underneath.
         Amended Complaint ¶¶ 31, 32. Elizabeth Hanna’s election to
         take against the will resulted in an Orphans’ Court deed of
         distribution which did not include these allegedly severed oil and
         gas interests. As a result, [Appellants] claim they pass through
         the laws of intestacy in part to [Appellants]. Amended Complaint
         ¶ 36.
    
                While the argument flows logically, the Court addressed
         this logic in its previous order on preliminary objections:
    
               [Appellants’] argument has a certain logical force. …
               [O]il and natural gas generally exist in a
               subterranean realm. Therefore, the conveyance of
               the surface of property without any further
               description would by necessary implication appear to
               exclude a conveyance of oil and natural gas.
               However, as Justice Oliver Wendell Holmes, Jr. once
    
    
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              aptly observed, “The life of the law has not been
              logic. It has been experience.”
    
              May 7, 2015 Opinion and Order
    
               Pursuant to Pennsylvania law, a conveyance of “all surface
         and right of soil” has been interpreted to include gas and oil
         rights where no specific exception or reservation severed such
         rights. Yuscavage v. Hamlin, 391 Pa. 13, 15-16, 137 A.2d 242,
         243-244 (1958). ‘‘The situs of the gas and the methods utilized
         to extract gas do not support a deviation ... “from the principle,
         known as the Dunham Rule. Such has been a rule of property
         law “long acquiesced in” within the Commonwealth. Butler v.
         Charles Powers Estate ex. rel. Warren, 65 A.3d 885, 891-892,
         and 899 (Pa. 2013).
    
               The following portion of the Majority Opinion written by
         Justice Baer in Butler informs us that:
    
              The Dunham Rule is clear, dating back to Gibson [v.
              Tyson, 5 Watts 34 (Pa. 1836)], that the common,
              layperson understanding of what is and is not a
              mineral is the only acceptable construction of a
              private      deed.       Notwithstanding      different
              interpretations proffered by other jurisdictions, the
              rule in Pennsylvania is that natural gas and oil simply
              are not minerals because they are not of a metallic
              nature, as the common person would understand
              minerals. Gibson, 5 Watts at 41-42; see also
              Dunham, 101 Pa. at 44. The Highland [v.
              Commonwealth, 161 A.2d 390 (Pa. 1960)] decision
              made clear that the party advocating for the
              inclusion of natural gas within the deed
              reservation (here [a]ppellees) bears the
              burden of pleading and proving by clear and
              convincing evidence that the intent of the
              parties who executed the reservation was to
              include natural gas. 161 A.2d at 398-99. Critically,
              however, such intention may only be shown
              through parol evidence that indicates the intent
              of the parties at the time the deed was
              executed—in this case, 1881. Id. (emphasis added)
    
    
    
    
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         Butler v. Charles Powers Estate ex rel. Warren, 620 Pa. 1, 22-
         23, 65 A.3d 885, 898 (2013).
    
                [Appellants] must plead that the intent of Hugh Hanna in
         executing his devise, and the intent of his heirs in executing the
         distribution, was to sever the oil and gas rights to the property.
         They have not pleaded such facts. Instead, they pleaded a
         pattern and practice of use over the land by Berdie Wilson and
         her heirs and assignees. They pleaded that the will and the deed
         of distribution did not provide for the distribution of oil and gas
         underlying the property, and this failure to address such a
         portion of Hugh Hanna’s estate evidences an intention to sever
         these interests. The established case law of the Commonwealth
         of Pennsylvania does not permit this assumption to be made;
         instead it requires the opposite. Hugh Hanna’s will and the Deed
         of Distribution demonstrate no intention to sever the oil and gas
         rights sufficient to overcome the Dunham Rule.
    
               A demurrer does not admit the truth of averments in a
         complaint that conflict with exhibits. Where any inconsistency
         exists between the allegations of a complaint and a written
         instrument ... the latter will prevail. See Framlau v. County of
         Delaware, 223 Pa. Super. 272, 299 A.2d 335, 338 (Pa. Super.
         1972).
    
               In an era where the Dunham rule necessarily included oil
         and gas in the “surface” of a property, Hugh Hanna referred to
         his property’s surface to distinguish it from the coal interests he
         bequeathed to his grandchildren. See Amended Complaint ¶¶ 33,
         Exhibit E.
    
                “The general principles regulating the titles to upper and
         lower estates in the earth’s crust are pretty well settled by our
         own cases. The ownership of the surface carries with it, if
         there be no obstacle to the application of the general rule,
         title downward to the center of the earth and upward
         indefinitely.” See Delaware & Hudson Canal Co. v, Hughes, 183
         Pa. 66, 691 38 A. 568,569 (1897) (emphasis added). “It is true
         that ... severance (of oil and gas rights or the mineral estate) is
         generally made by deed or other conveyance, and that until so
         made the title to the land is regarded as an entirety,
         including minerals as well as the surface.” See Hyde v.
         Rainey, 223 Pa. 540, 545, 82 a. 781, 783 (1912) (emphasis
         added). The Dunham rule has been “unwavering in its clarity
    
                                       - 14 -
    J-A27023-17
    
    
         that, absent the terms “oil” or “natural gas” being included
         within a reservation for mineral rights within a private deed, oil
         or natural gas simply are not encompassed within the
         reservation without clear and convincing parol evidence
         produced by the proponent of the reservation to the contrary.”
         Butler v. Charles Powers Estate ex rel. Warren, 620 Pa. 1, 19-
         20, 65 A.3d 885, 896 (2013).
    
                [Appellants] allege that the property had existing oil and
         gas wells that may have been producing oil and gas at the time
         of Hugh Hanna’s death. ¶ 41. They further allege that documents
         prepared before and after Hugh Hanna’s death indicate that the
         parties assessed the value of the “surface” of the property below
         that of what would be appropriate to include oil and gas. ¶¶ 42-
         45. [Appellants] argue under Count II that this indicates that a
         severance of the oil and gas was likely. However, Exhibit G
         demonstrates that Berdie Wilson signed and executed a
         distribution that conveyed to her no interest in the surface of the
         property at issue. This is fatal to [Appellants’] attempt to rebut
         the Dunham Rule’s presumption.1
               1
                 A demurrer does not admit the truth of averments
               in a complaint that conflict with exhibits. Where any
               inconsistency exists between the allegations of a
               complaint and a written instrument ... the latter will
               prevail. See Framlau v. County of Delaware, 223 Pa.
               Super. 272, 299 A.2d 335, 338 (Pa. Super. 1972).
    
               Interpreted in this light, the will of Hugh Hanna and the
         Deed of Distribution indicate an intent to include the oil and gas
         rights to the property. The Court must defer to the experience
         of case law. [Appellees’] and Intervenor’s preliminary objections
         to Count II of the Amended Complaint are sustained.
    
    Trial Court Opinion, 12/31/15, at 10-15.
    
         We agree with the trial court’s conclusions.     Appellants’ arguments
    
    ignore the reality that the only reservation of mineral rights was for coal;
    
    absent a separate reservation, the remaining subsurface rights remained
    
    with the surface rights in the property. The property, which included the oil
    
    
                                       - 15 -
    J-A27023-17
    
    
    and gas rights, was conveyed to Appellees’ predecessors in interest, and
    
    Appellants received no interest in the property. As such, we discern no error
    
    of law or abuse of discretion in the trial court sustaining Appellees’
    
    preliminary objections in the nature of a demurrer. Accordingly, we affirm
    
    the final order entered in this matter on March 16, 2017.
    
         Order affirmed.
    
    
    
    Judgment Entered.
    
    
    
    
    Joseph D. Seletyn, Esq.
    Prothonotary
    
    
    
    Date: 1/30/2018
    
    
    
    
                                       - 16 -
                                                                                                         Circulated 01/16/2018 12:20 PM
    
    
    
    
                                IN THE COURT OF COMMON PLEAS OF
                               WASHINGTON COUNTY, PENNSYLVANIA
                                          CIVIL DIVIgION-
    
    
      PATRICIA CARTER,
                                                                                   OP
      CAROL BETH WILSON,                                                     ECIITRY
                                                                                                011.
                                                                              AB3UDIC131021
      JOHN ALLEN WILSON AND
      ELIZABETH WILSON                                                        la"
                                                                              fi
                        PLAINTIFFS
    
                        VS.                                                                    2014-5859
    
     RICHARD M. FANNING,
     DEBRA J. FANNING,
     JEFFREY DUITON,
     LISA DUTTON,
     LARRY N. CERCIELLO AND
     KANDY S. CERCIELLO
    
                       DEFENDANTS
    
    
     AND
    
     RANGE RESOURCES -APPALACHIA, LLC
    
                      INTERVENOR/DEFENDANT
    
    
    
                                            OPINION AND ORDER
             Before the court are the summary judgment motions of the defendants. The
    
    Plaintiffs', Carter and Wilson, filed an action to quiet title with regard to oil and
    
    gas lying beneath an approximately 100 acre tract located in Donegal Township,
    
     Throughout this opinion the Plaintiff's, Patricia Carter, Carol Beth Wilson, john Allen Wilson and Elizabeth
    Wilson shall be referred to as the "Carter and Wilson."
    Washington County (Hereinafter referred to as the "Hanna Tract"). Carter and
    
                                   r6irabirgarthrotTglfRadie-WilktirdifightWiof
    
    Hugh Hanna. Carter and Wilson contend that prior to death Hugh Hanna gifted
    
    "100% of the oil and gas" underlying the Hanna Tract to Berdie Wilson.
    
    
    Procedural, History
    
          On September 24, 2014, Carter and Wilson, filed a four (4) count complaint
    
    against individual defendants Fanning, Dutton and Cerciello. The Complaint
    
    requested that the Court quiet Defendants Fanning, Dutton and Cerciello's title
    
    either completely or by "one-half' in certain real property. The Complaint also
    
    sets forth claims of unjust enrichment and slander of title. Carter and Wilson
    
    contended that they succeeded to the title of Berdie Wilson, daughter of Hugh
    
    Hanna, a prior record owner of the Hanna Tract. Carter and Wilson advanced that
    
    Hugh Hanna made a parol gift of the oil and gas estate to Berdie Wilson. On
    
    November 26, 2014 this court granted Range's petition to intervene as a party
    
    defendant.
    
    
          On November 24, 2014, Defendants Fanning, Dutton and Cerciello filed
    
    preliminary objections. On December 3, 2014 Range filed separate preliminary
    
    objections. Defendants Fanning, Dutton and Cerciello alleged that the recorded
    
    "chain of title" from 1825 to 2014 does not indicate that a severance of oil and gas
    
    
                                                                                2IPage
    occurred. By virtue of three (3) separately recorded deeds and their record chain of
    
         DefendantlFanning, Dutton and
    
    right, title and interest in the oil and gas to the Hanna Tract. (See Paragraphs 3, 4
    
    and 5 Fanning-Dutton Cerciello Preliminary Objections to the Original
    
    Complaint). Defendant Range filed preliminary objections that included a
    
    demurrer and a claim of lack of specificity.
    
           On May   7,   2015 this court issued an opinion and order sustaining the
    
    defendants' preliminary objections. The court did not dismiss the action. Instead,
    
    Carter and Wilson were given twenty (20) days to file an amended complaint.
    
    
          On May 27, 2015 Carter and Wilson filed an Amended Complaint. In the
    
    Amended Complaint, Carter and Wilson reiterated their previous allegation that as
    
    the heirs of Berdie Wilson's Estate they owned "100%" of the oil and gas
    
    underlying the Hanna Tract, Specifically, Carter and Wilson asserted that Hugh
    
    Hanna "gifted" the oil and gas estate to Berdie Wilson. (See Amended Complaint
    
     57 and 58). Carter and Wilson did not plead the existence of a writing that
    
    specifically provided for the gift. Instead, Carter and Wilson alleged that
    
    circumstantial evidence demonstrated the existence of a parol gift. (See Amended
    
    Complaint ¶ 11-56) In the alternative, Carter and Wilson alleged that the "Will of
    
    Hugh Hanna severed the surface of the farm and the coal of the Property(Hanna
    
    Tract) from the oil and gas." (See Amended Complaint ¶ 82) Carter and Wilson
           further alleged that the interests in the oil and gas passed "pursuant to the laws of
    
           tritestacy."- (See Ainende Zastnplami83)-011that basis,                Cater and' irslitiaster-
          they are the heirs of Berdie Wilson and entitled to a one-half interest in the oil and
    
           gas lying beneath the Property. (See Amended Complaint1183-85). The
    
          Defendants filed preliminary objections to the Amended Complaint.2
    
    
                  On December 31, 2015, this court issued a memorandum and order
    
          sustaining objections to Count II of the Amended Complaint and overruling all
    
          other objections. 3 With regard to the dismissal of Count II of the Amended
    
          Complaint, this court determined that the Carter and Wilson insufficiently pleaded
    
          the severance of the oil and gas estate from the surface of the "Property." More
    
          specifically, this court sustained preliminary objections to Count II of the original
    
          complaint and Count II of the amended complaint because neither the Hugh Hanna
    
          Will nor the later Deed of Distribution contained a reservation of oil and gas for
    
          the Hanna Tract. In Count II, Carter and Wilson pleaded "in the alternative." (See
    
          Amended Complaint 1180) Carter and Wilson alleged that Hugh Hanna's Will did
    
          not specifically provide for the distribution of the oil and gas estate and contained
    
    
    
            On June 12, 2015, Defendants Fanning, Dutton and Cerciello filed objections which raised a
          demurrer to all 4 counts of the Amended Complaint; sought a more specific pleading with regard
          to the time, date and place of the alleged parol gift of oil and gas interests and moved to strike all
          counts of the complaint. On June 16, 2015 Defendant Range filed 4 objections to the Amended
          Complaint. In each, Range asserted a demurrer to each of the counts of the Amended Complaint.
          ' By Amended Order of January 6, 2016 this court confined that it did not grant Carter and
    (,)   Wilson further leave to amend their complaint
                                                                                                     4jPage
     no residuary clause. On that basis, Carter and Wilson advanced that the oil and gas
    
     estate passed by the. Jaws ofmteitacy and they had succeeded to) die                    wivorrr -
    one half interest.
    
    
            Relying on the Dunham Rule and the decision of Butler v. Powers Estate ex.
    
    rel, 65 A.3d 885, 896 (2013), this court could not overlook the significance of the
    absence of an oil and gas severance provision in the Deed of Distribution.
    
    Pursuant to the Dunham Rule, the express language of the Deed of Distribution
    
    showed that Berdie Wilson had conveyed her interests in her late father's estate to
    
    include any inheritable interest in the Hanna Tract without a reservation of the oil
    
    and gas estate. Thus, Carter and Wilson could not rest their claim upon the laws of
    
    intestacy but would have to prove that the rights to the oil and gas estate were
    
    transferred to Berdie Wilson prior to Hugh Hanna's death. Having previously
    
    afforded Carter and Wilson the opportunity to amend the original complaint for the
    
    same deficiency, this court found that a further amendment would not cure a "fatal
    
    defect" in Carter and Wilson's pleading of Count 11             4
    
    
    
    
     The parties when describing this court's decision have consistently restricted the ruling to a
    determination of the intent of Hugh Hanna's Will. Such an interpretation is not entirely accurate.
    The following passages from this court's last opinion determining preliminary objections
    provided:
    
                   The Plaintiffs must plead that the intent of Hugh Hanna in executing his
           devise, and the intent of his heirs in executing the distribution, was to sever the oil
           and gas rights to the property. They have not pleaded such facts. Stead, they
           pleaded a pattern and practice of use over the land by Berdie Wilson and her heirs
                                                                                                51Pago
            The parties conducted discovery with regard to Counts I, III and IV of the
    
     .Amended CdniPlatirTholerZOTiliffiliErirdi an action to quiet title (Counf                    a
    
     claim of unjust enrichment seeking the imposition of a constructive trust and an
    
     accounting (Count II), and an action seeking damages for slander of title (Count
    
    IV).
    
    
           Following discovery, both Defendant -Range Resources and Defendants -
    
    Fanning and Cerciello filed motions for summary judgment.5 Fanning and
    
    Cerciello asserted in their motion that "The paucity of evidence to support the
    
    Plaintiffs' claim is alarming." (See Fanning and Cerciello Brief in Support p. 7) In
    
    summary, Fanning and Cerciello contend that no documentation or direct evidence
    
    supports Carter and Wilson's claim that Hugh Hanna, prior to death, completed a
    
    parol inter vivos gift of oil and gas interests to Berdie Wilson. To the contrary,
    
    Fanning and Cerciello point out that the Property was encumbered by an oil and
    
           and assignees. They pleaded that the will and the deed of distribution did not
           provide for the distribution of oil and gas underlying the property, and this failure
           to address such a portion of Hugh Hanna's estate evidences an intention to sever
           these interests. The established case law of the Commonwealth of Pennsylvania
           does not permit this assumption to be made; instead it requires the opposite. Hugh
           Hanna's will and the Deed of Distribution demonstrate no intention to sever the
           oil and gas rights sufficient to overcome the Dunham Rule.
    
    (See Memorandum Opinion 12/31/2015)
    
    
    'Defendant Range Resources filed its motion on June 24, 2016. Defendants Fanning and
    Cerciello filed their motion for summary judgment on June 29, 2016. Defendants Jeffrey button
    and Lisa Dutton did not file a motion for summary judgment. The Dutton Defendants requested
    that counsel representing Fanning and Cerciello withdraw from representation of the buttons
    who wished to proceed pro se, Such withdraw of counsel was granted on April 4, 2016.
                                                                                                       .
                                                                                              6IPage
    gas lease prior to Hugh Hanna's ownership. Identified as the "Gourley Lease,"
    
    such lease was according to Fanning and Cerciello subject to numerous
    
    assignments of record from 1889 to 1945. Such assignments did not include
    
    Berdie Wilson or her late husband Alex Wilson. Fanning and Cerciello charge that
    
    Carter and Wilson's claims are premised upon "unsupported inferences, conjecture
    
    and assumptions" that lack documentation memorializing, or the testimony of a
    
    living witness to the alleged oral gift. Fanning and Cerciello assert that the Statute
    
    of Frauds and the Pennsylvania Recording Act support the granting of summary
    
    judgment.
    
          In response, Carter and Wilson claim that "The evidence garnered, when
    
    considered as a whole" demonstrates that Hugh Hanna made a gift of the oil and.
    
    gas lying beneath the Hanna Tract to his daughter, Berdie Wilson. Specifically,
    
    Carter and Wilson allege that Berdie Wilson asserted dominion and control over
    
    the oil and gas during Hugh Hanna's lifetime. On that basis, Carter and Wilson
    
    proffer that "Berdie Wilson's actions with respect to the oil and gas underlying the
    
    Property evidenced her father's intention to make an immediate gift of the oil and
    
    gas to her." (See Plaintiffs' Omnibus Brief p. 4) Further, Carter and Wilson
    
    advance that the oil and gas lying beneath the property was not an asset of the
    
    estate of Hugh Hanna and was not "provided for" in Hugh Hanna's Will. (Carter
    
    and Wilson Omnibus Brief p. 8) Carter and Wilson claim they are the
    
                                                                                 iiiPage
     descendants of Berdie Wilson and have "100% ownership over " the oil and gas
    
    underlying the Property.   der ant       Nikon aSseitthattlie-detidantsi summ
    
    judgment motions are nothing more than twin invitations for the court to weigh
    
    evidence. On this basis, Carter and Wilson contend that material issues of fact
    
    exist that a finder of fact at trial must determine.
    
    
    Summary Judgment
    
           Summary judgment is properly granted where "the pleadings, depositions,
    
    answers to interrogatories, and admissions on file, together with the affidavits, if
    
    any, show that there is no genuine issue as to any material fact and that the moving
    
    party is entitled to a judgment as a matter of law." Pa.RC.P. 1035(b). An entry of
    
    summary judgment may be granted only in cases where the right is clear and free
    
    from doubt. Musser v. Vilsmeier Auction Co., Inc., 522 Pa. 367, 369, 562 A.2d
    
    279, 280 (1989).
    
    
          The moving party has the burden of proving the nonexistence      of any genuine
    
    issue of material fact. Thompson Coal Co. v. Pike Coal Co., 488 Pa. 198, 202-204,
    
    412 A.2d 466, 468-69 (1979). The record must be viewed in the light most
    
    favorable to the nonmoving party, and all doubts as to the existence of a genuine
    
    issue of material fact must be resolved against the moving party. Davis v. Peruwoil
    
    
    
    
                                                                                 8rPage
             Co., 438 Pa. 194, 264 A.2d 597 (1970) as cited in Marks v. Tasman, 527 Pa. 132,
    
    nr--= --114-35;73-8gXlii 2037206 (1991).
    
                   Where the non-moving party bears the burden of proof on an issue, he may
    
            not merely rely on his pleadings or answers in order to survive summary judgment.
    
            Failure of a non-moving party to adduce sufficient evidence on an issue essential to
    
            his case and on which it bears the burden of proof establishes the entitlement of the
    
            moving party to judgment as a matter of law. JP Morgan Chase Bank, N.A, v.
    
            Murray, 63 A.3d 1258, 1261-62 (Pa.Super.2013) (quoting Murphy v. Duquesne
    
            Univ. of the Holy Ghost 565 Pa. 571, 777 A.2d 418, 429 (2001)). Where there is
    
            no genuine issue   of material fact and the moving party is entitled to relief as a
    
            matter of law, summary judgment may be entered. Thompson v. Ginkel, 2014 PA
    
            Super 125, 95 A.3d 900, 904 (Pa. Super. 2014).
    
                  The ultimate inquiry in deciding a motion for summary judgment is whether
    
            the admissible evidence in the record, considered in the light most favorable to the
    
            respondent to the motion, fails to establish a prima facie case. Johnson v. Harris,
    
            419 Pa.Super. 541, 548-49, 615 A.2d 771, 775 (1992) citing Liles v, Balmer 389     ,
    
    
    
    
           Pa.Super. at 454, 567 A.2d at 692 (1989). The court below, nevertheless, could
    
           give weight to the affidavit only to the extent that it set forth matter that would be
    
           admissible into evidence. McFadden v. Am. Oil Co., 215 Pa.Super. 44, 50, 257
    
    
    
                                                                                           9   Page
    A.2d 283, 287 (1969). This principle is also set forth in Pa.R.C.P. 1035.4 which
    
    
    
                  Supporting and opposing affidavits shall be made on personal
           knowledge, shall set forth such facts as would be admissible in
           evidence, and shall show affirmatively that the signer is competent to
           testify to the matters stated therein. Verified or certified copies of all
           papers or parts thereof referred to in an affidavit shall be attached
           thereto or sewed therewith. The court may permit affidavits to be
           supplemented or opposed by depositions, answers to interrogatories,
           or further affidavits.
    
    Pa.R.C.P. No. 1035.4.
    
    
           The non-moving party is entitled to the benefit of all reasonable inferences.
    
    Elder v. Nationwide Ins. Co., 410 Pa.Super. 290, 294, 599 A.2d 996, 998 (1991)
    
    citing Samarin v. GAF Corporation. 391 Pa.Super. 340, 571 A.2d 398 (1989).
    
           In doing so, a trial court appropriately disregards hearsay or inadmissible
    
    evidence when determining a motion for summary judgment. In Liles, the non-
    
    moving party attempted to prove the occurrence of an accident through the
    
    admission of a police report and hospital records. The following passage from
    
    Liles is instructive in this regard:
    
          rt is readily apparent that there is a dispute of fact in this case. The
          real issue is whether the plaintiff can produce evidence sufficient to
          establish prima facie that the accident occurred as she has alleged.
          We agree with the trial court that plaintiff has failed to demonstrate
          that the police accident report and the hospital records are admissible
          as business records to prove the manner in which the accident
          occurred. To satisfy the requirements of the Uniform Business
    
                                                                                   10IPage
          Records in Evidence Act, 42 Pa.C.S. § 6108(b), a report must: (1)
        ..have_been made at oranear the tittle of the events it purports to relate;
           (2) be generated as a regular practice of the business; and (3) be
          trustworthy as to the source of information or the method or
           circumstances of preparation. Ganster v. Western Pennsylvania Water
           Co, 349 Pa.Super. 561, 569, 504 A.2d 186, 189-190 (1985). Here, the
          plaintiff has not shown that the sources of the information appearing
           in the police and hospital records were trustworthy. See: Hreha v.
          J3enscoter, 381 Pa.Super. 556, 565-567, 554 A.2d 525, 529-530
           (1989).
           We also agree with the trial court that plaintiff, contrary to her
           assertion, cannot prove her cause of action by showing that on prior
          occasions the dog was unrestrained and chased passing vehicles.
          Evidence of prior lack of restraint which permitted the dog to run into
          the street is not relevant to prove a negligent lack of control of the dog
           at the time of the accident. See, e.g.: Levant v. L. Wasserman Com
          Inc. 445 Pa. 380, 382-383, 284 A.2d 794, 796 (1971); Roney v.
          Clearfield Co. Grange Ins. Co, 332 Pa. 447, 449, 3 A.2d 365, 366
          (1939); Baumeister v. Baugh & Sons Co, 142 Pa.Super. 346, 353, 16
          A.2d 424, 427 (1940). Appellant, moreover, is unable to show that the
          Balmers habitually allowed their dog to run free to chase passing
          vehicles. Whether evidence of habit "is admissible to show what
          occurred in a specific instance depends on the 'invariable regularity'
          of the usage or habit." Baldrldge v. Matthews, 378 Pa. 566, 570, 106
          A.2d 809, 811 (1954); Aurand v. Universal Carloading & Distributing
          Co. 131 Pa.Super. 502, 507, 200 A. 285, 287 (1938); Packel and
          Poulin, Pennsylvania Evidence § 406, p. 186 (1987). Here there is no
          evidence that the dog habitually was allowed to run free to chase
          passing vehicles.
    
    
    Liles v. Balmer, 389 Pa.Super. 451, 455-56, 567 A.2d 691, 692-93 (1989)
    
    
          More recently, the Superior Court, in Rosenberry v. Evans, 48 A.3d 1255,
    
    1264 (Pa. Super. 2012), held that inadmissible hearsay could not be used to defeat
    
    a motion for summary judgment. The Superior Court explained:
    
    
                                                                                .111Page
           Mother testified that after her son was injured, she heard rumors from
           Dtde_Calmon that the_clog had previously:attacker:14S killed a poodle,
           Deposition of Rhonda Rosenberry, 10/12/10, at 21-22. She contends
           that the fact that Landlord lived in the community should permit the
           inference that he also heard the rumors and, thus, knew the dog had
           violent propensities.
           Landlord counters that, such testimony constitutes inadmissible
           hearsay and cannot be used to defeat summary judgment. Samarin v.
           GAF Corp., 391 Pa.Super. 340, 571 A.2d 398, 402 (1989). We agree.
           Mother had no personal knowledge of the facts underlying the rumors,
           and we will not rely upon inadmissible hearsay to find a genuine
           issue of material fact. If witnesses existed who could have
           substantiated the truth of the rumor, it was Mother's burden to
           establish those facts on the record.
    
    
    Rosenberry v. Evans, 2012 PA Super 91, 48 A.3d 1255, 1264 (Pa. Super. 2012).
    
    
           The "quantum of evidentiary facts which must be adduced to preclude
    
    summary judgment is not the same as required       at trial...." See, McFadden v.
    
    American Oil Company. 215 Pa.Super. 44, 257 A.2d 283 (1969) For instance, as
    
    explained by the Superior Court in Elder v. Nationwide Ins. Co., 410 Pa.Super.
    
    290, 599 A.2d 996 (1991), evidence presented by a non-moving party to establish
    
    fraud need not rise to a level of clear and convincing, although that is the standard
    
    to be applied at trial. However, the evidence must reasonably support the inference
    
    sought to be drawn therefrom in order that the non-moving party may resist a
    
    motion for summaryjudgment. Where the facts presented in a case "cannot be said
    
    to rise to such a level" summary judgment is appropriate. Elder v. Nationwide Ins
    
    Co 410 Pa.Super. 290, 299, 599 A.2d 996, 1000 (1991).
    
                                                                                1211311:ge
             Later, the Superior Court in InfoSAGE, Inc. v. Mellon Ventures. L.P., 896
    
    -At2d 616 (Pa: Supert2006) held that-the-ndiaVitlg pirlyniffitildduTe-d-Videntr'
    
     of such a quality that a jury could return a favorable verdict to the non-moving
    
    party on the issue or issues challenged by a summary judgment request. In support
    
    of their ruling, the Superior Court cited the following passage from Ertel v. Patriot -
    
    News Co., 544 Pa. 93, 100-02, 674 A.2d 1038, 1042 (1996)         :
    
    
    
             Allowing non-moving parties to avoid summary judgment where they
             have no evidence to support an issue on which they bear the burden of
             proof runs contrary to the spirit of [Pennsylvania Rules of Civil.
             Procedure 1035.1-.5]. We have stated that the 'mission of the
             summary judgment procedure is to pierce the pleadings and to assess
             the proof in order to see whether there is a genuine need for a trial.'
             We have a summary judgment rule in this Commonwealth in order to
             dispense with a trial of a case (or, in some matters, issues in a case)
             where the party lacks the beginnings of evidence to establish or
             contest a material issue.... Forcing parties to go to trial on a meritless
             claim under the guise of effectuating the summary judgment rule is a
             perversion of that rule.
             *   * * * *
    
             Thus, we hold that a non-moving party must adduce sufficient
             evidence on an issue essential to his case and on which he bears the
             burden of proof such that a jury could return a verdict in his favor.
    
    InfoSAGE, Inc. v. Mellon Ventures, L.P., 896 A.2d 616, 625-26 (Pa. Super.
    
    2006).
    
          The evidence relied upon by the non-moving party need not be direct
    
    evidence, but may be circumstantial evidence and the inferences reasonably
    
    deducible therefrom. Cade v. McDanel, 451 Pa.Super. 368, 679 A.2d 1266, 1271
    
    (1996). "Such circumstantial evidence and its reasonable inferences 'must be
    
                                                                                     01Page
    adequate to establish the conclusion sought and must so preponderate in favor of
    
    thatconclusionasto outweigh in the mind of the fact -finder any other evidence
    
    and reasonable inferences therefrom which are inconsistent therewith.' It is also
    
    well-settled that a court reviewing the propriety of a summary judgment motion
    
    must be mindful that a jury may not be permitted to reach its verdict on the basis of
    
    speculation or conjecture." InfoSAGE., Inc. v. Mellon Ventures, L.P., 896 A.2d
    
    616, 626 (Pa. Super. 2006) (Internal citations omitted)
    
    
          In light of these principles, this court has examined the pleadings, deposition
    
    transcripts, Answers to Interrogatories, Responses to Request for Admission and
    
    numerous attached documents all submitted by the parties.
    
    
    CHAIN OF LIME
    
          Both parties have submitted numerous recorded documents from the chain
    
    of title for the Hanna Tract. Pa.R.E. 803 (14) provides recorded property
    
    documents are admissible as an exception to the hearsay rule as follows:
    
                 The record of a document purporting to establish or affect an
          interest in property, as proof of the content of the original recorded
          document and its execution and delivery by each person by whom it
          purports to have been executed, if the record of a public office and an
          applicable statute authorizes the recording of documents of that kind
          in that office.
    
    
    
    
                                                                                141Page
         The documents submitted which establish the chain of title for the Hanna Tract and
    
    -    for the properties later   ---purchase-d   by the Plaintiffs were in allinstances documents
    
         recorded in either the Recorder of Deeds Office or admitted to probate in the
    
        Register of Wills Office of Washington County. As such, those documents are
    
         admissible pursuant to Pa.R.E. 803(14). Consideration of those documents to
    
        determine the present motion is appropriate and reveals the following.
    
                On May 3, 1889 John and Mary Gourley, then the owners of what later
    
        became known as the Hanna Tract, entered into a lease with W.E. Brooks and J.B.
    
        Duffy "for the sole and only purpose of drilling...for petroleum oil and gas." (See
    
        Range App. Ex. 6, DBV 150 page 309-310) On February 18, 1894 Brooks and
    
        Duffy sold and assigned this lease to Victor Oil Company. (See Range App. Ex. 7,
    
        DBV 201 page 119). On April           1,    1901, Victor Oil sold the lease back to J.B.
    
        Duffy for the sum of $5,000.00. In this recorded instrument, the parties recited
    
        that the Victor Oil Company "has drilled and is now operating two oil wells on
    
        said land " This transfer to Mr. Duffy included the "lease and all rights
    
        thereunder, together with said two wells." (See Range App. Ex. 7, DBV 250 Page
    
        622).
    
                On April 9, 1901 J.B. Duffy for the stem of $8,950.00 sold and assigned all
    
        of his right, title and interest to the oil and gas lease for what would become the
    
    
    
    
                                                                                            151Page
    Hanna Tract. (See Range App. Ex. 7, DBV 252, page 88 "Second Parcel"). This
    
    transfer to John Preston and W.C.McBrideincluded:
    
          ...all the oil wells, carpenter's rigs, engines, boilers, tubing, casing,
          steam, gas and water lines, tankage fittings, connections, tools and
          appurtenances now situate upon said leasehold(s)
    
    On April 10, 1901, John and Mary Gourley entered into a modification of lease
    
    with Preston and McBride. Such modification contemplated the drilling of
    
    additional wells and included a graduated royalty schedule based upon daily
    
    production of oil. (See Range App. Ex. 7, DBV 250 page 632)
    
           On February 9, 1903 Hugh Hanna purchased the 100 acre tract "together
    
    with all...the reversions and remainders; rents, issues and profits." (See Ex. A
    
    Amended Complaint). This deed contained no clause which mentioned the oil and
    
    gas lease held by Preston and McBride. The deed included no clause excepting
    
    and reserving any mineral, coal, oil and or natural gas rights.
    
           On January 31, 1905 John Preston assigned all of his right, title and interest
    
    to two (2) "oil bearing farms" known as the Lindly and Gourley farms. By the
    
    assignment W.C. McBride received all of Preston's interest. (See Range App. Ex.
    
    7, DBV 341 page 154) Within a decade, on March 20, 1914, W.C. McBride and
    
    his wife Katherine assigned all of their right, title and interest to the Gourley lease
    
    
    
    
                                                                                      16IP.ge
          to the Delk Investment Corporation of Missouri. (See Range App. Ex. 7, DBV 688
    S
          page 555).
    
                 On October 21, 1923 Hugh Hanna died. (See Amended Complaint Ex. E).
    
          Mr. Hanna died testate. No evidence has been provided of any written assignment,
    
          deed or other transfer of the oil and gas rights Hugh Hanna obtained from the
    
         Gourleys to his daughter Berdie Wilson. Hugh Hanna's Last Will and Testament,
    
         though colorfully written, contains no specific mention of any prior gift of the oil
    
         and gas rights to Berdie Wilson. By his will, Hugh Hanna bequeathed to his
    
         surviving spouse, Elizabeth, and his son Howard Thomas E. Hanna:
    
                 ...the surface ofthe farm on which I reside, share and share alike with
                 all its outbuildings, including the mansion house, wash house, old
                 brick house, barn, sheep shed, etc., which I value at $32,000, upon the
                following conditions, that they are to pay Francis Wilson the sum of
                $1,000.00 within one year of my death. And if they are not satisfied
                with this, they may apply to the pole cat hunters of McConnells Mills,
                who visited my farm in Chartiers Twp. from 125 to 150 times under
                the cover of darkness, committing all kinds of depredations, putting
                pole cats in my wells, and giving me a dose of croton oil, and cutting
                my harness to pieces, and finally, but not least, burning my sheep shed
                and its contents, which I valued at $4,000.00
    
        (See Amended Complaint Ex. E). In her deposition, plaintiff Carol Wilson
    
        contended that this bequest to was Hugh Hanna's "way of saying" that he had
    
        already gifted the oil and gas to Berdie Wilson. (See Range App. Ex.           5   p. 59-60
    
    
    
        'Though this assignment was executed by the McBride's on March 20, 1914, The assignment
        was not recorded until June 6, 1945. The assignment recited not only property in Washington
        County, Pennsylvania but also for leaseholds in West Virginia, Ohio, Missouri and Illinois.
    
                                                                                             17IPage
          and 63) In the same document, Hugh Hanna bequeathed to Berdie Wilson as
                                                                                                       rt=
    
    
    
                        ...12 shares of "bank stock" in the Citizens Trust Co. of
                 Canonsburg and all the money I have in said Citizen's Trust Co.'s
                 Bank, in Canonsburg. I also give to Berdie H. Wilson, my daughter
                 all the government bonds amounting to $1500.00 in the lock box of
                 Alexander Wilson in the Claysville National Bank, and all cash that I
                 have in the Claysville National Bank at the time of my death.
    
          Id. No specific mention of oil and gas interests is present in the Will.
    
                 On February 22, 1924 Elizabeth Hanna filed an "Election To Take Against
    
          Will." She did so because Hugh Hanna did not account for the payment of
    
          creditors in his Will. (See Amended Complaint,       En. H and I)
                 On June 30, 1926 Elizabeth Hanna, Hugh Hanna's widow, Howard T.E.
    
          Hanna, her son, Berdie Wilson, her daughter and George B. Lyle, the Guardian of
    
          the estates of minors Ruth Wilson and Francis Wilson, executed and recorded a
    
          Deed of Distribution regarding the assets of the Hugh Hanna Estate. In describing
    
          its purpose the Deed of Distribution recited   "...in order to vest the title to said real
    
          estate in accordance with said "Exhibit A" this instrument is executed
    
          acknowledged and delivered."
    
                According to this "Deed of Distribution" Hugh Hanna's interests in real
    
          estate were granted and conveyed to Elizabeth Hanna, Howard T.E. Hanna, Francis
    
          Wilson and Ruth Wilson. Elizabeth Hanna and Howard T. E. Hanna each
    
          received a one-half (1/2) interest in the Hanna Tract described as the "... surface of
    C.)
                                                                                          113Page
      the farm on which I reside, share and alike, with all its outbuildings, including the
    
    --manstotrhouseT-washthonWold-hiick house:Yarn sheepished, etc..."
    
      Wilson, Ruth Wilson and Elizabeth Hanna each received a one-third (1/3) interest
    
      in the coal underlying the Hanna Tract and to a Pittsburgh vein of coal underlying
    
      a 61 acre tract of land in Buffalo Township Washington County. (See Amended
    
      Complaint Ex. G, DBV 541 at Pg. 325)
    
              According to the schedule of distribution, labeled "Exhibit A", Berdie
    
      Wilson received from her father's estate the share having the greatest value, being
    
      $8,603.86. Such share did not include any interest in real estate. Such share did
    
     include 12 shares of stock in the Citizens Trust Co. valued at $3600.00 and a
    
      Savings Account in the same bank having a value of $ 5,151.12. (See Amended
    
     Complaint Ex. G).
    
            Elizabeth Hanna died testate on November 10, 1927. (See Amended
    
     Complaint Exhibit I) According to the Will of Elizabeth Hanna, all of her property
    
     passed to Howard T.E. Hanna, her son. (See Amended Complaint Exhibit H)
    
           The Defendants, Fanning, Dutton and Cerciello, each now own a portion of
    
     the Hanna Tract which Howard T.E. Hanna inherited from his father, Hugh, and
    
     mother, Elizabeth, On November 29, 1932 Howard T.E. Hanna sold 13.29 acres of
    
     Hanna Tract to Francis H. Wilson. The recorded deed for this conveyance recited
    
     the following:
    
    
                                                                                 1.91Page
           The above described tract of 13.2949 acres hereby conveyed is a part
           of a larger_tract otland containing
                                             101, acres, more er less, which was
           conveyed to Hugh Hanna by Mary J. Gourley etal.by deed dated
           February 9, 1903, and recorded in Deed Book No. 295, page 192.
    
          The said Hugh Hanna died on October 21, 1923 leaving a will in
          which be specifically devised said larger tract (of which the land
          hereby conveyed is a part) to certain devisees in said will named. For
          further information, reference is made to said will, as the same
          appears of record in Will Book No. 30, page 453. On June 29, 1926,
          by an agreement of that date, which is recorded in Deed Book No.
          531, page 324, the devisees and legatees under said will made an
          adjustment of their respective interests in the real and personal estate
          of the testator, whereby, inter alia, the title to said recited larger
          tract (excepting the underlying coal) became vested as follows: An
          undivided one-half thereof in Elizabeth A. Hanna, the testator's
          widow, and the other undivided one-half in said Howard T.B. Hanna."
    
    (See Amended Complaint Ex. I) (Emphasis Added). This recital made no mention
    
    of the oil and gas estate having been previously severed from Hugh Hanna Tract.
    On April 25, 1949 Howard T.E. Hanna sold the remaining 87.6175 acres to Robert
    
    and Frances Loughman. This conveyance included a similar recital concerning the
    
    distribution of the Estate of Hugh Hanna to that set forth in deed to Francis Wilson
    
    with the following additional language:
    
           ...The value ofthe entire estate, real and personal, was submitted to
          the Orphans' Court of Washington County, at No. 11 August Term,
          1924, A.A, for distribution ; the effect of which agreement was to
          construe the word "surface" in the devise to Howard T.E. Hanna
          on said vvill, as the land in opposition to the coal and including all
         else.
    
    
    
    
                                                                              2O   Page
    (See Amended Complaint Ex.      T,   DBV 756, page 25-26) (Emphasis Added)      .   The
    
    riefeidaltrailffing, Dutton and Cerciello true title to their reipectzve properties
    
    back to this conveyance from Howard T.E. Hanna to the Loughman.
    
    Quiet Title
    
           Carter and Wilson have filed a quiet title action to dispute the validity of the
    
    Defendants' interests in the oil and gas estates on the Farming, Dutton and
    
    Cerciello properties. The scope of permissible actions to Quiet Title is found at
    
    Pa.R.C.P. No. 1061which provides:
    
       (a) Except as otherwise provided in this chapter, the procedure in the action to
           quiet title from the commencement to the entry ofjudgment shall be in
           accordance with the rules relating to a civil action.
    
       (b)The action may be brought        '
    
    
    
    
      (1) to compel an adverse party to commence an action of ejectment;
      (2) where an action of ejectment will not lie, to determine any right, lien, title
      or interest in the land or determine the validity or discharge of any document,
      obligation or deed affecting any right, lien, title or interest in land;
      (3) to compel an adverse party to file, record, cancel, surrender or satisfy of
      record, or admit the validity, invalidity or discharge of, any document,
      obligation or deed affecting any right, lien, title or interest in land; or
      (4) to obtain possession of land sold at a judicial or tax sale.
    
    
    Carter and Wilson contend that they have 100 % ownership of the oil and gas
    
    estate for properties derived from the Hanna Tract. Carter and Wilson assert Hugh
    
    Hanna, by means of a parol inter vivos gift, gave title to Berdie Wilson. For these
    
    reasons, Carter and Wilson seek a decree that the Defendants have "no estate,
    
    
                                                                                 211Page
     right, title, lien or interest in or to" the oil and gas estate's lying beneath the
    
     Fanning, Dutton anrCet-irelio propettiei,
    
           The burden of proof in an action to quiet title is on the plaintiff. Cox's. Inc.
    
     v. Snodgrass, 372 Pa. 148, 152, 92 A.2d 540, 541-542 (1952); Grace Building Co.,
    
    Inc. y. Parchinaki, 78 Pa.CmwIth, 187, 191, 467 A.2d 94, 96 (1983). 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. Albert v. Lehigh Coal & Navigation
    
    Co., 431 Pa. 600, 607, 246 A.2d 840, 843 (1968); Carratelli v. Castrodale, 185
    
    Pa.Super. 426, 429, 137 A.2d 805, 806 (1958) as cited in Montrenes v. Montrenes,
    
    355 Pa.Super. 403, 405-06, 513 A.2d 983, 984 (1986).
    
    
           In this case, Carter and Wilson are unable to point to any deed or other
    
    document that conveyed the oil and gas lying beneath the Hanna Tract to Berdie
    
    Wilson. Instead, Carter and Wilson have rested the strength of their title upon the
    
    occurrence of an oral gift of land that occurred approximately 100 years ago. To
    
    meet their burden in this action, Carter and Wilson must demonstrate that Hugh
    
    Hanna made a parol inter vivos gift of the oil and gas estate to Berdie Wilson.
    
    
    PAROL INTER VIVOS GIFT OF AN INTEREST IN LAND
    
          In order to effectuate an inter vivos gift there must be evidence of an
    
    intention to make a gift and a delivery, actual or constructive, of a nature sufficient
    
    
    
                                                                                    22   ft age
    not only to divest the donor of all dominion over the property but also invest the
    
    donee with complete control over the subject-matter of the gift. In re Pyewe      's
    
    
    Estate, 334 Pa. 154,   5   A.2d 123; In re Rynier's Estate, 347 Pa. 471, 32 A.2d 736. It
    
    is the claimant's burden to prove by clear and satisfactory evidence that a gift in
    
    fact was made. Sullivan v. Hess, 241 Pa. 407, 88 A. 544; In re Kata's Estate, 363
    
    Pa. 539, 70 A.2d 351; Lochinger v. Hanlon, 348 Pa. 29, 39, 33 A.2d 1. Cf, In re
    
    Campbell's Estate, 61 Pa.Dist. & Co. 19. (Emphasis Added).
    
    
    No Evidence of a Declaration of Gift
    
           Carter and Wilson argue that "subsequent acts as well as the facts and
    
    circumstances surrounding the gift" establish Hugh Hanna's donative intent to
    
    make an immediate gift of oil and gas to Berdie Wilson. Carter and Wilson did not
    
    provide any evidence of an actual declaration of a gift by Hugh Hanna to Berdie
    
    Wilson.
    
          The court has reviewed and considered each of the cases cited in Carter and
    
    Wilson's Omnibus Brief concerning donative intent. The cases cited by Carter and
    
    Wilson do not support their extrapolation of long-standing legal principles.
    
    In the cases cited by Carter and Wilson, either by a writing such as a signature card
    
    or other written instrument, the essentials of a gift inter vivos were proven.
    
    
    
    
                                                                                  231Page
               For instance, Carter and Wilson cited the case of Ashley v. Ashley, 393 A.2d
    
        637, 639 (Pa. 1978) for the pm-poses of defining donative intent. Though correctly
    
        citing the black letter principle that such intent is an intention to make an
    
        immediate gift and transfer ownership, Carter and Wilson neglected to discuss the
    
        facts of Ashley. In Ashley, evidence of both a donor's oral and written
    
        representations regarding the gift of shares of stock to his wife was offered. No
    
        such evidence regarding Hugh Hanna's oral and written representations was
    
        offered by Carter and Wilson.
    
              Carter and Wilson also cited In re Secary's Estate, 407 Pa. 162, 166-67, 180
    
        A.2d 572, 574 (1962) for the principle that parol evidence is admissible to prove
    
    0   donative intent. The difficulty in applying this principle is that Carter and Wilson
    
        do not offer parol evidence of a declaration by Hugh Hanna     of a gift to Berdie
    
        Wilson. Further, Carter and Wilson broadly paraphrase a holding that dealt with
    
        an inter vivos gift of the contents of a safety deposit box where the alleged donor
    
        and donee executed a written lease. The Supreme Court in Secary explained:
    
    
              Where an owner of a safe deposit box and his donee execute a
              contract or lease which recites that the property therein is the joint
              property of the lessees, with right of survivorship, and that the lessees
              acknowledge the receipt of two keys to said box -this creates a prima
              facie case of a valid inter vivos gift of a joint interest (with right of
              survivorship) in said property. The majority view appears to be that
              parol evidence is admissible (a) to prove an intention, or lack of
              intention, to make a gift as well as (b) delivery or failure of delivery,
    
                                                                                        24IPage
               because the instrument is considered to be incomplete or (sometimes)
                          CLEurjanickls_Estate,a-37,1PA.:±484,10_0=Aai8_5.EQWever,___
               it is established that the parol evidence which is necessary to disprove
               such gift must be clear, precise and [convincing]. Cf. Fudanick's
               Estate, 375 PA. 484, 100 A.2d 85, supra; In re Fell's Estate, 369 Pa.
               597, 87 A.2d 310, supra; Mader v. Stemler, 319 Pa. 374, 179 A. 719,
               supra; Dempsey v. First National Bank of Scranton, 359 Pa. 177, 58
               A.2d 14, supra.
    
        In re Secary's Estate. 407 Pa. 162, 166-67, 180 A.2d 572, 574 (1962). In response
    
        to the motion for summary judgment, Carter and Wilson have not provided
    
        evidence that Hugh Hanna and Berdie Wilson executed a contract or a lease that
    
        recited their joint ownership of the oil and gas estate lying beneath the Property.
    
               Carter and Wilson correctly state that donative intent may be more readily
    
        found in cases involving gifts of personal property from parents to children. Aside
    
        from being cases that involve personal as opposed to real property, such cases are
    
        also factually different from this dispute.
    
              For example, Carter and Wilson cite McClements v, McClements, 191 A,2d
    
        814, 816 (Pa. 1963) which is distinguishable on its facts. McClements involved a
    
        dispute over ownership of shares of corporate stock between the widow and the
    
        sons of a decedent. Ownership of the disputed shares had been transferred to the
    
        sons according to the books of the corporation. Citing its earlier decision in
    
        Brightbill v. Boeshore, the Supreme Court reiterated that "under certain
    
        circumstances, the transfer of the registration of stock ownership on the books of
    a
                                                                                    251   Page
    the corporation in itself constitutes a legal and sufficient delivery. McClements v.
    
    McCleiiientr41r lc:257;261;       191 -A.2 a 814, 81511 6t1r9631:-
    
          In this instance, no such documentary proof of a transfer of ownership of the
    
    oil and gas estate of the "Hugh Hanna Tract" has been provided. In regards to
    
    matters involving real estate interests, the transfer of such ownership rights is
    
    recorded in the Recorder of Deeds Office. Conspicuously absent from the
    
    evidence Carter and Wilson have asked this court to consider are any recorded
    
    documents, to include memorandums, which establish the alleged gift of an oil and
    
    gas estate to Berdie Wilson. (See Range App. Ex.. 5, p. 213 lines 7-14)
    
          The quantum of evidence necessary to circumstantially prove an oral inter
    
    vivos gift is more than suspicion and conjecture. For instance in Wagner, the
    
    Supreme Court found significant actions the donor had taken in and around a
    
    specific date. The _Wagner Court explained:
    
    
                 Accepting as true, as did the trial court, the testimony of Mr.
          Aston, Eugene, Jr., and Marjorie, we are satisfied that the record
          supports a finding that appellant made or caused to be made delivery
          by gift to three of his children of the entire outstanding capital stock
          of the Realty Corporation. When on November 27, 1970, Aston's
          secretary, pursuant to appellant's instructions, recorded on the
          books of the corporation the issuance of shares to the three
          children, no share certificates had yet been issued. At the same
          time that this recording was made, blank share certificates were
          given, again with appellant's consent, to Wagner, Jr., and
          Marjorie for their signatures as officers of the corporation.
          Delivery was thereby made of whatever ownership rights Mr.
          Wagner may have then held in the corporation; he had done all
    
                                                                                 26 Rage
           that was possible to put the corporation beyond his control.9 That
           being so, it itreleyantthat the share certificatesyvere_thereafter kept._       _
                         is           A gift having been once completed by
           delivery, return of the subject matter to the donor will not of itself
           negate the transaction. Brown, Personal Property s 39 at 92-93 (1955);
           see also Thompson v. Curwensville Water Co., 400 Pa. 380, 162 A.2d
           198 (1960).
    
    Wagner v. Wagner, 466 Pa. 532, 539-41, 353 A.2d 819, 823 (1976) (Emphasis
    
    Added). Unlike Wagner, Carter and Wilson have offered no evidence that Hugh
    
    Hanna gave instructions that title documents for the oil and gas estate be prepared
    
    and given to Berdie Wilson. Carter and Wilson offered no evidence that Hugh
    
    Hanna communicated in any manner with any person his intention to transfer his
    
    oil and gas rights to Berdie Wilson.
    
           Lastly, Carter and Wilson also cited Brightbill v. Boeshore, 385 Pa. 69, 122
    
    A.2d 38 (1956). Brightbill was a dispute over the ownership of 670 shares of stock
    
    in a family owned business between a surviving spouse and her step-daughter.
    
    Prior to death, Miles Brightbill executed a written property settlement agreement
    
    with his first wife which provided for the delivery of 370 shares of stock to Mr.
    
    Brightbill's daughter, Kathryn Boeshore. Later, Mr. Brightbill assigned his
    
    remaining 670 shares in the family business to Ms. Boeshore. Ms. Boeshore took
    
    possession of the stock certificates for the 670 shares. Nonetheless, Mr. Brightbill
    
    for the remainder of his life received the dividends for the 670 shares, paid taxes
    
    on those dividends, and voted the shares of stock at corporate meetings.
    
    
                                                                                271Page
     Additionally, the corporate records did not indicate a change in the ownership of
    
       e stock hadoccurred, corporate tax returns continuedo tndxcate Mr. Bnghbill-        =a
     owned the stock and corporate by-laws provided that a transfer of all the stock was
    
    to be considered a resignation. Brightbill v. Boeshore, 385 Pa. 69, 76, 122 A.2d
    
    38, 42 (1956). The Supreme Court upheld the lower court's ruling that a valid gift
    
    of the 670 shares to Boeshore had occurred. The Court reiterated a long-standing
    
    principle that:
    
           `A gift inter vivosof stock, when once made, cannot be revoked or
           recalled by the donor without the consent of the donee, nor can the
           subsequent acts of the donor to which the donee is not a party and to
           which he does not consent, affect his title, although, of course, the
           donee may return the stock, thus releasing any right of ownership.
    
    Brightbill v. Boeshore, 385 Pa. 69, 78-79, 122 A.2d 38, 43 (1956).
    
           Unlike Brightbill, no evidence was presented of Hugh Hanna delivering an
    
    unrecorded deed, lease or other writing that transferred his oil and gas rights to
    
    Berdie Wilson. To the contrary, Carter and Wilson maintain the gift was an oral
    
    one.
    
    Circumstantial Evidence Concerning Oral Gift
    
           The requirements for the creation of a valid parol gift of land are "well
    
    established." Fuisz v. Fuisz, 527 Pa. 348, 352-53, 591 A.2d 1047, 1049 (1991). In
    
    Fuisz, the Court detailed the following requirements: 1.) evidence of the gift must
    
    be direct, positive, express, and unambiguous; 2.) possession of the land must be
    
                                                                                2.81Page
        taken at the time or immediately after the gift is made, and such possession must
    
        be exclusive, open, notorious, adverse, and continuous; and 1) the donee must
    
        make valuable improvements on the property for which compensation in damages
    
        would be inadequate.? In Fuisz. Chief Justice Flaherty further explained:
    
              Thus, Yarnall clearly established that the elements of a parol gift of
              land must be established by evidence which is direct, positive,
              express, and unambiguous. Underlying this requirement is a view that
              delivery of a deed, as is generally necessary under the Statute of
              Frauds, 33 P.S. § 1, is the normal and proper means for conveying
              title to real property. Only where it is abundantly clear, leaving
              nothing to speculation, that a parol gift has occurred does Yarnell
              permit recognition of the gift. The stringent requirements of Fantail
              exist to encourage persons to transfer properties in the proper
              manner, by means of deeds, and to foreclose the claims of those
              who might otherwise assert questionable claims of ownership in
              others' properties.
    
    Fuisz v. Fuisz, 527 Pa. 348, 352-53, 591       Aid 1047,    1049 (1991) (Emphasis
    
    Added). Further, where the alleged parol gift of land is between parent and child,
    
    evidence of an "even more clear and weighty nature" is required than is necessary
    
    where the alleged gift was between unrelated persons. Id. citing Yarnell Estate, 376
    
    Pa. at 589-90, 103 A.2d at 758. Rany v. Shimelc, 360 Pa. at 318, 62 A.2d at 48.
    
             The depositions of Carol Beth Wilson and Jade Carter demonstrate that the
    
    Plaintiffs are not able to prove through circumstantial evidence the existence of a
    
    
    
    
    7See also omitted citations of Yarna,Estate, 376 Pa. 582, 590,103 A.2d 753, 758 (1954) and
    Parry v. alma. 360 Pa. 315, 62 A.2d 46 (1948).
                                                                                       291Pa.ge
          parol inter vivos gift 8 When asked in what year the gift occurred, Carol Wilson
    
         responded "That I can't tell you." (See Range App. Ex. 5, p.15) When asked what
    
         the circumstances "were around the gift," Carol Wilson testified "I don't know."
    
         (See Range App. Ex. 5, p.15) No deed, court order, recorded or written document
    
         memorializes the gift. (See Range App. Ex. 5, p. 16,201 and 213) Sadie Carter's
    
         testimony concerning the date and circumstances surrounding the gift was no more
    
         precise. Ms. Carter testified:
    
    
                       The gifting of the oil and gas property that Hugh had to his
               daughter and her husband, Alex Wilson, either it would be given as a
               gift for marriage, as a wedding gift, since Alex was an oil producer.
               In lieu of giving livestock, if he had been a farmer, the gift was oil and
               gas. And that was during the time frame ---any time frame, between
               the time that Hugh Hanna purchased the property in 1903 to the time
               that the printing of the farm map in 1911, with two wells showing
               clearly in the Hanna property at that time. (Emphasis added)
    
         (See Range App. Ex. 11, p. 24-25). Ms. Carter added that she was unable to locate
    
         a marriage certificate for Alex and Berdie Wilson but "assumed" they were
    
         married in 1910. (See Range App. Ex. 11, p. 26) Jade Carter also admitted "I have
    
         no written evidence that the gift occurred." (See Range App. Ex. 11, p. 27 lines 8-
    
    
         'Berdie Wilson was the paternal grandmother of Plaintiffs Patricia Carter, John
         Allen Wilson and Carol Beth Wilson. (See Range App. Ex. 5, p. 1-12 and 14).
         Berdie Wilson died in 1976. (See Range App. Ex. 5, p. 14) . Jacie Carter is the
         daughter of Plaintiff, Patricia Carter, and though having no experience in real
         estate title abstracting, conducted research in. the Recorder of Deeds and Tax
         assessment Offices of Washington County. (See Range App. Ex. 11, p. 21-22) The
         Plaintiffs relied upon Ms. Jacie Carter's research in making their claim. (See
    lJ   Range App. Ex. 5, p. 25 ,lines 18-24, and 28-29)
                                                                                     301Pa ge
     9) When asked       if the alleged gift was to Berdie Wilson, alone, or included Alex
     Wilson as a co -done; Ms. Carter responded "I can't differentiate whether it went
    
     to one person or another." (See Range App. Ex. 11, p. 38) Carol Wilson has no
    
     personal knowledge of the gift because she was not "even born yet." She did not
    
     have conversations with the persons involved concerning the gift. (See Range App.
    
     Ex.   5   p.67)
    
    
               In addition to not knowing the date of the gift, Carol Wilson does not know
    
    the facts and circumstances surrounding the alleged oral gift. (See Range App. Ex.
    
    5,   p. 17) Carol Wilson knows of no witness to the alleged gift. (See Range App.
    
    Ex. 5, p. 17) The plaintiffs had no conversations with Berdie Wilson concerning
    
    the alleged oral gift from her great grandfather. (See Range App. Ex. 5, p.     18   and
    
    67 and Ex. 11, p.    42) Carol Wilson acknowledged that she never heard Berdie
    Wilson say that she owned the oil and gas. Berdie Wilson's Will and her estate
    
    documents made no mention of any ownership of oil and gas rights for the Hanna
    
    Tract. (See Range App. Ex. 5, p. 45 and 201) Following Berdie Wilson's death in
    
    1976 until 2014, when the original complaint was filed in this matter, Carter and
    
    Wilson filed no actions claiming their ownership of the Hanna Tract's oil and gas.
    
    (See Range App. Ex. p. 205-206) Berdie Wilson recorded no documents reflecting
    
    the transfer of oil and gas rights to Berdie Wilson and from Hugh Hanna. (See
    
    Range App. Ex. 5, p. 213)
    
                                                                                  31(Page.
            Both in answers to interrogatories and during her deposition testimony,
    
     Carol Wilson confirmed that the Carter and Wilson claims are based upon
    
     circumstantial inferences to be drawn from multiple documents. She specifically
    
     identified exhibits attached to the Amended Complaint, being Exhibits
    
     B,C,D,E,F,G,X,Y,Z, and AA thru ICK, and those Bates stamp documents 001-0047
    
    provided through discovery. (See Range App. Ex. 5, p. 184-187, and attached Ex.
    
    A, p.6 Answers to Interrogatories 6 thru 13).9 These documents can be categorized
    
    as follows: tax returns for Berdie and Alex Wilson; Hugh Hanna Estate related
    
    documents; well records from DEP; the personal papers of Berdie Wilson;
    
    documents regarding Alex Wilson; obituaries; documents concerning other
    
    properties owned by Hugh Hanna; tax assessment property cards from 1934; maps;
    
    documents provided by a library; the accounting of a guardian for Berdie Wilson's
    
    children and the testimony of Fred Gashel.
    
    
    Tax Return Evidence
    
    
            Carter and Wilson rely upon unsigned and unauthenticated tax returns,
    
    Exhibits B, C and D for Alex Wilson and Berdie Wilson. Neither Carol Wilson nor
    
    Jade Carter had any personal knowledge of the preparation of these documents.
    
    
    'The parties stipulated that Carol Beth Wilson was designated as the representative for all
    Plaintiffs. As such the parties agreed that testimony from other named Plaintiffs would be
    cumulative. The parties stipulated that the trial testimony of other named Plaintiffs is bound and
    limited by the testimony of Carol Beth Wilson. (See Range App. Ex. 9)
    
                                                                                           321Page
     Putting aside the evidentiary challenges to the proper admission of those
    
     documents at trial, the contents of the documents do not prove that Berdie Wilson
    
     received the oil and gas estate as a gift from her father.
    
    
           Exhibit B, an unsigned 1920 Tax Return, does contain a reference to rent
    
     and royalty income. (See Amended Complaint Ex.            BP However, Carol Wilson
    agreed the 1920 return did not indicate where the oil producing income came from
    
    (See Range App. Ex, 5, p. See Range App. Ex. 5, p.33) and did not reflect oil and
    
    gas well royalty income. (See Range App. Ex. 5, p. 35)
    
    
           With regard to Exhibit C, an unsigned income tax return for 1921, and
    
    Exhibit D, an unsigned 1925 Federal Tax Return offierdie Wilson, neither when
    
    considered, alone or together with all other evidence, demonstrates that Berdie and
    
    Alex Wilson derived oil and gas income from the Hanna Tract or made permanent
    
    improvements to it. With regard to Exhibit C, Carter and Wilson do not know from
    
    where the rents and royalties were derived. (See Range App. Ex. 5, p.42-43)
    
    Carol Wilson could not relate such oil and gas income to the oil and gas under the
    
    Hanna Tract (See Range App. Ex. 5, p.46) Exhibit D contained no indication that
    
    the income shown was attributable to oil and gas came from the Hanna Tract (See
    
    Range App. Ex. 5, p.51-53 and 56-57)
    
    
    
     The writing in the "Income From Rents and Royalties" section of the return was not legible.
    
                                                                                         33IPage
                 These tax returns do not support Carter and Wilson's claim that Berdie and
    
          Alex Wilson "made permanent improvements to the oil and gas underlying..." the
    
          Hanna Tract." For the 1921 return, nothing on the return indicates that expenses
    
          labeled "Labor," "Depletion," and "Automobile" were incurred in operation of oil
    
          wells and an "associated pipeline" on the Hanna Tract. (See Amended Complaint
    
         Ex. C) The deductions set forth in Exhibit D also do not refer to the Hanna Tract.
    
          (See Amended Complaint Ex. 1-) line 8) These returns do not provide support for
    
         the assertion by Carter and Wilson that Berdie and Alex Wilson labored to produce
    
         oil and gas from the Hanna Tract. Exhibits B, C and D to the Amended Complaint
    
         do not support Carter and Wilson's claim that Berdie Wilson made valuable
    
         improvements to the Hanna Tract.
    
    
                Carter and Wilson did not attach to their Amended Complaint the unsigned
    
         1919 Tax Return purported to be that of Alex Wilson. (See Range App. Ex. 10,
    
         being "Carter 0048-0051" and Ex.       11   p. 151) Similar to Exhibits B, C, and D this
    
         court could find no reference to the Hanna Tract on the return. Under the section
    
         entitled "Income From Rents and Royalties" there exists an entry for "Oil Lease."
    
         In a box that requires the taxpayer to identify the "Name and Address of Tenant,
    
         Lessee, Etc." the words "Managed by self' appear. No evidence was presented
    
         that established that the Gourley Lease had been terminated prior to 1915. Instead,
    as
         " See Carter and Wilson Omnibus Brief p. 34.
    
                                                                                        341Page
    W.C. McBride received an assignment in 1905 and himself assigned his interest in
    
     1914 to the Delk Investment Corporation. Ifincome had been derived from oil and
    
    gas production on the Hanna Tract, one would expect that the person receiving that
    
    income would report it and attribute it to either W.C. McBride or the Delk
    
    Investment Corporation. No such entries are found in Alex Wilson's 1919 Return
    
    or in the later returns being Exhibits B,   C and D.
    
           Carol Wilson stated that her grandfather and grandmother had oil and gas
    
    leases for multiple properties. (See Range App. Ex. 5, p. 55 lines 15-18) Carol
    
    Wilson and her fellow plaintiffs contend that Berdie and Alex Wilson were oil
    
    producers who owned and operated the Claysville Oil Company. (See Carter and
    
    Wilson Omnibus Brief, p.     13   and Range App. Ex. 5, p. 125-126) However, lade
    
    Carter conceded the plaintiffs had not uncovered any documents that supported a
    
    conclusion that Berdie and Alex Wilson owned the Claysville Oil Company. Ms.
    
    Carter stated "There was no business incorporation documentation, no(sic), I could
    
    locate. But that still doesn't acknowledge that because the documentation cannot
    
    be found, that they were not the owners and it was not their business." (See Range
    
    App. Ex   11 p. 50   -51) Ms. Carter and the Plaintiffs concluded that a reference to
    
    the source of Alex Wilson's income from "Salaries, Wages and Commissions" on
    
    a tax return proved his ownership    of the Claysville Oil Company. (See Range App.
    
    
    
                                                                                 35[Page
     Ex. 11, p. 66-73 and 119-120)12 To End that the mere reporting of income on a line
    
    of a t                      y used irdetar                 AT-ea:frailb
    
     not the principal of a business enterprise is an unreasonable inference. To
    
     circumstantially conclude that Alex and Berdie Wilson owned the Claysville Oil
    
     Company when no documents provide actual support for such a claim is an
    
     exercise in sophistry.
    
    
    Estate Documents for Hugh Hanna
    
    
             Numerous documents concerning Hugh Hanna's Estate were offered by
    
    Carter and Wilson to show the existence of a material issue of fact. Those
    
    documents included exhibits attached to their Amended Complaint, being Exhibits
    
    E, F, G, HET,   12,   J1 and KK and to their Answers to Interrogatories being labeled
    
    Carter 0027-0028.
    
    
             Carter 0027-0028 is a draft of Hugh Hanna's Will. (See Range App. Ex. 5,
    
    p. 168,   and Ex. 12) Carol Wilson explained that this draft shows Hugh Hanna was
    
    "specific" in directing the disposition of his property and "that he would not have
    
    missed something of oil and gas if he meant it to go anywhere other than he
    
    
    12The 1925 Tax Return, purported by Carter and Wilson to be Berdie Wilson's, did not include a
    reference to the Claysville Oil and Gas Company or to income in the form of salaries, wages and
    commissions. In the 1925 return only the "sale of oil" was reported as "other income," (See
    Amended Complaint Ex. D and Range App. Ex. 10) In later testimony, Jule Carter conceded
    that entries on Alex Wilson's Estate Documents did not show that he owned the Claysville Oil
    and Gas Company ( See Range App. Ex. 11, p. 119-120).
                                                                                        361Page
         already gifted it to my grandmother." (See Range App. Ex. 5, p. 168 lines 9-19)
    
           ar0      soh iicknoWleciged-thi   draftailaid not state that Hugh Hanna
         previously gifted the oil and gas to Berdie Wilson. (See Range App. Ex. 5, p. 168
    
         lines 20-23)
    
    
                 With regard to Exhibits E, F and G, these documents are Hugh Hanna's
    
         probated Last Will and Testament, Elizabeth Hanna's Election to take against the
    
         Will and the Deed of Distribution executed by Hugh Hanna's heirs. None of these
    
         documents contains an express reference to a severed oil and gas estate having
    
         been previously "gifted" to Berdie Wilson.
    
    
                 Exhibit M is correspondence from Howard T.E. Harm to I.N. Miller the
    
         Executor of the Estate of Hugh Hanna. In the document, Howard T.E, Hanna
    
         gives an accounting of revenues and expenses from a joint venture involving sheep
    
         that Howard T.E. Emma and Hugh Hanna conducted. (See Range App. Ex.           11    p.
    
         130) Carol Wilson explained that the lack    of a similar accounting from Berdie
    
         Wilson to Executor Miller demonstrated that Berdie Wilson and Hugh Hanna were
    
         not in business together to produce oil. (See Range App. Ex. 5, p. 148) Ms.
    
         Wilson, however, acknowledged that the fact that Hugh Hanna was not in the
    
         business of producing oil and gas did not preclude him from owning the oil and gas
    
         lying beneath the Hanna Tract. (See Range App. Ex. 5, p. 148-149)
    
    p)
                                                                                     37 IP   age
            With regard to Exhibit II, the document appears to be the First and Final
    
     Administrator's Account for Hugh Hanna, According to Carol Wilson this
    
     document revealed that from the date of Hugh Hanna's death in 1923 to 1924 he
    
    had income of $257.64 and it was not derived from oil and gas royalties. (See
    
    Range App. Ex. 5, p. 146) Carol Wilson acknowledged it was possible that any
    
    oil and gas well on the Hanna Tract may have stopped producing during this
    
    period. (See Range App. Ex. 5, p.148).
    
    
            Exhibit KK is correspondence from Attorney R.W. Knox to Berdie Wilson
    
    concerning appraised values for the Hanna Tract, both surface and coal, and a 34
    
    acre tract of coal located in Buffalo Township. (See Range App. Ex. 11, p. 130-
    
    131) Carol Wilson explained that the significance of this document shows that the
    
    Hanna Tract's oil and gas was not separately valued for inheritance tax purposes
    
    and "So therefore, the estate did not own the oil and gas." (See Range App. Ex. 5,
    
    p. 149 lines 3-13)13 Ms. Wilson did not know whether the oil and gas estate was
    
    separately assessed for property tax purposes by Washington County. (See Range
    
    App. Ex, 5, p.149-150). However, Carter and Wilson adamantly maintained in
    
    their Omnibus Brief, that the Will of Hugh Hanna and the administration and
    
    
    
    
     "This claim is factually incompatible with the Carter and Wilson's assertion that the oil and gas
     estate was not distributed through Hugh Hanna's Estate and by operation the laws of intestacy
    they own a portion of the oil and gas estate underlying the Hanna Tract,
                                                                                            381Page
    distribution of his estate did not provide for the disposition of the oil and gas
    
    estate. (See Ornnibus Brief at 14-T0)
    
    
           In support of this claim, Carter and Wilson cite Hyde v. Rainey. 233 Pa. 540,
    
    82 A. 781 (1912). The decision in Hyde, was arrived at by the Court in order to
    
    give effect to all portions of the testator's Will. The Court explained, "...but the
    
    conclusion reached is the only one which gives force and effect to every part of
    
    the wilL It does no violence to the language used; it makes the will consistent in all
    
    of its parts; and, in our opinion, carries out the manifest intention of the testatrix."
    
    Hyde v. Rainey, 233 Pa. 540, 549, 82 A. 781, 784 (1912). (Emphasis Added).
    
    
          However, the language of the testator's Will in Hyde differs significantly
    
    from that of Hugh Hanna. In Hyde, the testator's Will provided:
    
          The fifth item of the will was as follows: 'I will and bequeath to my
          son Harmon H. Rainey all that tract of land situated in Nottingham
          Township, Washington county, Penna., on which I now reside subject
         to the above named bequests which he is to pay to my daughters
         Lydia Bebout and Maria J. McGregor, and one hundred dollars to
         John Dixon will be hereinafter mentioned. The above named farm
         contains two hundred and twenty acres more or less, together with all
         the farming implements which I possess, including one two horse
         wagon, one four horse wagon and one spring wagon, and at the death
         of my son Harmon H. Rainey the above bequest is to descend to his
         children.'
         The sixth item of the will was as follows: 'It is my will that if the farm
         on which I reside shall be leased for the purpose of mining for coal,
         gas or oil that the proceeds of the lease shall be divided between my
         four children, viz.: Sarah K Hyde, Lydia A. Bebout, Maria J.
         McGregor and Harmon H. Rainey, share and share alike.'
    
    
                                                                                  39)   age
    ttre-ctt-- !Walt                        8i-A:781(1912)7(EMPlie,S4Aided)114,1-
    
             Will contained no similar express reference to oil and gas, An express mention of
    
             coal being severed and previously given by gift to Howard T.E. Hanna is set forth.
    
             Conspicuously absent from Hugh Hanna's Will is any mention of a previous gift of
    
             oil and gas to Berdie Wilson. This distinction is critical as the following passage      of
    
             the Hyde opinion makes clear:
    
                   It is true that the severance is generally made by deed or other
                   conveyance, and that until so made the title to the land is regarded
                   as an entirety, including minerals as well as surface. But that the
                   severance can be made by will is not an open question in this state; for
                   it was expressly so decided in Christy v. Christy, 162 Pa. 485, 29 Atl.
                   781.
    
             Hyde v. Rainey, 233 Pa. 540, 545, 82 A. 781, 783        (1912).   As discussed above,
    
             neither the Hanna Tract's chain of title nor Hugh Hanna's Will includes any
    
             express severance of the oil and gas estate from the entirety      of the Hanna Tract.
    
             Giving full force and effect to the scheme of distribution set forth in Hugh Hanna's
    
             Will does not require one to conclude that Berdie Wilson owned the oil and gas
    
             lying beneath the property.
    
                   With regard to Exhibit HH, this document is the inventory for the Hugh
    
             Hanna Estate. (See Range App.   Ex. 11, p. 129)       According to Carol Wilson the
    
             inventory contained no indication of any oil or gas being produced or any wells
    
             being valued. (See Range App. Ex.    5, p.   143)   Carol Wilson stated that the
    
                                                                                             40[Page
           Inventory shows no oil as being an asset of Hugh Hanna's Estate. (See Range App.
    
           Ex. 5, p. 146) However, the Inventory-and-Apprat-sement did not disclose any real
    
           estate holdings for Mr. Hanna.
    
    
                    Carter and Wilson contend that the lack of any specific mention of the oil
    
           and gas estate in Hugh Hanna's Will or in other Estate flings supports their claim
    
          of a prior parol inter vivos gift of realty to Berdie Wilson. They emphasize that
    
          Hugh Hanna merely provided fin the disposition of "surface" of the Hanna Tract.
    
          Such a conclusion is erroneous.
    
                    The Supreme Court in Rogers Estate, 3791 a. 494, 495- 496, 108 A.2d 924
    
          stated:
    
    
                       In the settlement of a decedent's estate disputed title to property
                 should not be determined upon exceptions to an inventory and
                 appraisement which happens not to include the property claimed on
                behalf of the estate. The function and object of an inventory and
                appraisement in a decedent's estate is to fix presumptively the
                existence of property in the possession of the fiduciary and the value
                thereof. This is only prima facie evidence of ownership and value.
                Such listing does not affect the true ownership and value.
    
          Id. (Emphasis added and citations omitted).
    
                Thus, the lack of any mention of any real estate interest to include an oil and
    
          gas estate does not preponderate in favor of the conclusion that such failure to
    
          mention is due to a prior gift of the oil and gas estate to Berdie Wilson. The
    
          absence of a reference to ownership of the oil and gas estate in the Inventory could
    (2)
                                                                                       411Page
     be due to a variety   of other circumstances. Simple oversight, neglect or some
    
    purpose other than the unsupported cairn that at some unknown prior time Hugh
    
    Hanna gifted the oil and gas estate to Berdie Wilson, each could explain the lack of
    
    a   reference to the Hanna Tract in the Inventory. All such possibilities including the
    
    alleged parol inter vivos gift are nothing more than base speculation. The evidence
    
    as accumulated and submitted by the parties does not permit any conclusion to be
    
    reasonably drawn from the lack of a reference to any real estate holdings of Hugh
    
    Hanna in his Estate Inventory.
    
    
            Moreover, in Highland v. Corn., 400 Pa. 261, 282, 161 A.2d 390, 401
    
    (1960), the Pennsylvania Supreme Court rejected arguments similar to those now
    
    made by Carter and Wilson      .   Highland involved four parties vying for natural gas
    
    and oil rights. One claimant, Shawmut, made an argument similar to that advanced
    
    by Carter and Wilson. Specifically, Shawmut claimed that the combination of the
    
    absence of a specific reference to natural gas in a deed to a competing claimant
    
    (Thompson) along with a reference to the "surface" as being conveyed indicated
    
    the grantor (Arnold) had previously sold his interest in the oil and gas to
    
    Shawmut's predecessor in title. Shawmut contended the use of the word "surface"
    
    in a later deed from Arnold's personal representatives proved that Arnold at his
    
    death was already divested of any ownership in the natural gas. The Supreme
    
    Court rejected that argument and held that the "burden was upon the Shawmut
    
                                                                                  42 P
     group to show, by clear and convincing evidence, that the parties intended that
    
     natural gas be included within the prior deed to Shawmut's predecessor in title.
    
     The Supreme Court found significant that "Neither the language of the deeds, the
    
     surrounding circumstances nor the subsequent conveyances made by Arnold and
    
     his successors in title demonstrate such intent." Highland v. Corn., 400 Pa. 261,
    
     279-80, 161 A.2d 390, 400 (1960).
    
    
           A second clainint in Highland, "the Arnold Group", argued they owned the
    
    rights to the disputed property in part because of a lack of reference to oil and gas
    
    rights in estate documentation. In Highland, supra., the personal representative of
    
    an estate had previously sought court approval for the sale of realty. In the petition
    
    for such approval, the executor asserted that an attached schedule, "C", was a full,
    
    correct statement of all the real estate of the testator. The executor's schedule C
    
    did not Iist the rights to natural gas. Instead, the executor described the four
    
    parcels by a metes and bounds description prefaced by the words "Surface Only."
    
    On this basis, the Arnold Group, argued that the sale approved by the court did not
    
    include natural gas interests. The Supreme Court did not agree. Specifically, the
    
    Court held:
    
    
          A reference to Schedule 'C', [attached to the executor's petition for
          the sale] indicates that it was prefaced as a 'full, correct statement of
          all the real estate of [Arnold] * * * which has come to the knowledge
          of his executors'. The Arnold group now argues that the rights to the
    
                                                                                 131Page
            natural gas were never listed by Arnold's personal representatives in
            the_petitionlor,salei=thatncLauthority.tuzseasuchrights wasimpesteti
            and that no such authority was granted by the court.
           Even though the descriptions of Parcels 1, 2, 3 and 4 were prefaced as
            `surface. only.',.yet Arnold's personalseprepcntatiyep, both in their
           petition and attached schedule, did represent to the court that they had
           listed all of Arnold's interest in realty in Clearfield County. There can
           be no doubt, from an examination of the court proceedings which led
           up to the petition for sale and to the sale itself, that Arnold's personal
           representatives, in order to liquidate his indebtedness, fully intended
           to sell all of Arnold's interest in realty in Clearfield County of
           whatever nature and there is no suggestion, expressed or implied, that
           there was to be a severance of the natural gas rights from the realty.
    
    
    Highland v. Corn., 400 Pa. 261, 282, 161 A.2d 390, 401 (1960) (Emphasis Added).
    
    
           Thus, the mere reference in a conveyance to the "surface" of realty does not
    
    in and of itself reflect an intention to sever the surface from the oil and gas estate.
    
    Moreover, the lack of a reference to a severed oil and gas estate in Hugh Hanna's
    
    Will does not prove that he completed a parol inter vivos gift of the oil and gas
    
    estate to a specific person, namely Berdie Wilson. Much more evidence is
    
    necessary to arrive at that conclusion.
    
          In Exhibit G, the Deed of Distribution executed by Berdie Wilson, she and
    
    Hugh Hanna's other heirs declared a different intention. Specifically, they
    
    explained their purposes as follows:
    
                  AND WHEREAS, the failure of the testator to provide for the
          payment of his debts or for the expenses of settling his estate, and
          also, the election of his widow to take against said will, rendered
          impossible the distribution of said estate, real and personal, in all
    
                                                                                  44IPage
             respects as intended and provided by said testator, and therefore, all of
          -the.persons_interested as devisees _andJegatenndetsaid :wilLagreed
             upon a distribution of said estate, real and personal, adjusted to the
             circumstances and approaching as nearly as possible to that which the
            testator directed in his will. _This was accomplished by placing a
            money value upon all of testator's estate, realandpersonal, the
             agreed value of the real estate being the valuation placed upon it for
            transfer inheritance tax purposes, and the agreed value of the personal
            estate being the valuation placed upon it by the appraisers thereof for
            administration purposes. The entire estate, real and personal, was
            then submitted by agreement to the Orphan's Court of Washington
            County, Pennsylvania and distribution was made by said Court as
            though the entire balance for distribution had consisted ofmoney.
            See Decree of Distribution at No. 141 August Term, 1924, A.A. of
            said Court.
    
    (See Amended Complaint Ex. G being DBV 541 page 325) (Emphasis Added).
    
    The Deed of Distribution shows a clear intention by Berdie Wilson and her fellow
    
    heirs to dispose of the entire Hugh Hanna Estate. Though Berdie Wilson and the
    
    other heirs made provisions in the Deed of Distribution to secure the coal rights
    
    previously given to Howard T. E. Hanna they made no similar provision for oil and
    
    gas rights being distributed to Berdie Wilson.°
    
    
    
    L4Carter and Wilson In their "Sur-Reply Brief' argue that reliance upon evidence of the payment
    of taxes and disclosure in an estate inventory may be relied upon to establish evidence of
    ownership. They cite Herder Spring Hunting Club v. Keller, 143 A.3d 358 (Pa. 2016), rea
    denied. 137 S.Ct. 641 (2017). Having reviewed Herder, this court can find no portion of the
    clear and straight forward opinion that can be fairly read to support Carter and Wilson's
    interpretation.
            In Herder., Justice Baer framed the issue before the court as follows:
    
           The parties' claims rise or fall based upon whether a 1935 tax sale resulted in the
           transfer of the entire property or merely the surface rights. After extensive review
           of the historical law regarding tax sales of unseated land in. Pennsylvania, we
           conclude that the tax sale related to the entire property at issue, including both the
    
                                                                                              45IPage
                actuand subsurface etterei:7Afirill be-ell -tinted after-discussion of the
            relevant law, the critical question in this case is whether the 1935 and 1941 sales
            involved the entire Eleanor Siddons Warrant or merely the surface rights
    
    Herder Spring Hunting Club v. Keller, 143 A.3d at 359 and 361. The plaintiff in Herder Spring,
    contended that a 1935 tax sale "extinguished any prior reserved estates in concurrence with the
    longstanding policy of 'title -washing.' "In furtherance of its argument, Herder Spring observed
    that the deed from the Centre County Commissioners to Herr did not reference only the "surface
    estate" but rather the Eleanor Siddons Warrant." Herder Spring Hunting Club v. Keller, 143 A.3d
    at 361. Justice Baer on behalf of the majority stated:
    
           we reject the Keller Heirs' claim that the reference to the "land surveyed to Ralph
           Smith" in the 1936 Deed from the Treasurer to the County Commissioners
           indicated that the deed was limited to the surface estate. Instead, we recognize
           that unseated land was assessed and taxed in the name of the Warrant, and any
           reference to the presumed -current owner, such as Ralph Smith, was merely used
           for descriptive purposes.
    
    Herder Spring Hunting Club v. Keller, 143 A.3d at 373. Justice Baer explained that real estate
    tax on unseated land was the liability of the land rather than the owners. "Therefore, if the
    property was assessed as a whole property and none of the owners paid the tax, then the property
    would be sold as a whole to satisfy that tax." Herder Spring Hunting Club v. Keller, 143 A.3d at
    375.
    
    Justice Baer added:
    
           We reiterate that the caselaw conneels that unseated land should be assessed
           according to the original warrant, absent direction from the owners, and that a tax
           sale conveys the property covered by the assessment.
    
    Herder Spring Hunting Club v. Keller, 143 A.3d at 375.
    
    Justice Baer set forth the limitations regarding the holding in Herder as follows:
    
           We observe that the holding in this case applies to a very limited subset of cases
            involving quiet title actions for formerly unseated land sold at a tax sale prior to
            1947. Indeed, within this subset of cases, the decision would not govern those tax
           sales which specified whether the assessment involved the surface or the mineral
           rights. Additionally, the Keller Heirs contend that it would not apply to tax sales
           where the severance occurred after the tax assessment, as our prior cases address
           such scenarios. Furthermore, it would not apply where owners can meet the
           adverse possession standard, which the trial court found Herder Spring missed.
           Therefore, this case has limited application, though substantial significance to
           those to which it applies.
    
                                                                                             461Page
            Well Records
    
                   Carter and Wilson submitted documents, Exhibits X and Z, benag well
    
           record? for two (2) wells on the Hanna Tract. Carter and Wilson contended these
    
           records demonstrated there were producing wells on the Hanna Tract. They argued
    
           that Alex Wilson was "an oil producer" and that these documents proved that Alex
    
           and Berdie Wilson were operating oil wells on the Hanna Tract. For these reasons,
    
           Carter and Wilson claim Hugh Hanna must have given his oil and gas rights to
    
           Berdie Wilson.
    
                  With regard to Exhibit X to the Amended Complaint, Carter and Wilson
    
           assert these are well records from DEP for two (2) wells labeled L.L. Hilberry #               1
    
    
    
    410    and #2. (See Range App. Ex. 5 p. 81-82 and Ex. 11, p. 99-104) Hilberry is the last
    
          name of an owner of the Hanna Tract, who is in the chain of title for the Individual
    
          Defendants, Fanning, Dutton and Cerciello. Carol Wilson's belief is that Alex
    
          Wilson drilled the wells during his lifetime because he was "an oil producer." (See
    
          Range App. Ex. 5, p. 87 lines 8-15)
    
    
                 However, Carol Wilson admitted the well records did not indicate that
    
          Berdie Wilson owned or operated the wells or owned the property upon which the
    
          Herder Spring Hunting Club v. Keller, 143 A.3d at 378-79.
          In the dispute before this lower court, important is the fact that no evidence was presented which
          claimed that Carter and Wilson rest their claims upon a tax sale of unseated land. No evidence
          was presented that the Hanna Tract was unseated land.
    
    
    
                                                                                                 .471Page
    ati   wells were found. (See Range App. Ex. 5, p. 91-92) Carol Wilson had no
                   -    _
          knowledge of when the wells stopped firoducing.
    
          Wilson had never seen the wells. (See Range App. Ex. 5, p. 95-96) Carol Wilson
    
          conceded the wells were not producing. (See Range App. Ex. 5, p.85) Carol
    
          Wilson's comments about the wells identified as Hilberry #       1   and # 2 were not
    
          based upon any information she received from DEP. (See Range App. Ex.             5   p. 83-
    
          84 and 85 lines 15-24) Carol Wilson acknowledged that: i) she lacked production
    
          records for the Hilberry #   1   Well and Hilberry #2, ii) had no records of the well
    
          being drilled, iii) possessed no knowledge of when the well was drilled, iv) knew
    
          of no records that demonstrated her grandfather Alex Wilson drilled the wells, and
    
          v) had no documentation as to the identity of the operator of the well (See Range
    
          App. Ex. 5, p. 86 and p. 89 and Ex. 11, p. 103-104).
    
    
                With regard to Exhibit Z, Carter and Wilson asserted that it was a
    
          photograph of Berdie Wilson at a well -site. Carol Wilson acknowledged. "but we
    
          have nothing to state that it is on that farm (Hanna Tract)." (See Range App. Ex. 5,
    
          p.97-98) Jacie Carter similarly conceded that the photograph could have been of a
    
          property other than the Hanna Tract. (See Range App. Ex. 11, p. 107) Further,
    
          Carol Wilson was unable to positively identify Berdie Wilson as being the lady in
    
          black depicted in the photograph. (See Range App. Ex. 5, p. 99-100) Carol Wilson
    
          admitted she did not know what well is depicted in the photograph but simply
    .)
    
                                                                                          48    Page
     assumed that the well depicted was on the Hanna Tract (See Range App. Ex. 5, p.
    
     101-102).
    
    
    Berdie Wilson's Personal Papers
    
           Carter and Wilson provided several documents, being Exhibits AA, BB, and
    
    "Carter 0044-0047, that were discovered by Jacie Carter. Carter and Wilson
    
    advanced that these documents supported their claim.
    
    
           With regard to Exhibit AA, a hand written receipt that Jacie Carter found in
    
    the personal papers of Berdie Wilson, no reasonable inference can be drawn that it
    
    relates to oil and gas income derived from the Hanna Tract. Both Carol Wilson
    
    and Jack Carter conceded there was no indication on the document that such
    
    financial reporting concerned or related to the wells on the Hanna Tract or that
    
    Berdie Wilson owned the wells (See Range App. Ex. 5, p.105-106, 112, and 115
    
    and Ex.   11   p. 110).
    
    
          Exhibit BB is purportedly a letter from D.L. Thomas to Alex Wilson dated
    
    July 6, 1916. Carol Wilson stated the letter "may or may not relate to the farm
    
    (Hanna Tract)." (See Range App. Ex. 5, p. 115) Jack Carter explained that the
    
    letter dealt with a division order for two properties adjacent to the Hanna Tract,
    
    being the I.E. Worrell Farm and the I.N. Miller Farm. (See Range App. Ex. 11, p.
    
    111) However, Exhibit BB does show that Alex Wilson had a lease for other
    
                                                                                491Page
     properties to include a tract identified as the J.E. Worrell Farm (See Range App.
    
     Ex. 5, p.ii.7) Exhibit BB shows that Alex Wilson may have been "involved wit1S
    
     wells on other properties." (See Range App. Ex. 5, p. 118) Exhibit BB shows Alex
    
     Wilson may have had sources of oil and gas income from properties but not the
    
    Hanna Tract. (See Range App. Ex. 11, p. llHines 7.25)
    
    
           Carter 0044-0045 are documents indicating "income from oil" (0044) and
    
    the existence of a "lease." (0045) (See Range App. Ex. 5, p. 178) Carol Wilson
    
    admitted these two documents do not specifically indicate any relationship to the
    
    Hanna Tract. (See Range App. Ex. 5, p. 179)
    
    
           Carter 0046 was described by Carol Wilson as having been "done in prep for
    
    that final settlement" of the Hugh Hanna Estate. (See Range App. Ex. 5, p. 179 and
    
    Ex. 12) Carol Wilson noted the document did not specifically mention oil and gas
    
    interests. (See Range App. Ex. 5, p. 181)
    
          Carter 0047 is a copy of checks in Berdie Wilson's handwriting and an
    
    envelope. (See Range App. Ex. 5, p. 180-181) Carter and Wilson never explained
    
    the significance of these documents as they relate to the Hanna Tract. Instead, a
    
    reference is made to Miller and Worrell and "1916 Statements." Jacie Carter
    
    explained that the checks were included as "an example of Berdie Wilson's
    
    handwriting." (See Range App. Ex. 11, p. 149)
    
    
                                                                              50   113   ag e
    Alex Wilson Documents
    
    
          Carter and Wilson also offered numerous documents related to Alex Wilson,
    
    Berdie Wilson's husband. (See Amended Complaint Exs. CC, DD, BE, FP and
    
    Range App. Ex. 12, Bates Stamp Carter 0018, and 0021-0022). As explained
    
    below, these documents do not provide any basis upon which to draw an inference
    
    that Hugh Hanna gave his oil and gas rights to Berdie Wilson.
    
    
           Exhibit CC is a deed from John and Clara Worrell to Alex 13.WiIson for 75
    
    acres and 136 perches located in Buffalo Township, and is not related to the Hanna
    
    Tract. (See Range App. Ex.    11 p.   112) In this conveyance, the grantor, John
    
    Worrell, excepted and reserved "oil and gas together with the right of drilling for,
    
    producing and transporting the same." (See Amended Complaint Ex. CC and
    
    Range App. Ex. 5, p. 123).
    
    
          Exhibit DD was identified by Carol Wilson and Janie Carter as being the
    
    Inventory and Appraisement of the Alex B. Wilson Estate and the First and Final
    
    Account of Berdie Wilson (See Amended Complaint Ex. DID, Range App. Ex. 5, p.
    
    123-124 , Ex. 11, p. 114 ) Carol Wilson conceded 'she did not know if any part of
    
    Alex B. Wilson's inventory related to oil and gas interests in the Hanna Tract and
    
    acknowledged that no part of the Inventory stated that Alex B. Wilson had an
    
    interest in the oil and gas lying beneath the Hanna Tract (See Range App. Ex. 5, p.
    
                                                                                51IPage
                126 lines 13-24- p, 127 line 8, and p. 131 lines 5-9 and 17-21) Carol Wilson
    
    -   ,---_--atimitted that the Inventory and Appraisement did not showthatBelditi Wilsorrhad
    
                an ownership interest in the oil and gas "under the" Hanna Tract. (See Range App.
    
               Ex. 5, p.127 lines 20-23).15
    
    
                       Exhibit EE is an obituary for Alex B. Wilson that Jade Carter obtained from
    
               a library. (See Range App. Ex, 11 p. 126) Carol Wilson admitted the obituary does
    
               not indicate Alex Wilson owned oil and gas wells located on the Hanna Tract. She
    
               further conceded the obituary did not state that Alex Wilson owned the oil and gas
    
               on the Hanna Tract or that Berdie Wilson produced oil and gas "under the
    
               property" (Hanna Tract) (See Range App. Ex.             5   g. 137-138).
    
    
                       Exhibit FT is a 193 8 letter regarding Alex B. Wilson's leases addressed to
    
               Mr. G. Ross Sproat concerning Workmen's Compensation insurance. (See Range
    
               App. Ex. 11, p. 126) Jacie Carter confessed that the letter "as stated" did not relate
    
               to the Hanna    Tract (See Range App. Ex. 11, p. 126 lines 16-18) Instead, Carter
    
               commented "I would say these are referencing the Miller-Worrell leases..." (See
    
                  Jacie Carter contended that a reference to "398.26" barrels of oil was related to the Hanna
               Tract. She stated "I would state that the line item 39842 barrels of oil, is related to the property
               (Hanna Tract), due to the fact that it doesn't state a lease name with that line item." (See Range
               App. Ex. II, p. 117, lines 18-22). This pattern of thawing an inference of ownership from a lack
               of evidence of ownership was also repeated by Carol Wilson during her deposition testimony.
               Nonetheless, on this parteular point Carol Wilson conceded she did not know where the barrels
               came from and what a $65 check from Preston Oil Co. was attributable to. (See Range App. Ex.
               p. 123-124 and 132).
    
    
    
                                                                                                        521Page
    at     Range App. Ex.    11 p. 127)   Carol Wilson conceded she did not know what leases
    kir
           the workmen's compensation pohcy covered, (See Range App. Ex. 5-p. 140). Cams
    
           Wilson contends that this document shows that Berdie Wilson continued Alex
    
           Wilson's oil and gas business because it is "a logical assumption." Carol Wilson
    
           Conceded nothing on the letter stated that Berdie Wilson was continuing the oil and
    
           gas business of her husband. (See Range App, Ex. 5, p. 141) Further, Carol
    
           Wilson never recalls Berdie Wilson stating that she and Alex Wilson owned the
    
          Claysville Oil Company (See Range App. Ex. 5, p. 45).
    
    
                 Carter 0018 is an assignment of 118th working interest in an oil and gas lease
    
          for property located in Buffalo Township, Washington County from Hannah
    
          Connors et.   at to Alex B. Wilson. (See Range App. Ex.    12) This document does
    
          not involve the Hanna Tract. In this assignment, Alex B. Wilson has an individual
    
          interest in the lease and does not transact business through the Claysville Oil
    
          Company. facie Carter stated the significance of these documents is that Alex
    
          Wilson "was an oil producer in the region adjacent to the Hanna property." (See
    
          Range App. Ex. 11, p. 137, lines 16-20)
    
    
                Carter 0021-0022 (See Range App. Ex. 12) is an oil and gas lease for
    
          property in Buffalo Township. (See Range App. Ex. 5, p. 160) In this lease, Alex
    
    
    
    
                                                                                     53IPage
     B. Wilson has an individual interest in the lease and does not transact business
    
                                                                 Sri 61).- --s-
     Obituaries
    
           Aside from the Alex Wilson obituary, Carter and Wilson offered two (2)
    
     other obituaries as evidence to support their claim.
    
    
           Exhibit GG is a newspaper obituary reporting the death and ftmeral of Hugh
    
     Hanna. Carol Wilson conceded this document did not show that Hugh Hanna
    
     gifted property to Berdie Wilson. (See Range App. Ex. 5, p. 142) Further, Carol
    
    Wilson acknowledged that Hugh Hanna could have had oil and gas leases for the
    
    Hanna Tract. (See Range App. Ex. 5, p. 143).
    
    
           Carter 0026 is an obituary for Howard T.E. Hanna. (See Range App. Ex. 12)
    
    Carol Wilson could not explain the relevancy of the document to her claim other
    
    than it being "information." (See Range App. Ex. 5, p. 167-168)
    
    
    Other Property Documents for Hugh Hanna
    
          Carter and Wilson argued that documents regarding other real estate owned
    
    by Hugh Hanna during his lifetime supported their claim.
    
           In Carter 001-002, 005-007, 008 and 009-011, Carter and Wilson provide a
    
    variety of property documents related to Hugh Hanna and real estate other than the
    
                                                                              54)Page
     Hanna Tract. (See Range App. Ex.12) Carter 001-002 is a deed of James Clark,
    
     assignee of Alexander Henderson; to Hugh-Hantia-forptoprrty lotatecl    utairtters
     (not Donegal) Township, Washington County. Carter 005-007 is a copy of an oil
                                                                                          -   -
     and gas lease between Hugh Hanna and the Philadelphia Company and related to
    
    the Chartiers' Property. Carter 008 is an oil pipeline agreement for the Chartiers
    
    Property. Carter 009-011 being the Deed conveying the Chartiers' property from
    
    Hugh and Elizabeth Hanna to William Bedillion which included a clause making
    
    the conveyance subject to the oil and gas lease that Hugh Hanna had executed in
    
    favor of the Philadelphia Company. Carol Wilson explained that such evidence
    
    "...demonstrates that he was knowledgeable of oil and gas, and he even gave out a
    
    lease on that property. So it was not that he was naive to the fact of how oil and
    
    gas works. Therefore, he gifted the oil and gas under his property to my
    
    grandmother, rather than lease it out to someone else." (See Range App. Ex. 5, p.
    
    151-153 and Ex. 11 p. 132-133) Such an inference does not naturally and logirtally
    
    flow from the evidence of Hanna's ownership, oil and gas leasing and later sale of
    
    the Chartiers Township property, whether considered as an isolated fact or in
    
    combination with all other facts and circumstances presented in this case. Such a
    
    speculative inference is an Olympian leap of logic.
    
    
    
    
                                                                               .55IPage
     Tax Assessment Documentation for the Hanna Tract
    
    -=---Carter0012-0017-(See Range App. Ex.1-2) are -triennial assessment-cards        -
    
    
    
    
     from Washington County. Carol Wilson could not explain the probative value of
    
     these documents. (See Range App. Ex. 5, p. 154-156) Jade Carter explained that
    
    the assessment cards for the Hanna Tract in 1934 referenced only the surface of the
    
    property and for that reason Howard T.E. Hanna only owned the surface and not
    
    the oil and gas estate.
    
    
    Maps
    
    
           Carter 0023 (See Range App. Ex. 12) is a map from the Pennsylvania
    
    Department of Environmental Protection. Carol Wilson had no personal
    
    knowledge concerning the map and specifically what it depicted. She testified that
    
    Janie Carter, her niece, discovered the map. (Range App. Ex. 5, p. 163-164)   lade
    Carter testified that the map depicted two wells on the Hanna Tract. (See Range
    
    App. Ex. 11 p. 138).
    
    
           The map provides no support for the claim that Hugh Hanna made an oral.
    
    gift of oil and gas rights to Berdie Wilson.
    
    
    
    
                                                                            56   Raga
    Range Offer
    
           In support of their claim, Carter and Wilson also submitted several
    
    documents from Range Resources representatives.
    
    
           Carter 0024 (See Range App. Ex. 12) is a document labeled "Offer to
    
    Lease" with a Range Resources trademark. The offer is addressed to the "Wilson
    
    Hanna Heirs" regarding Townships "Chartiers, Donegal, Morris" and stated "will
    
    lease the property in Chartiers and Donegal subject to title. Further research is
    
    needed in Morris." (See Range App. Ex. 12) Carol Wilson explained that this
    
    offer was given to her at a meeting with the Ward Group in Claysville. At that
    
    time, Range Resources was to have leases for the Carter and Wilson plaintiffs to
    
    sign. However, Range could not locate the leases and provided Carol Wilson the
    
    offer "so we had a record of being there and that they were willing to lease to us."
    
    (See Range App. Ex.   5, p. 164)   Wilson continued that the offer showed "that they
    
    acknowledge we had an interest hi the property or we thought we had an interest in
    
    the property." (See Range App. Ex. 5, p. 164-165)
    
    
          Jacie Carter, however, testified differently. Ms. Carter conceded that Range
    
    provided Carter and Wilson no lease and were offering a lease subject to "further
    
    research." (See Range App. Ex.     11   p. 139-140) This document does not
    
    specifically support the claim that Hugh Hanna completed 0. parol inter vivos gift
    
                                                                                 571   Page
     of the oil and gas estate to Berdie Wilsons. The document plainly stated that it was
    
    lisubjectio_title.2--No.material terms such as -length   of tenwamount of royalty
    precise location of property were set forth in the offer.
    
    
    Documents received from a library
    
    
           Carter 0025 (See Range App. Ex, 12) is a document with references to both
    
    Ancesnycora and the 1940 United States Census. Carol Wilson confessed to
    
    having no direct knowledge of the document. The document states that Francis
    
    Wilson, the son of Berdie and Alex Wilson, was employed as a "pumper." Carol
    
    Wilson stated that Francis Wilson was her father and that he was in the "oil
    
    business, which is after the fact, so ---it's a family business in other words." (See
    
    Range App. Ex. 5, p. 166) Janie Carter acknowledged the document was not
    
    received from the U.S. Census Bureau but from a library, (See Range App. Ex. 11,
    
    p. 143-144)
    
    
          This court is unable to draw any reasonable inference from this document
    
    that supports the Plaintiffs' claims.
    
    
    Accountings of the Guardian for Berdie Wilson's Children
    
    
          Carter 0029-0034 and Carter 0035-43 are, respectively, a final account and a
    
    statement of expenses of George B. Lysle(sic) as guardian for Ruth Wilson and
    
    
                                                                                  581 -Page
           Francis H. Wilson, minors. (See Range App. Ex. 11, p. 144-147) Carol Wilson
    
           stated that Ruth Wilson was her aunt and was The daughter of Berdie-Wilson.--(See
    
           Range App. Ex. 5, 169-170, 172-173) Carol Wilson claimed that she believed, but
    
           had no direct knowledge, that Berdie Wilson provided the information for the
    
           Lysle(sic) accounting because she was the mother of Francis and Ruth Wilson and
    
           was the person providing their support. (See Range App. Ex. 5 p. 174, p. 176 lines
    
           21-24 and p. 177 lines 14-16 and 177-178) Carol Wilson conceded that the entries
    
           on this document specifically do not relate to the Hanna Tract and that the oil
    
          referenced on the account could be from "any property." (Range App. Ex. 5, p. 171
    
          lines 18-24) Carol Wilson acknowledged her belief was based upon the
    
          assumption that the oil came from the Hanna Tract because she and the other
    410
          plaintiffs "know of no other property they could have owned." (See Range App.
    
          Ex. 5, p. 172) Though the absence of evidence can itself be probative of an issue,
    
          the absence of specific proof as to where oil income is derived does not
    
          demonstrate ownership of a specific interest in subsurface oil and gas lying
    
          beneath a particular tract of land.
    
    
                With regard to these documents and Berdie Wilson's payment of income
    
          taxes, Carter and Wilson argue that the Supreme Court's ruling in the Estate of
    
          Alien , 488 Pa. 415, 412 A.2d 833 (1980) supports the claim they are making. In
    
          Estate of Allen, the court concluded that a decedent's receipt of income for three
    
                                                                                      59   IP   age
    certain properties was indicative of his ownership in the absence of other evidence
    
                        -SpecifallSlthe'All-eftCotutexplairirod:'"'n-
           ...appellants argue that with respect to three parcels of real property
           the Orphans' Court's confirmation of the accountand adjudication was
          premature and not based upon the testimony of record. The three
          parcels of realty, all situate in Philadelphia, were listed by the auditor
          in the account as filed, but were noted in the account as having been
          "included as memorandum only. Rents have been collected, but
          ownership has not been determined." In the event, ownership never
          was determined, and the court below, in its adjudication dismissing
          appellants' objections to the account, merely noted "the auditor has
          been informed that it is impossible to determine to whom these
          properties are titled and belong."
          ...Instantly the only finding upon which the decree rests is that
          title to the realty at issue is impossible of ascertainment.
          The court -appointed auditor is empowered to convene hearings,
          administer oaths, and take testimony. In re Krepinevich's Estate, 433
         Pa. 78, 248 A.2d 844 (1969); Act of June 30, 1972, P.L. 508, No. 164,
          s 2, 20 Pa.C.SA. s 754. Moreover, auditors are empowered to issue
          subpoenas with or without a clause of duces tecum. Act of June 30,
          1972, P.L. 508, No. 164, s 2, 20 Pa.C.S.A. a 753. The record of the
         instant case reveals no hearing was held to ascertain title to the realty
         at issue. No subpoenas were issued. There is no evidence of record
         which would indicate the auditor attempted to ascertain the
         record owners of the properties via title search. There is no
         evidence of record which would indicate the auditor contacted the
         municipal taxing authority to determine who had been paying
         taxes on the properties. In short, the record is barren of
         competent, credible evidence to support the finding that
         ownership of the realty is impossible of ascertainment, on which
         finding the decree of the Orphans' Court, in turn, rests.
         On the contrary, the record contains evidence, notably, although not
         merely, the fact that income derived from the properties at issue was
         reported by decedent on his federal personal income tax returns,
         which could indicate ownership by testator.
         In the absence of evidence to support the findings upon which the
         decree rests, we vacate the decree and remand for a determination,
    
    
                                                                                60iPa.ge
           insofar as is in fact possible, of the state of decedent's interest in the
           contested properties.
    
    
     Estate of Allen, 488 Pa. 415, 426-27, 412 A.2d 833, 838-39 (1980) (emphasis
    
     added).
    
           The facts   of AUcn are distinguishable from this case in two (2) respects.
    
    First, the evidence advanced by Carter and Wilson does not specifically indicate
    
    the oil and gas income in the guardian's final account was derived from oil and gas
    
    produced from the Hanna Tract. Such income is not attributed to any particular
    
    property. In Allen, the auditor determined the rents were derived from and
    
    reported to federal tax authorities as income produce from the three (3) properties
    
    in question. Second, evidence from the chain of title demonstrates that record title
    
    for the properties is in the Defendants Fanning, Cerciello and Dutton. In Allen, the
    
    record before the Supreme Court lacked such evidence.
    
          Carter and Wilson contended in their Omnibus Brief that Berdie Wilson's
    
    support came from oil and gas income derived from the Hanna Tract. However,
    
    Carol Wilson's testimony did not support that claim. Carol Wilson testified that
    
    she assumed that because Alex Wilson was an oil producer, Berdie Wilson lived
    
    off the money he generated and invested it in AT & T stock. (See Range App. Ex.
    
    5, p. 188-189) Carol Wilson claimed that such income that permitted her to later
    
    prudently purchase blue chip stock was derived from wells on the Hanna Tract.
    
    
                                                                                   61IPage
     (See Range App. Ex. 5, p. 190) When asked to identify the documents that proved
    
     such's. clam; Carol Wilson merely -referred to Amended Complaint Exhibits B
    
     through G, X through Z, AA through KK, and Carter -Wilson Bates Stamped
    
     Documents 001-0047. (See Range App. Ex. 5, p. 189-190)
    
     Gashel Testimony
    
    
           Carter and Wilson both in their Omnibus Brief and at argument claimed that
    
    the testimony of Fred Gashel supported their allegations that Berdie Wilson
    
    exercised dominion and control over the Hanna Tract. A review of Mr. Gashel's
    
    deposition testimony demonstrates he has no personal knowledge of such actions
    
    by Berdie Wilson.
    
           Mr. Gashel was born in 1933 and lived across from the Hanna Tract during
    
    his youth. Mr. Gashel knew Howard T.E. Hanna who lived on the Hanna Tract.
    
    According to Mr. Gashel, Berdie Wilson lived "elsewhere" on Petroleum Avenue.
    
    (See Range App. Ex. 13, p. 9-10 and 12-13) Mr. Gashel testified he knew
    
    "nothing" about the ownership of oil and gas under the Hanna Tract. (See Range
    
    App. Ex. 13, p. 18) He stated he never talked to Howard T.E. Hanna or Berdie
    
    Wilson regarding the oil and gas rights to the Hanna Tract. Mr. Gashel testified
    
    that he had no knowledge that Berdie Wilson was "gifted the oil and gas," no
    
    "idea" who owned the oil and gas and never saw Berdie Wilson on the property
    
    operating an oil and gas well. (See Range App. Ex. 13, p.26)
    
                                                                              62-1.P a   ge
                 Mr. Gashel stated that through "hearsay" he heard a "story" concerning
    
    -Berdie Wilson"pu              g   halt" ta an effort by LT%an-Hilb-e-ity to -run a gas line
    
      from the wells on the Hanna Tract to his home. According to the "story," a
    
      gentleman named Leo Bane learned of Mr. Bilberry's efforts to connect his home
    
      on the Hanna Tract to a gas well on the property. As related by Mr. Cashel, Mr.
    
     Bane went to Berdie Wilson because she had ownership of the property and Berdie
    
      Wilson stopped Hilberry from doing so. (See Range App. Ex. 13, p. 19-23) Mr.
    
     Gashel acknowledged he had no personal knowledge of such facts and he could not
    
     remember who told him the "story." (See Range App. Ex. 13, p.19 and 24)
    
                Mr. Gashel's recounting of the Berdie Wilson Logan Hilberry "story" is
    
     inadmissible hearsay. See Pa.R.E.            §   801. An unknown declarant told Mr. Gashel
    
     the "story" out of court. The Pennsylvania Supreme Court has previously ruled
    
     that similar such evidence concerning an alleged gift is not admissible from known
    
     declarants, See In re Donsavage's Estate, 420 Pa. 587, 598-99, 218 A.2d 112, 120
    
     (1966). In Donsavage's Estate, two witnesses, Travis and Girton, testified that a
    
     donee, Mockler, told them she received stock certificates from a decedent,
    
     Donsavage. The Supreme Court held such testimony was inadmissible hearsay.16
    
    
     16   In Donsavage, the Court explained:
    
               It was an attempt to prove by these witnesses not what the decedent said to them
               but what Mrs. Mockler said the decedent had said to her. In Hartley v. Weideman,
               175 Pa. 309, 317, 34 A. 625, 626, we said: 'It is text law that the declarations of a
               party must be proved by one who heard them. It will not do to show by A. that B.
                                                                                                631Page
                The testimony of Fred Gashel does not support the claim that Berdie Wilson
    
    -==exerciseddominionandcontrol over the oiI -ancd-gaisle-Cited-on the HilniirTract.
         No evidence of a parol inter vivos gift
    
                A lower court finding of inter vivos gift is not supportable where there is
    
         insufficient evidence establishing with necessary precision "just when, where or
    
         under what circumstances such declarations were made, or when such gift was In
    
         fact made." Where the declarations relied upon are entirely too loose and vague to
    
         prove an inter vivos gift, such declarations do not constitute clear and convincing
    
         evidence of an inter vivos gift. Tomayko v. Carson, 368 Pa. 379, 383-84, 83 A.2d
    
         907, 909 (1951) (Emphasis Added).
    
               As the Supreme Court in In re Yarnall's Estate, 376 Pa. 582, 588, 103 A.2d
    
         753, 757 (1954) directed:
    
                The Statute of Frauds Act of March 21, 1772, 1 Sm.L. 389, § 1, 33
               P.S. § 1, requires a transfer of title to real estate to be in `* * * writing,
               or by act and operation of law.' There may be a valid parol inter vivos
               gift of an interest, in whole or part, of real estate, where such gift is
    
               told him that he heard C. make a certain statement, if it is C. who is to be affected
               by the testimony. This evidence should have been excluded.' See also: Johnson v.
               Peoples Cab Co., 386 Pa. 513, 515, 126 Aid 720....
    
               In the case at bar, although the declarations sought to be shown were those of the
               decedent and against decedent's interest, they were allegedly made to the donee of
               the gift and were sought to be shown by witnesses who did not hear the
               declarations made by the decedent but heard the donee of the gift state that the
               decedent bad declared to her.
    
    
        In re Donsavage's Estate, 420 Pa. 587, 598-99, 218 A.2d 112, 120 (1966)
    
                                                                                                 641Page
          followed not only by a change of possession, but by the making of
          such permanent improvements on the property as could not be
          compensated in damages.
    
    In re Yamall's Estate, 376 Pa. at 588, 103   Aid at 757 (1954).   The Yarnell Court
    
    noted that repairs and maintenance to property did not amount to the type
    
    permanent improvements necessary to prove a parol gift of a real estate interest.
    
    Yarnell, 376 Pa. at 582 , 103 a.2d at 759.
    
          Other Pennsylvania appellate courts have come to a similar conclusion. In
    
    Lang v. Lang, 140 Pa.Super. 356, 359, 14 Aid 216, 218 (1940), the Superior
    
    Court found insufficient an alleged donee's claim of a parol gift where she and her
    
    husband moved into the property and began certain work to improve the property.
    
    In Zigmantanis v. Zigmantanis, 797    Aid 990 (Pa. Super. 2002), the Superior
    Court found insufficient evidence that: i) an alleged donor on several occasions
    
    told several witnesses that his home was to go to his son Edward; ii) Edward paid
    
    household bills for the donor; iii) Edward lived in the home with his parents for 22
    
    years; iv) Edward made substantial improvements to the property; and v) Edward
    
    paid both the inheritance tax and the mortgage for the property. See Zigmantanis
    
    v. Zigmantanis, 797 A.2d at 992-94.
    
          The evidence by Carter and Wilson have presented falls far short of that
    
    found to be insufficient in Yarnell, Lang and Zigmantanis. Carter and Wilson
    
    offered no evidence that Berdie Wilson made permanent improvements to the
    
    
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     Hanna Tract, paid bills associated to the property or occupied the property. Both
    
     theOhaintifttle-eihdenceind thilestinionroffred Gashel demonstrate -that
    
     Howard T.E. Hanna occupied the property. Carter and Wilson did not allege nor
    
     offer evidence that established precisely when, where and under what
    
     circumstances Hugh Hanna made a declaration of gift and when such gift of the oil
    
     and gas estate was made to Berdie Wilson. Carter and Wilson advance that such a
    
     gift occurred during Hugh Hanna's "lifetime?' (See Carter and Wilson Omnibus
    
     Brief. P. 4). They posit that the "totality of facts and circumstances" to include
    
     "timing, surrounding circumstances, and subsequent acts establish the act of the
    
     gift." (See Carter and Wilson Omnibus Brief, p. 2). As discussed at length above,
    
    the totality of those circumstances do not reasonably lead to the conclusions Carter
    
    and Wilson assert.
    
            Carter and Wilson have argued that the court, at the summary judgment
    
    stage, should apply a less exacting standard than that set forth in Yarnell, Fuisz.
    
    Tomayko, Zigmantanis and Lang. Carter and Wilson contend the mere existence
    
    of an issue of fact suffices. This argument somewhat misses the mark.             17   The
    
    Superior Court in Manley v. Manley, 238 Pa.Super. 296, 357 A.2d 641 (1976)
    
    explained:
    
    
    "After several weeks of reading, reviewing and considering the voluminous pleadings,
    discovery responses, deposition transcripts, aged documents and briefs this court has been unable
    to identify a disputed material fact between the parties, The parties are not disputing what the
    facts are. Instead, they have hotly contested what the facts mean.
    
                                                                                           66IPage
           The Statute of Frauds, 33 P.S. s 1, prohibits the creation of interests or
           estates in any land by parol. Its obvious purpose is to prevent the
                     tif verTiaruiiderstanrulgsTaiid tootiitatethebigitafFicirs""s'
          fraud and perjury. 'It is not a mere rule of evidence. It is a declaration
           of public policy': Holland Furnace Co. v. Keystone Dehyd. Co., 151
          Pa..Super. 495, 499;30 A.2d 872, 874: A Writing signed by the parties
          is required, and even courts of equity, though dispensing with the
          form, firmly demand the substance.' Brotman v. Brannan, supra, 353
          Pa. at 573, 46 A.2d at 177. The failure of the moving party to sustain
          this heavy burden with respect to each and every element is fatal to
          his claim: 'It is no answer to say that the credibility of witnesses is
          for the jury, and they may disbelieve the testimony if they see fit
          to do so. That argument will not avail in this class of cases, for the
          question here is as to the character of the proof, because it is
          offered for the purpose of creating title to land by parol. It must
          conform to certain requirements, and if it does not, it will not
          suffice to create such a title; and of this the court must judge.' Erie
          & W.V.& Co. v. Knowles, supra, 117 Pa. at 86, 11 A. at 256.
    
    Manley v. Manley, 238 Pa.Super. 296, 306-10, 357 A.2d 641, 646-48 (1976).
    
    (Emphasis Added).
    
          Having done so, this Court concludes the admissible evidence in the record,
    
    considered in the light most favorable to Carter and Wilson, fails to establish a
    
    prima facie case that Hugh Hanna during Ms lifetime made an oral gift of his oil
    
    and gas rights to Berdie Wilson.
    
    CONCLUSION
    
          In the case before this court, the admissible facts presented by Carter and
    
    Wilson do not reasonably support the inferences Carter and Wilson invite this
    
    court to draw. Contrary to Carter and Wilson's assertions in their Omnibus Brief
    
    
    
                                                                                 6.71P a g e
    and at argument, the Defendants have not invited the court to engage in trial level
    
    
    
    
           Instead, the Defendants have asked this court to examine the evidence
    
    submitted by the plaintiffs and determine if a prima facie case exists. In doing so,
    
    this court may consider " ...the admissions of the opposing part)7(non-moving
    
    part)) or the opposing party's own witnesses..." and the entry of summary
    
    judgment may be based on such oral testimony. Lineberger v. Wyeth f/k/a
    
    American Home Products Corporation, 894 A.2d 141 (2006) as cited in
    
    TnfoSAGE, Inc. v. Mellon Ventures, L.P., 896 A.2d 616, 631 (Pa. Super, 2006).
    
    Further, where allegations in an amended complaint are based principally on
    
    speculation and conjecture, summary judgment is appropriate. InfoSAGE, Inc. v.
    
    Mellon Ventures, L.P., 896 A.2d 616, 639 (Pa. Super. 2006).
    
    
          This dispute is such a case. For these reasons, summary judgment is
    
    appropriate with regard to the remaining counts in the Amended Complaint.
    
    
    
    
                                                 BY THE COURT
    
                                                         II
                                                 MICHAEL, LUCAS
    
    
    
                                                                               68IPage
                                             ORDER
    
         Wisiacitilii-se     tb   'air&Mir:air/0 lrfOi thrreis-Unicsiefb'
    above opinion, the Defendants Motions for Summary Judgment are
                                                                   GRANTED.
    The Plaintiffs' Amended Complaint is dismissed with prejudice.
    
    
    
    
                                                BY THE COURT
    
    
    
    
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