R.D. Dysert v. Robinson Twp., Washington County ( 2020 )


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  •               IN THE COMMONWEALTH COURT OF PENNSYLVANIA
    Russell D. Dysert and Karen K.                    :
    Dysert, husband and wife, and                     :
    Michael Macklin and Lori Macklin,                 :
    husband and wife, and Joseph Klick                :
    and Jayne A. Klick, husband and wife              :
    :
    v.                         :   No. 260 C.D. 2019
    :   Argued: February 10, 2020
    Robinson Township, Washington                     :
    County,                                           :
    Appellant                   :
    BEFORE:         HONORABLE RENÉE COHN JUBELIRER, Judge
    HONORABLE P. KEVIN BROBSON, Judge
    HONORABLE J. ANDREW CROMPTON, Judge
    OPINION NOT REPORTED
    MEMORANDUM OPINION BY
    JUDGE COHN JUBELIRER                                  FILED: March 9, 2020
    Robinson Township, Washington County (Township) appeals from an Order
    of the Court of Common Pleas of Washington County (common pleas) overruling
    the Township’s preliminary objections (POs) to a petition for the appointment of a
    board of viewers alleging a de facto taking (Petition) filed by Russell D. Dysert
    and Karen K. Dysert (husband and wife), Michael Macklin and Lori Macklin
    (husband and wife), and Joseph Klick and Jayne A. Klick (husband and wife)1
    (collectively, Landowners). In its POs, the Township requested common pleas to
    1
    Joseph Klick and Jayne A. Klick are not participating in this appeal.
    dismiss the Petition based upon pendency of a prior action between the parties,
    legal insufficiency for failure to allege facts establishing a taking, and the claim
    being barred by the statute of limitations. Common pleas overruled all three
    objections. Upon review, we affirm in part as to the pendency of a prior action and
    vacate and remand for a factual hearing as to whether there was a de facto taking
    and, if so, whether the statute of limitations applies.
    I.    Factual Background
    Landowners and the Township are involved in two separate actions before
    common pleas relating to the ownership and status of Rita Drive, the disputed
    property: a declaratory judgment action and the eminent domain action.
    A. Declaratory Judgment Action
    On June 11, 2018, the Township filed with common pleas 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.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.
    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.
    2
    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
    representations to the Township otherwise.         (Declaratory Judgment Action
    Complaint (Compl.) ¶¶ 4, 16.) The Township sought common pleas to enter a
    judgment “confirming that Rita Drive is a public road in accordance with [T]he
    Second Class Township Code, 53 P.S. § 67307.” (Id., Wherefore Clause.)
    B. Petition
    While the Declaratory Judgment Action was pending, Landowners filed the
    Petition on August 6, 2018, requesting common pleas 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
    3
    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” 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 common pleas
    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 requested common pleas 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,
    common pleas 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.)
    4
    C. The Township’s POs
    The Township filed a motion to stay the Board of Viewer proceedings and
    subsequently filed its POs 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.C.P. No.
    1028(a)(6), allowing POs 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 common pleas3
    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 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. (POs ¶ 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, common
    pleas determined in the Declaratory Judgment Action that all but a portion of Rita Drive is a
    public road pursuant to Section 2307. See Lycoming County v. Pa. Labor Relations 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).
    5
    D. Common pleas’ Order
    The parties briefed the POs and oral argument was held.                     Upon
    consideration, common pleas entered the following Order:
    1. [The Township’s PO] relating to the pendency of a prior action is
    OVERRULED, inasmuch as we believe Pa.R.C.P. No. 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 PO] 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’] position that
    averments of the Petition are sufficient to state a cause of action for a
    de[]facto taking.
    3. [The Township’s PO] relating to the statute of limitations is
    OVERRULED.
    (Order.)     The Township appealed and, at common pleas’ 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 common pleas
    erred in overruling the POs and in ruling upon them at all prior to conducting an
    evidentiary hearing. Common pleas subsequently issued its Rule 1925(a) opinion.
    Common pleas relied upon its reasoning in the Order to support its determination
    as to the PO for the pendency of a prior action. With regard to demurrer for legal
    insufficiency, common pleas explained that the averments were sufficient to state a
    4
    26 Pa. C.S. §§ 101-1106.
    6
    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 Philadelphia, 
    503 A.2d 1110
    (Pa. Cmwlth. 1986)).) Finally, with regard to the statute of limitations, common
    pleas 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 it filed the [D]eclaratory [J]udgment [A]ction.” (Id. at 2.)5
    II. Discussion
    A. Whether common pleas erred in overruling the PO based on the pendency of
    a prior action.6
    The Township contends that common pleas erred in overruling its PO based
    on the pending prior Declaratory Judgment Action, arguing as follows.7 Common
    pleas should have sustained this PO because the parties are the same, assert the
    5
    Upon the Township’s appeal to this Court, Landowners filed a Motion to Dismiss the
    appeal for failure to preserve any issues for review, asserting that because the Township filed its
    POs under the Pennsylvania Rules of Civil Procedure and not the Eminent Domain Code, the
    Township had waived any issues on appeal. In a single-judge opinion, the Motion to Dismiss
    was denied “[b]ecause the substance of the Township’s [POs] fall within the scope of
    preliminary objections authorized by the Eminent Domain Code, the references to the
    Pennsylvania Rules of Civil Procedure are not fatal to the Township’s right to appeal,” and
    “[a]rguments regarding whether specific issues raised on appeal were properly preserved for
    appellate review can be argued along with the merits.” Dysert v. Robinson Township (Pa.
    Cmwlth., No. 260 C.D. 2019, filed April 26, 2019), slip op. at 4. In their brief on the merits,
    Landowners do not pursue this argument further and assert waiver with regard to only one of the
    Township’s arguments. As addressed more fully below, we do not agree that the Township has
    waived any issues.
    6
    We have rearranged the Township’s arguments for ease of discussion.
    7
    Our review of common pleas’ ruling on the Township’s POs to the Petition “is limited
    to ascertaining whether necessary findings are supported by competent evidence or an error of
    law was committed by [common pleas].” Dep’t of Transp. v. Mano, 
    613 A.2d 119
    , 121 n.1 (Pa.
    Cmwlth. 1992).
    7
    same rights as to Rita Drive, and seek the same relief in both actions. If the
    Petition is able to proceed while the Declaratory Judgment Action is pending,
    either common pleas will conclude that Rita Drive is not a public road, in which
    case there is no taking, or common pleas will determine that Rita Drive is a public
    road by operation of Section 2307, which is not an exercise of eminent domain
    power. In either scenario, there will be no need for the appointment of a board of
    viewers. Further, there is a risk of inconsistent decisions between this action and
    the Declaratory Judgment Action, and it is a waste of judicial resources to
    adjudicate both matters at the same time.
    Landowners reply that common pleas properly overruled this PO given the
    limited nature of POs under the Eminent Domain Code, arguing as follows. The
    Eminent Domain Code is the exclusive law under which this action should be
    litigated and it contains its own bases for POs; therefore, the Pennsylvania Rules of
    Civil Procedure do not apply. Pursuant to the Eminent Domain Code, POs in
    response to a petition for an appointment of viewers alleging a de facto taking are
    limited in scope to the validity of the condemnation, jurisdiction, the form of the
    petition, the legal sufficiency of the petition, or the factual basis of the petition.
    Thus, common pleas properly overruled this PO, as pendency of a prior action is
    not a basis for objection under the Eminent Domain Code. Even if this Court
    considers the PO based on pendency of a prior action, the Township is incorrect
    that the same rights are asserted and the same relief is sought in both actions.
    Rather, through the Declaratory Judgment Action, the Township seeks a
    declaration that Rita Drive is a 33-foot public road. In contrast, Landowners seek
    through the Petition just compensation for an alleged de facto taking. Therefore,
    common pleas properly overruled the Township’s PO.
    8
    The role of preliminary objections filed pursuant to the Eminent Domain
    Code “is not precisely that of preliminary objections as prescribed by the
    Pennsylvania Rules of Civil Procedure in actions covered by those rules.” Hall v.
    Middletown Twp. Del. Cty. Sewer Auth., 
    461 A.2d 899
    , 901 (Pa. Cmwlth. 1983)
    (citation omitted). Accordingly, pursuant to Section 504(d)(2) of the Eminent
    Domain Code, 26 Pa. C.S. § 504(d)(2), preliminary objections to a petition to the
    appointment of a board of viewers are limited. Specifically, the Eminent Domain
    Code provides:
    (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.
    
    Id. Pendency of
    a prior action is not an enumerated basis for preliminary
    objections under the Eminent Domain Code, as it is under Pennsylvania Rule of
    Civil Procedure 1028(a)(6), Pa.R.C.P. No. 1028(a)(6). Therefore, we agree with
    Landowners and common pleas that this PO was not a proper response to the
    Petition under the Eminent Domain Code.
    Moreover, we agree with Landowners that the parties do not assert the same
    rights or seek the same relief in the Declaratory Judgment Action.         In the
    Declaratory Judgment Action, the Township seeks a declaration that, pursuant to
    Section 2307 of The Second Class Township Code, Rita Drive is a public road. In
    the Petition, Landowners assert that the Township has de facto exercised its power
    of eminent domain with regard to Rita Drive and seek just compensation for that
    taking. Further, a declaration that Rita Drive is a public road by operation of
    Section 2307 does not necessarily preclude relief under the Eminent Domain Code,
    9
    as this Court observed in Einhaus v. Fawn Township (Pa. Cmwlth., No. 642 C.D.
    2015, filed June 9, 2016).8 There, the township and landowners disputed the width
    of a road, prompting the landowners to file a complaint in equity against the
    township for trespass. After a non-jury trial, the trial court concluded that the
    township had a 33-foot right-of-way on the road pursuant to Section 2307.
    On appeal, we observed “neither [The Second Class Township C]ode as a
    whole nor Section 2307 in particular exists in isolation” because “[a] township’s
    right to private lands, whether by statute or otherwise, exists within the framework
    of the Pennsylvania and United States Constitutions, which require payment of just
    compensation in order for a government entity to acquire private land.” Einhaus,
    slip op. at 5 (footnote omitted). We disagreed with the township’s argument
    otherwise, noting that the General Assembly could not “take private land by
    legislative fiat” through legislation establishing the width of public roads. 
    Id. Section 2307
    mandates a second class township’s duty “to provide a 33[-]foot
    right[-]of[-]way for the public traveling on public roads,” and provides the
    necessary authority for that duty, we explained, but it did “not extinguish the rights
    of private landowners.”       
    Id. at 6.
        Therefore, we affirmed the trial court’s
    conclusion that the township’s actions were not trespass and the road was public
    pursuant to Section 2307, but cautioned that nothing in our opinion or the trial
    court’s order “disposes of the issue of whether the [t]ownship’s actions constitute a
    de facto condemnation or bars [the landowners] from pursuing a remedy under the
    Eminent Domain Code.”          
    Id. at 7.
       See also Schnarrs v. Rush Twp. Bd. of
    8
    Einhaus, an unreported opinion of this Court, is cited for its persuasive value in
    accordance with Pennsylvania Rule of Appellate Procedure 126, Pa.R.A.P. 126, and Section
    414(a) of our Internal Operating Procedures, 210 Pa. Code § 69.414(a).
    10
    Supervisors, 
    210 A.3d 1161
    , 1176 n.9 (Pa. Cmwlth. 2019) (citing Einhaus and
    noting that although a township acquired land by prescriptive easement, the
    landowners were not foreclosed from pursuing a remedy under the Eminent
    Domain Code).
    We are persuaded by our rationale in Einhaus. A declaration under Section
    2307 that Rita Drive is a public road does not preclude Landowners from asserting
    a de facto taking for whatever portions of that public road they believe were taken
    by the Township. If common pleas ultimately determines that there was a de facto
    taking, Landowners are entitled to just compensation, regardless of whether the
    taking occurred by operation of statute or otherwise. Therefore, the Declaratory
    Judgment Action is not a bar to Landowners’ ability to pursue an action under the
    Eminent Domain Code. Accordingly, we affirm common pleas’ Order to the
    extent that it overruled the Township’s PO for pendency of a prior action.
    B. Whether common pleas erred in overruling the PO that Landowners failed
    to state a claim for a de facto taking without conducting an evidentiary
    hearing.
    The Township contends that common pleas erred in overruling the PO that
    Landowners failed to state a claim, arguing as follows. Pursuant to Section 2307,
    Rita Drive is a public road and declaring it as such is not an exercise of eminent
    domain power but rather ownership acquired through statutory prescription.
    Section 2307 is the mechanism by which “Rita Drive’s preexisting status as a
    public road may be confirmed,” rather than a procedure through which “private
    property is condemned for the purpose of creating a heretofore non-existent public
    road.” (Township’s Brief (Br.) at 12.) Even if a declaration pursuant to Section
    2307 that Rita Drive is a public road is construed as an exercise of eminent domain
    power, Landowners did not allege fee simple ownership of the land upon which
    11
    Rita Drive is situated, which is a prerequisite under the Eminent Domain Code.
    Although Landowners assert that, by invoking Section 2307, the Township has
    increased the width of Rita Drive, Landowners do not allege in the Petition which
    portions of this expanded Rita Drive over which they claim ownership. Finally,
    common pleas erred in overruling the Township’s POs without first holding an
    evidentiary hearing to determine whether a de facto taking occurred, a requirement
    that common pleas recognized in its Rule 1925(a) opinion. A court cannot find a
    de facto taking has occurred without first conducting an evidentiary hearing.
    Although common pleas determined the averments in the Petition were sufficient
    to state a claim for a de facto taking, the Township has “consistently disputed” that
    there was a taking at all. (Id. at 16.) Therefore, the Township asserts that common
    pleas should have sustained the POs and dismissed the Petition or conducted a
    hearing. The Township asks us to reverse or, at the least, to remand for common
    pleas to conduct an evidentiary hearing to determine whether a de facto taking has
    occurred.
    Landowners reply that their Petition is legally sufficient to state a claim for a
    de facto taking for the following reasons. Landowners described at length in the
    Petition the land in which they possess fee simple ownership, including the deed
    books in which those interests are recorded. Therefore, Landowners complied with
    the Eminent Domain Code’s requirement that a petition for an appointment of
    viewers contain “[a] brief description of the property acquired,” 26 Pa. C.S.
    § 502(a)(5).   Moreover, the Township filed its Declaratory Judgment Action
    against Landowners and included therein the same information for the recorded
    deeds and tax parcel numbers for Landowners’ property interests relating to Rita
    Drive and, therefore, any perceived inadequacy in the description in the Petition is
    12
    the fault of the Township. Further, establishing and maintaining a public road
    under Section 2307 falls within the Township’s eminent domain power.
    Regardless of whether the Township’s rights to Rita Drive are determined by
    statutory prescription or condemnation, they are subject to the just compensation
    requirements of the Pennsylvania and United States Constitutions. In addition, the
    Township did not raise before common pleas any issues of fact or request an
    evidentiary hearing until it filed its Rule 1925(b) Statement and, therefore, it is
    waived. Moreover, the facts averred in the Petition are the facts as set forth by the
    Township in its verified Complaint in the Declaratory Judgment Action; therefore,
    there can be no factual dispute as to the Petition. Moreover, it is in common pleas’
    discretion to decide whether any issues of fact were raised to necessitate an
    evidentiary hearing. Because the Township did not assert that there were issues of
    fact in the Petition or request an evidentiary hearing, there were no facts before
    common pleas to decide; thus, an evidentiary hearing was not needed, regardless of
    common pleas’ representation to the contrary in its Rule 1925(a) opinion.
    The Township replies that it raised clear issues of fact that necessitated an
    evidentiary hearing. Common pleas acknowledged as much in its Rule 1925(a)
    opinion. The Township further argues it established in its POs that it has a
    fundamental factual disagreement regarding the Petition – namely whether Rita
    Drive is and has been a public road for decades. Because there are disputed facts
    as to the nature and duration of the use of Rita Drive, the Township contends that it
    was reversible error for common pleas to rule upon the POs without an evidentiary
    hearing. The Township reiterates that Section 2307 is not an exercise of eminent
    domain power.
    13
    As set forth above, we do not agree with the Township that the operation of
    Section 2307 is not an exercise of its eminent domain power.               However,
    Landowners do not automatically state a claim for a de facto taking on the face of
    the Petition solely because Rita Drive may be declared a public road pursuant to
    Section 2307. The Township asserts that Landowners have not sufficiently averred
    their ownership interests and, moreover, the Petition raises issues of fact, which
    common pleas should have resolved in a hearing before ruling on the POs and
    appointing a board of viewers. We agree.
    When a petition for a de facto taking is filed, the common pleas court must
    determine the legal question of whether a de facto taking has actually occurred
    before it can appoint a board of viewers. Millcreek Township v. N.E.A. Cross Co.,
    
    620 A.2d 558
    , 560 (Pa. Cmwlth. 1993). If POs are filed to a petition alleging a de
    facto taking, the court must resolve them first. “If an issue of fact is raised” by
    POs filed to a petition alleging a de facto taking, “the court shall conduct an
    evidentiary hearing or order that evidence be taken by deposition or otherwise . . .
    .” 26 Pa. C.S. § 504(d)(5) (emphasis added). This is in contrast to the review of
    POs under the Rules of Civil Procedure, where the court accepts all well-pleaded
    facts as true to test the legal sufficiency of a complaint. William Penn Sch. Dist. v.
    Pa. Dep’t of Educ., 
    170 A.3d 414
    , 434-35 (Pa. 2017). As this Court has explained,
    the Eminent Domain Code
    has established a special role for preliminary objection proceedings in
    an eminent domain case, in that they are to provide a vehicle by which
    the common pleas court can resolve all legal and factual questions of
    entitlement at the outset, with an evidentiary hearing if necessary,
    before appointing the viewers and assigning them to their work of
    quantifying an award.
    14
    Dep’t of Transp. v. Berk, 
    611 A.2d 349
    , 351 (Pa. Cmwlth. 1992) (quoting Carroll
    Township v. Jones, 
    481 A.2d 1260
    , 1261 (Pa. Cmwlth. 1984)). Therefore, if the
    POs “raise an issue of fact, the resolution of which is necessary for determining
    whether a de facto taking has occurred, the court must hold an evidentiary
    hearing.” 
    Millcreek, 620 A.2d at 560
    . Only if no issues of fact are raised by the
    POs may the court examine the petition on its face to determine whether the
    averments are sufficient to conclusively establish a de facto taking. 
    Id. at 560-61.
          We examined this distinction between POs under the Rules of Civil
    Procedure and POs in an eminent domain proceeding in Department of
    Transportation v. Mano, 
    613 A.2d 119
    . There, the landowners filed a petition for
    appointment of a board of viewers, asserting a de facto taking as a result of the
    Department of Transportation’s (DOT) construction project, which the landowners
    alleged interfered with access to their business and resulted in substantial loss of
    business. After the landowners filed an amended petition in response to the initial
    POs, DOT filed POs again asserting that the landowners failed to plead their
    property interest with specificity. The trial court overruled the POs on the basis
    that the “[l]andowners had alleged sufficient facts to state a cause of action for a de
    facto taking and a trial to ascertain the facts would be required.” 
    Id. at 121.
    On
    appeal, we emphasized that POs are the “exclusive method” for raising factual and
    legal objections to a petition for appointment of a board of viewers, the resolution
    of which could necessitate a factual hearing to determine if a de facto taking has
    occurred.    Reasoning “[i]nasmuch as the trial court recognized that [the
    l]andowners’ . . . petition . . . contained averments which, if taken as true, might
    establish a de facto taking,” we concluded the trial court should not have overruled
    the POs “without first taking evidence by hearing, deposition, or other manner and
    15
    making a judicial determination as to whether or not a de facto taking had occurred
    based on the evidence obtained.” 
    Id. at 122.
    Therefore, we vacated the trial
    court’s order and remanded for an evidentiary hearing and “resolution of the de
    facto taking issue.” 
    Id. Here, common
    pleas, in overruling the Township’s POs in the nature of a
    demurrer for legal sufficiency of the Petition, “agree[d] with [Landowners’]
    position that averments of the Petition [we]re sufficient to state a cause of action
    for a de[]facto taking.” (Order ¶ 2 (emphasis omitted).) In its Rule 1925(a)
    opinion, common pleas explained that Landowners’ “averments were sufficient to
    state a cause of action for a de facto taking,” while also recognizing “a hearing is
    necessary so a judicial determination of whether a taking actually occurred can be
    made.” (Rule 1925(a) Opinion at 1-2 (emphasis omitted).) While common pleas
    determined that Landowners’ Petition “contained averments which, if taken as
    true, might establish a de facto taking of Landowners’ property, [common pleas]
    should not have overruled” the POs “without first taking evidence by hearing,
    deposition, or other manner and making a judicial determination as to whether or
    not a de facto taking has occurred based on the evidence obtained.” 
    Mano, 613 A.2d at 122
    .
    Landowners assert that the facts averred in the Petition are the same as those
    averred by the Township in the Declaratory Judgment Action complaint and,
    therefore, there are no facts in dispute. However, our review of the Petition,
    particularly when compared to the Township’s complaint in the Declaratory
    Judgment Action, which was attached to the Township’s POs, demonstrates the
    issues of fact surrounding the alleged taking of Rita Drive. Although Landowners
    set forth in their Petition descriptions of the land that they own in relation to Rita
    16
    Drive, nearly identically to how that land is described in the Declaratory Judgment
    Complaint, (Petition ¶¶ 1, 6, 9; Declaratory Judgment Action Compl. ¶¶ 3, 7, 10),
    Landowners and the Township disagree as to when and even if Rita Drive was
    taken by the Township at all. The Township avers in its Declaratory Judgment
    Action, which was attached to its POs before common pleas, that “Rita Drive[] has
    been continuously used for public travel in excess of 21 years.” (Declaratory
    Judgment Action Compl. ¶ 16 (emphasis added).) The Township provides “a non-
    exhaustive packet of Township meeting minutes dating back to 1996,” and
    recounts a relevant portion thereof, asserting that the Township’s maintenance of
    Rita Drive has been ongoing for at least 21 years. (Id. ¶¶ 21, 22.) In support of its
    preliminary objections and on appeal to this Court, the Township continues to
    argue that, although Section 2307 requires at least 21 years of continued
    maintenance, the Township has maintained Rita Drive for more than 21 years and
    Rita Drive has always been public. (R.R. at 72a; Township’s Reply Br. at 6.)
    In contrast, Landowners allege that the Township’s actions in maintaining
    the road beginning in 1996 and/or its filing of the Declaratory Judgment Action are
    an exercise of eminent domain power to take property that Landowners believe
    they own. Landowners allege that maintenance done by the Township to Rita
    Drive in 1996 was without Landowners’ consent and amounts to a taking without
    just compensation, regardless of whether Rita Drive is ultimately declared public.
    However, the Township contends that it has continuously maintained Rita Drive
    for more than 21 years, a fact discoverable by Landowners, and, accordingly, that
    the Township has not exercised its eminent domain power at any time.
    Landowners do not aver any facts addressing the Township’s continued
    maintenance of Rita Drive alleged by the Township in its Declaratory Judgment
    17
    Action. Given these factual disputes that existed at the time common pleas issued
    its Order, common pleas erred in not holding an evidentiary hearing to resolve
    these disputes and “so a judicial determination of whether a taking actually
    occurred can be made,” (Rule 1925(a) Opinion at 1-2).9
    Finally, although Landowners argue the Township waived its argument for
    an evidentiary hearing because it did not raise it until its Rule 1925(b) statement,
    the Township was not required to request an evidentiary hearing upon filing POs.
    The Township raised issues of fact in its POs by asserting legal insufficiency of the
    Petition and attaching the Declaratory Judgment Action complaint thereto. This
    raised sufficient issues of fact as to whether a de facto taking had occurred, which
    triggered the need to have a hearing and receive evidence on this issue. Because it
    was common pleas’ obligation to schedule a hearing given the issues of fact, the
    Township was not required to ask for one. Further, because the Township did not
    know common pleas was not going to hold an evidentiary hearing until common
    pleas issued its Order overruling the POs, the Township raised the issue at its first
    opportunity when it filed its Rule 1925(b) statement. Accordingly, common pleas
    committed an error of law when it appointed a board of viewers and overruled this
    9
    When common pleas issued its opinion and order in the Declaratory Judgment Action in
    December 2019, it explained that Landowners took the position at trial that “they did not oppose
    the petition to declare a portion of Rita Drive to be public.” (December 3, 2019 Opinion and
    Order at 2 (emphasis omitted).) Common pleas further reasoned “[t]he evidence was
    overwhelming that the Township regularly maintained the road to the end of the paved road.”
    (Id. (emphasis added).) As we concluded above, the Township’s success on the Declaratory
    Judgment Action does not necessarily foreclose relief under the Eminent Domain Code for
    Landowners. We also acknowledge that common pleas was without the benefit of the opinion
    and order in the Declaratory Judgment Action at the time it issued the Order in the present case
    and note only that the subsequent Declaratory Judgment Action decision further highlights the
    remaining factual disputes between the parties as to the ownership of Rita Drive for purposes of
    the Petition.
    18
    PO without first holding an evidentiary hearing. Therefore, we vacate common
    pleas’ Order on this point and remand for a factual hearing to determine whether a
    de facto taking occurred.
    C. Whether common pleas erred in overruling the PO that Landowners’
    Petition is barred by the statute of limitations.
    The Township asserts that common pleas erred by overruling its PO that
    Landowners’ Petition was barred by the statute of limitations, arguing as follows.
    Section 5527(a)(2) of the Judicial Code, 42 Pa. C.S. § 5527(a)(2), mandates that a
    petition for a taking must be filed within six years from the date of the alleged
    taking. Landowners assert that the Township first entered on Rita Drive and paved
    it on or about July 8, 1996, and again entered on or around June 2002 to sealcoat it.
    The actions of paving and sealcoating were open and should have put Landowners
    on notice that the Township believed Rita Drive was a public road that it was
    required to maintain. Therefore, even under Landowners’ assertions, the taking
    was reasonably discoverable on July 8, 1996, and the Petition should have been
    filed on or before July 8, 2002, which would be six years after Landowners allege
    the taking occurred. Common pleas’ determination that the statute of limitations
    began to run in June 2017 when the Township filed the Declaratory Judgment
    Action is not supported by the record, as Landowners allege in the Petition that
    there has been no formal action by the Township to dedicate Rita Drive as a public
    road. Further, the Township’s filing of the Declaratory Judgment Action should
    not be construed as the date of the taking, as the Township’s Declaratory Judgment
    Action was only to confirm by operation of statute that Rita Drive has always been
    a public road. The Township also argues that Rita Road has always been a public
    road, and so contests that 1996 is the earliest date action was taken; therefore, there
    19
    is at least a factual disagreement as to whether the action is barred by the statute of
    limitations.
    Landowners reply that its action is not barred by the statute of limitations,
    arguing as follows. If, as the Township asserts in its Declaratory Judgment Action,
    it took action with regard to Rita Drive in 1996, then Rita Drive could not have
    become a public road under Section 2307 until 21 years later, which would occur
    in 2017. That is when the six-year statute would begin to run, and which would
    not expire until 2023. Because Landowners’ Petition was filed in 2018, it was
    within the six-year statute of limitations. Moreover, Landowners “do not admit
    that their Petition is based on the [Township’s] taking beginning on or about July
    8, 1996,” but instead assert that it is in response to the allegations in the
    Township’s Declaratory Judgment Action. (Landowners’ Br. at 33.)
    Section 5527(a)(2) of the Judicial Code provides “a petition for the
    appointment of viewers for the assessment of damages under 26 Pa.[] C.S. 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). The Township argues that the six-year
    statute should begin running at least in 1996, when the Landowners by their own
    allegations assert that the Township took actions to maintain and repair Rita Drive.
    Section 2307(a) provides that roads become public so long as they are “maintained
    and kept in repair by the township for a period of at least twenty-one years.” 53
    P.S. § 67307(a) (emphasis added). Thus, where land becomes public by operation
    of Section 2307, the statute of limitations cannot begin to run at the first action of
    maintaining or repairing a road.       The road does not become public at the
    20
    Township’s first action of maintaining or repairing a road; it must do so for 21
    years.
    As set forth above, factual disputes remain as to whether a taking occurred
    and the extent thereof. Because an evidentiary hearing is needed in order to
    determine whether there was a taking, it is not clear at this point “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).
    Additionally, when a court is faced with the question of when a party reasonably
    could have discovered the injury, it is a factual determination that should be made
    by the trial court. See O’Kelly v. Dawson, 
    62 A.3d 414
    , 419 (Pa. Super. 2013).10
    The burden for demonstrating when a party reasonably should have discovered an
    injury rests with the party asserting the statute of limitations defense. See Wilson
    v. El-Daief, 
    964 A.2d 354
    , 362 (Pa. 2009). If common pleas determines there was
    a taking, common pleas should also determine the applicability of the statute of
    limitations defense.     Accordingly, we vacate the Order to the extent that it
    overruled the Township’s PO premised on the statute of limitations, and we
    remand for common pleas to determine in its evidentiary hearing when the statute
    of limitations began to run and to what extent it bars any of Landowners’ claims.
    III.     Conclusion
    The Township’s Declaratory Judgment Action does not foreclose
    Landowners from seeking relief under the Eminent Domain Code for an alleged
    While not binding, Superior Court decisions “offer persuasive precedent where they
    10
    address analogous issues.” Lerch v. Unemployment Comp. Bd. of Review, 
    180 A.3d 545
    , 550
    (Pa. Cmwlth. 2018).
    21
    taking. We affirm in part common pleas’ Order to the extent that it overrules the
    Township’s PO based on the pendency of a prior action. However, because the
    Township raised factual disputes in its POs, common pleas should have first
    conducted an evidentiary hearing before ruling on the other POs. Therefore, we
    vacate common pleas’ Order to the extent that it overruled the Township’s POs in
    the nature of a demurrer for legal insufficiency of the Petition and the statute of
    limitations and remand for common pleas to hold an evidentiary hearing to
    determine whether there was a de facto taking and, if so, whether the action is
    barred by the statute of limitations.11
    _____________________________________
    RENÉE COHN JUBELIRER, Judge
    11
    To avoid inconsistent judgments, common pleas, at its own discretion or at the parties’
    requests, may wish to stay further proceedings in this matter until the Declaratory Judgment
    Action is finally resolved.
    22
    IN THE COMMONWEALTH COURT OF PENNSYLVANIA
    Russell D. Dysert and Karen K.           :
    Dysert, husband and wife, and            :
    Michael Macklin and Lori Macklin,        :
    husband and wife, and Joseph Klick       :
    and Jayne A. Klick, husband and wife     :
    :
    v.                     :   No. 260 C.D. 2019
    :
    Robinson Township, Washington            :
    County,                                  :
    Appellant          :
    ORDER
    NOW, March 9, 2020, the Order of the Court of Common Pleas of
    Washington County (common pleas), in the above-captioned matter, is
    AFFIRMED to the extent that it overruled Robinson Township, Washington
    County’s (Township) preliminary objection (PO) on the basis of pendency of a
    prior action. To the extent that common pleas overruled the Township’s POs in the
    nature of a demurrer on the basis of legal insufficiency and the statute of
    limitations, common pleas’ Order is VACATED, and this matter is REMANDED
    for common pleas to conduct an evidentiary hearing to determine whether a de
    facto taking occurred and, if so, whether the action is barred by the statute of
    limitations.
    _____________________________________
    RENÉE COHN JUBELIRER, Judge
    

Document Info

Docket Number: 260 C.D. 2019

Judges: Cohn Jubelirer, J.

Filed Date: 3/9/2020

Precedential Status: Non-Precedential

Modified Date: 12/13/2024