Sutton v. Miller

592 A.2d 83, 405 Pa. Super. 213, 1991 Pa. Super. LEXIS 1508
CourtSuperior Court of Pennsylvania
DecidedJune 4, 1991
Docket746
StatusPublished
Cited by58 cases

This text of 592 A.2d 83 (Sutton v. Miller) 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
Sutton v. Miller, 592 A.2d 83, 405 Pa. Super. 213, 1991 Pa. Super. LEXIS 1508 (Pa. Ct. App. 1991).

Opinion

POPOVICH, Judge:

Appeal is taken from a final decree in Equity awarding appellees, through adverse possession, fee simple title to a parcel of land adjoining appellants’ lot. In addition, appellees received mandatory injunctive relief compelling appellants to replace appellees’ fence (previously removed by appellants) at a location where it had remained from 1957-1985. With modification, we affirm.

The relevant facts as found below by the Honorable George Kiester, S.J., specially presiding, are as follows:

Appellees, Edward Delos, et ux., are the current owners of a parcel of land located in Clay Township, Butler County (co-appellees Sutton are the former owners of the Delos lot and are responsible for commencing the instant litigation). Appellants, Paul and Betty Miller, own an adjoining parcel. Without the aid of a survey, sometime between 1953-1957 the Suttons constructed a fence dividing the lots. Comprised of electrified barbed wire and locust and steel posts, the fence was built for the purpose of pasturing cattle on the Sutton property—the fence being within eyesight of the Miller residence. Thereafter, between 1957-1985 the Millers repeatedly verbalized disagreement concerning the propriety of the Sutton fence, as located, as demarcating the true boundary line between the lots. Nevertheless, apart *217 from a letter sent in 1957 by appellants’ attorney expressing the Millers’ dissatisfaction with the location of the fence, and apart from numerous verbal protestations by the Millers, the Millers never initiated legal proceedings to resolve the boundary dispute. In 1985 they did, however, remove the Sutton fence (without the Suttons’ consent) and replace it with another fence located pursuant to a survey conducted by W.J. McGarvey, R.P.E., the differential representing the disputed property herein.

On September 24, 1985, appellees instituted action by filing a Complaint in “Law and Equity” entitled: “Complaint in Civil Action—Action to Quiet Title and Complaint in Equity—Injunction.” 1 The Complaint, after recounting the Millers’ removal of the Sutton fence and construction of a second fence, and after setting forth a claim of adverse possession for 21 years, states at “Count I, Quiet Title”:

That an Action and [sic] ejectment will not lie ... WHEREFORE, showing the above, the Plaintiff prays this Honorable Court to enter a decree as follows:
a. That the title of the Plaintiff in the above described property be adjudicated and decreed valid and indefeasible as against all rights or claims whatsoever ...
b. That the Court decree that the Defendant’s, their heirs, successors, assigns, and all other interested parties are forever barred from asserting any right, title, lien, interest, or claim in the land inconsistent with the ownership of the Plaintiff, unless the Defendants bring an Action and [sic] Ejectment against the Plaintiff within 30 days after the entry of an judgment of this Court, and if no such action is undertaken by the Defendant’s, their heirs, successors, assigns, personal representatives or *218 any other interested parties within the 30 day period, then said Defendant’s ... shall be forever barred from asserting any right, title, interest, claim or lien in the land inconsistent with the interest and claim of the Plaintiffs herein.

Complaint at 7-8. “Under Count II, Injunction”, appellees requested, inter alia, that appellants replace their fence at its original location and remove the fence constructed by appellants in 1985. See id. at 11.

Appellants demurred to and moved to strike off the Complaint submitting (and this was conceded by appellees in their Complaint at 9-11) that they were in possession of the disputed parcel whereby making the action in Quiet Title the improper form of action. See Preliminary Objections at 3. After hearing, appellants’ motions were denied by order of February 19, 1986. The case proceeded to trial and, as already noted, the court entered a final decree in favor of appellees.

Appellants frame two issues for our review:

I. Whether the evidence was sufficient to support appellees’ award of adverse possession;
II. Whether the trial court improperly denied appellants’ preliminary objection in the nature of demurrer to appellees’ action in Quiet Title?

Turning first to the second issue, we find erroneous the lower court’s failure to dismiss pursuant to appellants’ timely preliminary objection in the nature of demurrer. However, as we find the final decree properly sustainable under a alternative form of action—an action in Ejectment—we will sua sponte amend appellees’ pleadings and affirm the decree with modification.

I

The present-day action in Quiet Title is best understood as viewed through the window of its historical development. In time long past, and generally before the turn of the century, a plaintiff’s exclusive remedy to remove a cloud on *219 his or her title was through the filing of the equitable bill quia timet. See generally 13 Std.Pa.Pract.2d, Ejectment and Quieting Title § 159 (1957). Thereafter, during the mid-to-late 1800’s and early 1900’s, the Pennsylvania General Assembly, through statute, supplanted the former practice in equity and created a remedy at law to include all equitable jurisdiction encompassed by the former bill quia timet (plus additional causes of action to settle title to real estate not formerly encompassed by the equitable bill). See generally Pa.R.C.P. 1455(l)-(30) (listing various statutory actions); 3 Goodrich-Amram 2d §§ 1061(b):2—1061(b):4. In 1946, an effort to consolidate the form and procedure followed in these separate statutory actions (which often called for different procedures), yielded Pennsylvania Rules of Civil Procedure 1455 2 and 1061 3 et seq. These Rules provided for a new form of action—the action to quiet title. See White v. Young, 409 Pa. 562, 186 A.2d 919, 921 (1963) (purpose of Rules 1061 et seq. was to unify into one procedure all the diverse procedures by which clouds on title were formerly tried); Bruker v. Burgess and Town Council, 376 Pa. 330, 102 A.2d 418, 420 (1954) (“The action to quiet title is a new form of action, created as a consolidation *220 of a large number of independent actions and proceedings, mostly statutory, designed to remove clouds on title____”); see also Kalyvas v. Kalyvas, 371 Pa. 371, 89 A.2d 819 (1952) (“Although the action [under Pa.R.C.P.

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Bluebook (online)
592 A.2d 83, 405 Pa. Super. 213, 1991 Pa. Super. LEXIS 1508, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/sutton-v-miller-pasuperct-1991.