Rusciolelli v. Smith

171 A.2d 802, 195 Pa. Super. 562, 1961 Pa. Super. LEXIS 678
CourtSuperior Court of Pennsylvania
DecidedJune 15, 1961
DocketAppeal, No. 285
StatusPublished
Cited by21 cases

This text of 171 A.2d 802 (Rusciolelli v. Smith) 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
Rusciolelli v. Smith, 171 A.2d 802, 195 Pa. Super. 562, 1961 Pa. Super. LEXIS 678 (Pa. Ct. App. 1961).

Opinion

Opinion by

Montgomery, J.,

This is an appeal from a final decree in equity enjoining the defendants-appellants from interfering with the appellees’ use of a walkway easement and compelling them to restore a set of steps they had removed.

On May 23, 1956 the appellants owned a lot with a dwelling house erected thereon in the Borough of Beth[564]*564el, Allegheny County. This lot, hereinafter referred to as the Mollenauer lot, had its frontage on Railroad Street and the right of way of the Pittsburgh Railways Company. The rear of same abutted the rear of lot 5 in the Hultz Manor Plan. Didion Brothers, Inc., owned lot 5 and many other lots in said plan.

On May 23, 1956 appellants granted to Didion Brothers, Inc., its successors and assigns, an easement over their Mollenauer lot in the following language: “. . . free and uninterrupted use, liberty and privilege of ingress, egress and regress in and upon all that certain lot or piece of ground situate in the Borough of Bethel, County of Allegheny and State of Pennsylvania, a description of which is hereto attached, marked Exhibit ‘A’ and made part hereof, together with the free ingress, egress and regress to and from the said property of Didion Brothers, Inc., its successors and assigns, at all times, into, upon and out of said right of way or easement, it being further understood that the said right of way shall be used only for the purpose of installing and constructing a sanitary sewer in, through and over the said premises in accordance with the specifications of the Borough of Bethel and for use as a wallc way by pedestrians from Hultz Manor Plan of Lots to and from Pittsburgh Baihoays Company car stop.”

During these negotiations between appellants and Didions, for the aforesaid easement, the appellants expressed a desire to purchase lot 5 aforesaid which had a new house thereon. These negotiations ripened into a sale and the lot and house were conveyed to them by Didions by a deed of the same date, May 23,1956, which contained the following: “Subject also to an easement across the rear of the premises for sanitary sewers as may be required by the municipal authority of Bethel Boro and also an easement along the dividing line between Lot No. It and property above described for a [565]*565walk way running from Prescott Drive to the rear of Lot No. 5.” Lot 5 fronted on Prescott Drive.

Appellees (plaintiffs below) are all owners of lots in tbe Hultz Manor Plan under deeds, subsequent to tbe aforesaid deed to appellants, made directly to them by Didions, or through intervening owners who acquired title directly from Didions. None of said deeds made mention of either of the aforesaid easements. However, after this action was commenced, Didions executed a deed to appellees under date of August 31, 1959 which recited that “. . . by inadvertence, these easements were not specifically set forth in the aforesaid deeds,” and undertook to correct this inadvertence by conveying to appellees, their heirs and assigns “. . . the right and privilege to use for a walk way, an easement along the dividing line between Lot No. 4 and Lot No. 5 in the Hultz Manor Plan . . . running from Prescott Drive to the rear of Lot No. 5 in said Plan.” Eights in the easement over the Mollenauer lot were not included in this grant.

About three months after Didions acquired the aforesaid easements, they constructed a set of thirty-two wooden steps along the course of the walkway, partially on lot 5 and partially on the Mollenauer lot without permission of the appellants. Appellants subsequently removed same. Appellees, claiming the right to use the walkway and steps, filed this action to compel appellants to replace the steps and to desist from interfering with their use of same and the walk. In their amended complaint appellees allege that there was a mutual inadvertence, accident, and mistake made by appellants and Didions when the deed to lot 5 was prepared and that it did not express the true agreement of the parties which was to the effect that the reservation of the easement “. . . was to inure to the benefit of the said Didion Brothers, Inc., and to the owners, occupiers and users of all other properties of the said [566]*566Didion Brothers, Inc. in its Hultz Manor Plan of Lots, so that the said easements, together with the easements contained in the agreement between Didion Brothers, Inc., and the defendants executed at the same time and contemporaneously with the deed first above referred to between Didion Brothers, Inc. and the defendants . . . would afford access to the pedestrians from the Hultz Manor Plan of Lots from Prescott Drive to the Pittsburgh Railways Company carstop.” Appellees then recited the new conveyance of the rights in the easement aforementioned.

Didion Brothers, Inc. are not parties to this proceeding either in seeking the injunction or the reformation of its deed to appellants. However, we think this is not fatal, if appellees are in effect successors, at least in part, to its rights in the easements, since no rights of innocent purchasers are involved. Radnor Building & Loan Assn. v. Scott, 277 Pa. 56, 120 A. 804; Armstrong County Building and Loan Association of Ford City v. Guffey, 132 Pa. Superior Ct. 19, 200 A. 160.

Courts of equity have jurisdiction to reform deeds where mutual mistake appears, Kutztown Fair Association, Inc. v. Frey, 183 Pa. Superior Ct. 516, 132 A. 2d 912; Armstrong County Building and Loan Association of Ford City v. Guffey, supra, or when a unilateral mistake occurs with the knowledge of the other party. Peoples Natural Gas Company Appeal, 399 Pa. 226, 160 A. 2d 391. However, to justify the reformation of a deed, the proof of mutual mistake must be clear and positive, Miller v. Houseworth, 387 Pa. 316, 127 A. 2d 742, and the one seeking reformation on the ground of mutual mistake must establish in the clearest and most satisfactory manner that the alleged intentions to which he desires that the deed be made to conform continued concurrently in the minds of the parties down to the time of the execution of the deed, Kutz[567]*567town Fair Association, Inc. v. Frey, supra. If the evidence justifies such a finding, it may be made by the Chancellor even though it is expressly denied by one of the parties. Armstrong County Building and Loan Association of Ford City v. Guffey, supra. Such is the present case, wherein the appellants expressly deny that such an intention as contended by appellees ever existed in their minds.

Although the learned Chancellor made no specific finding that a mutual mistake had occurred in the preparation of the deed, in effect he did so by the statement in his adjudication that “the Chancellor feels that the defendants unquestionably subjected their land to servitude for the benefit of all the plaintiffs.”

The evidence, in our opinion, is sufficient to support a finding that a mutual mistake or a unilateral one with knowledge of same by the appellants had been made in the preparation of the deed. Joseph Didion, of Didion Brothers, Inc., testified that the purpose of the negotiations was to procure an easement across the Mollenauer lot so that the owners of lots in the Hultz Manor Plan could have access to the car stop, and the agreement bears this out, for it is specifically made for the benefit of pedestrians from the Hultz Manor Plan for that purpose.

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Bluebook (online)
171 A.2d 802, 195 Pa. Super. 562, 1961 Pa. Super. LEXIS 678, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/rusciolelli-v-smith-pasuperct-1961.