J-A29017-20
2021 PA Super 77
ASSOCIATES OF CHAPMAN LAKE : IN THE SUPERIOR COURT OF
: PENNSYLVANIA
:
v. :
:
:
EUGENE J. LONG AND ARYN LONG :
:
Appellants :
: No. 347 MDA 2020
:
EUGENE J. LONG AND ARYN LONG :
:
Appellants :
:
v. :
:
:
ASSOCIATES OF CHAPMAN LAKE, :
INC. AND KEN SREBRO :
Appeal from the Judgments Entered on February 14, 2020,
in the Court of Common Pleas of Lackawanna County,
Civil Division at No(s): 2014-CV-2781,
2014-CV-4917.
BEFORE: DUBOW, J., KUNSELMAN, J., and COLINS, J.*
OPINION BY KUNSELMAN, J.: FILED APRIL 22, 2021
Eugene and Aryn Long, husband and wife, appeal from the judgments
entered in favor of The Associates of Chapman Lake, Inc. and Ken Srebro
(“Associates”) in these consolidated cases. The Longs own property next to
Chapman Lake, maintain a dock on the lake, and have used the lake
recreationally since buying the land in 2007. The Associates, who bought the
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* Retired Senior Judge assigned to the Superior Court.
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various parcels of land beneath the lake between 2007 and 2012, began
charging the Longs (and other residents) $100 per year to use the lake, but
the Longs refused to pay that fee. This litigation ensued.
After a bench trial, the Court of Common Pleas of Lackawanna County
ruled that the Longs could not use Chapman Lake for recreation. It deemed
this use to be a trespass into and upon the lake. In making its decision, the
trial court misinterpreted a 19th-century conveyance that granted the prior
owners of the Longs’ property the right to use the lake as if they co-owned it.
Under Pennsylvania property law, that right passed to the Longs. Thus, we
vacate the order denying post-trial relief and remand for the entry of decrees
and judgments in favor of the Longs.
I. Factual History
Chapman Lake has undergone many changes over the past 125 years,
and its history is critical to this case. The lake covers about 100 acres of
Lackawanna County. Although the lake supports motorboats, jet skis, and
other light watercraft, it is closed to the rivers and, thus, the parties agree
that it has always been “non-navigable.”1
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1 “Non-navigable waters” versus “navigable waters” are terms of art. Waters
are navigable if “used, or susceptible of being used, in their ordinary condition,
as highways for commerce, over which trade and travel are or may be
conducted in the customary modes of trade and travel on water.” Mountain
Properties, Inc. v. Tyler Hill Realty Corp., 767 A.2d 1096, 1100 (Pa.
Super. 2001). Pennsylvania’s non-navigable lakes and ponds are private, but
the Commonwealth holds title to navigable waters in trust for the use of all.
See, e.g., Vill. of Four Seasons Ass'n, Inc. v. Elk Mountain Ski Resort,
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In the 1800s, farms bordered Chapman Lake. According to a title
searcher, the Longs’ lakefront property came “from two chains of title. One
would be what you would call the Lee Farm and the other would be what you
would call the Finch Farm.” N.T., 11/7/2018, at 27. The Lee Farm was over
100 acres and originally extended under a portion of the lake.
During the 1890s, The Jerymn and Rush Brook Water Co. purchased the
other parcels of land under Chapman Lake.2 The water company then
announced plans to raise Chapman Lake by four feet. This would submerge
five acres of the Lee Farm. In 1894, P.J. Lee, Ellen V. Vail, S. Esther Lee,
Georgiana Lee, Susie B. Lee, and Hattie X. Smith (“the Lees”) sued the water
company over the impending taking of their property.
The Court of Common Pleas of Lackawanna County assembled a Board
of Viewers, which visited the Lee Farm in 1895 and determined:
That there will be taken of the lands of [the Lee Farm]
about 5 acres, of which three and 85/100 acres were
covered by water of what is known as Chapman Lake, and
about one and 1/10 acres land will be taken . . .
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Inc., 103 A.3d 814, 820 (Pa. Super. 2014). The Commonwealth has never
compiled a formal list of its private and public waters. See Pennsylvania Boat
& Fish Commission, Public Rights in Pennsylvania’s Water F.A.Q. No. 13,
available at https://www.fishandboat.com/LearningCenter/FAQs/Pages/PublicAccess.aspx
(last visited 3/18/21). Still, one commentator observed, “With the exception
of Lake Erie, there are no navigable lakes and ponds bordering on or within
the boundaries of the Commonwealth.” J.D. Lynch, Riparian Title in
Pennsylvania, 41 Pa. B. Ass’n Q. 224, 231 (1970).
2 See Longs’ Ex. 2 at 775-81; Lackawanna County Deed Book 343 at 519;
Lackawanna County Deed Book 154 at 550-52; Lackawanna County Deed
Book 124 at 522-23.
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That the value of said land, water, or property so
taken or occupied, or to be taken or occupied . . . and [the
water company] having filed a map and a disclaimer of any
interest to raise the water of said lake more than four (4)
feet, or of depriving [the Lees] of the use of the water of the
said lake for all the uses for which it has been used in the
past by [the Lees] (said map and release being attached
hereto and made part of this report), and after having made
a fair and just comparison of said advantages and
disadvantages they estimate and determine that the [Lees]
have sustained damages including the taking and occupying
of the land and water as above stated to the amount of
[$580], and the same shall be paid to [the Lees].
Provided the disclaimer hereinbefore mentioned be
placed on record & remain in full force and virtue.
Lee v. The Jermyn & Rush Brook Water Co., 422 CV Sept. Term (C.C.P.
Lackawanna 1895), Report of the Board of Viewers at 1-3.
The water company and the Lees resolved their lawsuit with a cash
payment of $580, as set by the Board of Viewers, and the water company
granting the Lees and their successors the use of the lake. The Settlement
and Release in that action provided:
that the Jermyn and Rush Brook Water Company . . . doth
hereby release, remise, and forever quit claim to [the Lees],
their heirs, and assigns all and all manner of interest in and
to all land outside of that portion that will be taken and
flowed (of the lands of [the Lees]) by reasons of raising the
outlet of Chapman Lake . . . and do further disclaim any
intention of depriving the owners of said land or their heirs
or assigns of access to the water of said Chapman Lake
where it adjoins the said lands, or of free and uninterrupted
use of said water for the stock and other uses thereof in
connection with said farm as riparian owners of said land
and water, and do give and grant unto [the Lees] the right
to take water from said lake if it recedes or is drawn below
the line of low water mark and to have the use of the same
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as riparian owner and to fish in the water over the land
taken from said plaintiffs.
Lee, supra, Water Company’s Release at 1; see also Longs’ Ex. 2 at 1038;
Lackawanna County Deed Book 167 at 385.
The Recorder of Deeds of Lackawanna County recorded the 1895 Board
of Viewers Report and related court documents (including the Release and
Settlement) into the chain of title for the parcels beneath Chapman Lake. 3
“Chapman Lake was owned by various public utilities from 1896 to 1999,
and [they] held [the waters] as a back-up, fresh-drinking-water source.”
Associates at Chapman Lake v. Gerchman, 10 CV 391, 7/24/2003 Opinion
at 2 (C.C.P. Lackawanna 2003); The Associates’ Ex. 5. Over that same period,
the owners of the various farmsteads around the lake began subdividing and
selling their land to many other owners.
The former Commissioner of Lackawanna County, Robert Pettinato,
testified that his family began renting a summer cottage at Chapman Lake in
the late 1940s or early 50s, when he was about ten years old. See N.T.,
10/24/2018, at 8. In March of 1954, his parents and great uncle purchased
a lakefront tract of land in one of Chapman Lake’s subdivisions. See N.T.,
10/24/2018, at 9. Thereafter, the Pettinato family spent every summer (from
May until Labor Day) at the lake. Id. at 21, 24-25. The Pettinatos could trace
their chain of title for the land to the Lee Farm and the condemnation action.
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3See Longs’ Ex. 2 at 1039-42; Lackawanna County Deed Book 167 at 386-
88.
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See Longs’ Ex. 1. The Pettinatos immediately built a duplex cottage on the
land, installed a dock on the lake, and built a patio area near the dock. N.T.,
10/24/2018, at 11-12. Commissioner Pettinato recalled that “the dock was
modified many times,” because it “was damaged almost annually by the ice
formations and had to be rebuilt on occasion.” N.T., 10/24/2018, at 12. “And
when it was being rebuilt, often it was enlarged and -- we were always working
on that dock.” Id.
According to Commissioner Pettinato, Chapman Lake was the heart and
soul of the property. The lake “was the reason for being. Everything that we
did at Chapman Lake revolved around the lake.” Id. at 20. Each summer,
he and members of his family used the lake daily for swimming, fishing, or
boating. Id. at 21-22.
In 1974, the Pettinato family deeded their Chapman Lake property to
their family-owned corporations: Gerard & Pettinato Construction Co., Inc.
and The North End Lumber Co. See id. at 18. The Pettinatos continued to
visit their cottage each summer and to use the lake for recreation. In 2007,
the Pettinatos’ companies sold the land to Eugene Long, who eventually
reconveyed it to his wife and himself. See id. at 19.
As a child and teenager, Mr. Long regularly visited Chapman Lake in the
1980s. See N.T., 11/7/2018, at 49. He was friends with people who owned
homes at the lake. Since childhood, he continually used the lake in the
summers to jet ski, water ski, swim, and boat. See id. In the past he would
fish the lake, and other members of his family and his guests have continued
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that use. The Pettinatos’ dock was present when Mr. Long bought the land,
and the dock has remained there since.
One of Mr. Long’s neighbors, Ken Srebro, has lived at Chapman Lake
since buying property there in 1992. See N.T., 3/27/2019, at 13. From 1992
until 2007, he used the lake for swimming, boating, water skiing, snorkeling,
scuba diving, and fishing. See id. at 14. Like the Pettinatos and Longs, he
also had a dock on Chapman Lake. Furthermore, Mr. Srebro agreed that “all
of the other adjourning property owners on the lake were also using the lake
during that period of time for the same [i.e., recreational] purposes.” Id. at
15. During this time, Mr. Srebro paid no fee to anyone for the use of the lake.
See id. at 18. His recreational uses prompted the objections of Theta Land
Corporation, which had purchased the land under Chapman Lake in 1999. See
id. at 16; see also Longs’ Ex. 2 at 202-765; Lackawanna Deed Book 167 at
2-565.
John Matines also objected to Mr. Srebro’s use of the lake, even though
he never owned it. Mr. Matines “was a guy [who] was going to buy the lake
from Theta [Land] Corporation and sell it to” Mr. Srebro and six other
Chapman Lake residents. Id. at 17.
On December 14, 2007, to acquire Chapman Lake, Mr. Srebro and his
six neighbors formed and became sole shareholders of The Associates of
Chapman Lake, Inc. They originally incorporated as a non-profit. Two months
before its formation, The Associates of Chapman Lake, Inc. received title to
most of the lands beneath Chapman Lake in an October 23, 2007 deed from
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Lackawanna County. See Longs’ Ex. 2 at 10-14. The Associates acquired the
rest of the submerged property from Theta Land Corporation on July 9, 2012.
See id. at 5-7. They then began charging the approximately 300 residences
around Chapman Lake an annual assessment of $100 to use the lake. N.T.,
3/27/2019, at 20; see also N.T., 11/7/2018, at 50. This was the first time
in the history of Chapman Lake someone had assessed a recreational-use fee
to access its waters. The Longs refused to pay the Associates’ new fee.
In July of 2008, the Associates began leasing the oil and natural gas
rights beneath Chapman Lake to Exco Northcoast Energy, Inc. See N.T.,
3/27/2019, at 20, 22. The Associates at Chapman Lake, Inc. reincorporated
as a for-profit entity, so it could payout that rent as dividends to the seven
shareholders. See id. at 23. Each of the shareholders also received and
recorded deeds from The Associates of Chapman Lake, Inc. granting their
residential properties easements to use Chapman Lake for recreational
purposes. See id. at 24.
Aside from the Longs, two other families opposed the Associates’ annual
fees — the Gerchmans and the Cliffs. The Associates won legal cases against
both families and have thereafter refused to let either family use the lake at
any price. See id. 28-29.
The Associates also sued the Longs for trespassing on the lake.
II. Procedural Posture
The Associates initiated this action in the magisterial district court, and
the case moved to the court of common pleas on May 13, 2014. That court
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docketed the first case at 2014-CV-2781. The Associates filed a Complaint
two weeks later and a Second Amended Complaint the following summer. The
Longs also filed their own Complaint against the Associates at trial-court
docket number 2014-CV-4971.
The Associates alleged that the “Longs have placed docks in the Lake
and have continued to use the Lake for recreational purposes since 2008
without paying [the $100] fee.” Associates’ Second Amended Complaint at 2.
The Associates asked the trial court to order the Longs to remove their dock,
to stop using the lake, and to pay $700 plus interest. See id.
The Longs eventually filed a Second Amended Complaint of their own
on September 19, 2018. They had two counts in that filing: quiet title and
declaratory judgment. In both counts, the Longs sought identical relief –
namely, a declaration quieting title for themselves, their tenants, guests, and
invitees “to use Chapman Lake for fishing, boating, swimming, and other
recreational purposes by virtue of the [1895] Condemnation Documents.”
Longs’ Second Amended Complaint at 11-12. In the alternative, they sought
that same right through a declaration that they, their tenants, guests, and
invitees acquired a prescriptive easement to use the waters of Chapman Lake
for the same purposes. See id. In either event, the Longs sought a
permanent injunction to prevent the Associates from interfering with their use
of the lake and from attempting to charge them a fee to use the lake.
Although never officially consolidated below, the two cases proceeded
simultaneously to a bench trial. The court rendered a decision and enjoined
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the Longs “from using Chapman Lake for recreational purposes and from
otherwise trespassing on the property of Associates.” Trial Court Order,
6/21/2019, at 1. The Longs filed a post-trial motion seeking judgment as a
matter of law, which the trial court denied.
These two timely appeals followed.4 This Court consolidated them.
III. Analysis
The Longs raise five appellate issues. However, we limit our review to
only the first issue, because our disposition of it renders the other four issues
moot.5 That issue is:
Whether the [trial court erroneously] held that the
documents filed in the Condemnation Action created an
easement to use the waters of Chapman Lake for “farm
uses” only and by ignoring other provisions in the
Condemnation Documents . . . expressly granted riparian
rights to the Lee heirs and their successors and assigns?
The Longs’ Brief at 6.
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4 Upon receiving the Longs’ appeals, this Court issued a rule to show cause as
to whether it should quash them under Commonwealth v. Walker, 185 A.3d
969 (Pa. 2018) (dictating that appellants must file separate notices of appeal
for each docket number in order to vest jurisdiction in an appellate court).
The Longs filed an answer to the rule, and the Court deferred the jurisdictional
question to this panel. Based upon the response of the Longs to the rule and
our review of the records, the Longs did not violate Walker. They have
perfected our appellate jurisdiction. Any misstep below was the result of the
accidental fling errors of the Prothonotary of Lackawanna County.
5 The other four issues focus on the trial court’s conclusion that the Pettinatos
did not acquire a prescriptive easement to use of the waters of Chapman Lake.
See Longs’ Brief at 6-8.
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The trial court refused to quiet a usufructuary title6 in the Longs to, in,
and upon the waters of Chapman Lake for recreation. That court determined
that the condemnation case of Lee v. The Jermyn & Rush Brook Water
Co., 422 CV Sept. Term (C.C.P. Lackawanna 1895), only established a
usufructuary title in the Lees and their successors for agricultural uses of the
lake, rather than all conceivable uses to which water might be put. Thus,
while the trial court agreed with the Longs that the Lees and their successors
acquired a usufructuary title, the trial court disagreed with the Longs as to the
title’s scope.
This issue requires us to interpret and apply the Settlement and Release
in Lee, supra, various precedents of the trial court, and the common and
statutory law of property. All these matters raise pure questions of law.
“Accordingly, our standard of review is de novo, and our scope of review is
plenary.” MERSCORP, Inc. v. Delaware County, 207 A.3d 855, 861 (Pa.
2019); see also Russo v. Polidoro, 176 A.3d 326, 329 (Pa. Super. 2017).
As mentioned, the parties agree that Chapman Lake is non-navigable.
Regarding “a non-navigable lake or pond where the land under the water is
owned by others, no riparian rights attach to the property bordering on the
water, and an attempt to exercise any such rights by invading the water is as
much a trespass as if an unauthorized entry were made upon the dry land of
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6 Usufructuary (adj.) – “1: one having the usufruct of property; 2: one having
the use or enjoyment of something.” MERRIAM-WEBSTER ONLINE DICTIONARY,
available at https://www.merriam-webster.com/dictionary/usufructuary (last
visited 3/20/2021).
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another.” Miller v. Lutheran Conf. & Camp Ass'n, 200 A. 646, 650 (Pa.
1938). Still, water rights “are property that may be a subject of a contractual
or conveyance instrument. Landowners in possession of such riparian rights
are generally at liberty to sell the land and retain the rights, or vice versa.”
Mark Cheung, Dockominiums: An Expansion of Riparian Rights that Violates
the Public Trust Doctrine, 16 B.C. Envtl. Aff. L. Rev. 821 at 840-41 (1989).
See also Miller, 200 A. at 648-50, (holding grantee acquired usufructuary
title to boat and to fish in the grantor’s private lake through a deed).
Here, in rejecting the Longs’ argument that the 1895 release in Lee,
supra, granted them all recreational uses of Chapman Lake, the trial court
primarily relied upon its prior holding in Cliff v. Associates of Chapman
Lake, Inc., 2015-CV-99 (C.C.P. Lackawanna 2017).7 According to the trial
court, Cliff “dealt with a nearly identical issue, and [the common pleas court]
rejected the proposition that the Condemnation Documents grant riparian
rights prayed for by the Longs.” Trial Court Opinion, 6/21/2019, at 3. Cliff
“concluded the Condemnation Documents created an easement to use the
waters of the lake for ‘farm uses’ only. The same applies in this case.” Id.
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7 This Court issued a memorandum decision affirming on February 1, 2019.
Cliff v. Associates of Chapman Lake, Inc., 223 MDA 2018 (Pa. Super 2019)
(unpublished) (“Cliff II”). Under Pennsylvania Rule of Appellate Procedure
126(b), only Superior Court memoranda decisions filed after May 1, 2019 may
be relied upon as persuasive precedent. Therefore, Cliff II has no persuasive
value in this Court or the courts of common pleas. See Pa.R.A.P. 126(b)(2)
(limiting persuasive value to Superior Court memoranda filed after May 1,
2019).
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“As a preliminary matter, trial court decisions are not binding upon the
Superior Court.” Echeverria v. Holley, 142 A.3d 29, 36 n.2 (Pa. Super.
2016). Cliff is a trial court precedent and has no binding effect on appeal.
Additionally, judicial dictum is an “opinion by a court on a question that is
directly involved, briefed, and argued by counsel, and even passed on by the
court, but that is not essential to the decision.” BLACK'S LAW DICTIONARY at
465 (7th ed. 1999).
Like the Longs, the Cliffs refused to pay the Associates’ $100 fee to use
Chapman Lake. However, unlike the Longs, the Cliffs could not trace their
chain of title to the Lee Farm. The trial court in Cliff found that the facts of
that case were as follows:
in the 1800s and 1900s, the Lee Farm and the Finch Farm
were two properties which existed just to the west of
Chapman Lake. After the Lee Farm was condemned in
1895, the [water company] granted the Lees certain rights
to use the waters of the lake. [The Cliffs] allege that their
land derives in part from the Lee Farm, which thereby grants
them the rights granted to the Lees by said water company.
However, at the bench trial . . . Title Searcher David
Durkovic . . . stated that [the Cliffs’] property was from the
Finch Farm, and not the Lee Farm.
. . . As the [Cliffs] were unable to show that they derive
rights, including an easement to use the water of Chapman
Lake, from the Lee Farm . . . the Cliffs’ property is not in the
Lee Farm chain of title.
Cliff, 2015-CV-99, December 29, 2017 Decision and Decree at 2 (some
capitalization omitted).
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This factual finding rendered the breadth of the usufructuary title
conveyed in Lee, supra, moot in Cliff, because the Cliffs could not claim any
rights under the Lees’ chain of title. Notwithstanding that mootness, the Cliff
Court went on to opine that the water company “unambiguously limited the
[Lees’] use of the . . . waters of the lake for uses connected to the farm, such
as using water for livestock.” Cliff, December 29, 2017 Decision and Decree
at 2. Because this opinion on the water company’s conveyance to the Lees
was unessential to decide Cliff, the Cliff trial court’s views on the conveyance
was dictum.
“The doctrine of ‘stare decisis’ is limited to actual determinations in
respect to litigated and necessarily decided questions and is not applicable to
dicta or obiter dicta. Thus, a dictum is not binding authority and has no
precedential value.” 1 Standard Pa. Practice 2d § 2:252 (citing In re L.J., 79
A.3d 1073 (Pa. 2013); O’Neill v. Metropolitan Life Ins. Co., 26 A.2d 898,
(Pa. 1942); In re Cassell’s Estate, 6 A.2d 60 (Pa. 1939); City of Lower
Burrell v. City of Lower Burrell Wage and Policy Committee, 795 A.2d
432 (Pa. Cmwlth. 2002)). The trial court therefore erred by relying upon the
dictum from Cliff in the instant matter.
On appeal, the Associates make the same error as the trial court. They
rely upon the trial court’s dictum from Cliff and the unpublished memorandum
of this Court affirming Cliff. See Associates’ Brief at 10-11. That reliance is
misplaced, because neither of those authorities are precedential. See
Echeverria, supra; see also Note 7, supra.
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Next, the Associates claim the language of the Lee documents “clearly
qualifies and limits the use of water.” Associates Brief at 11. They believe
that, because a condemnation document states, “all uses for which [the lake]
had been used in the past by the [Lees],” the Longs needed to prove the Lees
used the lake for recreational purposes before the Lees sued the water
company. Id. (quoting Lee, Report of the Board of Viewers at 2).
This argument does not float. The Associates quote the Report of the
Board of Viewers, but that was not the conveyance. A representative of the
water company did not sign the Report of the Board of Viewers. The court-
appointed Viewers signed that document.
Under the Statute of Frauds, conveyances of real property must be a
writing that bears “the signature of the grantor.” Nolt v. TS Calkins &
Assocs., LP, 96 A.3d 1042, 1047 (Pa. Super. 2014) (emphasis added). Thus,
the Report of the Board of Viewers is not a conveyance of the water company’s
interests in Chapman Lake. Instead, the release is the conveyance.
The release itself determines the scope of the usufructuary title that it
grants. Our review is confined to the four corners of the release, because the
meaning of a conveyance is “gleaned solely from its language.” Teacher v.
Kijurina, 76 A.2d 197, 200 (Pa. 1950) (emphasis added). As the Associates
observe, “effect must be given to all the language of the instrument and no
part shall be rejected if it can be given meaning.” Associates’ Brief at 12
(quoting Brookbank v. Benedum-Trees Oil Co., 131 A.2d 103, 107 (Pa.
1957)) (emphasis added).
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We therefore turn to the language of the instrument in which the water
company granted the Lees the usufructuary title at issue. The water company
wrote and two of its officers signed the following:
that the Jermyn and Rush Brook Water Company . . . doth
hereby release, remise, and forever quit claim to [the Lees]
their heirs and assigns all and all manner of interest in and
to all land outside of that portion that will be taken and
flowed (of the lands of said plaintiffs) by reasons of raising
the outlet of Chapman Lake . . . and do further disclaim any
intention of depriving the owners of said land or their heirs
or assigns of access to the water of said Chapman Lake
where it adjoins the said lands, or of free and uninterrupted
use of said water for the stock and other uses thereof in
connection with said farm as riparian owners of said land
and water, and do give and grant unto [the Lees] the right
to take water from said lake if it recedes or is drawn below
the line of low water mark and to have the use of the
same as riparian owner and to fish in the water over the
land taken from said plaintiffs.
Lee, supra, Water Company’s Release at 1; see also Longs’ Ex. 2 at 1038;
Lackawanna County Deed Book 167 at 385 (emphasis added).
The Associates would have us focus on every clause other than the one
highlighted above. However, doing so, would violate Brookbank, supra,
wherein the Supreme Court of Pennsylvania directed courts to give effect to
all the language of an instrument, if possible. If we limited the instrument to
only agricultural uses – as the Associates suggest and as the trial court did –
then the clause granting the Lees and their successors “the use of the same
[i.e., the waters of Chapman Lake] as riparian owner” would have no effect.
Such an interpretation confers only the specific uses granted elsewhere in the
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conveyance and essentially removes the general-use-as-riparian-owner
clause from the Settlement and Release. This contradicts Brookbank.
The Associates would have us construe the conveyance as narrowly as
possible, but they produced no evidence as to why that narrowest reading
should prevail. Moreover, the plain language of the use-as-riparian-owner
clause is not narrow.
The classic example of narrow conveyance of water rights appears in
Miller v. Lutheran Conf. Camp, supra. There, the grantor-corporation
expressly limited the grant in its deed “to boat and fish the water” that the
corporation owned. Miller, 200 A. at 648. This was a specific, clearly limited
grant of water rights. Miller could do two things under his deed – boat and
fish.
In the matter at bar, had the water company desired to grant the Lees
the right to use the water of the lake for their “farm use only,” as the trial
court concluded, the water company could have done so by using this limiting
language in the Settlement and Release. For example, the water company
could have written that it “gives and grants unto the Lees the right to use the
waters of the lake for farm uses only.” That is not what the water company
wrote. It conveyed much more than that to the Lees, namely, “the use of
[the waters of Chapman Lake] as riparian owners.” Lee, supra, Water
Company’s Release at 1; see also Longs’ Ex. 2 at 1038; Lackawanna County
Deed Book 167 at 385. This language is the broadest grant of water rights
possible under Pennsylvania common law. The use of water “as a riparian
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owner” of non-navigable waters, such a Chapman Lake, is the use of those
waters as if the grantee were a private owner of those waters. See Vill. of
Four Seasons Ass'n, Inc. v. Elk Mountain Ski Resort, Inc., 103 A.3d 814
at 820 (Pa. Super. 2014).
Construing that clause as the Longs assert, by its plain and natural
language, we hold that this broad, general language granted the Lees and
their successors all the same uses as if they owned the waters of Chapman
Lake (“as riparian owners” of the waters). This interpretation gives the clause
its natural meaning and its full force and effect, while the other more specific
clauses concerning livestock, taking water for domestic use, and fishing
likewise remain in effect.
Additionally, we that, “if doubt arises concerning the interpretation of
the instrument, it will be resolved against the party who prepared it . . .”
Brookbank, 131 A.2d at 107 n.6 (emphasis added). The water company
prepared the release. Thus, we resolve any doubt against the water company
and its successors in interest – the Associates. The trial court therefore erred
by not interpreting the general clause that gives the Lees use of the lake as
riparian owners, according to its plain meaning and by not construing it
against the Associates, i.e., the drafter’s successors in interest.
We therefore hold that, under the Settlement and Release, recorded in
Lackawanna County Deed Book 167 at 385, the Lees and their successors in
title to the Lee Farm acquired usufructuary title to an easement. This
easement grants them access to, in, and upon the waters of Chapman Lake
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as if they themselves were, are, and will hereafter be “riparian owners” of the
lake.
We must next decide what type of easement the Lees’ chain of title
acquired. “In determining whether a certain easement in connection with
water is appurtenant or in gross, the nature of the right, the surrounding
circumstances, and the intention of the parties creating it are to be
considered.” George Thompson, COMMENTARIES ON REAL PROPERTY § 264 at
363-64 (1980 ed.) (citing Lindenmuth v. Safe Harbor Water Power Corp.,
163 A. 159 (Pa. 1932)).
The water company granted this easement to the Lees and their
successors in conjunction with the company’s condemnation of five acres of
the Lees’ land. The water company received a deeper reserve of drinking
water in exchange for giving the Lees and their successors the right to use
Chapman Lake as if co-owners of its waters. This quasi-co-ownership served
as part of the Lees’ compensation for the water company’s taking. Thus, the
easement is tied to and runs with the Lees’ land, for the benefit of the Lees
and all successors to their lands. The easement created in the release is an
easement appurtenant, rather than an easement in gross.
Finally, we agree with the Longs that this easement appurtenant flowed
down to them, as a matter of law. See Longs’ Brief at 34. Our legislature
has dictated, “All deeds or instruments in writing for conveying or releasing
land hereafter executed, granting or conveying lands, unless an exception or
reservation be made therein, shall be construed to include all . . .
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hereditaments, and appurtenances whatsoever . . .” that belong to the land.
21 P.S. § 3. The usufructuary title in question was for an incorporeal
hereditament, i.e., an easement appurtenant to the land conveyed from the
Lees. No prior owner in the Longs’ chain of title expressly reserved that
easement appurtenant. See Longs’ Ex. 1. Hence, the easement appurtenant
to use all waters Chapman Lake, as riparian owners, vested in the Longs.
In sum, the trial court erred, as a matter law, by not reversing its
decision and decree in these cases. It should have granted the Longs’ motion
for post-trial relief in its entirety. We vacate the order denying post-trial relief
and remand for the entry of an order awarding quiet, usufructuary title to the
Longs, their heirs, and assigns for an easement appurtenant to, in, and upon
the servient waters of Chapman Lake, including for all recreational uses
thereof. The trial court shall enter a permanent injunction against the
Associates and their successors. That injunction shall prohibit the Associates
and their successors from interfering with the Longs’ quiet use and enjoyment
of the water of Chapman Lake, and from assessing the Longs or their
successors a fee to use its water. Similarly, the trial court shall award
judgment to the Longs in the action that the Associates filed. The Longs’ dock
and recreational uses of Chapman Lake are not trespasses; they are within
the scope of the easement created in the 1895 release.
Judgments and order denying post-trial relief vacated. Case remanded
for further proceedings consistent with this Opinion.
Jurisdiction relinquished.
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Judgment Entered.
Joseph D. Seletyn, Esq.
Prothonotary
Date: 04/22/2021
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