Doman v. Brogan

592 A.2d 104, 405 Pa. Super. 254, 1991 Pa. Super. LEXIS 933
CourtSuperior Court of Pennsylvania
DecidedApril 16, 1991
Docket1115
StatusPublished
Cited by48 cases

This text of 592 A.2d 104 (Doman v. Brogan) 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
Doman v. Brogan, 592 A.2d 104, 405 Pa. Super. 254, 1991 Pa. Super. LEXIS 933 (Pa. Ct. App. 1991).

Opinion

POPOVICH, Judge:

Appeal is taken from judgment entered June 20, 1990, in the Luzerne County Court of Common Pleas establishing appellant’s and appellees’ respective property rights in a double-block dwelling. The action was one in ejectment at law to resolve a boundary dispute. We affirm.

George and Donna Doman (appellees), and Bertha Brogan (appellant), are owners of adjacent lots in a double-block dwelling—lots 34 and 36 Old Boston Road, respectively. Both parties claim title under Ada Doman, a/k/a Ada Maxwell, (appellant’s mother, appellee George’s grandmother) 1 as common grantor, said grantor having first acquired title to the full residence (lots 34 & 36) in 1955. Appellant, in 1968, began renting from Ada Doman that portion of the dwelling known as 36 Old Boston Road. In 1972 she purchased lot 36 and has since resided there. Her deed recites:

THE SAID PREMISES ARE SITUATE, BOUNDED AND DESCRIBED AS FOLLOWS:
BEGINNING at a nail in pave corner, being of the intersection of what was formally an approximate right angle turn on the Old Boston Road leading from Plymouth to Kingston, said corner being located ... (N. 62° 34' E.) ... (242.82) feet from the intersection of the Southerly line of Old Boston Road and the Northerly line of State Highway Route 11, No. 4 Spur;
*258 THENCE along the Westerly line of Old Boston Road, ... (S. 29° 45' E.) ... (60.13) feet to a corner;
THENCE along land of Robert E. Doman, et ux., ... (S. 21° 30' W.) ... (86.81) feet to the corner on the Northerly right-of-way line of State Highway Route 11;
THENCE along said right-of-way by a curve to the left by a chord having a course of ... (N. 76° 18' W.) for a distance of (40.32) feet to a corner;
BEING also the point of intersection of a line running through the center wall of a double dwelling;
THENCE along the line running through the center wall of the double dwelling ... (N. 18° 24' E.) ... (130) feet to a nail corner, the place of beginning.
This conveyance is made in accordance with a contract of sale recorded in Deed Book 1648 at page 549.

Deed Book 1745 at 819-20 (exhibit “B” plaintiffs’ complaint) (emphasis added).

Title to 34 Old Boston Road passed first from Ada Doman to her son and daughter-in-law, Robert and Victoria Doman. Robert and Victoria, George Doman’s parents, thereafter conveyed their interest in lot 34 to George and Donna Doman by deed dated March 18, 1986. The deed draws upon language found in Mrs. Brogan’s deed insofar as defining the common boundary separating the adjacent lots:

THENCE along the line running through the center wall of a double dwelling, being also along line of land now or late of Bertha Brogan, South 18 degrees 24 minutes West/S'. 18° 24' W.J ... (130) feet to the northerly right-of-way line of State Highway Route No. 4 Spur, also known as Route No. 11____

Deed Book 2187 at 383 (exhibit “A” plaintiffs’ complaint) (emphasis added).

Apparent from a literal interpretation of the parties’ respective deeds is that the lots were to be divided according to “the center wall” as further described by metes and bounds (“M & B”) figures. At trial, plaintiffs offered into *259 evidence a series of schematic diagrams. 2 See Plaintiffs’ exhibits 5-7 (exhibits 1-3 appended to this decision). It is uncontroverted that these diagrams accurately reflect the structural features of the double-residence, both presently and as of the dates Mrs. Brogan and George and Donna Doman purchased their lots, i.e., the structural features have not changed. See N.T. March 27, 1989, at 43, 53. The diagrams confirm, however, that there exists no one “center” wall forming an unbroken vertical plane from the basement to the second floor. N.T. at 16 (testimony of Gerald Fisher, registered land surveyor). Moreover, the projected M & B property line used to demarcate the mutual boundary between the lots forms one vertical plane not consistent with any wall located in the basement, first or second floor of the dwelling. 3

According to plaintiffs’ schematic diagrams, lot 34 comprises, roughly, the westerly portion of the double dwelling. Lot 36 occupies, roughly, the easterly portion. Moving from the basement upward, the full basement (lots 34 and 36) has what can be considered front (northerly) and rear (southerly) portions. The front portion is separated laterally by a wall located approximately 2.5 feet west of the projected M & B line. The rear portion is also separated by a wall (described as a “plank” wall) located approximately 2.5-3.0 feet west of the M & B line. On the first floor, the front portion is divided by a wall coextensive with the wall *260 dividing the front portion of the basement. The rear, however, is divided by a wall located roughly one foot east of the M & B line. The second floor has only a rear portion, such portion including a wall coextensive with the wall dividing the rear portion of the first floor. However, unlike each of the other walls mentioned, the second floor wall does not presently separate the lots. In fact, there is a doorway permitting lot 36 access to a bedroom physically located west of both the wall and the M & B line (except for, roughly, a one foot portion which lies east of the M & B line). A second door permitting lot 34 access to this bedroom from the west was panelled over sometime before 1956. N.T. at 41-42.

The parties’ respective positions below can be summarized as follows: Appellees assert title to, and the right to immediate possession of, a second floor bedroom, basement steps and landing occupied by appellant. See Plaintiffs’ Complaint ¶ 5. More generally, and at variance with their specific claim for the bedroom, etc., appellees contend that their title extends laterally (on all floors) up to the M & B division line as heretofore described. See Appellees’ Brief at 7-10. In defense, appellant offers the August, 1968, contract of sale referred to in appellees’ deed as recorded at Deed Book 1648 at page 549. Although we are reluctant to consider the prior agreement of sale on grounds of merger, 4 *261 nonetheless we shall consider appellant’s argument absent the prior agreement, to-wit: she has possessed the same portion of what she believes to comprise lot 36, including the second floor bedroom, basement steps and landing, since she began renting in 1968. N.T. at 53. Accordingly, concludes appellant, her deed must be construed according to her’s and Ada Doman’s intentions as manifested by her continued possession of what was allegedly conveyed.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
592 A.2d 104, 405 Pa. Super. 254, 1991 Pa. Super. LEXIS 933, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/doman-v-brogan-pasuperct-1991.