Hazelton, R. v. Hazelton, R.

CourtSuperior Court of Pennsylvania
DecidedDecember 9, 2016
Docket61 WDA 2016
StatusUnpublished

This text of Hazelton, R. v. Hazelton, R. (Hazelton, R. v. Hazelton, R.) 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
Hazelton, R. v. Hazelton, R., (Pa. Ct. App. 2016).

Opinion

J-A26022-16

NON-PRECEDENTIAL DECISION - SEE SUPERIOR COURT I.O.P. 65.37

RONALD HAZELTON AND KAREN : IN THE SUPERIOR COURT OF SHESKO : PENNSYLVANIA : Appellants : : : v. : : : No. 61 WDA 2016 RALPH HAZELTON, JANET WATSON, : DENNIS HAZELTON AND MICHAEL : BRINK :

Appeal from the Judgment Entered February 3, 2016 In the Court of Common Pleas of Clearfield County Civil Division at No(s): 2014-1407-CD

BEFORE: BENDER, P.J.E., RANSOM, J., and MUSMANNO, J.

MEMORANDUM BY RANSOM, J.: FILED DECEMBER 9, 2016

Ronald Hazelton and Karen Shesko (Appellants) appeal from the

judgment entered on February 3, 2016, which denied their Complaint for

Declaratory Judgment and granted Appellees’ counterclaim. We affirm.

The relevant facts are as follows:

A parcel of land in Chest Township, Clearfield County, Pennsylvania, consisting of approximately 82 acres has been owned by members of the Hazelton family for more than one hundred years. This parcel of land, upon which a farmhouse sets [sic], is commonly known by the parties and referred to herein as the Hazelton Farm.

For most of that time, land on the property was cultivated and farmed; with the exception of the years 1997 through 2011 when 24.7 acres were enrolled in the federal Conservation Reserve Enhancement Program (CREP). The continuing, unanimous consent of all owners was required for the land to remain enrolled in the CREP program. However, upon acquiring J-A26022-16

their interest in Hazelton Farm in 2010, [Appellants] and Donald Hazelton (a non-party to the present action) refused to consent to the Farm’s continued enrollment in the CREP program. Consequently, the Hazelton Farm was dis-enrolled from the CREP program.

Shortly after the acreage was dis-enrolled from the CREP program, Dennis Hazelton, and other [Appellees] in the present action, chose to have the acreage returned to its original use. Accordingly, they arranged for a third party farmer, [Appellee] Michael Brink, to cultivate and farm approximately 20 acres in the northwest portion of the Hazelton Farm.

The Hazelton Farm was originally more than 100 acres. However, due to disputes regarding the use and control of the farm among various co-tenants a partition action was commenced by Ralph Hazelton in April of 2010. This partition action resulted in the original Hazelton Farm being partitioned with Ronald Hazelton, Karen Shesko, the [Appellants] in the present case, as well as Donald Hazelton, a non-party to the present action, receiving an in[-]kind portion of the original Hazelton Farm. The portion amounted to just over 23 acres.

The remaining balance of the Hazelton Farm, consisting of a farm house and just over 82 acres, which is the property subject to the present [appeal], was conveyed by the Master in Partition by a deed dated July 26, 2013 to the following individuals as tenants in common in the following approximate fractional shares:

a. Dennis R. Hazelton, [Appellee] in the present action (40%)

b. Ralph N. Hazelton, [Appellee] in the present action (20%)

c. Mildred E. Park, Non-party to the present action (20%)

d. Beverly J. Hazelton, Non-party to the present action (5%)

e. Daniel R. Hazelton, Non-party to the present action (5%)

f. Janet R. Watson, [Appellee] in the present action (5%)

g. Paul N. Hazelton, Non-party to the present action (5%)

-2- J-A26022-16

Almost immediately following the conveyance by the Master in Partition in which the [Appellants] in the present case were awarded an in[-]kind portion of approximately 23 acres of the original 100 [plus] acre Hazelton farm, the [Appellants] in the present case, together with Donald Hazelton, who is a non-party to the present action, purchased an interest in the remaining 82 acres of the Hazelton Farm from Mildred E. Park through a quit- claim deed.

Following the partition action, the 82 acre portion of the Hazelton Farm was left without access to a public road. [Appellee] Dennis Hazelton constructed a dirt access road from the farmhouse to Ponish Road, a township road, to allow access to the Hazelton Farm via public roadway. Dennis Hazelton also constructed various other private roads and reopened existing roads that had become unpassable on the Hazelton Farm. One of these roads led to [Appellants’] 23 acre property that was partitioned off from the original Hazelton Farm. [Appellants] had a mound of dirt and stone bulldozed across this road, on the jointly owned property, to obstruct entry to their separately owned property.

In September of 2014, at the time the [Appellants] filed their complaint in the case at bar, the Hazelton Farm was owned by the following individuals as tenants in common in the following approximate fractional shares:

a. Dennis Hazelton, [Appellee] (40%)

b. Ralph Hazelton, [Appellee] (20%)

c. Ronald Hazelton [Appellant] (6.67%)

d. Karen Shesko [Appellant] (6.67%)

e. Donald Hazelton, Non-party (6.66%)

f. Janet Watson, [Appellee] (5%)

g. Beverly J. Hazelton, Non-party (5%)

h. Daniel R. Hazelton, Non-party (5%) 1 i. Paul N. Hazelton, Non-party (5%)

By oral agreement[s] in 2012 and 2013 and memorialized in writing in 2014 and 2015, [Appellee], Michael Brink (Brink), who is a local farmer living in Irvona, Pennsylvania, was given

-3- J-A26022-16

permission by the Hazelton [Appellees] to farm approximately 20 acres in the northwest portion of Hazelton Farm. This agreement, herein after referred to as the Land Use Agreement, did not involve any portion of the [Appellants’] 23 acre parcel of land that was once part of the original Hazelton Farm. Indeed, Mr. Brink has never engaged in any farming activity of any kind on the [Appellants’] 23 acre parcel. Rather, the Land Use Agreement gave Mr. Brink the right to farm approximately 20 acres of the northwest portion of the 82 acre Hazelton Farm. In the spring of 2012, Brink began farming activities on portions of the Hazelton Farm pursuant to the oral land use agreement that he entered into with the Hazelton [Appellees] as well as non- party owners Daniel Hazelton and Paul Hazelton.

Witnesses for [Appellees], included Mr. Brink and Mike Kunsman, who testified as a farming expert, credibly testified at trial as to the many improvements Mr. Brink’s farming activities were having on the cultivated acreage and the Hazelton Farm as a whole. Rather than being overgrown and untended, or left fallow, Mr. Brink’s farming activity afforded a benefit to the soil by contributing to the soil’s nutrient balance and reducing weed and pest infestations, as well as leaving a certain amount of his corn crop in place to hold deer and game in the vicinity off the Hazelton Farm. Mr. Brink’s use of the plan complied with the “Conservation Plan” prepared for the acreage by the United States Department of Agriculture Natural Resource Conservation Service.

1 Subsequent to the filing of the [Appellant’s] complaint, Dennis Hazelton ([Appellee]) has acquired the interest of Ralph Hazelton ([Appellee]) leaving Dennis Hazelton with a 60% interest in the Hazelton Farm. Similarly, Janet R. Watson ([Appellee]) purchased Beverly J. Hazelton’s (non-party) interest resulting in Janet R. Watson owning a 10% interest in the Hazelton Farm which Janet R. Watson concurrently conveyed to herself and her husband Jay A. Watson (non-party).

Trial Court Opinion, 12/16/15 at 1-7 (citations and footnotes omitted).

-4- J-A26022-16

In September 18, 2014, Appellant’s sought a declaratory judgment

that the Land Use Agreement for the year 2014 is null and void. Appellees

filed a counterclaim asking the court to direct Appellants to remove the dirt

and stone obstructing one of the private roads on the 82 acre portion of the

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Hazelton, R. v. Hazelton, R., Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/hazelton-r-v-hazelton-r-pasuperct-2016.