Sehrawat, B. v. Rite Aid

CourtSuperior Court of Pennsylvania
DecidedNovember 13, 2020
Docket1901 WDA 2019
StatusUnpublished

This text of Sehrawat, B. v. Rite Aid (Sehrawat, B. v. Rite Aid) 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
Sehrawat, B. v. Rite Aid, (Pa. Ct. App. 2020).

Opinion

J-A24006-20

NON-PRECEDENTIAL DECISION - SEE SUPERIOR COURT I.O.P. 65.37

BHOOP SEHRAWAT, TRUSTEE UNDER : IN THE SUPERIOR COURT OF THE RATTAN REAL ESTATE TRUST : PENNSYLVANIA : : v. : : : RITE AID OF PENNSYLVANIA, INC. : : No. 1901 WDA 2019 Appellant :

Appeal from the Order Entered December 2, 2019 In the Court of Common Pleas of Allegheny County Civil Division at No(s): GD-17-009057

BEFORE: BENDER, P.J.E., McLAUGHLIN, J., and MUSMANNO, J.

MEMORANDUM BY BENDER, P.J.E.: FILED NOVEMBER 13, 2020

Rite Aid of Pennsylvania, Inc. (“Rite Aid”) appeals from the order dated

November 30, 2019, and entered on December 2, 2019, denying its motion

for summary judgment, granting Bhoop Sehrawat’s, Trustee Under the Rattan

Real Estate Trust (“Rattan Trust”), cross-motion for summary judgment, and

declaring void ab initio an easement agreement purportedly entered in favor

of Rite Aid. After careful review, we affirm.

This case commenced on June 23, 2017, with the filing of a complaint

in an action to quiet title by Rattan Trust.

The dispute involves a shared parking lot between two commercial properties. The entrance driveway and most of the lot is located J-A24006-20

on property owned by [Rattan Trust].[1] [Rite Aid] has title only to the land occupied by the ten parking spaces closest to its building. The instant dispute involves [Rattan Trust’s] claim that [it] had no notice, actual or constructive, of the existence of a written easement in favor of [Rite Aid] for access from the street to its ten spaces when [it] purchased the property in question. [Rite Aid’s] argument and counterclaim is that it was granted an express easement via a written grant dated September 4, 2001. Alternatively, [Rite Aid] argues that it has either an easement by estoppel or an irrevocable license.

Trial Court Memorandum (“TCM”), 11/30/19, at 1-2.

In its memorandum, the trial court found the following undisputed facts:

1) There is a single parking lot located between the buildings of the parties.

2) There is a single entrance into the parking lot from the street.

3) [Rattan Trust] has title to most of the parking lot, including the portion where the only entrance to the lot is located; if [Rite Aid] cannot use that entrance, it cannot use the spaces on its own land.

4) The listing of [Rattan Trust’s] property for sale referred to a shared parking lot.

____________________________________________

1 Rattan Trust’s property consists of its portion of the parking lot (Block and Lot No. 14-R-346), as well as the adjacent property known as 240 Hays Avenue, Mt. Oliver, PA 15210 (Block and Lot No. 14-R-350), on which a Family Dollar store is located. The Rattan Trust property was previously owned and conveyed by Charles E. Beckman and Jean R. Beckman to Jean E. Beckman by a deed, dated September 1, 1994, and recorded in the Allegheny County Office of the Department of Real Estate. Following the death of Jean Beckman on December 30, 2001, the property was conveyed by Charles Beckman, the executor of her estate, to Charles Beckman and Jill Beckman, Trustees under the Will of Jean Beckman, by deed dated December 4, 2002. Jill Beckman resigned as Trustee on May 3, 2007, and Charles Beckman died on February 19, 2010. On April 2, 2010, Lucinda R. Nachman was appointed as Successor Trustee to the estate. The property was subsequently conveyed by the Successor Trustee under the will of Jean Beckman to Rattan Trust, pursuant to a recorded deed dated March 16, 2011.

-2- J-A24006-20

5) [Rattan Trust] purchased the property on which [its] building stands[,] along with the portion of the parking lot[,] on March 16, 2011, subject to the existing lease to Family Dollar Stores of Pennsylvania, Inc., which also showed that [Rite Aid] had the right to use 10 spaces on the lot and Family Dollar had the right to use the 10 spaces on its side of the lot. (The evidence suggests that the public used spaces on either side of the lot regardless of which business was being visited. The evidence also suggests that[,] at times[,] members of the public would park there and visit neither party’s business. There is no indication that either party claimed the other was using more than its allotted share.)

6) There is no contention that [Rattan Trust] was not given a copy of this lease as required by the Addendum to the Agreement of Sale.

7) [Charles Beckman, t]he husband of [Jean Beckman, Rattan Trust’s] seller’s predecessor in title[,] had purported to grant an easement to [Rite Aid] on September 4, 2001, for access over the driveway to its ten spaces in the area of the lot closest to its building.[2]

8) The [Easement Agreement] was not recorded until April 28, 2017.

9) [Rattan Trust] was unrepresented by counsel both at the time [it] signed the agreement of sale and at [the] closing.

10) Prior to [the] closing, [Rattan Trust] … made inquiry via [its] agent[, Rick Sikora,] about whether there were any writings related to easements.

11) [Rattan Trust] denies having received any response from [its] agent, and the agent’s testimony, years later, is that he has no recall of any written easement having been brought to his attention.

2 The written document by which an easement was purportedly granted to Rite Aid is referred to herein as the “Easement Agreement.”

-3- J-A24006-20

12) The [s]eller’s agent[, Bruce McIlrath,] also recalls nothing about an easement.

13) An affidavit from [Jill Beckman,] a representative of the [s]eller[,3] states that she responded to an inquiry by forwarding a copy of the [E]asement [Agreement] to the [s]eller’s agent. No copy of a power of attorney was included.

14) All witnesses who were deposed indicated that knowledge of a written easement would have been a highly significant event that each would have remembered.

15) [Rattan Trust] admits [it] did nothing further when [it] received no reply to [its] inquiry.

16) [Rite Aid] admits that it did not record the [Easement Agreement] until years after [Rattan Trust] purchased the property.

17) [Rite Aid] admits that it has no evidence to support its contention that it contributed to the maintenance of the parking lot.[4]

18) [Rite Aid] has no copy of any power of attorney giving Charles Beckman the right to do anything regarding his wife, including a right to handle her real estate.

3 Jill Beckman is the daughter of Charles and Jean Beckman and negotiated the sale of the property to Rattan Trust, on behalf of her mother’s estate.

4 After reviewing the transcript from the oral argument, the trial court issued a supplemental opinion, modifying its Finding of Fact No. 17, as follows:

While [Rite Aid] does not expressly admit that it has no evidence that it contributed to the cost of maintenance of the parking lot and driveway entrance, it points to only one piece of evidence to support its contention that it made such contribution pursuant to an agreement with the prior owners of the property: the affidavit of Jill Beckman, the contents of which do not support [Rite Aid’s] contention.

Trial Court Supplemental Opinion (“Supplemental TCO”), 3/27/20, at 1 (citation to record omitted).

-4- J-A24006-20

19) There is no indication by the [n]otary that a power of attorney was presented at the time of signing or that Charles Beckman had signed pursuant to a power of attorney.

20) The [Easement Agreement] as signed had two blanks in it, apparently to insert the relevant Deed Book volume and page. The blanks were not filled in until years later, a few months prior to recording.

Id. at 2-3.

Following multiple depositions, Rattan Trust and Rite Aid filed cross

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Bluebook (online)
Sehrawat, B. v. Rite Aid, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/sehrawat-b-v-rite-aid-pasuperct-2020.