Waksmunski v. Delginis

570 A.2d 88, 391 Pa. Super. 37, 1990 Pa. Super. LEXIS 309
CourtSupreme Court of Pennsylvania
DecidedFebruary 5, 1990
Docket360 and 460
StatusPublished
Cited by9 cases

This text of 570 A.2d 88 (Waksmunski v. Delginis) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Pennsylvania primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Waksmunski v. Delginis, 570 A.2d 88, 391 Pa. Super. 37, 1990 Pa. Super. LEXIS 309 (Pa. 1990).

Opinion

HESTER, Judge:

John and Agnes Waksmunski instituted this equity action on November 6, 1984, by petition for injunction against Edward and Agnes Dilginis. 1 The equity court issued an injunction against respondents to cease blocking an easement over the respondents’ property which petitioners used to access their property. The equity court, however, denied petitioners’ request to declare the easement a public road pursuant to 53 P.S. § 66105 thereby widening the easement from fourteen feet to thirty-three feet. We affirm.

The Waksmunskis filed this action against the Dilginises by petition for injunction, in which they alleged the following. Petitioners own property directly across an unnamed lane or roadway from property owned by respondents in Portage Township, Cambria County. Both properties are located in an area known as Dutch settlement, where five other families also reside. The roadway is used as the sole-access road by all property owners in the settlement. Construction of a different access road would be prohibitively expensive. Furthermore, petitioners have a fourteen-foot easement in the roadway as established in their chain of title, which originates from a grantor common to the grantor of respondents. In September, 1984, respondents partially obstructed the lane by placing wooden posts and steel reinforcing bars along the side of the lane, which has significantly narrowed the size of the lane rendering motor vehicle access dangerous.

*40 Petitioners also alleged that the roadway has been in continuous use as a public right-of-way in excess of twenty-one years and that during that time, the lane was continually maintained and improved by the Township of Portage.

Petitioners requested an injunction preventing further obstruction of the roadway. They also requested that the roadway be widened to thirty-three feet pursuant to 53 P.S. § 66105.

In their response to the petition, respondents denied both that all the families in the settlement used the roadway and that the roadway was the sole access to the settlement. Further, they alleged that the steel posts that they admittedly placed on the easement were actually located on their property and outside the easement as described in the chain of title to the relevant properties. Respondents also denied that the road had been maintained and used by the public in excess of twenty-one years.

The matter was heard by the equity court at hearings held on July 28, 1987, and January 26, 1988. The first witness was Charles W. Sasgiver who has been the Portage Township road foreman for twenty years and has worked on the roads in the township for thirty-four years. He testified that for twenty-five years, the township continually has cleared the snow from the roadway following every snowstorm. The township also patched holes and constructed and repaired the drainage ditches along the roadway. The township has graded the entire roadway occasionally, has placed red dog along the road from time to time, and has partially surfaced the road. Minutes from the township supervisors’ meeting were read into evidence at the hearing. The supervisors do not want to dedicate this road as a public highway, but they are willing to continue to plow and patch it.

Pictures of the area introduced at the hearing by petitioners clearly demonstrate that respondents placed large posts inside a clearly-defined dirt roadway. Mr. Waksmunski testified that when ice or snow appear on the road, a truck *41 owned by one of the people using the easement cannot pass through the road at the site of the posts.

At the hearing, respondents maintained that the posts were on their property and that the easement granted in the deed was different from the roadway actually utilized by the individuals in the settlement. They contended that the easement as defined in the deed is located more on petitioners’ property than the roadway as it actually exists and that the posts that encroach on the roadway are not in the easement but are on their own property.

By order dated January 24, 1989, the equity court granted petitioners’ request for a permanent injunction as to a fourteen foot roadway. It established the easement by reference to the survey introduced into evidence by petitioners at the hearing. The equity court modified the position of the easement from that contained in the deed, which is delineated in the survey. It changed the boundaries of the easement to conform to the way the easement actually has been utilized, thus making it conform with the roadway as it appears in the photographs introduced into evidence. Under the court-ordered easement, respondents’ posts are within the easement, and respondents were ordered to remove the posts. The equity court declined to widen the roadway to thirty-three feet by dedicating it as a public roadway.

The Dilginises filed a timely appeal from the order, and the Waksmunskis filed a timely cross-appeal.

Dilginis Appeal

The Dilginises first contend that the equity court had no jurisdiction to entertain this matter in that the action should have been brought at law. Since they never raised this issue by preliminary objection, the issue has been waived. Pa.R.C.P. 1509(c) (objection that equity court has no jurisdiction due to existence of adequate remedy at law is waived if not raised by preliminary objection).

*42 The next issue raised by the Dilginises is whether the evidence established that the roadway as it exists was obstructed by the fence posts. We conclude that the evidence establishes obstruction. The photographs of the roadway introduced into evidence at the hearing clearly show that the posts are on the dirt roadway and that larger motor vehicles have difficulty navigating through the portion of the roadway where the posts are located. Further, the boundaries of the dirt roadway are clearly marked by the start of grass and weed growth. Accordingly, we affirm the equity court’s finding of encroachment.

Next, the Dilginises object to where the equity court placed the easement, and they argue that the order effectuated a reformation of the deed. They note that reformation of a deed may be made only if there is a mutual mistake in the deed. However, the Dilginises misconstrue the effect of the order. The equity court did not reform the deed description; it explicitly based its location of the easement by reference to the survey introduced by the Waksmunskis. The survey is based on the deed. The equity court merely changed the boundaries of the easement to reflect where the easement actually has been used since its inception which leads us to the next argument raised by the Dilginises.

The Dilginises argue that “[n]o evidence was presented to establish that Mr. and Mrs. Waksmunski are entitled to an easement by prescription.” Dilginis brief at 9. We disagree. Mr. Sasgiver testified that he personally had supervised the plowing of the roadway for twenty-five years. Both parties were in agreement at the hearing that the configuration of the roadway as it now exists has not changed since they were children — far in excess of twenty-one years. In fact, at the hearing, the Dilginises never denied that they placed the posts inside the roadway actually used by the other residents of Dutch settlement.

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Bluebook (online)
570 A.2d 88, 391 Pa. Super. 37, 1990 Pa. Super. LEXIS 309, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/waksmunski-v-delginis-pa-1990.