Meridian Oil and Gas Enterprises, Inc. v. Penn Cent. Corp.

614 A.2d 246, 418 Pa. Super. 231, 1992 Pa. Super. LEXIS 2505
CourtSuperior Court of Pennsylvania
DecidedAugust 7, 1992
Docket1181
StatusPublished
Cited by24 cases

This text of 614 A.2d 246 (Meridian Oil and Gas Enterprises, Inc. v. Penn Cent. Corp.) 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
Meridian Oil and Gas Enterprises, Inc. v. Penn Cent. Corp., 614 A.2d 246, 418 Pa. Super. 231, 1992 Pa. Super. LEXIS 2505 (Pa. Ct. App. 1992).

Opinion

CAVANAUGH, Judge.

Appellant, The Penn Central Corporation (Penn Central), appeals from an order of the Crawford County Court of Common Pleas entering judgment on a jury verdict in favor of appellee, Meridian Oil & Gas Enterprises, Inc. (Meridian), in the amount of $800,000 plus interest. Because we find the lower court erred in precluding Penn Central’s use of a prior judicial determination to collaterally bar the instant action, we reverse the order entering judgment on the jury verdict and remand for a new trial.

Penn Central is in the business of selling abandoned railroad lines. It first sells the rails, ties and fixtures. Next, it *234 sells the ballast, and finally the land. 1 On October 17, 1979, following a telephone conversation between James Shearer, Meridian’s owner and president and T.E. Jordan, a Penn Central employee, Penn Central issued a sales order to Meridian, in which Penn Central sold and Meridian purchased 31.4 miles of ballast on the Erie and Pittsburgh branch of a rail line between Jamestown and Albion, Pennsylvania for the amount of $40,820. The sales order did not define the term “ballast,” specify depth and width limitations on the ballast sold, or provide a time limit for removal. According to Shearer’s testimony, he had never purchased ballast before the October 1979 contract with Penn Central.

Under the name, James Drilling Corporation, Shearer entered into two more ballast removal contracts with Penn Central on a different rail line. A sales order dated November 9,1979, contained no time limit for removal but specifically provided that “Ballast is to be removed to a depth not exceeding 15" deep and 10' wide.” A sales order dated December 22, 1980, provided depth and width limits of fifteen inches and ten feet, respectively and required that the ballast be removed by a specified date, just over five months from the date on the sales order.

At some point after entering into the ballast removal contracts, Shearer discovered that he did not own the appropriate equipment to remove ballast. Shearer then purchased the necessary equipment and proceeded to remove ballast on the three lines.

On February 27, 1980, Penn Central sold by quitclaim deed a one mile stretch of land on the Erie and Pittsburgh rail line to Warren Kelly. The land Kelly purchased fell within the perimeters of Meridian’s October 17, 1979 ballast removal contract with Penn Central. Kelly began removing ballast on *235 the one mile stretch of land and Meridian sued to permanently enjoin further ballast removal by Kelly.

On June 24, 1982, Judge Thomas of the Crawford County Court of Common Pleas issued a decree nisi denying Meridian’s request for a permanent injunction. Meridian Oil and Gas Enterprises, Inc. v. Warren Kelly, Court of Common Pleas, Crawford County, Civil-Equity 11 (1982). In Kelly, Judge Thomas framed the issue before the court as:

[WJhether the Plaintiffs [Meridian’s] contract [with Penn Central] to buy ballast from an abandoned rail line ... includes all material between the top of the now rail free right-of-way to the natural ground level, or whether ballast is a term limited to the material directly beneath and to the side of the ties and rails and resting on other surface material to support the former ties and rails.

Trial Court Opinion, June 24, 1982, at 1.

The court then made the following finding of fact:

Shearer, Meridian’s President and owner, contends no mention was made of the depth and width of the ballast in his first contract at issue here ..., so that he essentially bought everything between the top of the line down to natural ground level. Testimony clearly establishes that the term ballast has a clear and recognized meaning in the railroad construction business and is the top course of dense material upon which ties are imbedded. A Penn Central employee, T.E. Jordan, testified that he specifically spelled out to Shearer in the negotiations, as he does to all potential ballast buyers, the depth and width of the ballast he was buying and that the descriptive 15" x 10' language normally used in all ballast contract sales was inadvertently left off the Meridian contract. We find as a fact that Shearer knew or should have known that his purchase of ballast was a purchase of the topmost course of material constituting the right-of-way bed and did not include materials in the right-of-way below approximately the top 15 inches.

Trial Court Opinion, June 24, 1982, at 3.

Judge Thomas then concluded as a matter of law that under Meridian’s October 17, 1979 ballast removal contract with *236 Penn Central, Meridian purchased ballast to a depth not in excess of fifteen inches from the top of the former ties and to a width of ten feet. Judge Thomas concluded that under his deed from Penn Central, Kelly purchased all materials beneath the ballast in the right-of-way for a distance of one mile. Judge Thomas further concluded that Meridian had no further right to remove materials from the one mile strip owned by Kelly. 2

On August 25, 1982, Penn Central notified Meridian by letter that according to an on-site evaluation by a Penn Central field employee, Meridian had removed all of the ballast to which it was entitled under the October 17, 1979 contract and that Meridian should cease removing anymore material.

On January 28, 1983, Meridian filed a complaint against Penn Central in the Crawford County Court of Common Pleas requesting the court to declare that Meridian’s rights under the October 17, 1979 contract entitled it to all ballast, without limitation, from the sub-grade to the top of the ballast. On February 7, 1986, Meridian filed a motion for leave to amend their complaint, which was granted by Judge Walker on March 22,1988. On April 27,1988, Meridian filed an amended complaint, which added a request for an award of compensatory and punitive damages for Penn Central’s willful, fraudulent and intentional conduct in depriving Meridian of its ballast by quitclaiming property subject to the ballast removal contract to third parties. On April, 27, 1988, Penn Central filed an answer to Meridian’s amended complaint, which made no mention of the prior judicial determination in the Kelly case.

On October 3,1988, the parties met for a pretrial conference before Judge Thomas, who was scheduled to preside at the trial. Penn Central submitted a pretrial narrative raising as a defense Judge Thomas’ prior determination in Kelly that Meridian was only entitled to ballast fifteen inches deep and ten feet wide under the sales order at issue. Judge Thomas *237 indicated that he would allow Penn Central to use the collateral estoppel defense at trial. R.R. at 942a.

On October 7, 1988, Meridian filed a motion in limine to preclude Penn Central from using the collateral effect of the Kelly decision at trial. The case was then reassigned to Judge Walker, who granted Meridian’s motion in limine

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Bluebook (online)
614 A.2d 246, 418 Pa. Super. 231, 1992 Pa. Super. LEXIS 2505, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/meridian-oil-and-gas-enterprises-inc-v-penn-cent-corp-pasuperct-1992.