Colquhoun, B. v. Stefanick, L.

CourtSuperior Court of Pennsylvania
DecidedApril 17, 2015
Docket764 WDA 2014
StatusUnpublished

This text of Colquhoun, B. v. Stefanick, L. (Colquhoun, B. v. Stefanick, L.) 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
Colquhoun, B. v. Stefanick, L., (Pa. Ct. App. 2015).

Opinion

J-A04013-15

NON-PRECEDENTIAL DECISION - SEE SUPERIOR COURT I.O.P. 65.37 BRIAN S. COLQUHOUN AND KATHLEEN IN THE SUPERIOR COURT OF S. COLQUHOUN, HUSBAND AND WIFE PENNSYLVANIA AND RODNEY B. MCADAMS AND BRENDA J. MCADAMS, HUSBAND AND WIFE,

Appellees

v.

LARRY L. STEFANICK AND LILIAN R. STEFANICK, HUSBAND AND WIFE,

Appellants No. 764 WDA 2014

Appeal from the Order April 15, 2014 In the Court of Common Pleas of Mercer County Civil Division at No(s): 2012-57

BEFORE: BOWES, OLSON, and STRASSBURGER,* JJ.

MEMORANDUM BY BOWES, J.: FILED APRIL 17, 2015

Larry L. and Lilian R. Stefanick appeal from the April 15, 2014 order

granting a request for ejectment and permanently enjoining them from entry

on a strip of land that traverses property owned by Appellees Brian S. and

Kathleen S. Colquoun and Rodney B. and Brenda J. McAdams. After careful

review, we affirm.

In order to properly understand this appeal, we first reproduce the

map that appears on page two of the trial court’s March 28, 2014 opinion.

____________________________________________ * Retired Senior Judge assigned to the Superior Court. J-A04013-15

The land at issue in this matter is marked on this map as the Disputed

Railroad Line. It is sixty-six feet wide, and is a portion of what used to be a

longer railroad track. The Disputed Railroad Line is located between the

properties owned by Appellees. The present appeal does not relate to the

part of the railroad line on Appellants’ real estate. The northern boundary of

the Colquhouns’ land is the southern boundary of the Disputed Railroad Line

while the northern boundary of the Disputed Railroad Line is the southern

boundary of the McAdams’ property. The Disputed Railroad Line is a portion

of a parcel that was referred to as Railroad Parcel Four in deeds in the

pertinent chain of title.

Appellees instituted this action on January 6, 2012 as a quiet title

action. Eventually, they filed a third amended complaint containing two

counts, a count in ejectment and another count in trespass seeking

monetary damages caused by Appellants’ trespass onto the Disputed

-2- J-A04013-15

Railroad Line. Appellees averred that they were the legal owners and

entitled to immediate possession of the Disputed Railroad Line since it was a

railroad right-of-way previously owned by Sharpsville Railroad Company and

expressly abandoned by that entity. They contend that fee simple ownership

of the Disputed Railroad Line reverted to their predecessors in title.

Appellees maintained that, in June 2011, Appellants took possession of the

Disputed Railroad Line by removing trees and brush on it for the stated

purpose of installing a private driveway on the Disputed Railroad Line to

Appellants’ real estate. Before starting to construct their proposed driveway,

Appellants had the Disputed Railroad Line surveyed and installed survey

stakes.

Appellees moved for a preliminary and permanent injunction to

prevent Appellants from entering onto the property until the dispute over

ownership was resolved. The preliminary injunction was granted, and the

matter eventually proceeded to a non-jury trial. The trial court, the

Honorable John C. Reed, issued an extensive opinion outlining the chain-of-

title of all the parties, and it performed an admirable job of resolving this

land dispute. Appellants and Appellees have a common grantor to their

respective properties, Robert Thompson. Mr. Thompson also owned any

land at issue in this case that became titled in the name of a railroad. The

parties’ respective positions were as follows.

-3- J-A04013-15

Appellees maintained that the Disputed Railroad Line was a section of

a railroad right-of-way and that they became owners of the Disputed

Railroad Line after the railroad abandoned the right-of-way. Under

Pennsylvania law, when a railroad right-of-way is abandoned, ownership of

the abandoned railroad track reverts to the adjacent property owners, who

each take to the centerline. Dellach v. DeNinno, 862 A.2d 117, 118

(Pa.Super. 2004) (“When a railroad abandons an easement, the right-of-way

is extinguished and the land is owned in fee simple by the owner or owners

of the land on either side of the right-of-way.”).

Appellants claimed that they own the Disputed Railroad Line in fee

simple absolute as follows. The Disputed Railroad Strip was owned by the

Sharpsville Railroad Company in fee simple and, as noted, part of a piece of

property known as Railroad Parcel Four. Railroad Parcel Four was included

in Appellants’ chain of title under a March 3, 1982 quit-claim deed from Penn

Central Corporation, as successor to the Sharpsville Railroad Company, to

Anna Sonoff.

The trial court concluded that the dispositive document in this case

was an unrecorded June 27, 1864 agreement between Robert Thompson and

Frank Allen. The document in question reads:

Witnesseth: that for and in consideration of the covenants and agreements upon the part of Frank Allen to be kept and performed by him, The said Robert Thompson hath this day agreed to release unto the Said Frank Allen, his heirs and assigns, the right of way for a coal rail road over and through land of the said Thompson situate in the Township of

-4- J-A04013-15

Hickory aforesaid, as the same is now located and surveyed and graded through said farm, being about one hundred and eight rods in length and not to exceed four (4) rods in width. In consideration of which the said Frank Allen agrees and binds himself to pay unto the said Robert Thompson, his heirs and assigns the sum of Four Hundred and Six Dollars (406 $). It is further agreed that said Thompson shall at his pleasure fence the road through the woodland being about thirty rods, for which he shall receive from said Frank Allen his assigns the sum of Sixty Dollars...

Joint Exhibit 1 and Joint Stipulation 1 (“June 27, 1864 unrecorded release”).

The Disputed Railroad Line is a portion of the right-of-way conveyed in

this document. Translating rods into feet, the trial court noted that the land

conveyed in the June 27, 1864 unrecorded release was 66 feet wide and

2,970 feet in length. The June 27, 1864 unrecorded release was assigned

on March 20, 1866, by Frank Allen, as assignor, to the Sharpsville & Oakland

Railroad Company, which was formed in January 1866, as assignee. The

trial court observed that area railroads bought rights-of-way to transport

coal from various mines in Hickory Township to iron furnaces.

Sharpsville Railroad Company, which was incorporated in 1876,

became the successor owner of this right-of-way owned by the Sharpsville &

Oakland Railroad Company through two conveyances. The first transfer was

a straw purchase. Specifically, on March 25, 1876, Sharpsville & Oakland

Railroad Company, as grantor, deeded to Charles E. Agnew, trustee, as

grantee, fifty-six parcels of land owned by it. In turn, Mr. Agnew, on March

25, 1876, conveyed the same fifty-six parcels of property the he obtained

from Sharpsville & Oakland Railroad Company to Sharpsville Railroad

-5- J-A04013-15

Company. Both of the March 25, 1876 deeds were recorded on August 25,

1876. The two deeds conveyed the right-of-way created by Mr. Thompson

on June 27, 1864, from Sharpsville & Oakland Railroad Company to

Sharpsville Railroad Company.

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Bluebook (online)
Colquhoun, B. v. Stefanick, L., Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/colquhoun-b-v-stefanick-l-pasuperct-2015.