Pcs Realty, LLC v. Ralph Fredericks

CourtNew Jersey Superior Court Appellate Division
DecidedMarch 14, 2024
DocketA-1947-22
StatusUnpublished

This text of Pcs Realty, LLC v. Ralph Fredericks (Pcs Realty, LLC v. Ralph Fredericks) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering New Jersey Superior Court Appellate Division primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Pcs Realty, LLC v. Ralph Fredericks, (N.J. Ct. App. 2024).

Opinion

NOT FOR PUBLICATION WITHOUT THE APPROVAL OF THE APPELLATE DIVISION This opinion shall not "constitute precedent or be binding upon any court ." Although it is posted on the internet, this opinion is binding only on the parties in the case and its use in other cases is limited. R. 1:36-3.

SUPERIOR COURT OF NEW JERSEY APPELLATE DIVISION DOCKET NO. A-1947-22

PCS REALTY, LLC,

Plaintiff-Appellant,

v.

RALPH FREDERICKS and BRENT WILLIAMS FREDERICKS,

Defendants-Respondents. _______________________________

Submitted February 14, 2024 – Decided March 14, 2024

Before Judges Vernoia and Gummer.

On appeal from the Superior Court of New Jersey, Chancery Division, Morris County, Docket No. C- 000067-22.

Beinhaker & Beinhaker, attorneys for appellant (Dore R. Beinhaker, on the briefs).

Needleman and Pisano, attorneys for respondents (Frank Pisano, III, on the brief).

PER CURIAM This matter arises from plaintiff PCS Realty, LLC's claim that a driveway,

fence, landscaping, and features of property owned by defendant Ralph

Fredericks, and resided in by defendant Brent Williams Fredericks, encroach on

its property. Plaintiff appeals from a Chancery Division order, entered after a

bench trial, dismissing the complaint, in which plaintiff had asserted causes of

action for ejectment, trespass, and interference with property rights and an order

denying its motion for reconsideration and granting defendants an equitable

easement for the driveway's encroachment on plaintiff's property. We reverse

the court's orders and remand for further proceedings.

I.

The pertinent facts are not disputed. Plaintiff owns commercial property

located at 115 Main Road in Montville, New Jersey (plaintiff's property). 1

Plaintiff purchased the property in 2015.

Defendant Ralph Fredericks owns residential property (defendants'

property) at 113 Main Road that abuts plaintiff's property.2 Defendant Brent

1 Plaintiff's property is designated as Block 51, Lot 28 on the Township of Montville tax map. 2 Defendants' property is designated as Block 51, Lot 27 on the Township of Montville tax map.

A-1947-22 2 Williams Fredericks resides at defendants' property. Ralph Fredericks

purchased the property in 2005.

In April 2022, plaintiff filed a verified complaint against defendants,

asserting causes of action for ejectment, trespass, and interference with its

property rights. Plaintiff claimed defendants had "encroached and trespassed on

[p]laintiff's property by erecting a fence, installing a driveway and landscaping"

and the "like" on the property. 3

Plaintiff filed an order to show cause requesting that the court require

defendants' ejectment from the property, removal of all "landscaping, asphalt,

[and] fences" encroaching on plaintiff's property, and payment of damages and

attorney's fees. The court entered an order scheduling a hearing on the order to

show cause and directing that defendants serve a written response to the order

to show cause prior to the hearing date.

Defendants filed an answer and counterclaim. In their answer, defendants

denied they had trespassed on plaintiff's property but admitted they had

encroached on plaintiff's property by erecting a fence and installing a driveway,

3 It is not disputed that plaintiff claimed defendants had installed or maintained a stone retaining wall on plaintiff's property. It appears plaintiff's use of the phrase "like" to refer to other alleged encroachments was intended as a reference to the wall. The record also suggests plaintiff claimed the garage on defendants' property encroached on plaintiff's property. A-1947-22 3 landscaping, and the "like" on the property. Defendants also admitted they had

refused to remove the fence, landscaping, driveway, and the like in response to

plaintiff's demands that they do so.

Defendant Ralph Fredericks filed a counterclaim against plaintiff,

asserting that he, and the party that sold him defendants' property in 2005, had

"openly, continuously, exclusively, adversely and notoriously used a driveway

installed on a portion of [plaintiff's] property . . . for over [thirty] years." 4

Indeed, in the counterclaim, Ralph Fredericks sought a judgment establishing

that he had "title and ownership to the entire subject driveway by adverse

possession, including that portion of the subject driveway and the like that may

have been previously over the property line and on" plaintiff's property.

Following a hearing on the order to show cause, the court denied plaintiff's

requests for relief without prejudice. The court determined plaintiff's claims

could not be properly determined in a summary proceeding, noting that although

4 In a clearly unintended error, the counterclaim alleges Ralph Fredericks had "openly, continuously, exclusively, adversely and notoriously used a driveway installed on a portion of Defendant's property . . . for over [thirty] years." (Emphasis added). The claim was made in support of Ralph Fredericks's cause of action for adverse possession, and, as such, we recognize he intended to assert he had used the driveway for thirty-years on plaintiff's property in the manner he described.

A-1947-22 4 defendants' adverse possession claim "did not appear to be supported by the

[then-]current record" before the court, defendant had asserted the adverse-

possession claim and other affirmative defenses the court lacked sufficient

information to decide. The court therefore denied plaintiff's application and

directed the parties to proceed with discovery.

At the subsequent bench trial, plaintiff presented a single witness, Marcia

George, who is the business manager for Red Cap Machinery, which operates

its manufacturing business at plaintiff's property and is owned, in part, by the

partners in plaintiff. George testified plaintiff had purchased plaintiff's property

in 2015 and moved its offices onto the property in May 2017. George testified

that when it purchased the property in 2015, plaintiff obtained a survey, which

showed defendants' driveway, fence, landscaping, and a rock wall encroaching

on plaintiff's property. George explained she had taken a photograph of an

individual standing in the middle of defendants' driveway holding a post above

a pin in the driveway that is referenced in the survey. According to George, she

took the photo to show the location of the property line—as established by the

pin in the middle of the driveway—as proof that a portion of defendants'

driveway encroached on plaintiff's property.

A-1947-22 5 The parties stipulated to the admission into evidence of the photograph of

the worker; other photos of defendants' property, driveway, and home; the

survey; and plaintiff's June 14, 2015 deed for its property.

Defendants called two witnesses. Ralph Fredericks testified that when he

purchased defendants' property in 2005, the home on the property did not have

a paved driveway or the stone retaining wall. According to Fredericks, they

were installed in 2006. He also testified the property line for defendants'

property that abuts plaintiff's property is located less than fifteen feet from the

side of the home on the defendants' property.

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Pcs Realty, LLC v. Ralph Fredericks, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/pcs-realty-llc-v-ralph-fredericks-njsuperctappdiv-2024.