Stoley, G. v. Wampler, G.

2024 Pa. Super. 106, 317 A.3d 1007
CourtSuperior Court of Pennsylvania
DecidedMay 28, 2024
Docket712 WDA 2023
StatusPublished
Cited by9 cases

This text of 2024 Pa. Super. 106 (Stoley, G. v. Wampler, G.) 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
Stoley, G. v. Wampler, G., 2024 Pa. Super. 106, 317 A.3d 1007 (Pa. Ct. App. 2024).

Opinion

J-A03008-24

2024 PA Super 106

GARY STOLEY AND ROSE MARIE : IN THE SUPERIOR COURT OF NEHLS : PENNSYLVANIA : Appellants : : v. : : GENE W. WAMPLER, INDIVIDUALLY : AND AS EXECUTOR OF THE ESTATE : OF DOROTHY S. WAMPLER AND : RUSSELL E. WAMPLER AND MARY JO : No. 712 WDA 2023 WAMPLER :

Appeal from the Judgment Entered August 21, 2023 In the Court of Common Pleas of Westmoreland County Civil Division at No(s): Case No. 1230 of 2020

BEFORE: BOWES, J., KUNSELMAN, J., and MURRAY, J.

OPINION BY BOWES, J.: FILED: MAY 28, 2024

Gary Stoley and Rose Marie Nehls (collectively “Plaintiffs”) appeal from

the quiet title judgment entered upon the court’s March 6, 2023 non-jury

verdict, as modified by the June 6, 2023 order granting in part Plaintiffs’

motion for post-trial relief. We vacate the judgment and the verdict, as well

as the order adjudicating post-trial relief, and remand with instructions.

This action concerns land in Westmoreland County that was once a

single parcel owned by the Wampler family. Specifically, W.E. and Gertrude

Wampler acquired the property by a 1946 deed and resided in a house

thereon, presently designated 531 State Route 130 (“S.R. 130”). A second

house was built on the parcel, farther back from the road, in which their son

Theodore and his wife Dorothy resided. The parcel was subsequently divided, J-A03008-24

and the back lot was conveyed to Theodore and Dorothy by a 1958 deed, at

some point becoming 533 S.R. 130. Their children, including Gene W.

Wampler (“Executor”) and Russell E. Wampler (“Russell”) grew up at 533 S.R.

130. The house was somewhat screened by a row of pine trees that grew

approximately ten feet from the side of the garage. However, since the

original parcel remained within the family, the exact location of the boundary

between the lots was not a matter of concern, and maintenance of the whole

area was done by Theodore and his sons.1

Russell acquired the front lot from his grandparents in 1977, and a

subsequent deed placed 531 S.R. 130 in the name of Russell and his wife Mary

Jo (collectively “the Wamplers”). Theodore and Dorothy continued to reside

at 533 S.R. 130 until approximately 2005, when they moved to a nursing

____________________________________________

1 We offer the following image, which is a version of Plaintiffs’ Exhibit 18 from

which we omitted extraneous detail, solely to aid visualization of the property at issue:

-2- J-A03008-24

home. Theodore died in 2008, leaving Dorothy the sole owner of the back

parcel until she died testate a few months later.

In 2016, Executor decided to sell the home, which had fallen into a state

of disrepair, through a private auction. He opted to utilize the services of

Eugene Gornik, a friend who was a professional auctioneer. According to Mr.

Gornik, either Executor or Russell told him prior to the auction that the

property line for 533 S.R. 130 was the line of pine trees near the side of the

house, and he conveyed that information to Plaintiffs before they became the

successful bidders.

Plaintiffs set about cleaning up the property to rent. Believing that the

pine trees next to the house were roughly on the boundary between the

parcels, they sought and received the Wamplers’ permission before having

them removed, along with most other vegetation on the land, a partially

collapsed barn, and multiple dumpsters full of junk. In their place Plaintiffs

installed gravel and a prefabricated steel structure.

In connection with these modifications, Plaintiffs hired surveyor Charles

L. Zelenak, Jr., to determine the boundaries of their parcel. However, Mr.

Zelenak discerned that, based upon the description of the land in the deed

Executor supplied to Plaintiffs, the metes and bounds did not designate a

completed rectangle, and the boundary line between their plot and the

Wamplers’ land actually intersected their house such that roughly ten feet of

the structure closest to the felled trees was not on their land.

-3- J-A03008-24

Upon sharing this discovery with Plaintiffs, Mr. Zelenak proposed

resolving the issue by having him prepare a survey and deed that would place

the property line one foot away from the house, with a four-foot easement for

maintenance purposes. See N.T. Trial, 7/25/22, at 111, 118, 153-54. See

also id. at 162-63 (Mr. Zelenak explaining that he had not obtained the

physical or parol evidence at the time he proposed the compromise deed and

survey placing the boundary one foot from the dwelling).

When that ultimately proved unsuccessful, Plaintiffs again retained Mr.

Zelenak to perform a full field survey of their property, this time utilizing parol

evidence and seeking out monuments that might otherwise establish a

recognized boundary. From examining Plaintiffs’ deed in connection with

others in the chain of title of nearby parcels, questioning neighbors including

the Wamplers, and locating an angle iron in line with the stumps of the trees

Plaintiffs removed, Mr. Zelenak reached the professional opinion that the

correct boundary of 533 S.R. 130 was not as described in the deed, but was

the line of pine trees that stood near the house for approximately seventy-

five years. Id. at 122-30.

We offer the following image, again purely as an aid to visualizing the

area of land in dispute and not as a strictly accurate representation thereof:

-4- J-A03008-24

See Plaintiffs’ Exhibit 18 (modified).

Based upon Mr. Zelenak’s findings, Plaintiffs filed the instant action

against Executor and the Wamplers (collectively “Defendants”) seeking to

obtain title to the land between the line suggested by their deed and the line

formed by the trees and the found angle iron. In their complaint, Plaintiffs

averred that they were the true owners of the disputed area based upon (1)

the erroneous description in their deed, the actual description in the

Wamplers’ deed, the location of monuments along the tree line, and the intent

of the parties when Plaintiffs’ parcel was severed; (2) the doctrine of

consentable lines; (3) adverse possession; and (4) equitable estoppel. See

Plaintiffs’ Complaint, 3/2/20, at 8-11.

Defendants filed a joint answer and new matter wherein they asserted

that the area in dispute was limited to a sliver of land necessary to encompass

the Plaintiffs’ dwelling, admitted that Plaintiffs and their predecessors have

-5- J-A03008-24

been in possession of a portion of that area, denied ever designating the tree

line as the boundary line, and averred that Plaintiffs’ predecessors never

claimed ownership of or possessed the full disputed area defined by Plaintiffs.

See Answer, New Matter and Counterclaim, 8/17/20, at 3-9, 15-16.2

The case proceeded to a non-jury trial that took place over two days in

July and December 2022. As witnesses Plaintiffs produced auctioneer Mr.

Gornik and surveyor Mr. Zelenak, both of whom indicated that Russell stated

the property line was the line of trees. See N.T. Trial, 7/25/22, at 25-26,

127. Plaintiffs themselves testified that Mr. Gornik had informed them of that

boundary location. Id. at 43, 81. Of note, the trial court undertook a

significant examination of Mr. Zelenak, repeatedly expressing confusion about

his testimony. See, e.g., id. at 95 (“I’m confused.”), 112 (“I’m still

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Bluebook (online)
2024 Pa. Super. 106, 317 A.3d 1007, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/stoley-g-v-wampler-g-pasuperct-2024.