Saslow, A. v. Massele, H.

CourtSuperior Court of Pennsylvania
DecidedAugust 19, 2022
Docket1360 EDA 2021
StatusUnpublished

This text of Saslow, A. v. Massele, H. (Saslow, A. v. Massele, H.) 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
Saslow, A. v. Massele, H., (Pa. Ct. App. 2022).

Opinion

J-A09017-22

NON-PRECEDENTIAL DECISION - SEE SUPERIOR COURT I.O.P. 65.37

AMANDA SASLOW AND DANIEL : IN THE SUPERIOR COURT OF PROSEN : PENNSYLVANIA : : v. : : : HAREGEWAIN MASSELE A/K/A : HARRY MASSELE AND ZUFAN : No. 1360 EDA 2021 MUHABIE : : : APPEAL OF: HAREGEWAIN MASSELE :

Appeal from the Judgment Entered July 8, 2021 In the Court of Common Pleas of Philadelphia County Civil Division at No(s): 190500445

BEFORE: NICHOLS, J., SULLIVAN, J., and PELLEGRINI, J.*

MEMORANDUM BY SULLIVAN, J.: FILED AUGUST 19, 2022

Haregewain Massele (“Massele”) appeals from the judgment entered in

favor of Amanda Saslow and Daniel Prosen (collectively, “Appellees”). We

vacate the judgment.

We summarize the background of this property dispute from the record.

Massele purchased 2271 Bryn Mawr Avenue (“Massele’s property”) in 1992.

He later approached his then-neighbor, Louise Shoemaker (“Shoemaker”), the

owner of 2265 Bryn Mawr Avenue (“Shoemaker’s property”), to buy some of

her land. Thereafter, Massele drafted and recorded a 2005 deed between him

and Shoemaker (“the 2005 deed”) that contained a metes and bounds

____________________________________________

* Retired Senior Judge assigned to the Superior Court. J-A09017-22

description of an L-shape piece of land (“the disputed tract”) and a

handwritten amendment changing the property description of the disputed

tract from “2265 Bryn Mawr Avenue” to “2271 Bryn Mawr Avenue Rear.” See

Trial Exhibit P-7 (2005 deed from Shoemaker to Massele). Massele paid

Shoemaker $200 for the disputed tract. See id.

By the time of the 2005 sale, the City of Philadelphia (“the City”) had

designated the disputed tract as a separate tax parcel as outlined in the

following illustration:1

The disputed tract ran behind three parcels on Bryn Mawr Avenue—an

unidentified property to the north of Massele’s property, Massele’s property, ____________________________________________

1 Although included in Appellees’ complaint, the illustration was not admitted at trial as an exhibit. We include the illustration here only for demonstrative purposes.

-2- J-A09017-22

and Shoemaker’s property—and then perpendicular next to Shoemaker’s

property, including Nevada Street, which connects a driveway at the back of

Shoemaker’s property to Bryn Mawr Avenue.2

After executing and recording the 2005 deed for the disputed tract,

Massele took no actions to exclude Shoemaker from using the portion of the

disputed tract behind Shoemaker’s property. Massele never paid additional

taxes for any portion of the disputed tract. See N.T., 4/19/21, at 22, 97-100.

In 2013, Appellees bought Shoemaker’s property from her estate. See

id. at 31-33. After Appellees purchased the property, Massele approached

them with a separate map that he had drawn by hand and which showed

Massele’s property, Shoemaker’s property, and the disputed tract behind

them. See id. at 38; see also Trial Exhibit P-2. On the map, Massele

highlighted the portion of the disputed tract directly behind his property, which

he claimed to own, but he did not claim that he owned the portion of the

disputed tract behind Shoemaker’s property. See N.T., 4/19/21, at 38.

Massele did not object when Appellees built a fence across the disputed tract

directly behind Shoemaker’s property. See id. at 48.

2 Apparently, sometime in the 1980’s, the City designated the disputed tract, including Nevada Street, as a separate tax parcel identified as 2263 Bryn Mawr Avenue. See Trial Exhibits P-3, P-8.

-3- J-A09017-22

As noted above, the City had designated the disputed tract as a separate

tax parcel. Although taxes accrued,3 the City apparently took no actions

concerning the disputed tract until 2014, when it posted a notice of a tax sale

of the disputed tract. See id. at 75. Appellees intervened in the City’s action

(“Appellees’ tax action”). See id. Massele did not participate in Appellees’

tax action although they informed him of the tax issue. See id. at 77.

In 2019, Appellees commenced the underlying action seeking a

declaratory judgment against Massele after Massele began asserting a claim

of title to the disputed tract, including Nevada Street.4 Massele filed an answer

and counterclaims for ejectment and trespass.

Following a hearing, the trial court, on May 21, 2021, found in favor of

Appellees in their action for declaratory relief.5 Massele filed post-trial ____________________________________________

3 As of April 2021, the City listed a tax balance due of $52,409 for the disputed tract. See Trial Exhibit P-8.

4 Appellees alleged that Massele threatened to charge a toll for the use of Nevada Street, remove trees, stone walls, and fences from the disputed tract, and build apartments or a nursing home on his land. See Appellees’ Complaint, 5/8/19, at 10-11. Additionally, Appellees requested that the trial court allocate pro rata taxes for the disputed tract, excluding Nevada Street, which Appellees alleged was a public road. Id. at 11, 14.

5 Appellees brought their action under the Declaratory Judgment Act (“the Act”), 42 Pa.C.S.A. §§ 7531-7541. We note the Act is intended to determine existing rights under an instrument and does not authorize a court to reform the instrument. See New London Oil Co., Inc. v. Ziegler, 485 A.2d 1131, 1133 (Pa. Super. 1984) (citing Baskind v. National Surety Corp., 101 A.2d 645, 646 (Pa. 1954) for the proposition that “[n]owhere are the courts given the authority to reform an instrument in a declaratory judgment proceeding [because s]uch a proceeding is limited to the adjudication of rights under (Footnote Continued Next Page)

-4- J-A09017-22

motions, which the trial court denied. Thereafter, the trial court entered a

final order that (1) modified Appellees’ deed to include the portion of the

disputed tract directly behind 2265 Bryn Mawr Avenue; (2) modified Massele’s

2005 deed to reflect his ownership of the disputed tract directly behind 2271

Bryn Mawr Avenue; and (3) directed that the remainder of the disputed tract,

excluding Nevada Street, revert to the estate of Shoemaker. The final order

also declared that the City arbitrarily and without proper notice created a

separate tax parcel for the disputed tract. Massele appealed, and both he and

the trial court complied with Pa.R.A.P. 1925.6

Massele raises the following issues for review:

1. Did the [t]rial [c]ourt commit an error of law and/or abuse its discretion when it concluded that the doctrine of consentable lines by recognition and acquiescence applied to the facts of this case and that [Appellees] met their burden to produce credible, clear and definitive proof of adverse possession to ____________________________________________

existing documents or legislation as then written” (emphasis in original)). Here, contrary to Ziegler and Baskind, Appellees’ claim seeking a modification of the 2005 deed did not seek to illuminate existing rights, but to reform the deed based on a mutual mistake. Nevertheless, the trial court arguably had the authority to reform the deed in an ejectment or quiet title action based on the facts pleaded by the parties. Cf. Doman v. Brogan, 592 A.2d 104, 111 (Pa. Super.

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Bluebook (online)
Saslow, A. v. Massele, H., Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/saslow-a-v-massele-h-pasuperct-2022.