McConnell v. Estate of Wells

393 A.2d 830, 259 Pa. Super. 286, 1978 Pa. Super. LEXIS 3831
CourtSuperior Court of Pennsylvania
DecidedOctober 20, 1978
DocketNo. 2422
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 393 A.2d 830 (McConnell v. Estate of Wells) 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
McConnell v. Estate of Wells, 393 A.2d 830, 259 Pa. Super. 286, 1978 Pa. Super. LEXIS 3831 (Pa. Ct. App. 1978).

Opinion

HESTER, Judge:

This is an appeal from the entry of a non-suit by the Chancellor following the close of appellants’ case in chief. This resulted, of course, in the dismissal of appellants’ Complaint in Equity.

In granting the non-suit, the Chancellor found that appellants’ complaint and the relief sought were barred by the equitable doctrine of laches. The Chancellor concluded: “The doctrine of laches should be pursued diligently when the failure of a plaintiff (the appellants herein) to exercise his rights has resulted in prejudice to the defendant (the appellees herein). This is just such a case” (T. 78a).

Thereafter, appellants filed timely exceptions to the Chancellor’s opinion (sic, adjudication) which were argued before a court en banc. The court en banc opined:

[288]*288We have reviewed the record and have concluded that, under the circumstances of this case, McConnells are guilty of want of due diligence in failing to submit their complaints against Wells prior to Wells’ death, the hurricane of 1972, the break in the raceway and the vesting of the interest of the Butlers. In brief, there is no merit in the plaintiffs’ exceptions.

It is from the court en banc’s refusal of appellants’ exceptions that the instant appeal has been taken.

We disagree with the action of the court en banc and order that the non-suit be taken off and the hearing be continued until fully concluded.

We adopt the Chancellor’s statement of the controversy as found in the court’s opinion:

This is a suit in equity wherein the plaintiffs seek injunctive and the other equitable relief. For years prior to March 15, 1888, the land of the plaintiffs and the defendants were one tract of land owned by Joseph and Susan Schultz. Sometime prior to March 15, 1888, either Schultz or his predecessor in title erected a dam on the west branch of the Perkiomen Creek which ran through the property. The object of the dam was to divert a portion of the Perkiomen Creek into a raceway which was to run parallel to the Perkiomen Creek for the purpose of furnishing water power to operate a grist mill on a portion of Schultz’s property. Midway between the breast of the dam and the grist mill was a pond with a flood gate which was used to control the flow of water into the grist mill.
On March 15, 1888, Schultz conveyed a portion of the property to the plaintiffs’ predecessors in title. In that conveyance Schultz reserved the right to use the millrace and the water that flowed through it for the purpose of operating the grist mill. He also reserved the right to maintain the millrace and the right to go upon the conveyed property for the purpose of repairing and maintaining the dam, race and the flood gate.
[289]*289Since August 1,1952 the plaintiffs are the owners of the land over which the millrace flows and the defendants are the owners of the adjacent property which includes inter alia the grist mill which was serviced by the millrace.
The defendants have owned the property since March 19, 1963, although title was held in a corporation (Wink Inc.) which plaintiffs acknowledge was a closely held corporation, all of the stock being registered in the name of C. Edmund Wells, the deceased defendant in this case.
The grist mill on the Wells property hasn’t been used since 1961. Sometime in the mid 60’s the plaintiffs constructed a high capacity centrafuge pump in the pond area of the raceway near the flood gate. The plaintiffs’ purpose in installing the pump was to divert water from the raceway onto their land for the purpose of irrigating their fields and orchards. During this period of time there were various controversies between the plaintiffs and C. Edmund Wells concerning the use, misuse and repairs to the raceway and to the flood gate.
There are allegations in the complaint and in the answer which would indicate that sometime prior to 1962 there was a lively and running controversy between the plaintiffs and C. Edmund Wells concerning the raceway, the pond and the flood gate. There are allegations as to certain agreements between the plaintiff Leslie McConnell and the late C. Edmund Wells and there are allegations concerning conduct on the part of both parties about a secondary impounding dam and the reasons for repairing and replacing pilings at the flood gate in an effort to regulate the flow of the water in the raceway.
Additionally, the plaintiffs complain that, sometime pri- or to June 10, 1972, C. Edmund Wells caused to be erected an eight-foot high solid wooden fence on his own property, but on the boundary line between that property and the plaintiffs’ immediately in front of the plaintiffs’ tenant house. The plaintiffs complain that the fence has interfered with and interrupted access to the roadway by the plaintiffs and their tenants from the adjacent property.
[290]*290By way of an answer the defendant alleges that the plaintiffs’ tenants, guests and invitees have trespassed on the defendant’s land near the right-of-way and have left abandoned automobiles, furniture and other debris on or near the right-of-way which rendered it necessary for the defendants to construct the eight-foot high wooden fence on their own property to protect their own property and right of privacy. The evidence discloses that the eight-foot wooden fence was erected on the defendants’ own property but that it did prevent direct access from the right-of-way road to the tenant property.
On or about June 22 or 23 of 1972, as a result of a tropical storm known as Agnes, a large portion of both the plaintiffs’ and the defendants’ land was flooded and there was a break in the raceway causing water, which had been diverted at the dam in the Perkiomen Creek, to cross back over the plaintiffs’ property and return to the Perkiomen Creek. The plaintiffs contend that they have repeatedly demanded C. Edmund Wells to repair the break in the raceway but that the defendants have refused to do so. On the contrary the defendants allege that, although they have no legal obligation to repair the raceway damaged as a result of the tropical storm, they had voluntarily sent contractors onto the plaintiffs’ property for the purpose of repairing the dam, raceway and flood gate, but that the plaintiffs, under threat of arrest, had ordered the defendants’ contractors from the property and refused permission for them to engate in the task of restoring the flood gate and the millrace.
C. Edmund Wells died February 12, 1975.

The propriety of the entry of a non-suit in a civil case in Pennsylvania has been articulated by the Supreme Court in Engle v. Spino, 425 Pa. 254, 256-7, 228 A.2d 745, 746 (1967):

It is hornbook law that a judgment of non-suit can be entered only in clear cases and plaintiff must be given the benefit of all evidence favorable to him, together with all reasonable inferences of fact arising therefrom, and any conflict in the evidence must be resolved in his favor: [291]*291(quoting cases). See also Omrcanin v. Hassler, 8 Pa. Cmwlth. 224, 225, 302 A.2d 878 (Note 1) (1973).

Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI

Related

Moeller v. Metzger
491 A.2d 1356 (Superior Court of Pennsylvania, 1985)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
393 A.2d 830, 259 Pa. Super. 286, 1978 Pa. Super. LEXIS 3831, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/mcconnell-v-estate-of-wells-pasuperct-1978.