R.D. Dysert v. Robinson Twp., Washington County ~ Appeal of: R. D. Dysert ( 2021 )


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  •              IN THE COMMONWEALTH COURT OF PENNSYLVANIA
    Russell D. Dysert, Karen K. Dysert, :
    Joseph Klick, Jayne Klick, Michael  :
    Macklin and Lori Macklin            :
    :
    v.                             : No. 38 C.D. 2021
    : ARGUED: October 18, 2021
    Robinson Township, Washington       :
    County                              :
    :
    Appeal of: Russell D. Dysert, Karen :
    K. Dysert, Michael Macklin and Lori :
    Macklin                             :
    BEFORE:          HONORABLE P. KEVIN BROBSON, President Judge
    HONORABLE ANNE E. COVEY, Judge
    HONORABLE ELLEN CEISLER, Judge
    OPINION NOT REPORTED
    MEMORANDUM OPINION
    BY JUDGE CEISLER                                              FILED: December 22, 2021
    Appellants Russell D. Dysert, Karen K. Dysert, Michael Macklin, and Lori
    Macklin appeal from the Court of Common Pleas of Washington County’s
    (Common Pleas) December 22, 2020 order,1 through which, in relevant part,
    Common Pleas sustained Appellee Robinson Township, Washington County’s
    (Township) preliminary objections to a petition for appointment of a board of
    viewers (Petition) filed by Appellants, Joseph Klick, and Jayne Klick (collectively,
    Landowners), on the basis that the Petition was barred by the pertinent statute of
    limitations.2 The Township has also filed an application to strike certain exhibits that
    1
    Common Pleas’ order is dated December 18, 2020, but was not mailed to the parties until
    four days later.
    2
    The Klicks are not participating in this appeal.
    are attached to Appellants’ brief (Application), in which it argues that those exhibits
    are dehors the record from below and, therefore, should not be considered on appeal.
    After thorough review, we grant the Application and affirm Common Pleas’
    December 22, 2020 order.
    I. Background
    This marks the second time we have considered this matter, which has
    returned to us after we remanded it in part to Common Pleas in March 2020, so that
    Common Pleas could hold a hearing and make certain factual determinations. As
    previously recounted by our Court in Dysert v. Robinson Township, Washington
    County (Pa. Cmwlth., No. 260 C.D. 2019, filed Mar. 9, 2020) (Dysert I),
    Landowners and the Township [have been] involved in
    two separate actions before [C]ommon [P]leas relating to
    the ownership and status of Rita Drive, the disputed
    property: a declaratory judgment action and [an] eminent
    domain action.
    A. Declaratory Judgment Action
    On June 11, 2018, the Township filed with [C]ommon
    [P]leas a complaint for declaratory judgment against
    Landowners (Declaratory Judgment Action). In its
    Declaratory Judgment Action, the Township asserted that
    it has continuously maintained Rita Drive in excess of 21
    years and sought an order declaring that Rita Drive is a
    public road pursuant to Section 2307 of The Second Class
    Township Code [(Township Code)].2 Section 2307(a)
    provides:
    [e]very road which has been used for public travel
    and maintained and kept in repair by the township
    for a period of at least twenty-one years is a public
    road having a right-of-way of thirty-three feet even
    though there is no public record of the laying out or
    dedication for public use of the road.
    53 P.S. § 67307(a). The Township alleged that Rita Drive
    is, and always has been, a public road that the Township
    has     maintained,      despite    Landowners’       recent
    2
    representations to the Township otherwise. Declaratory
    Judgment Action Complaint. Compl. ¶¶4, 16. [Through
    the Declaratory Judgment Action, t]he Township sought .
    . . a judgment “confirming that Rita Drive is a public road
    in accordance with the . . . Township Code, 53 P.S. §
    67307.” Id., Wherefore Clause.
    2
    Act of May 1, 1933, P.L. 103, as amended, added by
    Section 1 of the Act of November 9, 1995, P.L. 350, 53 P.S.
    § 67307.
    B. Petition
    While the Declaratory Judgment Action was pending,
    Landowners filed the Petition on August 6, 2018, [asking]
    [C]ommon [P]leas to appoint a board of viewers to
    determine whether the Township had effectuated a de
    facto taking of Rita Drive and, if so, to determine just
    compensation. Landowners averred in the Petition as
    follows. The Dyserts own land that Rita Drive bifurcates,
    the Macklins own property north of Rita Drive and rely
    upon Rita Drive for access to a public right-of-way, and
    the Klicks also own property to the north of Rita Drive.
    Petition ¶¶1, 3, 6-7, 9-10. There is no public record of
    dedicating Rita Drive for public use, there was no formal
    vote for such purpose, and there has never been an exercise
    of de jure power of eminent domain with regard to Rita
    Drive. Rather, “Rita Drive is a dead-end cart[ ]path[,] the
    sole function of which is to provide exclusive access to a
    public right-of-way” for the surrounding properties. Id.
    ¶17. Rita Drive has never been opened to or used by the
    public, which divested the Township of any right it may
    have had to use Rita Drive as a public road. Rita Drive is
    currently 11-feet-wide. However, Section 2307
    necessitates that the road be 33-feet-wide if it is declared
    a public road. Although the Township has alleged in its
    Declaratory Judgment Action that it has acquired 33 feet
    of land comprising Rita Drive, it has never filed a
    declaration of taking or otherwise acquired title thereto.
    Landowners further alleged as follows. The Township’s
    “continuous use, expansion, and improvement” of Rita
    Drive for “non-residential[] public purposes has destroyed
    the use and enjoyment of all, or the portion of the alleged
    33[-foot] right-of-way within and beyond the existing”
    3
    Rita Drive, which has resulted in injury and damages to
    Landowners. Id. ¶31. The Township’s actions fall squarely
    within its eminent domain power. Accordingly,
    Landowners “seek just compensation for the period of July
    1996 to July 2017 in which” the Township appropriated
    Rita Drive as a public road, “in the event that [Common
    Pleas] should determine [in the Declaratory Judgment
    Action] that Rita Drive became a public road” pursuant to
    Section 2307. Id. ¶37. Alternatively, if [C]ommon [P]leas
    determines that Rita Drive is not a public road pursuant to
    Section 2307, Landowners seek “just compensation
    reflecting a taking in perpetuity . . . resulting from [the
    Township’s] admitted confiscation of Rita Drive for
    public use as the Township alleged in its Declaratory
    Judgment Action. Id. ¶38. Therefore, Landowners [asked
    C]ommon [P]leas [to] appoint a board of viewers to
    determine “whether a de facto taking has occurred” and, if
    so, what just compensation was due. Id., Wherefore
    Clause (emphasis omitted). By order dated August 6,
    2018, [C]ommon [P]leas appointed a board of viewers to
    “view the premises and to ascertain and assess such
    damages as [it] may find to have been caused to
    [Landowners].” Reproduced Record (R.R.) at 14a.
    C. The Township’s [Preliminary Objections]
    The Township filed a motion to stay the Board of
    Viewer[s] proceedings and subsequently filed its
    [preliminary objections] on September 26, 2018, asserting
    three separate grounds for objection to the Petition: (1)
    pendency of a prior action; (2) demurrer or legal
    insufficiency of the Petition; and (3) demurrer based upon
    the statute of limitations. With regard to the pendency of a
    prior action, the Township asserted that, pursuant to Rule
    1028(a)(6) of the Pennsylvania Rules of Civil Procedure,
    Pa. R.[Civ.]P.[]1028(a)(6), allowing [preliminary
    objections] to be filed on the grounds of “pendency of a
    prior action or agreement for alternative dispute
    resolution,” the Petition should be dismissed because the
    Declaratory Judgment Action then pending before
    [C]ommon [P]leas3 would have a direct impact on the
    relief Landowners seek in the Petition. The Township
    further asserted that the Petition was legally insufficient
    because Landowners did not allege sufficient facts of their
    4
    ownership interests or facts to establish a taking, as they
    do not allege that they are fee simple owners of the land
    upon which Rita Drive rests but aver that Rita Drive is
    north of their land or “appears” to bifurcate it.
    [Preliminary Objections] ¶ 17. Finally, the Township
    argued that the Petition was legally insufficient because it
    was filed after the statute of limitations had run. If the
    Township’s actions could be considered a taking, the
    Township asserted that the six-year statute of limitations
    for a takings claim began to run on July 8, 1996, when the
    Township entered onto portions of Rita Drive and paved
    it. For the foregoing reasons, the Township asserted, the
    Petition should be dismissed.
    3
    We take judicial notice that by Opinion and Order dated
    December 3, 2019, [C]ommon [P]leas determined in the
    Declaratory Judgment Action that all but a portion of Rita
    Drive is a public road pursuant to Section 2307. See
    Lycoming [Cnty.] v. Pa. [Lab. Rels.] Bd., 
    943 A.2d 333
    , 335
    n.8 (Pa. Cmwlth. 2007) (a court can take judicial notice of
    judgments and pleadings in other court proceedings,
    particularly where the proceedings involve the same parties).
    D. Common [P]leas’ Order
    The parties briefed the [preliminary objections] and oral
    argument was held. Upon consideration, [C]ommon
    [P]leas entered the following Order:
    1. [The Township’s preliminary objection] relating
    to the pendency of a prior action is OVERRULED,
    inasmuch          as       we       believe        Pa.
    R.[Civ.]P.[]1028([a])(6) does not apply to a petition
    brought under the Eminent Domain Code[4] for
    appointment of viewers. Even if our view [was]
    otherwise, we agree with [Landowners’] position
    that the objection of the pendency of a prior action
    is not applicable, as the same rights are not asserted
    and the same relief is not sought in the two actions.
    2. [The Township’s preliminary objection] relating
    [to] the legal insufficiency of [Landowners’]
    pleading, i.e., that there has been no exercise of
    eminent domain and that no taking has been averred
    is OVERRULED. We agree with [Landowners']
    5
    position that averments of the Petition are sufficient
    to state a cause of action for a de[]facto taking.
    3. [The Township’s preliminary objection] relating
    to the statute of limitations is OVERRULED.
    Order. The Township appealed and, at [C]ommon [P]leas’
    direction, filed a statement of errors complained of on
    appeal pursuant to Pennsylvania Rule of Appellate
    Procedure 1925(b), Pa. R.A.P. 1925(b), asserting that
    [C]ommon [P]leas erred in overruling the [preliminary
    objections] and in ruling upon them at all prior to
    conducting an evidentiary hearing. Common [P]leas
    subsequently issued its Rule 1925(a) opinion[, in which it]
    relied upon its reasoning in the Order to support its
    determination as to the [preliminary objection] for the
    pendency of a prior action. With regard to demurrer for
    legal insufficiency, [C]ommon [P]leas explained that the
    averments were sufficient to state a cause of action for a
    de facto taking, acknowledging “that a hearing is
    necessary so a judicial determination of whether a taking
    actually occurred can be made.” Rule 1925(a) Opinion at
    1-2 (citing Friedman v. City of [Phila.], 
    503 A.2d 1110
    (Pa. Cmwlth. 1986)). Finally, with regard to the statute of
    limitations, [C]ommon [P]leas stated that it agreed with
    Landowners that the statute of limitations began to run in
    June 2017 when the Township declared Rita Drive a
    public road, “or at the latest, when [the Township] filed
    the [D]eclaratory [J]udgment [A]ction.” Id. at 2.
    4
    26 Pa. C.S. §§ 101-1106.
    Dysert I, slip op. at 2-7, 
    2020 WL 1130764
    , at *1-*3 (some punctuation omitted).
    The Township appealed Common Pleas’ Order to our Court and we
    subsequently affirmed the Order in part and vacated it in part. We concluded that
    Common Pleas had properly overruled the Township’s pendency of a prior action
    preliminary objection, but had erred by overruling the Township’s legal
    insufficiency preliminary objection. Id. at 7-19, 
    2020 WL 1130764
    , at *3-*8.
    Specifically, we noted that Common Pleas had never held the legally mandated
    evidentiary hearing but had nevertheless determined that the Township had effected
    6
    a de facto taking of Rita Drive. Id. at 14-19, 
    2020 WL 1130764
    , at *6-*8. We also
    concluded that Common Pleas had erred by overruling the Township’s statute of
    limitations preliminary objection because, without an evidentiary hearing and
    appropriate factual findings, it could not be said with certitude whether a de facto
    taking had occurred or, assuming that it had, when the statute of limitations on
    challenging that taking had begun to run. Id. at 19-21, 
    2020 WL 1130764
    , at *8-*9.
    Accordingly, we affirmed Common Pleas’ Order as to the pendency of a prior action
    preliminary objection, but vacated it as to the legal sufficiency and statute of
    limitations preliminary objections, and remanded the matter to Common Pleas with
    instructions that it hold an evidentiary hearing regarding those preliminary
    objections. Id. at 21-22, 
    2020 WL 1130764
    , at *9.
    Common Pleas then convened that hearing on July 22, 2020, during which the
    parties collectively stipulated to use of the evidentiary record from the Declaratory
    Judgment Action as the record for the Petition Action, in lieu of holding additional
    hearings and creating an entirely new record before Common Pleas. Common Pleas
    Op., 12/22/20, at 2. That same day, Appellants withdrew their post-trial motions in
    the Declaratory Judgment Action, thereby giving up their ability to appeal Common
    Pleas’ December 3, 2019 order and rendering it final. R.R. at 265a. On December
    22, 2020, Common Pleas ruled that, based upon this jointly stipulated record, the
    Township had effected a de facto taking of Rita Drive, but that Landowners had
    waited too long to file their Petition challenging that taking. Common Pleas Op.,
    12/22/20, at 2-4. Common Pleas came to this conclusion for two reasons. First,
    Common Pleas credited the testimony of Gerald Runtas, who had been a road
    supervisor for the Township between 1974 and 2005, and determined, on the basis
    of his testimony, that Rita Drive had been treated as a public road starting in 1974.
    7
    Id. at 3. Second, Common Pleas held that Appellants were put on notice regarding
    the public status of Rita Drive no later than 1997 and 1998, when the Dyserts and
    Macklins first purchased their respective properties, as the deeds for their properties
    described Rita Drive as a public road. Id. at 4. In light of these conclusions, Common
    Pleas determined that Rita Drive had become a public road in 1995, pursuant to
    Section 2307 of the Township Code, and that Appellants were consequently required
    to challenge that de facto taking no later than an unspecified date in 2001, per 42 Pa.
    C.S. § 5527(a)(2).3 As a result, Common Pleas overruled the Township’s legal
    insufficiency preliminary objection, but sustained the Township’s statute of
    limitations-based preliminary objection, and dismissed the Petition with prejudice
    due to its lack of timeliness. Id. at 4-5.
    Appellants subsequently appealed Common Pleas’ December 22, 2020 order
    to our Court on January 15, 2021. Thereafter, Appellants submitted an appellate brief
    to our Court, which, in addition to presenting their legal argument, contained three
    attached exhibits that are described as follows: Appendix A (Trial Court Opinion
    and Order); Appendix B (Township’s Comprehensive Plan and Resolution); and
    Appendix C (Township’s Liquid Fuels Map). See Appellants’ Br. at ii, Apps. A-C.
    On July 7, 2021, the Township filed its Application, in which it asserted that both
    Appendix B and Appendix C should be stricken, in addition to all references thereto
    in Appellants’ Brief, due to the fact that neither item had been part of the jointly
    stipulated record that had been presented to, and considered by, Common Pleas.
    Application at 1-3; see Township’s Br. at 21-26. Appellants responded in opposition
    3
    This law states: “[i]f the condemnor has not filed a declaration of taking, a petition for
    the appointment of viewers for the assessment of damages under [the Eminent Domain Code, 26
    Pa. C.S. §§ 101-1106,] must be filed within six years from the date on which the asserted taking,
    injury or destruction of the property occurred or could reasonably have been discovered by the
    condemnee.” 42 Pa. C.S. § 5527(a)(2).
    8
    to the Application on July 13, 2021; as such, both the appeal and the Application are
    ready for our consideration.
    II. Discussion
    A. Application
    First, we address the Township’s Application. To reiterate, the Township
    argues that we should strike Appendix B and Appendix C, and all references made
    by Appellants to those appendices in their brief, as these appendices were not
    included in the jointly stipulated record presented to Common Pleas. Id. Appellants
    do not dispute that those appendices are dehors the jointly stipulated record.
    Nevertheless, they maintain that we should judicially notice them pursuant to
    Section 6107(a) of the Judicial Code4 or Pa. R.E. 201,5 and consider them for
    4
    This law states that “[t]he ordinances of municipal corporations of this Commonwealth
    shall be judicially noticed.” 42 Pa. C.S. § 6107(a).
    5
    This rule of evidence reads as follows:
    (a) Scope. This rule governs judicial notice of an adjudicative fact
    only, not a legislative fact.
    (b) Kinds of Facts That May Be Judicially Noticed. The court may
    judicially notice a fact that is not subject to reasonable dispute
    because it:
    (1) is generally known within the trial court’s territorial
    jurisdiction; or
    (2) can be accurately and readily determined from sources
    whose accuracy cannot reasonably be questioned.
    (c) Taking Notice. The court:
    (1) may take judicial notice on its own; or
    (2) must take judicial notice if a party requests it and the
    court is supplied with the necessary information.
    (d) Timing. The court may take judicial notice at any stage of the
    proceeding.
    (e) Opportunity to Be Heard. On timely request, a party is entitled
    to be heard on the propriety of taking judicial notice and the nature
    (Footnote continued on next page…)
    9
    purposes of our disposition of this matter, as both are official government documents
    that contain what can either be deemed legislative facts or facts beyond reasonable
    dispute showing that the Township considered Rita Drive to be a private road.
    Appellants’ Br. at 40-48; Appellants’ Response to Application ¶¶6-18. Appellants
    further clarify that they
    are not asserting these documents as a conclusive
    determination of the truth of these official representations
    that Rita Drive is a private road; to the contrary, the maps
    [contained in the challenged appendices] could be legally
    incorrect. However, what cannot be disputed is that had
    [Appellants] made an exhaustive inquiry as to whether
    Rita Drive was public or private, they would have been
    reliably put on notice by these official documents that Rita
    Drive was regarded by the Condemnor[, i.e., the
    Township,] as a private road.
    Appellants’ Response to Application ¶14 (emphasis in original).
    These reliable and official sources reasonably supersede
    the cryptic and uncorroborated deed reference and vague,
    generalized testimony relied upon by the Township.
    [Common Pleas] erred in holding [Appellants] to a much
    higher standard of what “could reasonably have been
    discovered” than it holds the Township with regard to its
    own documents. [Appellant] Russell Dysert was a
    Township Supervisor when the Comprehensive Plan was
    adopted in 2012 and the Township has not modified the
    Comprehensive Plan since. [Appellants] reasonably relied
    or could have reasonably relied upon the well-vetted, and
    formally adopted Comprehensive Plan which expressly
    represents that Rita Drive is a private road. [Appellants]
    would have been foolish to disregard the official maps of
    the Township in favor of an indeterminate, inconsistent
    of the fact to be noticed. If the court takes judicial notice before
    notifying a party, the party, on request, is still entitled to be heard.
    (f) Instructing the Jury. The court must instruct the jury that it may,
    but is not required to, accept as conclusive any fact judicially
    noticed.
    Pa. R.E. 201.
    10
    deed reference and, therefore, any finding to the contrary
    that [Appellants] exercised reasonable diligence is an error
    of law.
    Appellants’ Br. at 48 (emphasis in original).
    In doing so, however, Appellants misperceive both the limited scope of our
    appellate standard of review and our ability to take judicial notice of the challenged
    appendices. Section 504(d) of the Eminent Domain Code provides the following
    direction regarding how a court of common pleas must handle preliminary
    objections to a petition to appoint a board of viewers:
    (1) Any objection to the appointment of viewers may be
    raised by preliminary objections filed within 30 days after
    receipt of notice of the appointment of viewers.
    (2) Objections to the form of the petition or the
    appointment or the qualifications of the viewers in any
    proceeding or to the legal sufficiency or factual basis of a
    petition filed under section 502(c) (relating to petition for
    appointment of viewers) are waived unless included in
    preliminary objections.
    (3) An answer with or without new matter may be filed
    within 20 days of service of preliminary objections, and a
    reply to new matter may be filed within 20 days of service
    of the answer.
    (4) The court shall determine promptly all preliminary
    objections and make any orders and decrees as justice
    requires.
    (5) If an issue of fact is raised, the court shall conduct an
    evidentiary hearing or order that evidence be taken by
    deposition or otherwise, but in no event shall evidence be
    taken by the viewers on this issue.
    26 Pa. C.S. § 504(d). The courts of common pleas are thus the factfinders regarding
    preliminary objections to such petitions; it follows, then that “[q]uestions of
    credibility and conflicts in the evidence presented [in these matters] are for the [court
    of common pleas] to resolve.” Denes v. Pa. Tpk. Comm’n, 
    689 A.2d 219
    , 222 (Pa.
    11
    1997). “Appellate review in an eminent domain case is limited to a determination of
    whether the trial court abused its discretion or committed an error of law, and
    whether the findings of fact are supported by substantial evidence.” 
    Id.
     “Substantial
    evidence is such relevant evidence as a reasonable person would consider adequate
    to support a finding.” Bouch v. State Ethics Comm’n, 
    848 A.2d 1078
    , 1080 (Pa.
    Cmwlth. 2004). “If sufficient evidence supports the trial court’s findings as
    factfinder, they should not be disturbed.” Denes, 
    689 A.2d at 222
    . More generally,
    [a]n appellate court is limited to considering only those
    facts that have been duly certified in the record on appeal.
    City of Pittsburgh [Comm’n] on [Hum. Rels.] v. DeFelice,
    
    782 A.2d 586
    , 593 n. 10 (Pa. Cmwlth. 2001). For purposes
    of appellate review, that which is not part of the certified
    record does not exist. 
    Id.
     Documents attached to a brief as
    an appendix or reproduced record may not be considered
    by an appellate court when they are not part of the certified
    record. Stabler Dev[.] Co[.] v. [Bd.] of Supervisors of
    Lower Mt. Bethel [Twp.], 
    695 A.2d 882
    , 887 n. 5 (Pa.
    Cmwlth. 1997) . . . . “[I]t is the responsibility of the
    appellant to supply this Court with a complete record for
    purposes of review. The failure by an appellant to insure
    that the original record certified for appeal contains
    sufficient information to conduct a proper review
    constitutes waiver of the issue(s) sought to be examined.”
    Salameh v. Spossey, 
    731 A.2d 649
    , 658 (Pa. Cmwlth.
    [1999]) . . . (citation omitted).
    B.K. v. Dep’t of Pub. Welfare, 
    36 A.3d 649
    , 657 (Pa. Cmwlth. 2012).
    Appellants’ judicial notice request is thus problematic for two reasons. First,
    they offer no explanation as to why they did not ask Common Pleas to take judicial
    notice of the Comprehensive Plan and Resolution or the Liquid Fuels Map, or why
    they did not seek to add these items to the record below via agreement with the
    Township or through leave from Common Pleas. See Thomas v. Grimm, 
    155 A.3d 128
    , 134 (Pa. Cmwlth. 2017) (appellate court cannot take judicial notice of facts in
    12
    document that is not in the record if appellant could have, but did not, ask trial court
    to take such notice). Second, by seeking judicial notice at this stage, Appellants
    effectively ask us to add those items to the record from below, reweigh the combined
    materials, and make factual findings of our own regarding when they could have
    reasonably discovered the Township’s de facto taking of Rita Drive. To accede to
    that request would undoubtedly contravene our aforementioned standard of review
    and improperly discard a portion of Common Pleas’ factual determinations.
    Consequently, we grant the Application and strike Appendix B and Appendix C
    from Appellants’ Brief, as well as all references thereto in the body of Appellants’
    Brief itself.
    B. Appeal
    With that resolved, we now turn to the remaining arguments raised by
    Appellants, which we restate as follows. First, Common Pleas’ determination that
    Rita Drive has been a public road since 1974 is not supported by substantial
    evidence. Appellants’ Br. at 22-37.6 Second, Common Pleas’ determination that the
    6
    The Township argues that Appellants are collaterally estopped by virtue of Common
    Pleas’ adjudication of the Declaratory Judgment Action, as well as admissions made by
    Appellants’ counsel in that matter, from arguing in this case that Rita Drive was not a public road
    as of 1974. See Township’s Br. at 17-20.
    Collateral estoppel or issue preclusion prohibits the re-litigation of
    questions of law or issues of fact that have already been litigated and
    determined by a final judgment. . . . Collateral estoppel prohibits re-
    litigation where: (1) the legal or factual issues are identical; (2) they
    were actually litigated; (3) they were essential to the judgment; and
    (4) they were material to the adjudication. A prerequisite to the
    application of collateral estoppel is that the prior decision asserted
    to have preclusive effect must be a final judgment.
    Duvall v. Dep’t of Corr., 
    926 A.2d 1220
    , 1224 (Pa. Cmwlth. 2007) (internal citations omitted).
    This argument, however, misapprehends the effect of the Declaratory Judgment Action, as well as
    the substance of counsel’s admissions. With regard to the first issue, we can come up with no better
    (Footnote continued on next page…)
    13
    language used in Appellants’ deeds should have put them on notice that Rita Drive
    was considered a public road is not supported by substantial evidence. Id. at 48-53.
    Finally, Appellants could not have discovered through reasonable diligence that the
    Township’s de facto taking by prescription was of a 33-foot-wide swath of property
    along Rita Drive, as the portions of that road that were heretofore owned by
    Appellants are 11-feet-wide and there is no evidence that the Township ever
    maintained or improved the remaining width. Id. at 53-55.
    With regard to the first issue, the standard for determining whether a road has
    been made public under the Township Code has been established through both
    statute and case law. Per Section 2307 of the Township Code,
    (a) Every road which has been used for public travel and
    maintained and kept in repair by the township for a period
    of at least twenty-one years is a public road having a right-
    of-way of thirty-three feet even though there is no public
    record of the laying out or dedication for public use of the
    road.
    explanation for why collateral estoppel does not apply than how the Township itself described the
    situation to Common Pleas in its Response to Appellants’ Brief on Issues to be Decided on
    Remand:
    [Common Pleas] has already decided that Rita Drive is a public road
    pursuant to Section 2307 [of the Township Code] through its order
    in the Declaratory [Judgment] Action. Post-trial motions were
    withdrawn by [Appellants] and that decision was not appealed.
    Therefore, for purposes of this eminent domain proceeding, there
    has been a final judgment . . . on the issue that Rita Drive is a public
    road[.] . . . It is now for [Common Pleas] to determine when the
    period of public use and maintenance of Rita Drive began.
    R.R. at 864a. Thus, the question that is before us (and was before Common Pleas), regarding the
    statute of limitations, is different from that which was answered through the Declaratory Judgment
    Action. As to the second issue, Appellants’ counsel admitted that Rita Drive was a public road,
    but never admitted to when it attained that status. See R.R. at 273a-92a. Those admissions
    consequently have no preclusive effect upon Appellants’ ability to dispute when exactly the statute
    of limitations began to run.
    14
    (b) In any proceeding pursuant to this section, any relevant
    oral or documentary evidence of public travel or
    maintenance and repairs by the township shall, if
    presented, be considered, including, but not limited to:
    (i) Maps or surveys which are either generated by
    any governmental unit or are created pursuant to
    any judicial proceeding of the courts of this
    Commonwealth.
    (ii) Evidence concerning the distribution of
    government funds to the township pursuant to the
    act of June 1, 1956 (1955 P.L. 1944, No. 655), [as
    amended, 72 P.S. §§ 2615.1-2615.10,] referred to as
    the “Liquid Fuels Tax Municipal Allocation Law.”
    (iii) Approved subdivision plans, deeds or other
    documents containing a designation of the road as
    either a township road or otherwise.
    (iv) Evidence that the road is an extension from a
    public road or public cul-de-sac, a throughway
    between other municipal or State roads or provides
    the only access to a municipal boundary line.
    (v) Court orders, decisions, findings of fact or other
    matters of judicial record relating to public or
    private rights in the road.
    (c) For purposes of this section:
    (i) The frequency of use of a road may be
    considered relevant in any proceeding pursuant to
    this section, but, in the absence of additional
    findings on the purpose of such use, shall not alone
    be sufficient to establish that the road has been used
    for public travel.
    (ii) The condition or sufficiency of the road surface
    for public travel may be considered relevant in any
    proceeding pursuant to this section, but, absent
    additional findings of actual public maintenance
    and repair, shall not alone be sufficient to establish
    maintenance and repair by the township.
    (d) Nothing in this section shall be construed as affecting
    the weight or persuasiveness of any evidence presented in
    accordance with subsection (b) or the relevance of any
    15
    evidence presented except as otherwise provided in this
    section.
    (e) In any proceeding in which this section is relied upon
    to allege the existence of a public road, the proponent of
    the public status of the road shall present evidence first,
    and the burden shall then shift to the opponent to present
    evidence to refute the public status of the road.
    53 P.S. § 67307. Thus, by statute, a road can only become public where there is
    evidence that, for at least 21 years, it has been maintained by the municipality in
    which it is situated and has been used for travel by the general public. Id. Beyond
    these statutory parameters, we have elaborated via case law about what constitutes
    the level of public use necessary to allow for a road to be deemed public.
    Although public use does not mean use by every member
    of the community, it is not made out by use of a road
    merely by those having business with the establishments
    to which the road provides access. [Se. Pa. Transp. Auth.
    v. Pa.] Public Util[.] Comm[’n], 
    505 A.2d 1046
    , 1049 (Pa.
    Cmwlth. 1986). Moreover, “[t]he use must be by the
    public in general, as against a limited segment of the
    public.” 
    Id.
     (citation omitted). “[T]he evidence need not
    show a constant use in order to establish continuity; rather,
    continuity is established if the evidence shows a settled
    course of conduct indicating an attitude of mind on the part
    of the user or users that the use is the exercise of a property
    right.” Minteer [v. Wolfe], 446 A.2d[ 316,] 319 [(Pa.
    Super. 1982)] (quoting Keefer v. Jones, . . . 
    359 A.2d 735
    ,
    737 ([Pa.] 1976)).
    In Re Petition for Appointment of Bd. of Viewers, 
    149 A.3d 911
    , 915 (Pa. Cmwlth.
    2016).
    For the first prong of this test, Common Pleas’ determination that the
    Township maintained Rita Drive continuously from 1974 onwards is supported by
    substantial evidence. As noted above, Common Pleas found Gerald Runtas to be
    credible with regard to his testimony on this point. In relevant part, Runtas stated
    that he was a Township supervisor between 1974 and 2010, during which time he
    16
    supervised and was involved in road maintenance throughout his municipality,
    including repair projects and snow plowing. Runtas attested to the fact that, during
    the entirety of his time as a supervisor, he and his crews did such maintenance on
    Rita Drive because, in his opinion, it was a public road. See R.R. at 437a-47a. Given
    the thoroughness of Runtas’ testimony, we conclude that Common Pleas did not
    abuse its discretion by ruling that the Township began continuously maintaining Rita
    Drive starting in 1974.
    Similarly, regarding the second prong of the test, Common Pleas’
    determination that the public has used Rita Drive from 1974 onwards is supported
    by substantial evidence. During the course of his testimony, Runtas recounted that
    he had seen delivery trucks, garbage trucks, utility trucks, and private vehicles
    travelling along Rita Drive over the years. See 
    id.
     at 447a-49a. His testimony
    provides sufficient grounds for a conclusion that the public’s use of Rita Drive
    occurred through the same time period as the continual governmental maintenance
    of the roadway. Accordingly, we conclude that Common Pleas did not abuse its
    discretion by determining that the public began regularly using Rita Drive in 1974.
    In addition, we find no merit in Appellants’ assertion that their property deeds’
    language did not put them on notice regarding Rita Drive’s status. Generally
    speaking, “a grantee is chargeable with notice of everything affecting his title which
    could be discovered by an examination of the records of the deeds or other
    muniments of title of his grantor.” Piper v. Mowris, 
    351 A.2d 635
    , 639 (Pa. 1976)
    (quoting Finley v. Glenn, 
    154 A. 299
    , 301 (Pa. 1931)). It follows, then, that deed
    language referencing the fact that Rita Drive was considered to be a public road
    would therefore be sufficient enough to put Appellants on notice and preclude the
    tolling of the statute of limitations for filing their Petition. Both the Dyserts’ and the
    17
    Macklins’ respective deeds include descriptive information regarding the roads
    bounding their properties that, in context, refer to Rita Drive as a public road. See
    R.R. at 565a-72a, 744a-47a. Therefore, even if we assume that the running of the
    statute of limitations was tolled in some way by Appellants’ purchase of their
    properties, we discern no error regarding Common Pleas’ determination that they
    were put on notice regarding Rita Drive’s status as a public road in 1997 and 1998,
    i.e., when they secured their respective property deeds.
    Finally, we are unpersuaded by Appellants’ argument that they could not have
    discovered the scope of the Township’s taking by exercising reasonable diligence.
    This is because Section 2307’s operative language regarding the 33-foot width of
    roads made public in this manner has been in legal effect since 1933, when its
    predecessor statute was enacted as part of the original version of the Township Code.
    See Fritchey v. Com., 
    200 A. 622
    , 623 (Pa. 1938) (discussing Section 1105 of the
    Act of May 1, 1933, P.L. 103, formerly 53 P.S. § 19093-1105, deleted by the Act of
    November 9, 1995, P.L. 350). As our Supreme Court remarked nearly two centuries
    ago,
    [i]t is an unquestionable principle, which applies to civil
    as well as criminal cases, that ignorance of law will not
    furnish an excuse for any person, either for a breach or
    omission of duty. Ignorantia legis neminem excusat is a
    maxim which is as much respected in equity as in law. This
    doctrine is among the settled elements of the law; for every
    man, at his peril, is bound to take notice of what the law
    is, as well the law made by statute as the common law[.] .
    . . The presumption is, that every man is acquainted with
    his own rights, provided he has a reasonable opportunity
    to know them. And nothing can be more liable to abuse
    than to permit a person to reclaim his property upon the
    mere preten[s]e that . . . he was ignorant of the law acting
    on his title[.]
    18
    Rankin v. Mortimere, 
    7 Watts 372
    , 374 (Pa. 1838). Therefore, given that the Dyserts
    and Macklins were on notice no later than 1997 and 1998, respectively, regarding
    Rita Drive’s status as a public road, their ignorance regarding Section 2307 does not
    render this statute somehow inapplicable to their situation or mean that Appellants
    could not have discovered its effect through the exercise of reasonable diligence.
    III. Conclusion
    Accordingly, we grant the Township’s Application and affirm Common
    Pleas’ December 22, 2020 order.
    __________________________________
    ELLEN CEISLER, Judge
    19
    IN THE COMMONWEALTH COURT OF PENNSYLVANIA
    Russell D. Dysert, Karen K. Dysert, :
    Joseph Klick, Jayne Klick, Michael  :
    Macklin and Lori Macklin            :
    :
    v.                             : No. 38 C.D. 2021
    :
    Robinson Township, Washington       :
    County                              :
    :
    Appeal of: Russell D. Dysert, Karen :
    K. Dysert, Michael Macklin and Lori :
    Macklin                             :
    ORDER
    AND NOW, this 22nd day of December, 2021, it is hereby ORDERED:
    1. Appellee Robinson Township, Washington County’s (Township) application
    to strike Appendix B and Appendix C from the Brief filed by Appellants
    Russell D. Dysert, Karen K. Dysert, Michael Macklin, and Lori Macklin, as
    well as all references thereto in that Brief, is GRANTED;
    2. The Court of Common Pleas of Washington County’s (Common Pleas)
    December 22, 2020 order is AFFIRMED.
    __________________________________
    ELLEN CEISLER, Judge