Associates of Philipsburg v. Hurwitz

437 A.2d 447, 292 Pa. Super. 406, 1981 Pa. Super. LEXIS 3779
CourtSuperior Court of Pennsylvania
DecidedNovember 20, 1981
Docket878
StatusPublished
Cited by15 cases

This text of 437 A.2d 447 (Associates of Philipsburg v. Hurwitz) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Superior Court of Pennsylvania primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Associates of Philipsburg v. Hurwitz, 437 A.2d 447, 292 Pa. Super. 406, 1981 Pa. Super. LEXIS 3779 (Pa. Ct. App. 1981).

Opinion

MONTGOMERY, Judge:

The Plaintiff-Appellant filed the instant appeal from a final order of the lower court which sustained preliminary objections in the nature of a demurrer and dismissed the Appellant’s Petition for Declaratory Judgment. The Appellant instituted this action to resolve rights concerning the use of an entranceway to certain properties owned and/or controlled by the various parties to this case.

The record shows that the Appellant, Associates of Philipsburg, is a general partnership which is the successor in title to certain property in Decatur Township, Clearfield County. At the time of the filing of this action, the Appellant had a shopping plaza on that property. The immediate predecessor in title to the Appellant’s property was an entity known as the Trustees of C.I. Mortgage Group (hereinafter referred to as “Trustees”). The Trustees had purchased the property on September 3, 1974 from the Appellee Hurwitz Brothers. The two individuals trading and doing business under that name were the Appellees Edsel F. and Alfred B. Hurwitz, apparently operating as a partnership. A little more than a year after the Trustees purchased the shopping *409 plaza property from Hurwitz Brothers, both parties executed documents granting each other a right-of-way for entry to each property, from U.S. Route 322, over adjoining corners of land which each controlled along that road. At that time, on November 24, 1975, Hurwitz Brothers still retained property situated contiguous to and generally east of the property then owned by Trustees, and later owned by the Appellant. The pertinent sections of the November, 1975 agreement provided as follows:

1. The Parties hereto hereby mutually agree, one with the other, that each of the respective parties shall have a perpetual right to use the respective entranceways herein-before referred to and set out on the drawing hereinabove referred to which is attached to this Agreement. The respective rights to use both of said entranceways shall inure to the benefit of the successors in title and the respective agents, contractors, employees, lessees, business invitees, and business licensees and the customers of any business on the premises owned by the respective Parties; with full right of ingress and egress by pedestrians and vehicles relative to said entranceways.
It is understood and agreed by and between the Parties hereto that as of the date of the execution of this Agreement, the entranceway to the lands of the Parties of the First Part, outlined in green upon the attached map and being designated by the letter “D” is being utilized solely in connection with the operation of the shopping center of the Party of the Second Part on adjacent premises.
3. It is covenanted and agreed between the Parties hereto that if and in the event other lands of the Parties of the First Part located to the east and south of the shopping center of the Party of the Second Part are developed, that then and in that event the care and maintenance of the entranceway on the above described premises shall be the equal responsibility of the parties hereto; and they shall be liable severally for damages resulting from their own use of the entranceway.
*410 4. This Agreement shall be bind upon and inure to the benefit of the heirs, executors, administrators, successors and assigns of the respective Parties hereto.

In February, 1979, Hurwitz Brothers conveyed a parcel of land comprising .371 acre to the Appellees, llene, Francine and Irwin Hurwitz, together with a right-of-way over the entranceway from U.S. Route 322 which had been the subject of the November, 1975 agreement between the Trustees and the Hurwitz Brothers. Subsequently, llene, Francine and Irwin Hurwitz leased the tract to Franchise Realty Interstate Corporation. By.an easement agreement.dated later in February, 1979, the Franchise Realty Interstate Corporation acquired from the Hurwitz Brothers a right-of-way over the entranceway which has been referred to above. Subsequently, Franchise Realty Interstate Corporation assigned all of its right and interest in the property to the McDonald’s Corporation, an Appellant herein.

In addition to the transactions described above, the Appellees llene, Francine and Irwin Hurwitz were conveyed a tract of land containing .588 acre from another Appellee, the Bronia Corporation. In consideration of that transfer, the Hurwitz Brothers conveyed to Bronia Corporation a right-of-way over the entrance way from Route 322 to adjacent property owned by the Bronia Corporation. The Bronia property was farther to the south and east than the properties belonging to the other parties. The transfer of the right-of-way from Hurwitz Brothers to Bronia Corporation and the conveyance of the small tract of land to llene, Francine and Irwin Hurwitz all took place in February, 1979. Later that year, in September, Bronia Corporation conveyed an additional 6.14 acre tract to llene, Francine and Irwin Hurwitz, while reserving unto itself in the deed a right-of-way extending from the right-of-way it acquired in the February transaction, through the property then being conveyed to llene, Francine and Irwin Hurwitz, to a roadway owned by Bronia Corporation located to the east of the 6.14 acre tract.

*411 In view of the somewhat complex nature of these various transactions, it appears that it would be helpful and appropriate to summarize all of these facts and transactions in simpler form. In summary, Hurwitz Brothers and the Trustees owned neighboring properties and wished to give each other a right-of-way over corners of their adjoining land at an entranceway from U.S. Route 322. Thus, the Hurwitz Brothers conveyed a right-of-way over its entranceway to Route 322 to the Trustees in November, 1975, and simultaneously took in return a right-of-way over the Trustees’ contiguous entranceway. Hurwitz Brothers subsequently conveyed rights-of-way over the same entranceways in 1979 to llene, Francine and Irwin Hurwitz, the Bronia Corporation, and a predecessor in title of the McDonald’s Corporation. All of the latter, as well as the Hurwitz Brothers, were named as defendants in an action instituted by the Appellant, which had succeeded to the rights of the Trustees in the November, 1975 agreement.

The Appellant filed its action in December, 1979 seeking a declaration, from the Court, of its rights under the November, 1975 agreement between the Hurwitz Brothers and the Trustees. Appellant requested injunctive relief against the use of the right-of-way by various Appellees. Each of the Appellees subsequently filed preliminary objections in the nature of demurrers to the Appellant’s Petition. Following oral argument and the submission of briefs, the trial court issued a Memorandum and Order sustaining the preliminary objections.

In its original pleading, which was titled “Petition in Declaratory Judgment”, the Plaintiff-Appellant recited the various property transactions explained above, and averred that the various Appellees would utilize the common right-of-way over the entranceway in question, in derogation of its own rights in the entranceway. More specifically, the Appellant alleged that the use of the entranceway by the Appellees, “. . .

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
437 A.2d 447, 292 Pa. Super. 406, 1981 Pa. Super. LEXIS 3779, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/associates-of-philipsburg-v-hurwitz-pasuperct-1981.