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NON-PRECEDENTIAL DECISION - SEE SUPERIOR COURT O.P. 65.37
RICHARD WORTHINGTON LODGE, : IN THE SUPERIOR COURT OF
JOHN STERLING LODGE, AND : PENNSYLVANIA
MARIE-LOUISE LODGE :
:
:
v. :
:
:
WILLIAM HOYT, MARK HOYT, : No. 1294 MDA 2022
EDWARD C. HOYT, THEODORE R. :
HOYT, AND GEORGE HOYT, :
COMPRISING THE FIRM OF HOYT :
BROTHERS, MARY HOYT, ANNA A. :
HOYT, CORDELIA IDA HOYT, AND :
ALL THEIR HEIRS, SUCCESSORS, :
AND ASSIGNS, HOYT ROYALTY, LLC, :
AND MICHAEL J. SOLOMON AND :
LORI A. SOLOMON, HOYT ROYALTY, :
LLC, TRUSTEES OF THE MARGARET :
E. HAIGHT TRUST, THOMAS PEDDER :
BISPHAM, SYDNEY WYNNE :
WOODWARD, GERTRUDE WEBER, :
JOHN WEDEL, KAREN ELITHIA :
WEDEL, ANN HOYT WEBER, :
CAROLINE HOKE WEBER, VIRGINIA :
FOOTE HAGGERTY, NATHAN CLARK :
SWEET, JOHN WEBER SWEET, AND :
ALL OTHER UNKNOWN HEIRS, :
SUCCESSORS, AND ASSIGNS OF :
WILLIAM HOYT, THEODORE R. HOYT, :
AND GEORGE S. HOYT, :
INDIVIDUALLY, JOINTLY, AND/OR :
TRADING AS HOYT BROTHERS :
:
:
v. :
:
:
RICHARD WORTHINGTON LODGE, :
JOHN STERLING LODGE, MARIE- :
LOUISE LODGE, MICHAEL J. :
SOLOMON AND LORI A. SOLOMON :
J-A20043-23
J-A20044-23
:
:
APPEAL OF: HOYT ROYALTY, LLC, :
TRUSTEES OF THE MARGARET E. :
HAIGHT TRUST, THOMAS PEDDER :
BISPHAM, SYDNEY WYNNE :
WOODWARD, GERTRUDE WEBER, :
JOHN WEDEL, KAREN ELITHIA :
WEDEL, ANN HOYT WEBER, :
CAROLINE HOKE WEBER, VIRGINIA :
FOOTE HAGGERTY, NATHAN CLARK :
SWEET, JOHN WEBER SWEET, AND :
ALL OTHER UNKNOWN HEIRS, :
SUCCESSORS, AND ASSIGNS OF :
WILLIAM HOYT, THEODORE R. HOYT, :
AND GEORGE S. HOYT, :
INDIVIDUALLY, JOINTLY, AND/OR :
TRADING AS HOYT BROTHERS :
Appeal from the Order Entered August 15, 2022
In the Court of Common Pleas of Sullivan County Civil Division at No(s):
2008CV-321
RICHARD WORTHINGTON LODGE, : IN THE SUPERIOR COURT OF
JOHN STERLING LODGE, AND : PENNSYLVANIA
MARIE-LOUISE LODGE :
:
:
v. :
:
:
WILLIAM HOYT, MARK HOYT, : No. 1363 MDA 2022
EDWARD C. HOYT, THEODORE R. :
HOYT, AND GEORGE HOYT, :
COMPRISING THE FIRM OF HOYT :
BROTHERS, MARY HOYT, ANNA A. :
HOYT, CORDELIA IDA HOYT, AND :
ALL THEIR HEIRS, SUCCESSORS, :
AND ASSIGNS, HOYT ROYALTY, LLC, :
AND MICHAEL J. SOLOMON AND :
LORI A. SOLOMON, HOYT ROYALTY, :
LLC, TRUSTEES OF THE MARGARET :
E. HAIGHT TRUST, THOMAS PEDDER :
BISPHAM, SYDNEY WYNNE :
WOODWARD, GERTRUDE WEBER, :
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JOHN WEDEL, KAREN ELITHIA :
WEDEL, ANN HOYT WEBER, :
CAROLINE HOKE WEBER, VIRGINIA :
FOOTE HAGGERTY, NATHAN CLARK :
SWEET, JOHN WEBER SWEET, AND :
ALL OTHER UNKNOWN HEIRS, :
SUCCESSORS, AND ASSIGNS OF :
WILLIAM HOYT, THEODORE R. HOYT, :
AND GEORGE S. HOYT, :
INDIVIDUALLY, JOINTLY, AND/OR :
TRADING AS HOYT BROTHERS :
:
:
v. :
:
:
RICHARD WORTHINGTON LODGE, :
JOHN STERLING LODGE, MARIE- :
LOUISE LODGE, MICHAEL J. :
SOLOMON AND LORI A. SOLOMON :
:
:
APPEAL OF: RICHARD :
WORTHINGTON LODGE, JOHN :
STERLING LODGE, AND MARIE- :
LOUISE LODGE :
Appeal from the Order Entered August 15, 2022
In the Court of Common Pleas of Sullivan County Civil Division at No(s):
2008-CV-321
BEFORE: PANELLA, P.J., MURRAY, J., and STEVENS, P.J.E.*
MEMORANDUM BY STEVENS, P.J.E.: FILED: NOVEMBER 28, 2023
Hoyt Royalty, LLC, Trustees of the Margaret E. Haight Trust, Thomas
Pedder Bispham, Sydney Wynne Woodward, Gertrude Weber, John Wedel,
Karen Elithia Wedel, Ann Hoyt Weber, Caroline Hoke Weber, Virginia Foote
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* Former Justice specially assigned to the Superior Court.
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Haggerty, Nathan Clark Sweet and John Weber Sweet (collectively “Hoyt
Appellants”) filed an appeal to challenge the trial court’s order granting
summary judgment in favor of Michael J. Solomon and Lori Solomon
(hereinafter Appellees). Richard Worthington Lodge, John Sterling Lodge, and
Marie-Louise Lodge (collectively “the Lodge Appellants”) filed a separate
appeal challenging the same order.1 After careful review, we reverse the trial
court’s order and remand for further proceedings.
By way of background, in an April 22, 1893 deed, William Hoyt, Mark
Hoyt, Edward C. Hoyt, Theodore R. Hoyt, and George S. Hoyt (“Hoyt
Brothers”) along with Mary Hoyt, wife of William Hoyt, Ann A. Hoyt, wife of
Mark Hoyt, and Cordelia Ida Hoyt, wife of Edward C. Hoyt (collectively the
“Hoyts”) conveyed a vast amount of real property in Sullivan County to Union
Tanning Company. However, in the same deed, the Hoyts reserved the oil,
gas, and mineral rights to such property. The Hoyt Appellants have claimed
that they own the subsurface rights to 20,916 acres of land.
In a deed dated February 4, 2011, the Lodge Appellants acquired
property containing 303.63 acres (identified as Sullivan County Tax Parcel
Number 06-076-002) from the Richard S. Lodge Revocable Trust and the
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1 We will address the appeals of the Hoyt Appellants and Lodge Appellants
together in one decision as they raise the same issues and challenge the same
order granting summary judgment in favor of Appellees. See Pa.R.A.P. 513
(“[w]here there is more than one appeal from the same order, or where the
same question is involved in two or more appeals in different cases, the
appellate court may, in its discretion, order them to be argued together in all
particulars as if but a single appeal”).
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Marie-Gay Lodge Revocable Trust. The Lodge Appellants asserted that the
303.63 acre property was described in a previous deed as three separate
parcels with different chains of title. Amended Complaint, at 2. The Lodge
Appellants admitted that one of the parcels (approximately 111 acres in size)
was subject to the Hoyts’ oil, gas, and mineral reservation set forth in their
1893 deed. Amended Complaint, at 2-3.
On November 21, 2008, the Lodge Appellants filed a quiet title action
against the Hoyts and their heirs, successors, and assigns. Pursuant to the
trial court’s July 24, 2013 order, the Lodge Appellants filed an amended
complaint on September 3, 2013 in order to include additional defendants in
its quiet title action, including Appellant Hoyt Royalty, LLC (the successor to
the Hoyts).2 With respect to Appellant Hoyt Royalty, LLC and all other heirs,
successors, and assigns of the Hoyts (collectively, the “Hoyt Appellants”), the
Lodge Appellants asserted that the Hoyt Appellants’ reservation of oil, gas,
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2 Although this action names as defendants the members of the Hoyt family
involved in the 1893 conveyance, all such individuals are deceased. Hoyt
Royalty, LLC is a limited liability company that was formed “to acquire, own,
possess, and manage all rights, title and interests in any and all natural gas,
oil, coal, and other minerals and mineral rights located in the Commonwealth
of Pennsylvania and elsewhere that were originally owned and possessed by
the Hoyts … and their heirs, successors, and assigns.” Hoyt Appellants’
Answer, Cross-Claim, and Counterclaim, at 36-37. Hoyt Royalty, LLC owns
and possesses 84.4% of the subsurface estate owned or possessed by the
Hoyts’ heirs, successors, and assigns. Hoyt Appellants’ Answer, Cross-Claim,
and Counterclaim, at 36. The owners of the remaining portion of the
subsurface estate were joined to this action in the Hoyt Appellants’
counterclaim and cross-claim, as discussed infra.
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and mineral rights in the 1893 deed was invalid and had been cancelled with
respect to the 111-acre parcel.
The Lodge Appellants’ amended complaint also named Appellees (the
Solomons) as defendants as Appellees had asserted an interest in the
subsurface estate of Lodge Appellants’ entire 303.63-acre property after this
quiet title action had commenced. Appellees cited to a May 28, 1981 Tax Claim
Deed in which the Sullivan County Tax Claim Bureau purported to convey the
subsurface estate on Parcel “MR-6-3” to Appellees. Amended Complaint, at 5.
The Tax Claim Deed refers to the exception in the “deed from William Hoyt
and others to the Union Tanning Company dated April 22, 1893” and describes
the property as approximately 313 acres. Amended Complaint at 3.
The Lodge Appellants specifically argued that Appellees have no claim
to the subsurface rights of their 303.63 acreage parcel as Appellees’ May 1981
Tax Claim deed was void. The Lodge Appellants cited to the records for the
tax sale underlying the Tax Claim Deed which indicated that the premises sold
included “80 acres of mineral rights in Elkland Township’s Jesse Parker
Warrant”; in comparison, the Lodge Appellants emphasized that their 303.63-
acre property at Parcel Number 06-076-002 falls within Elkland Township’s
David Turner Warrant. Amended Complaint, at 5.
Thus, the Lodge Appellants argued that the Tax Deed erroneously
described the taxed and sold property as 313 acres in the David Turner
Warrant instead of 80 acres in in the Jesse Parker Warrant. As such, the Lodge
Appellants argued that Appellees “may own the oil, gas, and mineral rights in
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80 acres located in the Jesse Parker Warrant, but they do not hold or own title
to the oil, gas, or mineral rights in any part of the subject property [belonging
to the Lodge Appellants].” Amended Complaint, at 7.
In addition, the Lodge Appellants argued that notice of the tax sale for
Sullivan County Tax Parcel MR-6-3 (“80 acres in Jesse Parker”) was not
provided to their predecessors in title nor was Appellees’ Tax Claim Deed listed
in the Sullivan County grantor indexes under the Hoyt Appellants.
On November 7, 2013, Appellees filed an Answer and New Matter to the
Amended Complaint, asserting affirmative defenses which included a claim
that the quiet title action was barred by the applicable statutes of limitations.
Appellees did not make any counterclaim against the Lodge Appellants or file
a cross-claim against the Hoyt Appellants.
On November 20, 2013, the Hoyt Appellants filed an Answer and New
Matter to the Amended Complaint as well as a Counterclaims and Cross-Claim,
which included three counts: 1) quiet title, 2) declaratory judgment, and 3)
slander of title. The Hoyt Appellants’ Counterclaim and Cross-Claim added
multiple plaintiffs3 who “are known living heirs, successors and/or assigns of
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3 The Hoyt Counterclaim and Cross-Claim Plaintiffs were identified as the
Trustees of the Margaret E. Haight Trust, Thomas Pedder Bispham, Sydney
Wynne Woodward, Gertrude Weber, John Wedel, Matt Wedel, Jay Wedel,
Karen Elithia Wedel, Ann Hoyt Weber, Caroline Hoke Weber, Helen Hoyt
Weber, Virginia Foote Haggerty, Nathan Clark Sweet and John Weber Sweet.
The Hoyt Appellants deemed these individuals to be “involuntary counterclaim
plaintiffs” along with all other unknown, successors, and assigns of the Hoyts.
Hoyt Appellants’ Answer, Cross-Claim, and Counterclaim, at 36-37.
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the Hoyts who have not assigned and transferred their rights, title, and
interests to Hoyt Royalty.”4
With respect to the Appellees’ claims, the Hoyt Appellants agreed with
the Lodge Appellants that “to the extent that [the] 1981 Solomon Tax Deed
sought to convey the Hoyt Sullivan County Subsurface Estate in, on, and under
the Subject property, which is expressly denied, any such tax sale and tax
title derived therefrom is void and invalid as a matter of law.” Hoyt Appellants’
Answer, Cross-Claim, and Counterclaim, at 36-37. The Hoyt Appellants also
argued that the only tracts identified in the Hoyts’ 1893 Deed
Exception/Reservation are from warrants other than the Jesse Parker warrant.
On December 23, 2013, Appellees filed a reply to the Hoyt Appellants’
claims and pled as new matter several affirmative defenses, including the
statute of limitations.
On October 7, 2021, Appellees filed a motion for summary judgment,
seeking to bar both the Hoyt Appellants’ and Lodge Appellants’ quiet title
actions with a statute of limitations defense. On November 29, 2022, the
Lodge Appellants filed an Answer along with a countermotion for summary
judgment, asking the trial court to declare that Appellees’ Tax Claim Deed is
void ab initio and to bar Appellees from asserting any right, lien, title or
interest in the subsurface rights at issue. On March 23, 2022, the Hoyt
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4 The Hoyt Appellants attempted to join lessees of the disputed subsurface
rights as defendants, but ultimately filed a motion to discontinue the action as
to those parties. On April 25, 2018, the trial court discontinued the action
against all defendants excluding the Lodge Appellants and Appellees.
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Appellants filed its Answer and countermotion for partial summary judgment,
raising the same claim against Appellees based on its contention that
Appellees’ Tax Claim Deed was void. The Hoyt Appellants also asked the trial
court to enter summary judgment in its favor against the Lodge Appellants as
to the parties’ competing claims for quiet title and declaratory judgment.
In its countermotion for partial summary judgment, the Hoyt Appellants
provided that they had taken the oral deposition of the director of the Sullivan
County Tax Claim Bureau, Susan McCarty. In this deposition, Ms. McCarty had
no explanation for how Appellees’ May 28, 1981 Tax Deed was prepared or
issued. S. McCarty Dep. Tr., at 66-150. Ms. McCarty agreed that the real
estate description contained in that Deed was inconsistent with the records
and documents underlying the sale of 80 acres of mineral rights from the Jesse
Parker Warrant taxed as Elkland Township Parcel MR-6-3. Id. at 148-49.
Ms. McCarty also indicated that Bureau has no records that indicate that
the mineral rights to the approximately 303.63-acre parcel owned by the
Lodge Appellants in the David Turner Warrant were ever taxed or sold prior to
the 1981 private sale. Id. at 149. Ms. McCarty conceded that the 1981 Tax
Deed was erroneous as she agreed that the Bureau had no authority to convey
the subsurface rights at issue as the relevant property was never assessed or
sold for taxes. Id. at 38-39, 56-60, 63-65, 148-150.
On August 15, 2022, the trial court entered an order granting Appellees’
motion for summary judgment and denying the Lodge Appellants’ motion for
summary judgment and the Hoyt Appellants’ motion for partial summary
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judgment. In its accompanying opinion, the trial court concluded that both the
Lodge Appellants and Hoyt Appellants were barred from challenging Appellees’
recorded May 1981 Tax Claim Deed pursuant to the statutes of limitations
under 42 Pa.C.S.A. §§ 5527 and 5530.
In reaching this conclusion, the trial court admitted that it did not need
to “get to the merits” of the Lodge Appellants’ and Hoyt Appellants’ summary
judgment motions, but ruled “as a matter of law, the recording of a deed from
a tax claim bureau places the public on notice of the sale and the passage of
time and/or constructive notice bars challenges to that deed.” Trial Court
Opinion, 8/15/22, at 6 (citing Pfeifer v. Westmoreland Cnty. Tax Claim
Bureau, 127 A.3d 848 (Pa.Cmwlth. 2015)).
On August 24, 2022, the Hoyt Appellants, unsure of whether the trial
court’s grant of summary judgment was a final order, filed a motion asking
the trial court to amend its order to include a finality determination pursuant
to Pa.R.A.P. 341(c). On September 6, 2022, the trial court amended its order
to include a finality determination, stating an immediate appeal of its August
15, 2022 order would facilitate resolution of the entire case.
On September 12, 2022, the Hoyt Appellants filed a notice of appeal
docketed at 1294 MDA 2022. On September 19, 2022, the Lodge Appellants
filed a notice of appeal docketed at 1363 MDA 2022. Although the Lodge
Appellants titled their appeal as a cross-appeal, both the Lodge Appellants and
the Hoyt Appellants’ indicated that they were challenging the trial court’s
decision to grant summary judgment in favor of Appellees.
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On October 31, 2022, this Court issued a rule to show cause as to
whether the Hoyt Appellants and Lodge Appellants intended to raise issues
that oppose each other and designate the appeals as cross-appeals, or
whether the appeals should be designated at joint appeals pursuant to
Pa.R.A.P. 512. On November 10, 2022, counsel for both the Hoyt Appellants
and Lodge Appellants indicated that they did not intend to raise on appeals
that oppose each other as the trial court did not resolve the merits of their
respective summary judgment motions, but denied them on the basis of
Appellees’ statute of limitations defense. Thus, the Hoyt Appellants and Lodge
Appellants did not object to their matters being designated as joint appeals.
On November 22, 2022, this Court issued an order indicating that the
appeals would be listed consecutively, rather than as cross-appeals. This Court
also authorized Appellees to file one brief in response to both appeals.
The Hoyt Appellants raise the following issues in their appeal:
1) Can the invalidity of a recorded tax claim bureau deed for
property never assessed or sold for taxes be challenged
through a quiet title or similar action filed over six or twenty-
one years from the deed’s recording?
2) Did the trial court err in its application of the summary
judgment review standard in that, by not reaching the merits
of the parties’ motions, the trial court presumed the validity of
the recorded tax claim bureau deed, although the burden of
proving such validity rested upon the tax claim purchaser who
offered no undisputed evidence of the deed’s validity?
3) Did the trial court err in its application of the summary
judgment review standard in that, by not getting to the merits
of the parties’ motions, the Court ignored the existence of
genuine issues of material fact about the invalidity of the
recorded tax claim bureau deed?
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Hoyt Appellants’ Brief, at 6-7 (renumbered, suggested answers omitted).
The Lodge Appellants raise the following issues in their appeal, which
are essentially the same as those raised by the Hoyt Appellants:
1) Did the trial court err in ruling, as a matter of law and based
on the Pfeifer decision, that a recorded tax claim bureau deed
for property that was never validly assessed or sold for taxes
is protected from all challenges due to the passage of time
and/or constructive notice?
2) Did the trial court err in its application of the summary
judgment motion standards in that, by not getting to the merits
of the parties’ motions, the Court presumed that the recorded
May 1981 Tax Claim Bureau deed was valid, despite the fact
that the burden of proof of validity rested upon [Appellees] who
offered no undisputed evidence of such validity?
3) Did the trial court err in its application of the summary
judgment motion standards in that, by not getting to the merits
of the parties’ motions, the Court ignored the existence of
genuine issues of material fact concerning the validity of the
May 1981 Tax Claim Bureau Deed?
Hoyt Appellants’ Brief, at 5-6 (renumbered, suggested answers omitted).
As a preliminary matter, we must determine whether this appeal is
properly before this Court. An appellate court only “has jurisdiction to
entertain appeals taken (1) as of right from a final order; (2) from
interlocutory orders by permission; (3) from certain interlocutory orders as of
right; and (4) from certain collateral orders.” Redevelopment Auth. of
Cambria City v. Int'l Ins. Co., 685 A.2d 581, 585 (Pa.Super. 1996)
(citations omitted).
Generally, only final orders are appealable, and final orders are defined
as orders disposing of all claims and all parties. Spuglio v. Cugini, 818 A.2d
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1286, 1287 (Pa.Super. 2003) (quoting American Independent Ins. Co. v.
E.S. Ex. Rel. Crespo, 809 A.2d 388 (Pa.Super. 2002); Pa.R.A.P. 341(b)(1)).
In this case, the trial court granted Appellees’ motion for summary
judgment concluding that all claims challenging Appellees’ ownership of the
313-acre subsurface estate described in the Tax Claim Deed were barred by
the statute of limitations. While the trial court did not specifically resolve the
Lodge Appellants’ claims against the Hoyt Appellants or the Hoyts’ respective
counterclaims, the trial court’s grant of summary judgment in favor of
Appellees was a final determination that neither the Hoyt Appellants nor the
Lodge Appellants are permitted to assert any right, title, interest, and/or
ownership in the subsurface estate at issue.
Even assuming arguendo that the trial court’s order did not dispose of
all claims and all parties, the Hoyt Appellants also attempted to perfect an
interlocutory appeal by permission by timely seeking and obtaining the trial
court’s certification pursuant to Rule 341(c). The trial court determined that
an immediate appeal would facilitate the resolution of the entire case. Both
the Hoyt Appellants and Lodge Appellants filed a notice of appeal within thirty
days of the date of the certification of the trial court’s order granting summary
judgment.5 We conclude that we have jurisdiction to proceed in this matter.
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5 If the trial court agrees to enter a certification pursuant to Rule 341(c), “an
immediate appeal of an otherwise unappealable interlocutory order may be
filed as of right within 30 days of the date of certification of the order.”
Redevelopment Auth. of Cambria Cnty. v. Int'l Ins. Co., 685 A.2d 581,
586 (Pa.Super. 1996) (citations omitted)).
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Our review of the trial court’s grant of summary judgment is as follows:
[W]e apply the same standard as the trial court, reviewing all the
evidence of record to determine whether there exists a genuine
issue of material fact. We view the record in the light most
favorable to the non-moving 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. All doubts as to the existence of a genuine issue of a
material fact must be resolved against the moving party.
Motions for summary judgment necessarily and directly implicate
the plaintiff's proof of the elements of [a] cause of action.
Summary judgment is proper if, after the completion of discovery
relevant to the motion, including the production of expert reports,
an adverse party who will bear the burden of proof at trial has
failed to produce evidence of facts essential to the cause of action
or defense which in a jury trial would require the issues to be
submitted to a jury. In other words, whenever there is no genuine
issue of any material fact as to a necessary element of the cause
of action or defense, which could be established by additional
discovery or expert report and the moving party is entitled to
judgment as a matter of law, summary judgment is appropriate.
Thus, a record that supports summary judgment either (1) shows
the material facts are undisputed or (2) contains insufficient
evidence of facts to make out a prima facie cause of action or
defense.
Upon appellate review, we are not bound by the trial court's
conclusions of law, but may reach our own conclusions.
Olszewski v. Parry, 283 A.3d 1257, 1262–63 (Pa.Super. 2022) (quoting
True Railroad Realty, Inc. v. McNees, Wallace & Nurick, LLC, 275 A.3d
490. 494 (Pa.Super. 2022)).
In granting summary judgment in this case, the trial court ruled that
the Hoyt Appellants and Lodge Appellants were barred from attacking the
validity of Appellees May 1981 Tax Claim Deed and the underlying tax sale in
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their quiet title actions by the statute of limitations set under 42 Pa.C.S.A. §§
5527 and 5530. However, in reaching this conclusion, the trial court did not
address the Hoyt Appellants’ and Lodge Appellants’ challenges to the validity
of the tax sale itself.
We begin by noting the following general principles:
The purpose of a quiet title action is to settle competing claims to
interests in property or to determine right or title or the validity
of any deed affecting any interest in land. Quiet title actions can
be used to determine the respective interests of different parties
claiming an interest in oil and gas rights, and these actions have
become more common in this Commonwealth as landowners seek
to enter into gas leases. Title searches incident to such leases may
reveal competing claims to the gas rights or royalties.
A quiet title action is the appropriate forum for testing the validity
of titles obtained at tax sales. Price–Jeffries Co. v. Tillman, 11
Pa.Cmwlth. 153, 312 A.2d 494 (1973). Former owners may use a
quiet title action to attack defects in tax sales that would invalidate
the deed by which they lost title, and purchasers at tax sales can
file such an action to clear or confirm the deed by which they
obtained title. Pa.R.C.P 1061(b)(4). Despite a presumption of
good title in the possessor of a tax deed, the presumption falls
when the regularity of the deed is questioned.
Cornwall Mountain Invs., L.P. v. Thomas E. Proctor Heirs Tr., 158 A.3d
148, 160 (Pa.Super. 2017) (citation omitted).
This Court has recognized that “procedural irregularities in the notice,
assessment, and tax sale process” are required to be raised in a timely action
to upset a tax sale. Id. Nevertheless, “statutes of limitation and repose do not
preclude one from defending a quiet title action on the basis that a tax sale
was void, i.e., where there were jurisdictional defects.” Id. See Trexler v.
Africa, 33 Pa.Super. 395, 410 (1907) (finding that a challenge based on a
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five-year statute of limitations could not “breathe life into a void tax title”);
see also Pennsylvania Game Comm'n v. Thomas E. Proctor Heirs Tr.,
455 F. Supp. 3d 127, 152 (M.D.Pa. 2020) (claim that tax sale was void ab
initio raised a “jurisdictional defect immune to statute of limitations
challenges”).
In concluding that the Hoyt Appellants and Lodge Appellants were
barred from challenging the 1981 tax sale by applicable statutes of limitations,
the trial court relied on Pfeifer v. Westmoreland Cnty. Tax Claim Bureau,
127 A.3d 848 (Pa.Cmwlth. 2015)). In Pfeifer, individuals filed an action in
2013 seeking to challenge the 1990 upset tax sale of certain oil and gas rights,
by claiming the tax claim bureau did not provide them with proper notice of
the sale. The Commonwealth Court held that a “cause of action to set aside a tax
sale on the basis of deficient notice accrued and the statute of limitations began to
run on the date of the tax sale.” Pfeifer, 127 A.3d at 851. The Commonwealth
Court found that the individuals had received constructive notice of the tax
sale since “as a matter of law, the recording of a deed from a tax claim bureau
places the public on notice of the sale and the passage of time and/or
constructive notice bars challenges to that deed.” Id.
However, even if the Pfeifer decision was binding on this Court,6 the
the Commonwealth Court has itself since ruled that Pfeifer is not applicable
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6“This Court is not bound by the decisions of the Commonwealth Court.
However, such decisions provide persuasive authority, and we may turn to
(Footnote Continued Next Page)
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to cases raising a jurisdictional challenge to a void tax sale and accompanying
deed. In re Sale of Real Est. by Lackawanna Cnty. Tax Claim Bureau,
255 A.3d 619, 631 (Pa.Cmwlth. 2021). Consistent with this Court’s decision
in Cornwall, the Commonwealth Court has since clarified that a statute of
limitations does not bar a challenge to a tax sale that is found to be void ab
initio. Id.
As both Hoyt Appellants and the Lodge Appellants both sought to quiet
title against Appellees based on their claim that Appellee’s tax claim deed was
void, the Hoyt Appellants and the Lodge Appellants were not precluded from
challenging Appellees’ claim of ownership on this basis by the statute of
limitations.
Our review of the record reveals that the Hoyt Appellants and Lodge
Appellants demonstrated that a disputed issue of fact existed on whether the
Bureau had the authority to convey 313 acres of oil, gas, and mineral rights
from property in the David Turner Warrant in Appellees’ Claim Deed. Given
that the underlying tax sale records and documents involved 80 acres of
mineral rights in the Jesse Parker Warrant, there is a genuine issue of material
fact to determine whether Appellees’ Tax Claim Deed mistakenly included
mineral rights that had not been assessed.
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our colleagues on the Commonwealth Court for guidance when appropriate.”
Commonwealth v. Hunt, 220 A.3d 582, 591 (Pa.Super. 2019) (citations
omitted).
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J-A20043-23
J-A20044-23
Thus, in this case, the trial court erred in granting Appellees’ summary
judgment motion based solely on its determination that the quiet title actions
were barred by the statutes of limitations without considering the Hoyt
Appellants’ and Lodge Appellants’ claims seeking to invalidate Appellees’ Tax
Claim Deed as void.7
Accordingly, we reverse the portion of the trial court’s order granting
Appellee’s summary judgment motion and vacate the trial court’s order in all
other respects. We remand for the trial court to address the merits of the
countermotions for summary judgment filed by the Lodge Appellants and Hoyt
Appellants.
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7 Based on its conclusion, the trial court also did not address the Hoyt
Appellants’ argument in its motion that summary judgment was appropriate
for the Hoyt Parties against the Lodge Appellants’ with respect to the parties’
competing claims for quiet title and declaratory relief.
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J-A20043-23
J-A20044-23
Order reversed in part with respect to its grant of Appellees’ motion for
summary judgment, order vacated in part with respect to denial of Lodge
Appellants’ and Hoyt Appellants’ countermotions for summary judgment.
Remand for proceedings consistent with this opinion. Jurisdiction relinquished.
Judgment Entered.
Benjamin D. Kohler, Esq.
Prothonotary
Date: 11/28/2023
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