Daddona v. Thorpe

749 A.2d 475, 2000 Pa. Super. 75, 2000 Pa. Super. LEXIS 255
CourtSuperior Court of Pennsylvania
DecidedMarch 14, 2000
StatusPublished
Cited by27 cases

This text of 749 A.2d 475 (Daddona v. Thorpe) 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
Daddona v. Thorpe, 749 A.2d 475, 2000 Pa. Super. 75, 2000 Pa. Super. LEXIS 255 (Pa. Ct. App. 2000).

Opinion

HUDOCK, J.:

¶ 1 Joe and Linda Thorpe (the Thorpes) appeal from the final decree entered by the trial court, which, inter alia, permanently enjoined them from erecting a fence or other obstruction over a common paved driveway. We affirm.

*477 ¶2 The factual findings of the court below, as well as the procedural history of the instant litigation, can be summarized as follows: Donald and Eva Daddona (the Daddonas) presently reside at 321 East Emmaus Avenue in Allentown, Lehigh County (the Daddona property). The Thorpes presently reside at 333 East Em-maus Avenue (the Thorpe property). Frederick and Dorothy Burton own the property located at the rear of 321 East Emmaus Avenue (the Burton Property). All three properties are contiguous. The Daddona property is located to the west of the Thorpe property and to the south of the Burton Property. Emmaus Avenue is an east-west road that is located to the south of the properties. Slate Alley is situated to the immediate north of both the Thorpe and Burton properties.

¶ 3 On February 27, 1919, Howard F. Frey acquired title to all three properties by way of a deed recorded in the Office of the Recorder of Deeds of Lehigh County. On September 26, 1966, Virginia Daddona acquired title to what is now the Thorpe property from Helen Pivilinsky. At the time of this acquisition, there was a stone driveway that had been in that location since at least 1916, running from Emmaus Avenue and providing access to all three properties, across Trout Creek, to Slate Alley. This same driveway is at issue in the present case. At the present time, the driveway is now paved and connects Em-maus Avenue with Slate Alley.

¶4 At the time Virginia Daddona acquired title to the Thorpe property, Nina Creveling Christine owned both the Dad-dona and Burton properties. The Chris-tines used the driveway at issue to access their home on the Daddona property. Until 1980, the driveway between the Thorpe and Daddona properties was known as “Christine Lane”. Virginia Daddona never gave permission to anyone to use Christine Lane because she believed it was for her use and that the common paved driveway would serve all three properties. Indeed, since 1966, the respective owners and visitors to all three properties have utilized the existing driveway as a means of ingress and egress.

¶ 5 On November 14, 1968, Nina Crevel-ing Christine conveyed what is now the Burton property and the Daddona property to the Daddonas, along with Donald’s brother Anthony Daddona, and his wife Virginia. (This is the same Virginia who, since 1966, held title to the Thorpe property). By way of deed dated May 12, 1988, Donald and Eva Daddona acquired sole title to the Daddona property from themselves and Anthony and Virginia Daddona. From 1968 to present, Donald and Eva Daddona live in a house on the Daddona property that has been located there since at least 1916.

¶ 6 Anthony and Virginia Daddona never lived at the residence located on the Dad-dona property, nor maintained it. Moreover, they did not make payments on the mortgage on the Daddona property and their names appeared in the Daddona chain of title as a mere accommodation. Since 1968, the Daddonas have maintained and repaired the driveway at issue, including paving and patching, removing tree limbs, plowing snow, and raking leaves. In addition, the Daddonas have continuously, on a daily basis, used the driveway to access the Daddona property.

¶ 7 As a result of a flood in 1972, the driveway’s bridge across Trout Creek was washed out and Donald and Anthony Dad-dona replaced the original wood and steel bridge with a concrete bridge and repaved the driveway. Also in 1972, Donald Dad-dona built the original porch and sidewalk leading to the existing driveway from his residence on the Daddona property. In 1995, Donald Daddona made substantial improvements to the sidewalk.

¶ 8 On or about January 23, 1980, the Daddonas, together with Anthony and Virginia Daddona, by deed conveyed to Gene J. Riggins (Riggins) land now known as the Burton property. At the time of this conveyance, there was a structure on the *478 property, which had been used as a business office for a contracting business operated by the Daddona brothers. Prior to the time of the conveyance of what is now the Burton property, the property owned by the Daddona couples abutted both Em-maus Avenue, a public road on the southern border of the property and Slate Alley, an alley on the northern border of the property which had been laid out as a public alley on the Plan of Overlook Terrace, but not accepted as a public alley. As a result of the transfer of the Burton property to Riggins, the Daddona property no longer abutted Slate alley.

¶ 9 In order for the Daddonas to transfer the Burton property to Riggins, it was necessary for them to obtain subdivision approval from Salisbury Township, the municipality in which the subject properties are located. As part of the subdivision approval process, Salisbury Township required the Daddona couples, Riggins, and the Bank of Pennsylvania, in its capacity as mortgagee to Riggins, to enter into a sewer easement and right of way agreement. The parties to the Burton property conveyance entered into a sewer easement, which was duly recorded, on or about January 24, 1980. The sewer easement depicts an “existing driveway” running from Emmaus Avenue on the Thorpe property, through that property, to Slate Alley, together with a bridge spanning Trout Creek and a “proposed 25’ drive” running from Emmaus Avenue immediately adjacent to the western side of the existing driveway in the area between Emmaus Avenue and Trout Creek, stopping before reaching Trout Creek. The proposed driveway was not meant to provide access to the residence on the Daddona property, but rather, was contemplated to provide access to a future subdivision of the portion of the Daddona property that borders on Emmaus Avenue. The proposed driveway does not coincide with the boundaries of the right of way agreement entered into by the parties to the Burton property conveyance.

¶ 10 On or about January 24, 1980, the parties to the Burton property conveyance entered into a right of way agreement. At that time, the parties to the right of way agreement believed that the existing driveway, which was actually completely on the Thorpe property, ran along the boundary line between the Thorpe and Daddona properties. 1 The parties to the right of way agreement did not have a survey completed prior to entering into the agreement. The right of way area described in the agreement is contiguous, but not identical to, the driveway, which existed on the Thorpe property in 1968 when Nina Crev-eling Christine conveyed what is now the Daddona and Burton properties to the Daddona couples. As described in the right of way agreement, the right of way would pass within approximately two feet from the home of the Daddonas.

¶ 11 The parties to the right of way agreement directed its scrivener, Harry Creveling, now deceased, to prepare a right of way agreement which would describe the metes and bounds of the right of way in a manner consistent with the existing driveway so that all of the parties, their heirs and assigns, would have the benefit of using the existing driveway. The intent of the parties was to have a twenty-five foot easement, twelve -and one-half to both the east and west of the existing driveway.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
749 A.2d 475, 2000 Pa. Super. 75, 2000 Pa. Super. LEXIS 255, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/daddona-v-thorpe-pasuperct-2000.