Plauchak v. Boling

653 A.2d 671, 439 Pa. Super. 156, 1995 Pa. Super. LEXIS 38
CourtSuperior Court of Pennsylvania
DecidedJanuary 17, 1995
StatusPublished
Cited by44 cases

This text of 653 A.2d 671 (Plauchak v. Boling) 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
Plauchak v. Boling, 653 A.2d 671, 439 Pa. Super. 156, 1995 Pa. Super. LEXIS 38 (Pa. Ct. App. 1995).

Opinion

CERCONE, Judge:

This is an appeal from a final judgment 1 granting ejectment and quieting title to a tract of land. We affirm.

Michael S. and Ann K. Plauchak, appellees, own a tract of land situated in Washington County, Pennsylvania, which they purchased following a mortgage foreclosure sale. This property was formerly owned by Carl Holmes, Jr., and occupied by his sister, Evelyn Morris. Ownership of the land was acquired by the Resolution Trust Corporation as receiver for American Savings and Loan Association of Brazoria County via Sheriffs deed dated December 3, 1990, and duly recorded with the Recorder of Deeds of Washington County. The Resolution Trust Corporation transferred title to appellees by a subsequently recorded deed dated September 25, 1992. On December 18, 1992, appellees also acquired a quit-claim deed from Carl Holmes, Jr. and Evelyn Morris covering the land conveyed in the sheriffs sale as well as an adjacent parcel of land (hereinafter respectively referred to as “Tract No. 1” and “Tract No. 2”).

*161 In 1989, appellants Gerald W. and Linda L. Boling purchased two contiguous properties which lie next to Tract No. 2. Robert A. Lunn, a predecessor in title to the Bolings’ lands, planted a hedge row in 1957 on what he believed to be the boundary line between his property and that portion of the Holmes property now known as Tract No. 2. From 1957 until mid-October of 1991, the Holmes family treated the land on their side of the hedge row as their own, mowing the grass and performing other routine maintenance. They installed a septic system on Tract No. 1 with a leach bed that extends into Tract No. 2. The Holmeses parked a house trailer on Tract No. 2 for an extended period of time. They also cleared and installed a gravelled parking area on Tract No. 2, which served their dwelling house erected on Tract No. 1.

From 1957 through May of 1989, when the appellants purchased their current property, all predecessors in title to the Bolings recognized the boundary of their property as corresponding to the hedge row planted by Mr. Lunn. However, since October of 1991, appellants have planted hedges, pine trees and maple trees, and have built fences, erected no trespassing and private property signs, and placed a barricade of rubber tires on Tract No. 2. Appellants have also removed the gravelled parking area from Tract No. 2.

This appeal stems from an action in ejectment and/or to quiet title which the appellees , instituted in 1993 concerning Tract No. 2. The Honorable Thomas D. Gladden, President Judge of Washington County, heard testimony at hearings conducted on September 21, 1993 and November 9, 1993. On January 31, 1994, Judge Gladden issued an opinion and order ejecting the Bolings from the property at issue and granting possession to the Plauchaks, and confirming the Plauchaks’ ownership in fee simple absolute. The trial judge determined that the hedge row planted by Mr. Lunn had been treated as a consentable 2 boundary line by all predecessors in interest *162 since 1957, and that this acquiescence had continued for longer than twenty-one years. Judge Gladden premised his legal conclusions upon an extensive list of factual findings which we need not reiterate here. See Trial Court Opinion dated January 31, 1994 at 1-6.

Appellants filed a document titled “Request for Post-Trial Relief’ on February 9, 1994. Appellees then petitioned the court for attorney’s fees. The lower court denied both motions, and entered final judgment on April 12, 1994. The instant timely appeal followed presenting a single issue for our consideration:

Whether title to the disputed tract of property, Tract No. 2, will vest in Plaintiffs either by adverse possession or under the doctrine of consentable boundary when there is no reference to the disputed tract in any deed purporting to transfer ownership of property owned by Plaintiffs or their predecessors in title until the Plaintiffs acquired a Quit Claim Deed [on] December 18, 1992, which was approximately three months after Plaintiffs purchased their property?

Before appraising the validity of appellants’ arguments, however, we must first address certain procedural irregularities stemming from the manner in which the underlying case was initiated.

It is procedurally improper to simultaneously commence both an action in ejectment and an action to quiet title regarding the same parcel of real estate. Ordinarily, the plaintiff in an action to quiet title must be in possession of the land in controversy; if he is out of possession, his sole remedy is an action in ejectment. Grossman v. Hill, 384 Pa. 590, 593, 122 A.2d 69, 71 (1956). An action to quiet title may be brought only where an action in ejectment will not lie. Id. at 594, 122 A.2d at 71; Pa.R.C.P. No. 1061(b)(2), 42 Pa.C.S.A. Ejectment, being a possessory action, can be maintained if the plaintiff has a right to immediate possession with the concomitant right to demand that the defendant vacate the land. Grossman v. Hill, 384 Pa. at 593-94, 122 A.2d at 71.

*163 Permitting an out-of-possession plaintiff to maintain an action to quiet title is impermissible because it constitutes an enlargement of the plaintiffs substantive rights as defined by statute, and thus exceeds the court’s jurisdiction to proceed. Sutton v. Miller, 405 Pa.Super. 213, 223-224, 592 A.2d 83, 88-89 (1991). Because plaintiffs/appellees were acting under color of legal title provided by a quit claim deed granting the right of immediate possession, and because appellants were in undisputed physical possession of the land in question by reason of their actions in planting trees, erecting a fence and placing a barricade of tires, the correct practice in this case was to seek ejectment and not quiet title. See generally: Id. (equitable owner under contract for sale, with no right of immediate possession, may maintain suit to quiet title); Brennan v. Shore Brothers, Inc., 380 Pa. 283, 285, 110 A.2d 401, 402 (1955) (ejectment is appropriate where plaintiff is not in possession of property); Buck v. Brunner, 167 Pa.Super. 142, 143, 74 A.2d 528, 528 (1950) (ejectment improper where plaintiff is in possession of disputed property); Pa.R.C.P. No. 1061(b)(1), 42 Pa.C.S.A. (action to quiet title may be brought to compel an adverse party to commence an action of ejectment). But see Hoffman v. Bozitsko, 198 Pa.Super. 553, 182 A.2d 113 (1962) (purchaser at judicial sale has option to obtain possession of purchased property either by ejectment or quiet title).

Nevertheless, appellees’ use of an incorrect form of action is not fatal to the relief granted by the trial court.

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Bluebook (online)
653 A.2d 671, 439 Pa. Super. 156, 1995 Pa. Super. LEXIS 38, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/plauchak-v-boling-pasuperct-1995.