Bratina, M. v. Bunting, W.

2025 Pa. Super. 224
CourtSuperior Court of Pennsylvania
DecidedOctober 1, 2025
Docket1621 EDA 2024
StatusPublished

This text of 2025 Pa. Super. 224 (Bratina, M. v. Bunting, W.) 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
Bratina, M. v. Bunting, W., 2025 Pa. Super. 224 (Pa. Ct. App. 2025).

Opinion

J-S19029-25

2025 PA Super 224

MATTHEW BRATINA AND DENISE : IN THE SUPERIOR COURT OF BRATINA : PENNSYLVANIA : Appellants : : : v. : : : No. 1621 EDA 2024 WILLIAM BUNTING, JR. AND : BEATRICE BUNTING, AND WILLIAM : F. MCGURRIN :

Appeal from the Orders Entered May 13, 2024 In the Court of Common Pleas of Philadelphia County Civil Division at No: 211200475

BEFORE: PANELLA, P.J.E., STABILE, J., and BECK, J.

OPINION BY STABILE, J.: FILED OCTOBER 1, 2025

In this boundary dispute action, Denise Bratina (Appellant) seeks review

of orders entered by the Court of Common Pleas of Philadelphia County (trial

court), striking a verdict in her favor and denying post-trial relief. 1 Following

a bench trial, the Honorable Jacqueline F. Allen found that the former owner

of Appellant’s property, William F. McGurrin (McGurrin), was liable to Appellant

for $35,173.35 in damages. After the verdict was entered, Judge Allen retired,

and the case was reassigned to the Honorable Damaris Garcia, who granted

McGurrin’s post-trial motion to strike the verdict on the ground that all of

Appellant’s evidence of damages was inadmissible hearsay. Appellant now

argues that the rulings of Judge Allen were binding on Judge Garcia, and that

____________________________________________

1 Appellant’s husband, Matthew Bratina, passed away on March 2, 2023, during the pendency of the case. J-S19029-25

regardless, her evidence of damages was both admissible and sufficient to

sustain the verdict. Finding merit in Appellant’s evidentiary claim, we vacate

the orders on review and remand the case for further proceedings.

On December 9, 2021, Appellant commenced the instant action against

her neighbors, Appellees, William Bunting, Jr. and Beatrice Bunting (the

Buntings), as well as a former owner of Appellant’s property, McGurrin. In

her Complaint, Appellant alleged that the subject property (803 Inverness

Lane, Philadelphia, Pennsylvania 19128) was encroached upon by a fence

between it and an adjacent lot (805 Inverness Lane) owned by the Buntings.

Appellant asserted claims against the Buntings for ejectment (Count I),

trespass (Count II), and a declaratory judgment as to the parties’ property

lines (Count V).

Appellant also asserted claims against McGurrin for a violation of

Pennsylvania’s Unfair Trade Practices and Consumer Protection Law (UTPCPL)

(73 P.S. § 201–1 et seq.) (Count III) and negligent misrepresentation (Count

IV). She alleged that McGurrin knowingly sold her the subject property

without disclosing that the fence between 803 and 805 Inverness Lane had in

effect reduced the size of her lot.

At the bench trial held on September 26, 2023, the following facts were

adduced:

In the early 1960s, a fence enclosed the yard of the 805 property [owned by the Buntings]. The wire fence was treated as the dividing line between the 805 property and the neighboring property located at 803 Inverness Lane, Philadelphia, PA. [In] 1981, the fence was changed to a chain link fence.

-2- J-S19029-25

[McGurrin] purchased the 803 property in 1989. In or around 1999, a survey of the 803 property was completed. McGurrin discovered that the fence encroached upon a portion of the 803 [p]roperty. The fence remained in place from 1989 to 2017, when McGurrin sold his property to [Appellant]. [Appellant] discovered the encroachment in 2021, when a survey was completed.

Trial Court 1925(a) Opinion, 12/10/2024, at 2-3 (some internal citations and

all footnotes omitted).

To assist her in proving her damages, Appellant sought to introduce her

“Statement of Damages,” which was identified at trial as “Exhibit 16” (The

Statement). The body of the Statement is a 4-page summary of Appellant’s

underlying allegations as to the loss of property and property value caused by

the encroaching fence dividing 803 and 805 Inverness Lane. Attached to the

Statement were five exhibits labelled, “A,” “B,” “D,” “E,” and “F.”

Exhibit A of the Statement was the warranty deed executed between

McGurrin and Appellant at the time of the property’s sale; exhibit B was a

survey map of Appellant’s property; exhibit D was a chart printed from the

City of Philadelphia Department of Revenue website showing the property tax

amounts paid on Appellant’s property; exhibit E was a print-out from an MLS

(multiple listing service) website showing Appellant’s property; and exhibit F

was a print-out from the City of Philadelphia Department of Revenue website

showing the assessed market value of Appellant’s property.

The Statement also included an attachment of a page printed from

Zillow.com (exhibit C), which included an assessed value of Appellant’s

-3- J-S19029-25

property. McGurrin specifically objected to that portion of the Statement on

hearsay grounds, and the objection was sustained. At no point in this case

was the content of the Zillow print-out admitted into evidence, and its

exclusion is not now at issue.

The averments and calculations in the Statement are straight-forward.

A city assessment and private survey determined the size of Appellant’s

property to be 13,500 square feet. The alleged encroachment area was about

1,084 square feet, or 8.02% of the total lot.

The Statement listed the undisputed purchase price of the home to be

$285,000, and an up-to-date assessed value of $332,300, as of the year of

the trial, 2023. Also listed were the property tax amounts that Appellant paid

between 2017, the year of the property’s purchase, and 2023. In those six

years, Appellant paid a total of $23,570.50 in property taxes.

According to the calculations in the Statement, 8.02% of the total

property taxes Appellant paid equaled $1,890.35, and 8.02% of the assessed

property value ($332,300) equaled $33,283.2 These two totals were added

together for a damages amount of $35,173.35, which Appellant attributed to

McGurrin. Appellant explained in her testimony that all of the figures reflected

in the Statement had already “existed in [her] head” before the exhibit was

drafted:

2 We note that 8.02% of $332,300 is in fact $26,650.46. The figure in the Statement ($332,300) is slightly over 10% of the assessed value in 2023.

-4- J-S19029-25

[Counsel]: Mrs. Bratina, how do you calculate your damages?

[Appellant]: The 8.02 percent of what I paid to the City of Philadelphia and what the City of Philadelphia has listed as the property value.

[Counsel]: Is that a calculation that you yourself made?

[Appellant]: Yes.

[Counsel]: Is that a calculation reflected in [the Statement]?

[Counsel]: Is that calculation something that you came up with before [the Statement] was put pen to paper?

[Appellant]: No. I mean, I'm sorry. I don't understand.

[Counsel]: The math?

[Appellant]: The math?

[Counsel]: Did the math exist somewhere other than [the Statement]? Did it exist in your head before [the Statement] was drafted?

[Appellant]: Well, sure. Anybody can do the math or you should be able to.

N.T. Trial, 9/26/2023, at 103.

McGurrin objected that the Statement was inadmissible primarily

because the information it contained was “expert opinion from a lay person.”

See id., at 94. Further, McGurrin argued that, since Appellant was “not

competent to testify to these things . . . [t]his document is otherwise hearsay

-5- J-S19029-25

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2025 Pa. Super. 224, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/bratina-m-v-bunting-w-pasuperct-2025.