Adams Twp. v. Richland Apl of: Richland

154 A.3d 250, 638 Pa. 109, 2017 Pa. LEXIS 393
CourtSupreme Court of Pennsylvania
DecidedFebruary 22, 2017
DocketAdams Twp. v. Richland Apl of: Richland - No. 12 WAP 2016
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 154 A.3d 250 (Adams Twp. v. Richland Apl of: Richland) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Pennsylvania primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Adams Twp. v. Richland Apl of: Richland, 154 A.3d 250, 638 Pa. 109, 2017 Pa. LEXIS 393 (Pa. 2017).

Opinion

OPINION

JUSTICE WECHT

In this case, two townships dispute the location of their common boundary. Pursuant to the Second Class Township Code, 1 the trial court appointed three commissioners to ascertain that boundary. We granted allowance of appeal to consider whether such commissioners, when tasked with determining the location of a municipal boundary but concluding that they cannot do so with certainty, may consider the townships’ acquiescence to a line used as the boundary and relied upon by residents, and accordingly recommend the adoption of that alternative line as the municipal boundary. We conclude that, in such a narrow circumstance, the commissioners may rely upon the equitable doctrine of acquiescence in making their determination, and need not search indefinitely for evidence of the original boundary. Accordingly, we reverse the order of the Commonwealth Court and remand for reinstatement of the trial court’s order.

I. Background

Adams Township (“Adams”) and Richland Township (“Rich-land”), both located in Cambria County, dispute the location of their shared boundary. Adams was carved out of Richland in 1870. Although the document that established Adams presumably would have described the boundary between the townships, that document has been lost. The document is missing from the Cambria County Courthouse and appears in no other repository of historical documents or official records. No copies of the document are known to exist. The townships and *115 their residents long used a line depicted in the Cambria County tax assessment map as the common boundary.

In 2004, the townships were putative defendants in litigation arising from an automobile accident, and they disputed their liability based upon the location of the accident. With the location of the true boundary thus in question, the townships jointly hired a professional surveyor, Frederick Brown, to identify and plot the boundary. 2 Brown relied, in part, upon a survey of nearby municipalities that was performed around 1980. That survey was not conducted to ascertain the boundary between Adams and Richland, but purportedly depicted the northernmost point where the townships meet. Brown further considered a number of “monuments” that aided in his location of that northernmost point along the boundary. Brown believed that a monument to the south of that point established a line, and that, because the original boundary was a straight line, such a line could be extended to determine the location of the southernmost point where the townships meet. Thus, Brown opined, that line was the original boundary between Adams and Richland. As further support, Brown pointed to differentiations in macadam on two roads near his proposed line.

In 2006, Watkins Glen Properties, Inc. (“Watkins Glen”), was planning to develop a subdivision on a plot of land that ostensibly was situated in both Adams and Richland, and it sought clarification from the townships as to the location of the municipal boundary. Richland advised Watkins Glen to follow the tax assessment line, but Adams advised the developer to follow the line established in Brown’s survey. The matter remained unresolved for seven years before Watkins Glen requested that the townships resolve their disagreement over the location of the boundary. Accordingly, on April 17, 2013, Adams filed an action for a declaratory judgment, seeking a judicial declaration that Brown’s proposed line represents the *116 true boundary between Adams and Richland. The trial court, in turn, appointed a board of commissioners (“Board”) pursuant to Section 303 3 of the Second Class Township Code, 53 P.S. §§ 65101 et seq., to determine the location of the boundary.

The Board held hearings on November 15, 2013, December 20, 2013, and April 4, 2014. In support of its position, Adams presented the testimony of Frederick Brown, who explained the reasoning behind his survey. Richland offered the testimony of another professional surveyor, David Kalina. Kalina did not conduct his own survey, but he testified that he researched historical documents dating back to 1872. Kalina agreed with Brown that the original boundary was a straight line, but his research led him to conclude that the northernmost point where Adams and Richland meet is a point northeast of the location that Brown identified. Kalina opined that the original boundary could be discerned by extending a line from that point southward to a farm that he identified as the original southern point of convergence between the townships. Kalina believed that the older records that he consulted were more reliable than the documents upon which Brown relied, because they were created closer in time to the establishment of the original boundary.

Relative to the previously-accepted 4 tax assessment line, the differing boundary lines that Brown and Kalina suggested *117 would have varying impacts upon property owners in the area. Brown’s proposed boundary would move at least six individuals’ properties, including a substantial portion of Watkins Glen’s proposed subdivision, from Richland into Adams, and would move several properties from Adams into Richland. Kalina’s proposed boundary, lying well to the east of Brown’s and the tax assessment line, would move hundreds of properties from Adams into Richland.

The Board also heard testimony from numerous residents of the disputed area, In general, the residents expressed a desire to maintain the status quo of using the tax assessment line as the municipal boundary because they had come to rely upon it in making decisions regarding their properties. All residents who testified indicated that they wished for their properties to remain situated according to their understanding of the township boundary, or explained that they would not have purchased property in the other township originally. 5 Under questioning, some residents stated that they would not object to an alternative boundary, provided that it would not move their properties into the other township. 6 Some residents explained that differing tax rates or property values influenced their decisions regarding where to purchase property. 7 Numerous residents highlighted the importance of sending their children to their preferred school district. 8

Of significance to the Board’s subsequent legal determination, three residents testified that they built houses upon their properties (or made substantial renovations) based upon their *118 understandings of the municipal boundary. 9 Specifically, Debra Kuhne testified that she purchased property in 1985, relying upon surveys, county maps, and tax assessment records that indicated that the property lay in Richland. N.T., 11/15/2013, at 87. She constructed a house on the property in 1986. Id. at 92.

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Bluebook (online)
154 A.3d 250, 638 Pa. 109, 2017 Pa. LEXIS 393, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/adams-twp-v-richland-apl-of-richland-pa-2017.