CHERYL LEONARD VS. PERA PANTICH (C-000019-18, SALEM COUNTY AND STATEWIDE)

CourtNew Jersey Superior Court Appellate Division
DecidedAugust 27, 2020
DocketA-5645-18T1
StatusUnpublished

This text of CHERYL LEONARD VS. PERA PANTICH (C-000019-18, SALEM COUNTY AND STATEWIDE) (CHERYL LEONARD VS. PERA PANTICH (C-000019-18, SALEM COUNTY AND STATEWIDE)) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering New Jersey Superior Court Appellate Division primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
CHERYL LEONARD VS. PERA PANTICH (C-000019-18, SALEM COUNTY AND STATEWIDE), (N.J. Ct. App. 2020).

Opinion

NOT FOR PUBLICATION WITHOUT THE APPROVAL OF THE APPELLATE DIVISION This opinion shall not "constitute precedent or be binding upon any court." Although it is posted on the internet, this opinion is binding only on the parties in the case and its use in other cases is limited. R. 1:36-3.

SUPERIOR COURT OF NEW JERSEY APPELLATE DIVISION DOCKET NO. A-5645-18T1

CHERYL LEONARD,

Plaintiff-Respondent,

v.

PERA PANTICH,

Defendant-Appellant. _______________________

Submitted July 13, 2020 – Decided August 27, 2020

Before Judges Suter and Natali.

On appeal from the Superior Court of New Jersey, Chancery Division, Salem County, Docket No. C-000019-18.

Telsey & Telsey LLC, attorneys for appellant (Adam I. Telsey and Kristin J. Telsey, on the briefs).

Cresse & Carr and DeSimone Law Offices LLC, attorneys for respondent (John G. Carr and John G. DeSimone, on the brief).

PER CURIAM In this quiet title action involving a boundary line dispute between two

neighbors, defendant Pera Pantich appeals from an August 14, 2019 Chancery

Division order granting judgment after a non-jury trial to plaintiff Cheryl

Leonard declaring her the owner of Block 11, Lot 3 in the Township of Elsinboro

consistent with a September 27, 2006 survey prepared by Richard C.

Waddington (Waddington survey). The court also ordered defendant to remove

a fence constructed on the rear of the property and an approximate three -foot

portion of a stone driveway that encroached on the front portion of the property,

denied plaintiff's claim for money damages and counsel fees, and dismissed

defendant's counterclaims sounding in adverse possession and prescriptive

easement. We affirm.

I.

Plaintiff has owned and resided at 75 Sinnickson Landing Road since

September 29, 2006. When she purchased the property, she obtained the

Waddington survey along with a title insurance policy. The Waddington survey

contained a notation identifying an "[i]ron pipe found [eighteen] inches deep,

iron bars had flush" (Waddington pipe)1 as the property line of the western side

1 For purposes of distinction and clarity, we refer to the iron pipe identified in the Waddington survey as the Waddington pipe and the white post near (continued) A-5645-18T1 2 of her lot. In addition, the survey noted a fence line along the property with a

portion of defendant's wire mesh fence located in the rear of the lot. While it

did note the stone portion of defendant's driveway, the Waddington survey did

not classify it as an encroachment.

Plaintiff testified that she obtained a $600 financial settlement from her

title company "for the loss of property that's shown on the [2006] endorsement,"

which appears to be the rear fence encroachment. 2 Plaintiff testified that after

she acquired the property, she maintained the portion of the property

surrounding the white post. In this regard, when maintaining the property,

plaintiff testified she abided by "[w]hat [she] believed to be the property line,

basically pretty much a straight line from the fence over to the road."

Defendant, plaintiff's next-door neighbor, has lived at 79 Sinnickson

Landing Road since 1980 and purchased it on February 20, 1981. On October

26, 2010, plaintiff mailed a letter along with the Waddington survey to defendant

plaintiff's hedges as "the white post." Plaintiff claimed that the Waddington pipe is the boundary of her property, while defendant alleged that the boundary was identified by the white post, which was closer to plaintiff's house than the Waddington pipe. 2 On direct examination, plaintiff's counsel referred to the endorsement as "the 2016 endorsement" but the substantive line of questioning, as well as the October 13, 2006 date on the endorsement document itself, clearly referred to the settlement plaintiff obtained as part of the property purchase in 2006. A-5645-18T1 3 in which she stated her belief "that [defendant's] fence is over the property line"

and asked him to remove the fence. Defendant responded by letter on November

15, 2010, disagreeing with the property line in the Waddington survey and

contending that the "real property line" is at the location of a white post near the

hedges on the property.

According to plaintiff, defendant replenished his stone driveway in 2015

up to six inches away from the white post, which coincided with the area

plaintiff considered to be her property. He also replaced the old wire mesh fence

in the rear of the property in favor of a new chain link fence.

In conjunction with a fence plaintiff intended to put up, she obtained a

survey prepared by James A. Clancy (Clancy survey) as well as a zoning permit

so she "could move forward with installing [a] fence at the correct location" of

her property, and more specifically along the fence line. The Clancy survey

indicated a "[s]ix-inch encroachment in the back corner." Defendant claimed

that he owned that portion of the property and disputed that he extended the

width of the driveway in any fashion. As a result of the parties' dispute, plaintiff

has not proceeded to install the fence.

On November 7, 2018, plaintiff filed a verified complaint in the Chancery

Division, General Equity Part, to quiet title pursuant to N.J.S.A. 2A:62-2

A-5645-18T1 4 seeking a judgment ordering that plaintiff owns Block 11, Lot 3 as described in

the Waddington survey and ordering that defendant vacate same to the extent

any encroachment existed. Plaintiff also sought an order for defendant to

remove the fence and stone driveway allegedly encroaching on her property , as

well as damages for the costs of obtaining the Clancy survey. In response,

defendant counterclaimed that he owned the disputed land by adverse

possession, N.J.S.A. 2A:14-30, or by a prescriptive easement.

On July 15, 2019, the trial court conducted a bench trial. Plaintiff testified

first and, as noted, indicated her belief that defendant's fence and driveway

constituted encroachments based on the Waddington and Clancy surveys. She

also stated that when she replaced the hedges on the property, she planted them

"about five feet away [from the Waddington pipe] knowing the trees were going

to extend" and so they "wouldn't cause an encroachment." On cross-

examination, she testified regarding a Facebook post in which she indicated that

"if people wanted to see where [her] property began, to look for th[e] white

marker." When asked by defense counsel why she referred to the white post as

her property marker and not the Waddington pipe, plaintiff explained that the

white post "was something that was visible and easy to reference versus telling

A-5645-18T1 5 them to look for the buried . . . property marker underneath the ground you could

not see."

Plaintiff's son, Thain Strzelecki, also testified. He stated that he mowed

the grass and "would go along [defendant's] fence and basically continue that

line straight out towards the road" beginning around 2006 or 2007 and ending

in 2016 and that defendant had never asked him not to do so. Further, he testified

that once defendant had his driveway replenished, he began to mow over stones

which he indicated were "installed over the property that [he] used to mow." At

the close of plaintiff's case, defendant moved for involuntary dismissal pursuant

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CHERYL LEONARD VS. PERA PANTICH (C-000019-18, SALEM COUNTY AND STATEWIDE), Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/cheryl-leonard-vs-pera-pantich-c-000019-18-salem-county-and-statewide-njsuperctappdiv-2020.