Pennsylvania Game Commission v. K.D. Miller Lumber Co.

654 A.2d 6, 1994 Pa. Commw. LEXIS 708
CourtCommonwealth Court of Pennsylvania
DecidedDecember 22, 1994
StatusPublished
Cited by11 cases

This text of 654 A.2d 6 (Pennsylvania Game Commission v. K.D. Miller Lumber Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Commonwealth Court of Pennsylvania primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Pennsylvania Game Commission v. K.D. Miller Lumber Co., 654 A.2d 6, 1994 Pa. Commw. LEXIS 708 (Pa. Ct. App. 1994).

Opinion

KELLEY, Judge.

The Pennsylvania Game Commission (Commission) petitions for review of an adjudication and order of the Board of Property (Board) which settled a property boundary dispute between K.D. Miller Lumber Company, Inc., through its President Kenneth D. Miller (jointly referred to as Miller), and the Commonwealth.1

Miller filed a petition with the Board to which the Commission responded by filing an answer and new matter. Miller filed an answer to the Commission’s new matter. Prior to the hearing before the Board, the Commission filed a motion to join indispensable parties. Following the hearing, the Board issued its adjudication which included lengthy findings of fact, summarized as follows.

Both Miller and the Commission have asserted title to a strip of land containing approximately nineteen acres in Boggs Township, Clearfield County. Miller bases its claim of title on a deed recorded on May 29, 1991 in Clearfield County wherein Dresser [8]*8Industries, Inc. conveyed a tract of land to Miller (hereinafter referred to as “the Miller deed”).2

The Commission bases its claim of title on a deed dated and recorded September 10, 1934 in Clearfield County (“the Commission deed”). By the Commission deed, Martha E. Gould, et al. conveyed to the Commonwealth, for the use of the Commission, a tract of land containing 1,180.3 acres situate in Boggs Township. The Commission deed describes the tract as including “all of the Mary Morris and the Thomas L. Moore Warrants, and part of the William Morris Warrant.” The nineteen acres in dispute are located in the northwest corner of the Thomas Smith warrant.3

Miller claims that the legal description found in its description clause of the deed, and the immediately preceding deed in the chain of title, is superior to the description in the Commission deed. Further, Miller claims that the Miller deed description is consistent with the original warrant surveys drawn of the area. The Board found that the deed from which Miller derives title is superior to the deed from which the Commission derives title.

The Board found Charles H. Krey, a licensed and professional engineer, qualified as an expert to testify regarding his survey of the area on behalf of Miller. Mr. Krey testified that the Thomas Smith and the Thomas Moore boundary lines, both southern and northern, run parallel east to west in a straight line.

Greg Shufran, a project manager with Meese Engineering, also testified on behalf of Miller. The Board found that, although at the time of the hearing Mr. Shufran had not yet received a land surveyor’s license, he had participated in approximately 300 surveys, a third of which took place in Clearfield County.

Mr. Shufran testified his visual inspection of the tract and its monuments4 allowed him to locate ten corners to the Miller property. Mr. Shufran identified corner number 6 as the Miller corner, marked by rocks that had “been there a while ... because they are covered with earth.” (Finding of Fact No. 21.) Mr. Shufran identified comer number 5 as the Commission comer, marked by a 5/8ths-inch rebar of recent origin and stones. Mr. Shufran characterized the comer number 5 monument, consisting of the type of stone found in a retaining wall near a mine drift, as “old but not real old either.” (Finding of Fact No. 24.)

Thomas Michael Hayden, a real estate specialist with the Commission’s Bureau of Land Management, testified on behalf of the Commission. The Board found that Mr. Hayden’s qualifications were sufficient to permit him to testify as an expert regarding the surveys of the disputed land, although his experience in Clearfield County was limited.

Mr. Hayden testified that a line drawn from the northwest corner of the Thomas Moore warrant to the comer that the Commission alleges is the northwest comer of the [9]*9Thomas Smith warrant would be a diagonal or sloping line.

Lastly, the Board found that Kenneth Miller testified he contacted the head of the Commission, Peter Duncan, in June or July, 1991, to discuss the discrepancy in the boundary lines prior to the commencement of timber harvesting.

After consideration of the boundary line dispute, the Board concluded that Miller had proven by substantial evidence that the northern boundary line of the Thomas Smith warrant is the northern boundary line of the tract conveyed to it by Dresser Industries. The Board rejected the Commission’s argument that Miller was equitably estopped from bringing this action because it allegedly had knowledge of the boundary dispute prior to acquiring the property. The Commission appeals from this adjudication.

Initially, we note that our scope of review, as statutorily mandated, requires us to affirm the Board’s adjudication unless the adjudication is in violation of the petitioner’s constitutional rights, or it is not in accordance with law, or if any finding of fact made by the Board and necessary to support its adjudication is not supported by substantial evidence. Section 704 of the Administrative Agency Law, 2 Pa.C.S. § 704.

On appeal, the Commission presents the following issues for our consideration: (1) whether the Board erred by failing to join an indispensable party whose boundary would also be fixed by the Board’s decision; (2) whether the Board erred by entirely disregarding without explanation the testimony of the Commission’s Registered Surveyor, Glenn Arnold; (3) whether the Board erred in concluding that Miller was not estopped or barred by laches from asserting title to the disputed area; (4) whether the Board erred in concluding that a deed relying on an original warrant description which calls for nonexistent monumentation (the Miller deed) takes precedence over lines clearly established on the ground and senior warrant lines (the Commission deed); and (5) whether the Board’s findings of fact are supported by substantial evidence.

We will first address the Commission’s argument concerning why the private property owners whose own boundary lines are called into question by the Board’s determination were not joined as indispensable parties. The Commission asserted through its motion to join indispensable party that the owner of an adjoining parcel of land, now or formerly Annie A. Dixon, is indispensable because if the relief requested by Miller was granted, the adjoining tract would be affected.5

To be an indispensable party, one must have rights so directly connected with and affected by the litigation that she must be a party to protect such rights; her absence renders any order or decree of the court null and void for want of jurisdiction. Zerr v. Department of Environmental Resources, 131 Pa. Commonwealth Ct. 317, 570 A.2d 132 (1990).

In the present matter, the Board was presented with Miller’s narrow request to determine the ownership of nineteen acres of disputed property. Under no conceivable circumstances would the boundary of the Annie A. Dixon tract be affected by the determination of the Board concerning the rightful ownership of the disputed nineteen acres. The petition did not request the Board to redraw the boundary of the disputed tract, only to determine its ownership. Therefore, we conclude that Annie A. Dixon cannot be considered an indispensable party to the adjudication.

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Bluebook (online)
654 A.2d 6, 1994 Pa. Commw. LEXIS 708, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/pennsylvania-game-commission-v-kd-miller-lumber-co-pacommwct-1994.