D.A. Sechrist & B.W. Morgan v. J.D. Danish & M.A. Danish

CourtCommonwealth Court of Pennsylvania
DecidedFebruary 20, 2024
Docket941 C.D. 2022
StatusPublished

This text of D.A. Sechrist & B.W. Morgan v. J.D. Danish & M.A. Danish (D.A. Sechrist & B.W. Morgan v. J.D. Danish & M.A. Danish) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Commonwealth Court of Pennsylvania primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
D.A. Sechrist & B.W. Morgan v. J.D. Danish & M.A. Danish, (Pa. Ct. App. 2024).

Opinion

IN THE COMMONWEALTH COURT OF PENNSYLVANIA

Deborah A. Sechrist and Bill W. : Morgan : : v. : No. 941 C.D. 2022 : ARGUED: September 11, 2023 Joseph D. Danish and Maria A. Danish, : Appellants :

BEFORE: HONORABLE CHRISTINE FIZZANO CANNON, Judge HONORABLE STACY WALLACE, Judge HONORABLE BONNIE BRIGANCE LEADBETTER, Senior Judge

OPINION BY SENIOR JUDGE LEADBETTER FILED: February 20, 2024

Appellants, Joseph D. Danish and Maria A. Danish, appeal from a judgment and decree of the Court of Common Pleas of Huntingdon County entering judgment in favor of Deborah A. Sechrist and Bill W. Morgan (together, the Morgans)1 and finding that a private road exists across the Danish Property in favor of the Morgan Property. For the following reasons, we reverse. I. Background The Danish Property and the Morgan Property are large, rural parcels of adjoining land.2 Both properties are located in Shirley Township, Huntingdon

1 While Bill W. Morgan and Deborah Ann Morgan Sechrist are brother and sister, rather than husband and wife, we will refer to them as “the Morgans” for ease of reference. See Reproduced Record (R.R.) at 51. We note that the page numbers of the Reproduced Record are not followed by a small a, as required by Pennsylvania Rule of Appellate Procedure 2173, Pa.R.A.P. 2173. 2 The Danish Property consists of approximately 159 acres, and the Morgan Property approximately 90 acres. See R.R. at 3-4. County, and both have frontage along Hill Valley Road, State Route 747. The Morgans claim that a private road, commonly referred to as Ridge Road,3 exists across the Danish Property, connecting the Morgan Property to Hill Valley Road.4 At the crux of this case is a dispute between the parties regarding the extent Ridge Road existed and was used prior to 1963, i.e., whether Ridge Road existed as a private road at that time. It is undisputed, however, that in 1963, the Township passed Ordinance No. 1963-45 pertaining to Ridge Road titled “AN ORDINANCE OF THE TOWNSHIP OF SHIRLEY, COUNTY OF HUNTINGDON AND COMMONWEALTH OF PENNSYLVANIA, ADOPTING AND TAKING OVER A CERTAIN ROAD IN THE SAID TOWNSHIP OF SHIRLEY AS A PUBLIC ROAD.” Reproduced Record (R.R.) at 12-13, 107. The language of Ordinance No. 1963-4 refers to both adopting Ridge Road as an existing road and opening the road. See R.R. at 14 (stating “[a] draft of said road proposed to be opened,” and “following a hearing in consideration of the laying out of the said road,” as well as providing that the road “be adopted and taken over by the Township” as a public road) (emphasis added). The parties further agree that Ridge Road was open and maintained as a public road from 1963 until 1995. R.R. at 109. However, “as time went on, the public need for [] Ridge Road diminished, and [] dumping along the road – particularly on the upper portion across the Morgan Property – became a serious issue.” R.R. at 111. Because of this, the Morgans’ father and predecessor in interest,

3 The road at issue is also referred to by the parties and throughout the record as Nebo Road. Ridge Road is basically an extension of Nebo Road. 4 A more extensive description of Ridge Road can be found in the trial court opinion. See R.R. at 105-07. Ridge Road is further depicted on a map admitted into the trial court record as Danish Exhibit 1. See R.R. at 94. 5 Shirley Twp., Huntingdon County, Pa., Ordinance No. 1963-4 (1963).

2 Bill L. Morgan (Father), led a petition drive in 1995 to have Ridge Road vacated so that it could be gated off. Father obtained the necessary number of signatures from surrounding property owners, including Mr. Danish, to petition the Township to close Ridge Road. See R.R. at 19. On September 27, 1995, the Township enacted Ordinance No. 1995-2,6 which provides, in pertinent part:

The Township [] hereby vacates any and all right, title[,] and interest it has in the section of [Ridge] Road (Shirley Township Route 407) between Wrangletown Road and State Route 747 such that all right title and interest thereto reverts to the owners of any properties which either adjoin or totally encompass that section of the former township road.

R.R. at 17, 113 (emphasis added). Notably, Ordinance No. 1995-2 does not specify that Ridge Road shall revert to or become a private road upon the vacation. The parties agree that a gate was placed across Ridge Road shortly after Ordinance No. 1995-2 took effect, and that the illegal dumping ceased. They strongly disagree, however, “with respect to the intended situation after the closing of [Ridge R]oad, what use had been made of the road after it was closed, and who had the ability to get through the gate.” R.R. at 113. The underlying dispute arose after the Morgans subdivided a portion of their property into three lots, with the intent to use Ridge Road for access. At the request of the prospective buyer, the Morgans asked the Danishes for written confirmation of the existence of Ridge Road and the Morgans’ right to its use. The Danishes refused to provide such confirmation and indicated their intent to interfere with the Morgans’ use of Ridge Road.

6 Shirley Twp., Huntingdon County, Pa., Ordinance No. 1995-2 (1995).

3 Because of this, the Morgans filed a declaratory judgment action in the trial court in September 2020. The complaint sought a declaration “that [Ridge] Road constitutes a 25’[-]wide easement for the purposes of ingress, egress[,] and regress to and from the [Morgan] Property,” as well as entry of an order in the Office of the Recorder of Deeds confirming same. R.R. at 7. The sole count of the complaint averred that when a township vacates a public road via ordinance, a private road is created by operation of Section 1 of what is commonly known as the Private Road Act,7 36 P.S. § 2781, with a right-of-way of 25 feet. R.R. at 6 [citing Schantz v. Bahry, 43 A.3d 536, 542-43 (Pa. Cmwlth. 2012)]. The Morgans further requested “a permanent injunction which enjoins the [Danishes], their heirs, successors[,] and assigns from obstructing or preventing the use of [Ridge] Road for ingress, egress[,] and regress, to and from the [Morgan] Property[.]” Id. The Danishes filed a preliminary objection asserting that the complaint should be dismissed for failure to join indispensable parties. See R.R. at 22-26. They maintained that the parcels of nine other property owners would be impacted by the declaratory judgment action since Ridge Road crosses their properties as well, and that the trial court could not adequately address the Morgans’ claim absent their joinder as parties. The Morgans filed both a response in opposition as well as a preliminary objection to the preliminary objection, arguing that it should be dismissed as untimely.8 The trial court overruled the preliminary objection regarding indispensable parties and declined to address the issue of timeliness. R.R. at 37.

7 Act of April 17, 1929, P.L. 530, 36 P.S. §§ 2731-2891. 8 Counsel for the Morgans claimed that while he consented to the Danishes’ request for an extension of time to file a “responsive pleading,” he did not specifically consent to such an extension for the purpose of filing preliminary objections. R.R. at 29. Moreover, while the Danishes were served with the complaint in October 2020, their preliminary objection was not filed until March 26, 2021, making it untimely. Id.

4 The matter proceeded to a bench trial on November 1, 2021. The Morgans presented the testimony of Kenneth Mentzer, whose grandparents previously owned the Morgan Property. Mr. Mentzer lived on the Morgan Property from his birth in 1938 until 1950. He personally traveled Ridge Road many times in the 1940s and stated that members of the general public, not just individuals who lived on the road, used it as a shortcut between Wrangletown Road and Hill Valley Road. R.R. at 107. Mr.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
D.A. Sechrist & B.W. Morgan v. J.D. Danish & M.A. Danish, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/da-sechrist-bw-morgan-v-jd-danish-ma-danish-pacommwct-2024.