J-A30028-19
2020 PA Super 182
SCOTT GUISER, DENNIS ZEIDERS, : IN THE SUPERIOR COURT OF
DIANE ZEIDERS, GEORGE BIDDLE, : PENNSYLVANIA
JEFFREY BIDDLE, BROOKS ARNOLD :
AND SHARON ARNOLD :
:
:
v. :
:
: No. 674 MDA 2019
MATTHEW S. SIEBER AND SUSAN L. :
SIEBER, HIS WIFE :
:
Appellants :
Appeal from the Order Entered April 2, 2019
In the Court of Common Pleas of Juniata County Civil Division at No(s):
316-2013
BEFORE: DUBOW, J., NICHOLS, J., and COLINS, J.*
OPINION BY NICHOLS, J.: FILED AUGUST 05, 2020
Appellants Matthew S. Sieber and Susan L. Sieber appeal from the order
finding against them and in favor of Appellees Scott Guiser (Guiser), Dennis
Zeiders, George Biddle, Jeffrey Biddle, Brooks Arnold, and Sharon Arnold.
Appellants contend that the trial court erred in determining that a twenty-one
acre tract belonged to Appellee Guiser, that Appellees had a right to use a
road that crossed Appellants’ properties, and that Appellees were entitled to
an injunction barring Appellants from blocking the road. For the reasons that
follow, we quash in part, vacate in part, and remand for proceedings
consistent with this opinion.
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* Retired Senior Judge assigned to the Superior Court.
J-A30028-19
The procedural history of this matter is as follows. On August 15, 2013,
Appellees filed a complaint against Appellants. Appellees asserted claims of
easement by prescription, equitable servitude, and irrevocable license with
respect to a dirt road referred to as “Woods Road” and requested a preliminary
injunction restraining Appellants from denying Appellees access to their
properties by way of Woods Road. Additionally, the complaint also contained
requests for Appellees to conduct a centerline survey of Woods Road.
Appellants filed an answer.
On October 31, 2013, the trial court heard testimony regarding
Appellees’ request for a preliminary injunction. At the conclusion of the
hearing, the trial court took the matter under advisement. The trial court did
not rule on Appellee’s request for an injunction until after trial.
During discovery, Appellees requested leave to file an amended
complaint, which the trial court granted. In January of 2016, Appellees filed
an amended complaint stating an additional claim by Appellee Guiser against
Appellants to quiet title as to approximately twenty-one acres of land claimed
by Appellants.1 Appellants filed an answer and new matter as to the additional
claim.
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1 In all, Appellees’ amended complaint contained the following counts: Count
1—quiet title by Appellee Guiser only against Seiber with respect to the
twenty-one acres; Count 2—equitable relief in the form of an injunction; Count
3—easement by prescription; Count 4—equitable servitude; Count 5—
irrevocable license; Count 6—easement by estoppel; Count 7—easement by
necessity. Counts 2 through 7 involved Woods Road.
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The matter proceeded to a non-jury trial that commenced on April 28,
2017. Following the first day of trial, the trial court continued the matter and
kept the record open to receive expert testimony. During the continuance,
the parties deposed Appellees’ expert, George Campbell, a recording of which
was admitted into evidence. During the second day of trial on June 21, 2017,
Appellants’ experts testified.
On July 24, 2017, Appellants filed a motion to dismiss Appellees’ claims
for failure to join indispensable parties regarding Woods Road. Appellants
claimed that Appellees failed to sue Beale Township and “other numerous
property owners between the public road known as Hammer Hollow Road and
[Appellees’] lands.” Appellants’ Mot. to Dismiss, 7/24/17, at 1-3. The trial
court heard additional arguments on the motion. Thereafter, in December of
2017, the parties submitted proposed findings of fact and conclusions of law.
On February 8, 2019, the trial court entered an order denying
Appellants’ motion to dismiss for failure to join indispensable parties. On
March 25, 2019, the trial court issued an order finding in favor of Appellees
and against Appellants. The order, which was docketed on April 2, 2019, read,
in part, as follows:
AND NOW, March 25, 2019, after review of Trial Testimony,
Exhibits and the Arguments made by counsel, both orally and
through Proposed Findings of Fact, Conclusions of Law and Replies
thereto, the [c]ourt is ACCEPTING and ADOPTING the [Appellees’]
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Proposed Findings of Facts and Conclusions of Law as filed on
December 20, 2017, in full.[2]
The [c]ourt is, therefore, entering Judgment in favor of
[Appellees] and against [Appellants].
The [c]ourt is specifically entering Judgment in favor of [Appellee
Guiser] against [Appellants] Quieting his Title to the property as
outlined in Count 1 of the Amended Complaint.
The [c]ourt is also DIRECTING that an Injunction restraining
[Appellants] from denying the use of “Woods Road” to the
[Appellees] is hereby GRANTED. This Injunction is necessary to
preserve and enable [Appellees’] rights to use of that road. The
[c]ourt finds that [Appellants’] actions have and will continue in
the future to result in irreputable [sic] harm to [Appellees] if the
Injunction is not granted.
The [c]ourt is specifically finding that [Appellees] acquired an
Easement by prescription over and along “Woods Road” where it
intersects with [Appellants’] parcels.
The [c]ourt also finds that an Equitable Servitude exists in favor
of [Appellees], who are the property owners to the West of
[Appellants’] parcels b[e]aring Tax Assessment Numbers 9-13-46
and 9-13-47.
The [c]ourt also finds that [Appellees] obtained irrevocable license
to use “Woods Road” from [Appellants].
Order, 4/2/19, at 1-2.
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2 This Court has stated that “it is not error for the trial court to adopt a party’s
proposed findings of fact and/or conclusions of law.” Eighth N.-Val, Inc. v.
William L. Parkinson, D.D.S., P.C., Pension Tr., 773 A.2d 1248, 1251 (Pa.
Super. 2001) (emphasis omitted). However, our Supreme Court “generally
discourage[s] the practice of wholesale adoption of facts or law as presented
by litigants,” and has indicated that “a fact-finding court should support its
determinations with sufficient explanations of the facts and law, including
specific citations to the record for all evidence on which it relies, and to the
legal authority on which it relies, to facilitate appellate review.”
Commonwealth v. Weiss, 986 A.2d 808, 816 n.4 (Pa. 2009) (citations
omitted).
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On April 12, 2019, Appellants filed a post-trial motion. On April 29,
2019, before the trial court had an opportunity to rule on Appellants’ post-trial
motion, Appellant filed a notice of appeal.
The trial court issued an order requiring the filing and service of a
Pa.R.A.P. 1925(b) statement. Appellants timely filed a nineteen-page Rule
1925(b) statement. The trial court filed an opinion.
Appellants present the following questions on appeal, which we have
reordered as follows:
[1.] Did the [trial] court err in entering judgment for [Appellee
Guiser] on his quiet title claim when the decision was not
supported by any competent evidence?
[2.] Did the [trial] court erroneously determine that [Appellees’]
action for access [to Woods Road] should not be dismissed for
failure to join indispensable parties?
[3.] Was it clear error to strike the trial testimony of an adjoining
landowner who opposed the use of “Woods Road” as access for
Appellees?
[4.] Did the [trial] court erroneously rule that [Appellees] had an
entitlement to access over 4.5 miles of a logging road through
unenclosed mountain woodlands when:
(1) [Appellees] failed to introduce a metes and bounds
description of the proposed easement;
(2) The logging road goes through unenclosed woodlands that
[Appellees] used with permission until June 21, 2012, and
when they sought the consent of other landowners, including
[Appellants], to use the logging road as access on October 2,
2012;
(3) The covenant involving the [Appellants’] parcel no. 9-13-
37 is unreasonably vague and did not affect their other parcels;
(4) When no evidence supported a claim of an irrevocable
license to use the logging road and, [Appellees] sought consent
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to obtain an easement from the [thirteen] sets of affected
landowners?
[5.] Did the [trial] court erroneously grant an injunction?
Appellants’ Brief at 5-7.
Because the certified record and associated docket entries in this matter
do not show that the trial court denied Appellants’ post-trial motion or entered
a formal judgment in this matter, we must first consider whether this Court
has jurisdiction to address this matter. It is well settled that “an appeal lies
from the entry of judgment.” Melani v. N.W. Eng'g, Inc., 909 A.2d 404,
405 (Pa. Super. 2006) (citation and internal alterations omitted).
In Melani, the trial court entered an opinion and order determining the
location of a right of way after a non-jury trial. Id. The appellants timely filed
a post-trial motion within ten days of the opinion and order. Thirty days after
the entry of the opinion and order, but before the trial court ruled on the post-
trial motion, the appellants filed a notice of appeal from the opinion and order.
Id.
The Melani Court quashed the appeal as interlocutory. The Court
explained that the appeal was premature because the appellants timely filed
a post-trial motion, but appealed before the trial court ruled on the post-trial
motion. Id. at 406. Additionally, the Court noted that the appellants filed
their appeal before the 120-day period to decide the motions lapsed and
before a judgment was entered. Id.
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Here, as in Melani, Appellants timely filed a post-trial motion from the
order entered following a non-jury trial. See id. Appellants filed a notice of
appeal before the trial court ruled on the post-trial motion, before the 120-
day period to decide the motion expired, and before a judgment was formally
entered on the record. Therefore, this appeal is premature.3
However, this conclusion does not end our analysis. In its April 2, 2019
order, the trial court found in favor of Appellee Guiser and against Appellants
in the quiet title action to approximately twenty-one acres of land. The trial
court also found in favor of Appellees and Appellants as to the right to access
Woods Road. Significantly, the trial court also granted Appellees’ request for
an injunction prohibiting Appellants from blocking access to Woods Road.
As to the trial court’s grant of injunctive relief, Pa.R.A.P. 311 states:
(a) General rule.—An appeal may be taken as of right and
without reference to Pa.R.A.P. 341(c) from:
(4) Injunctions.—An order that grants or denies, modifies or
refuses to modify, continues or refuses to continue, or dissolves
or refuses to dissolve an injunction unless the order was entered:
* * *
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3 We acknowledge that the trial court stated that it was entering a judgment
in favor of Appellees and against Appellants in its April 2, 2019 order.
However, “Rule 227.1 requires parties to file post-trial motions in order to
preserve issues for appeal . . . .” Bd. of Supervisors of Willistown Twp.
v. Main Line Gardens, Inc., 155 A.3d 39, 44 (Pa. 2017) (citation and
internal alterations omitted). Further, this Court has stated that “[t]he
purpose for Rule 227.1 is to provide the trial court with an opportunity to
correct errors in its ruling and avert the need for appellate review.” Devon
Serv., LLC v. S & T Realty, 171 A.3d 287, 293 n.7 (Pa. Super. 2017) (citation
omitted).
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(ii) After a trial but before entry of the final order. Such order
is immediately appealable, however, if the order enjoins
conduct previously permitted or mandated or permits or
mandates conduct not previously mandated or
permitted, and is effective before entry of the final
order.
Pa.R.A.P. 311(a)(4)(ii).
In Thomas A. Robinson Family Ltd. P'ship v. Bioni, 178 A.3d 839
(Pa. Super. 2017), appeal denied, 194 A.3d 560 (Pa. 2018), this Court stated
that the purpose of Rule 311(a)(4)(ii)
is to permit an immediate appeal if an immediately-effective
permanent injunction makes such a change to the status quo that
the aggrieved party needs quick appellate recourse without
incurring delays from post-trial proceedings in the trial court. The
exception is designed to provide the putative appellant with the
option to file for immediate review of a “new” injunction entered
after trial, notwithstanding that final judgment has not been
entered.
Thomas A. Robinson Family Ltd. P'ship, 178 A.3d at 847 (footnotes
omitted).
Here, Appellants blocked access to Woods Road for several years before
the instant action. Although Appellees requested a preliminary injunction, the
trial court initially did not issue a preliminary injunction, and there was no
indication in the record that Appellants stopped blocking access to Woods Road
during the pendency of the litigation of this matter. However, after the non-
jury trial, but before the entry of judgment, the trial court issued an injunction
that changed the status quo and prohibited Appellants from blocking Woods
Road.
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Therefore, this injunction prohibited “conduct previously permitted or
mandated.” See id. Moreover, the record indicates that the injunction has
taken effect.4 Appellants asserted that the access would result in irreparable
harm. The trial court, however, denied the stay.
Under these circumstances, we are constrained to conclude that an
appeal from the trial court’s decision to grant an injunction is properly before
this Court under Pa.R.A.P. 311(a)(4)(ii) and Thomas A. Robinson Family
Ltd. P'ship. Therefore, we will address Appellants’ arguments to the extent
that they relate to the injunction prohibiting Appellants from blocking
Appellees’ access to Woods Road. However, because a judgment has not been
entered,5 we will not address Appellants’ first claim related to Appellee
Guiser’s quiet title claim as to the twenty-one acres of land, and we quash
that aspect of this appeal.
We state the factual background relevant to the injunction. Appellants
own six parcels of real estate in Milford and Beale Townships in Juniata County,
which we refer to by their county tax assessments numbers. Lots Nos. 9-9-
22, 9-13-37, and 9-13-46 are located in Milford Township, and Lot No. 9-9-
22 is not contiguous with his other lots. Lots Nos. 1-10-2, 1-10-9, and 1-10-
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4 Specifically, in Appellants’ application for a stay pending appeal and
Appellees’ response, the parties noted that Appellants made the road
accessible pursuant to the order.
5 Moreover, as discussed below, Appellants’ challenge based on the failure to
join indispensable parties goes to the subject-matter jurisdiction of the trial
court and cannot be waived.
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10 are located in Beale Township, west of the relevant portion of Milford
Township. The Beale Township lots are not contiguous with the Milford
Township lots, and there are approximately three lots owned by other parties
between Lot 9-9-22, Appellants’ western-most property in Milford Township,
and Lot 1-10-10, Appellants’ eastern-most property in Beale Township. Lot
No. 1-10-2 in Beale Township is the western-most of Appellants’ lots.
Glenn Guiser, Appellee Guiser’s father, owned a plot of land in Beale
County since 1973, and conveyed approximately ten acres of that plot to the
Arnold Appellees. Appellee Guiser obtained the plot from his father in 1985.
Later, Appellee Guiser subdivided his plot and conveyed lots to the Zeider
Appellees in 1999. According to Appellees, Appellee Guiser currently owns Lot
No. 1-10-1, which abuts the western edge of Appellants’ Lot No. 1-10-2. The
Zeider Appellees own Lot No. 1-10-7, which abuts the western edge of
Appellee Guiser’s lot. The Arnold Appellees and Biddle Appellees own the lots
directly to the west of the Zeider Appellees’ lot. Appellees’ lots are all located
in Beale Township.
Woods Road is a dirt road that connects to Hammer Hollow Road, a
public roadway to the east of Appellants’ and Appellee’s lots. Traveling west
from Hammer Hollow Road, Woods Road covers approximately four-and-one-
half miles through Milford and Beale Townships, Appellants’ properties in
Milford Township and his three properties in Beale Township. Woods Road
provides access to Appellees’ properties west of Appellants’ Lot No. 1-10-2 in
Beale Township, and then connects to what the parties referred to as an “AT&T
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right of way,” that was located on the Biddle Appellees’ lot. At some point,
between Hammer Hollow Road and Appellees’ properties, Woods Road also
connects with what the parties referred to as “Johnstown Road.” Johnstown
Road then proceeds southwest and connects with what the parties referred to
as “Lead Line Lane,” which, in turn, connects with Cider Press Road.
In their proposed findings of fact and conclusions of law, Appellees
further described Woods Road as follows:
45. “Woods Road” and Lead Line Lane were once part of the same
Beale Township public road, as is shown on the 1912, 1931 and
1941 Juniata County PA Department of Highways Beale Township
map ([Appellees’] Exhibit 9).
46. That portion of Lead Line Lane known as “Woods Road” is a
private roadway which reverted back to all abutting property
owners in 1931 when Lead Line Lane was vacated in 1931, thereby
giving said owners, including [Appellees], a right of way over said
road way.
47. In the alternative to paragraph 46 above, if the portion of Lead
Line Lane known as “Woods Road” was not properly vacated in
accordance with the law due to the vacation documentation not
being clear and distinct, the remaining parts of Lead Line Lane,
including “Woods Road” would still be a Beale Township Road.
Appellees’ Proposed Finding of Facts & Conclusions of Law, 12/20/17, at ¶¶
45-47.
According to Appellees, Glenn Guiser, the predecessor of Appellee
Guiser and the Arnold and Zeider Appellees, began using Woods Road from
its intersection with Hammer Hollow Road from approximately 1980. The
Biddle Appellees began using the same portion of Woods Road from 1976.
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Before the dispute between the parties arose, there was a locked gate
at the connection between Hammer Hollow Road and Woods Road. However,
the individual who installed the gate apparently gave his neighbors keys for
the gate. Beginning in 2011, Appellants began to claim that Appellees had no
right to use Woods Road. In 2012, Appellants began blocking Appellees’
access to their properties from Woods Road. Specifically, Appellants
attempted to change the lock on the gate at Hammer Hollow Road, installed
a second gate on Woods Road further west from the first gate at Hammer
Hollow Road, and placed logs, rocks, and rock crushing equipment at various
points on Woods Road. Additionally, there was evidence that obstructions
existed near the area where Woods Road connected with Johnstown Road,
and further southwest near the area where Johnstown Road connected with
Lead Line Road. At trial, Appellant Scott Seiber admitted to blocking Woods
Road, but asserted that he did so on his own property.
In their second through fifth issues in this appeal, Appellants challenge
the issuance of the injunction and the related findings that Appellees had a
right to use Woods Road. In their second issue, Appellants assert that the
trial court erred in concluding that it was not necessary to join property owners
with an interest in Woods Road. In their third issue, Appellants contend that
the trial court erred in precluding the husband of one of the other property
owners from testifying at the hearing on Appellants’ motion to dismiss for
failure to join indispensable parties. In their fourth issue, Appellants argue
that the trial court erred in finding that Appellees established their right to a
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prescriptive easement, equitable servitude, or irrevocable license with respect
to Woods Road. In their fifth issue, they conclude that because Appellees
failed to establish a right to use Woods Road, the trial court erred in granting
an injunction.
Initially, we note our standard of review:
The grant or denial of a permanent injunction is a question of law.
Regarding the trial court’s legal determination, our standard of
review is de novo, and our scope of review is plenary. As in all
equity matters, however, we must accept the trial court’s factual
findings and give them the weight of a jury verdict where they are
supported by competent evidence.
Liberty Place Retail Assocs., L.P. v. Israelite Sch. of Universal Practical
Knowledge, 102 A.3d 501, 506 (Pa. Super. 2014) (citations and footnote
omitted).
[I]n order to establish a claim for a permanent injunction, the
party must establish his or her clear right to relief. However,
unlike a claim for a preliminary injunction, the party need not
establish either irreparable harm or immediate relief and a court
may issue a final injunction if such relief is necessary to prevent a
legal wrong for which there is no adequate redress at law.
Gurecka v. Carroll, 155 A.3d 1071, 1075 (Pa. Super. 2017) (en banc)
(citation omitted).
Appellants, in their second issue on appeal, contend that the trial court
lacked jurisdiction to determine Appellees’ rights to use Woods Road.
Appellants’ Brief at 19-32. According to Appellants, Woods Road crossed the
properties of twelve sets of property owners, whose interest would be affected
by recognizing Appellees’ right to use Woods Road. Id. at 20. Additionally,
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Appellants claim that Appellees were required to join Milford and Beale
Townships because Appellees pled that Woods Road was a vacated public road
or, in the alternative, could be public roadway. Id. In support, Appellants
cite Columbia Gas Transmission Corp. v. Diamond Fuel Co., 346 A.2d
788 (Pa. 1975), Barren v. Dubas, 441 A.2d 1315 (Pa. Super. 1982), and
Nelson by Nelson v. Dibble, 510 A.2d 792 (Pa. Super. 1986), for the
propositions that Appellants’ failure to join the interested property owners and
municipalities rendered a determination of Appellees’ right to use Woods Road
void for lack of jurisdiction. Id. at 23-26.
Appellees argue that they did not fail to join necessary parties.
Appellees emphasize that their amended complaint requested a limited
resolution of their right to use Woods Road as to Appellants’ property rights.
Appellees’ Brief at 30. According to Appellees, the limited nature of the relief
they requested was similar to Burkett v. Smyder, 535 A.2d 671 (Pa. Super.
1988), which, they argue, limited Barren. Id. at 29.
Similarly, with respect to Beale Township, Appellees note that they did
not request that Woods Road be declared a public road and the trial court
found that Woods Road was a private road. Id. at 26. Alternatively, Appellees
contend that even if Beale Township was an indispensable party, a remand
would not be necessary to join Beale Township because Woods Road was not
found to be a public road. Id. at 28 (citing Waksmunski v. Delginis, 570
A.2d 88 (Pa. Super. 1990)).
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The trial court, as noted above, denied Appellants’ motion to dismiss in
a separate order entered on February 8, 2019. In that order, the trial court
asserted that a “right-of-way being sought is only over the ‘’Woods Road’ over
the property of [Appellants]” and that “agreements exist[] with the individuals
put forth as indispensable parties.” Order, 2/8/19. In its Rule 1925(a)
opinion, the trial court stated that it “found that other property owners were
not interfering with [Appellees’] right to use Woods Road and, therefore, there
was no need to join them.” Trial Ct. Op. at 4 (some formatting altered). The
trial court did not address Appellants’ claim regarding the municipalities as
indispensable parties in its February 8, 2019 order or its Rule 1925(a) opinion.
It is well settled that “[t]he failure to join an indispensable party is a
non-waivable defect that implicates the trial court’s subject matter
jurisdiction.” N. Forests II, Inc. v. Keta Realty Co., 130 A.3d 19, 28-29
(Pa. Super. 2015) (citation omitted). As our Supreme Court stated in
Columbia Gas, the absence of an indispensable party “renders any order or
decree of court null and void for want of jurisdiction.” Columbia Gas, 346
A.2d at 789. This Court should address this jurisdictional issue sua sponte.
Barren, 441 A.2d at 1316.
This Court summarized the definition of an indispensable party as
follows:
A party is indispensable
when his or her rights are so connected with the claims of
the litigants that no decree can be made without impairing
those rights. If no redress is sought against a party, and its
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rights would not be prejudiced by any decision in the case,
it is not indispensable with respect to the litigation. We have
consistently held that a trial court must weigh the following
considerations in determining if a party is indispensable to
a particular litigation:
1. Do absent parties have a right or an interest related
to the claim?
2. If so, what is the nature of that right or interest?
3. Is that right or interest essential to the merits of
the issue?
4. Can justice be afforded without violating the due
process rights of absent parties?
In determining whether a party is indispensable, the basic inquiry
remains whether justice can be done in the absence of a third
party.
N. Forests II, 130 A.3d at 29 (citations and quotation marks omitted).
With respect to the individual property owners referenced by Appellant,
we note that in Barren, the plaintiffs commenced an action to recognize a
prescriptive easement to an alley that crossed the defendant’s adjoining lot,
compel the defendants to restore access, and prohibit the defendants from
interfering with the use of the alleyway. Barren, 441 A.2d at 1315-16. The
trial court entered a decree nisi recognizing the easement and granting
injunctive relief. Id. at 1316. The defendants filed exceptions claiming that
the trial court erred in precluding evidence that they conveyed a portion of
the servient tenement to third parties. Id. The trial court subsequently
modified the decree to include a provision that the plaintiffs join the third
parties, but no further proceedings with respect to the third parties were held.
Id. at 1316 & n.*. The defendants appealed.
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The Barren Court vacated the decree finding that the trial court lacked
jurisdiction because the third parties were indispensable parties. Id. at 1317.
The Court held that
when there is a dispute as to the existence of an easement, all
owners of servient tenements have a material interest in the
controversy and should be joined as defendants, even though
such an owner may have had no part in the interference with, or
obstruction of, the alleged easement.
Id. at 1316.
In Burkett, the trial court awarded the plaintiff a prescriptive easement
related to a 400-foot area in dispute where a roadway crossed the defendants’
land, which the plaintiffs used for more than twenty-one years, first to access
their Christmas tree business and later for walking or hiking. 6 Burkett, 535
A.2d at 672-73. On appeal, the defendants argued, in part, that the plaintiffs
failed to join an additional owner over whose property the prescriptive
easement crossed.
The Burkett Court rejected the argument, explaining:
[The defendants] contend that the rights of the other landowner
whose property is intersected by the roadway were inextricably
bound to the disposition of the case at bar. However, we note
that the subject matter of [the plaintiffs’] action was a 400 feet
portion of the roadway which was located solely on [the
defendants’] land. Any resolution made with respect to the
existence of a prescriptive easement would be determinate only
to [the defendants’] property rights. Thus, [the plaintiffs’] action
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6 The plaintiffs’ and the defendants’ properties in Burkett were not adjoining.
Burkett, 535 A.2d at 674. The defendants in Burkett first raised the issue
of indispensable parties in a motion for judgment on the pleadings, which the
trial court denied. Id.
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was narrowly confined so as not to affect the rights or interests
held by other landowners.
Id. at 674. The Burkett Court further distinguished Barren, noting that
[i]n Barren, the [plaintiffs] filed a complaint alleging that they
had obtained a prescriptive easement to an alleyway traversing
the appellants' adjoining parcel of land. On appeal, this Court held
that two parties to whom the [defendants] had conveyed a portion
of the servient tenement were indispensable to those proceedings
inasmuch as they had a material interest in the controversy. By
comparison, the case sub judice involves a servient tenement
consisting of 400 feet of land owned solely by [the defendants].
[The defendants] have failed to name any parties whose rights or
interests in that section of land would be adversely affected by a
determination in their absence. Accordingly, we affirm the trial
court’s treatment of this issue.
Id.
Following our review, we conclude that the instant matter is closer to
Burkett than Barren with respect to the sets of twelve other landowners over
whose property Woods Road crossed. The trial court’s order was limited to a
finding that Appellees acquired a prescriptive easement “over and along
‘Woods Road’ where it intersects with [Appellants’] parcels,” that
equitable servitude existed as to Appellants’ lots in Milford Township, and that
Appellees obtained irrevocable license to use Wood Road from Appellant.
Order, 4/2/19, at 1 (emphasis added). Therefore, as in Burkett, the trial
court’s resolution was determinative only as to Appellants’ property rights and
did not affect the rights or interests held by other landowners. See Burkett,
535 A.2d at 674. Moreover, unlike Barren, there were no other fee owners
of the servient tenements specifically at issue in this case. See Barren, 441
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A.2d at 1315. On this basis, we conclude that the trial court’s conclusion as
to the individual property owners was not erroneous because justice could be
afforded without violating the due process rights of those property owners.
See Burkett, 535 A.2d at 674; see generally N. Forests II, 130 A.3d at
29.
As to the municipalities, however, the trial court’s decision to adopt
Appellees’ proposed findings of fact and conclusions of law complicates our
review. In its proposed findings of fact and conclusion of law, Appellees
offered two alternatives as to the status of Woods Road as a public or private
road and its right to an injunction. See Appellees’ Proposed Finding of Facts
& Conclusions of Law at ¶¶ 45-47. First, Appellees claimed that Woods Road
was a private road that they had a right to use. See id. at ¶¶ 45-46. Second,
Appellees claimed that Woods Road was a public road over which they had a
right to access as members of the public. See id. at ¶ 47 & Conclusions of
Law at Ct. 2. In support of their request for an injunction, Appellees did not
propose a specific finding of fact or conclusion of law that Woods Road was a
private road or possibly a Beale Township or Milford Township public road.
Therefore, by adopting Appellee’s proposed findings of fact and conclusions of
law without further elaboration in its order or Rule 1925(b) opinion, the trial
court essentially failed to resolve whether Woods Road is a public or private
road.
As this Court noted in Nelson, the distinction between a public and
private road is not a trivial one. In Nelson, the trial court determined that
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the plaintiff sought to enjoin the defendant from blocking his access to a
roadway. Nelson, 510 A.2d at 793. The trial court granted a preliminary
injunction that barred either of the parties from blocking access to the
roadway. Id.
Notably, in Nelson, the trial court stated that it did not need to decide
whether there was an easement by prescription or as a public road. Id. The
trial court concluded that calling the roadway vacated or abandoned was “a
difference without a distinction” because the township no longer maintained
or claimed the road. Id. On appeal, the Nelson Court found that this
conclusion was flawed. Id. at 794.
The Nelson Court noted the principles that “a claim of title by adverse
possession does not lie against Commonwealth property” and “that local
governments have immunity from a claim of adverse possession when the
land in question is devoted to public use.” Id.. The Court remanded the
matter because the outcome of the plaintiffs’ adverse possession claim was
“linked inextricably with whether title to the subject property is vested in [the
township].” Id. at 795. Specifically, adverse possession, if granted in that
case, could directly affect the township’s interests, thereby making the
township an indispensable party. Id. “If title was at one time vested in [the
township],” the Court continued, “then the Court of Common Pleas was
without jurisdiction to grant the preliminary injunction.” Id.
Here, as in Nelson, the trial court did not make a specific finding as to
whether Woods Road was a public or a private road such that a municipality
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could be an indispensable party. See Orders, 2/8/19 & 4/2/19; see also Trial
Ct. Op. at 4 (discussing only whether other property owners were
indispensable parties). Indeed, while Appellees raised the question of fact in
its proposed findings of fact and conclusions of law for injunctive relief, they
did not suggest specific findings of fact or conclusions of law on this point.
Appellees’ Proposed Findings of Facts & Conclusions of Law at ¶¶ 45-47,
Conclusions of Law, Ct. 2. We acknowledge that Nelson was decided on a
request for a preliminary injunction. Nelson, 510 A.2d at 795. However, we
are constrained to conclude that the trial court in the instant case did not
properly resolve whether a municipality, such as Beale Township or Milford
Township, was an indispensable party, see id., and that the trial evidence did
not provide a basis for determining that issue as a matter of law.
Moreover, we find no merit to Appellees’ suggestion that we may affirm
without remanding based on Waksmunski. In that case, the plaintiffs sought
to enjoin the defendant from blocking an easement over the defendants’
property. Waksmunski, 570 A.2d at 89. Additionally, the plaintiffs
requested a declaration that the easement was a public road, which, if
granted, would widen the easement. Id. at 89-90. The trial court granted a
permanent injunction finding that an easement was created in the deeds of
the relevant properties, but denied the plaintiffs’ request to declare that the
easement was a public roadway. Id. at 90-91. Both parties appealed, and
this Court affirmed. Id. at 89, 91.
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Of relevance to this appeal, the Waksmunski Court, citing Nelson,
found that because the township was an indispensable party that was not
joined in the action below, it lacked jurisdiction to determine the issue of
whether the easement became a public road. Id. at 92. We concluded,
however, that a remand for joinder was not necessary because the trial court
declared the roadway was not public and, assuming we had jurisdiction, we
would have affirmed that the road provided private access. Id. at 93. Under
those circumstances, the Waksmunski Court affirmed the order as to the
existence of the easement and the injunction without remanding. Id.
Here, unlike Waksmunski, neither party requested a finding that
Woods Road was a public road, nor did the trial court expressly decide whether
Woods Road was a public or private road. Therefore, this present action for
injunctive relief and the jurisdictional issue raised by the status of the road
subject to Appellees’ claimed easement by prescription cannot be as easily
separated as they were in Waksmunski. See id. at 92-93.
Accordingly, in light of the present record, it is necessary to remand this
matter to the trial court for further consideration of whether Beale Township
or any other municipality was an indispensable party. See Nelson, 510 A.2d
at 795. Until this jurisdictional issue has been resolved, we must conclude
that the trial court was not competent to render a determination on Appellees’
claims that they were entitled to injunctive relief under a theory of easement
by prescription. See id. Accordingly, we order the injunctive relief be
vacated.
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On remand, the trial court may consider the present record, or receive
any additional evidence as is necessary to determine the issue. Because this
remand is to determine jurisdiction, no new post-trial motions need be filed if
the trial court receives new evidence. However, if the trial court concludes
there were no indispensable parties to Appellees’ action, it may be advisable
for the court to rule on Appellants’ existing post-trial motions before the taking
of another appeal.7
In sum, we quash Appellants’ appeal in part because Appellants’
premature notice did not invoke this Court’s jurisdiction to consider issues
related to Appellees’ quiet title action regarding the twenty acres of land. See
Melani, 909 A.2d at 405-06. However, because the trial court did not
properly resolve the issue of whether Beale Township or another municipality
may have an interest in Woods Road, we must vacate the trial court’s order
to the extent it granted injunctive relief and remand for further proceedings
to determine if there are necessary parties that should have been joined. See
Nelson, 510 A.2d at 795.
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7 We are mindful that Appellants’ jurisdictional arguments contradict their own
position that Woods Road was not public and would bring them no substantive
or practical relief in this case since they would not be entitled to block a public
roadway. However, “the law requiring joinder of indispensable parties is
strict.” N. Forests II, 130 A.3d at 30.
In light of our decision, we decline to address Appellants’ remaining arguments
regarding the trial court’s findings of fact and conclusions of law regarding
equitable servitude and irrevocable license, which may be rendered moot by
a determination of whether Woods Road is a public or private road.
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Appeal quashed in part. Order vacated in part. Case remanded with
instructions. Jurisdiction relinquished.
Judgment Entered.
Joseph D. Seletyn, Esq.
Prothonotary
Date: 08/05/2020
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