Reed, G. & S. v. Nicarry, E. & P. ( 2015 )


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  • J-S64020-15
    NON-PRECEDENTIAL DECISION - SEE SUPERIOR COURT I.O.P. 65.37
    GREGORY R. REED AND SUSAN F. REED,              IN THE SUPERIOR COURT OF
    HIS WIFE                                              PENNSYLVANIA
    Appellants
    v.
    ERIC L. NICARRY AND PENNEY J.
    NICARRY
    Appellees                No. 788 MDA 2015
    Appeal from the Judgment Entered on May 27, 2015
    In the Court of Common Pleas of Huntingdon County
    Civil Division at No.: 1547 of 2012
    BEFORE: FORD ELLIOTT, P.J.E., WECHT, J., and FITZGERALD, J.*
    MEMORANDUM BY WECHT, J.:                        FILED DECEMBER 16, 2015
    Appellants Gregory and Susan Reed (collectively, “the Reeds”) appeal
    the trial court’s entry of judgment in favor of appellees Eric and Penney1
    Nicarry (collectively, “the Nicarrys”) in the Reeds’ action in ejectment and/or
    to quiet title over a disputed parcel of land along the common boundary of
    their respective properties. We affirm.
    ____________________________________________
    *
    Former Justice specially assigned to the Superior Court.
    1
    There appears to be some confusion as to whether the proper spelling
    is Penney or Penny. Although counsel for the Nicarrys before this Court uses
    Penny, the initial filings before the trial court in this matter, and
    consequently the docket, use Penney. For consistency, we use the latter
    spelling.
    J-S64020-15
    The trial court has provided the following brief narrative account of this
    case’s factual history:
    The boundary line fray began in October of 2012 when
    [Appellant Gregory Reed]2 became aware of a railroad spike
    driven into Dirt Mountain Road which indicated to him the
    “repositioning” of the corner at the heart of this dispute. We
    learned at trial that the repositioned corner had been marked
    with the spike by Kirby Lockard of Africa Engineers and Land
    Surveyors, Inc. Lockard had conducted a survey for [Appellee
    Eric Nicarry] on September 26, 2012. At the time Gregory Reed
    encountered the railroad spike, he also encountered “no
    trespass” signs in an area that he believed he owned.
    ___________
    2
    [Gregory Reed, Esq.,] represented himself and his wife
    throughout this litigation.
    The Reeds, until this point, [had assumed] that the correct
    location of the southwestern corner of their property and the
    northwestern corner of the Nicarry property had been
    established in 1980 when Gary Young performed surveys on
    both properties in question. Lockard’s survey in 2012, however,
    placed the disputed corner for the line in a different location.
    The difference between the two disputed corners, placed more
    than three decades apart, creates a triangular piece of wooded
    mountain ground which amounts to approximately .624 acres.
    [The Reeds] claim this triangular area and seek to eject [the
    Nicarrys] from the .624[-]acre piece of land.
    Trial Court Opinion, 12/23/2014, at 4-5 (citations omitted).
    In support of this brief narrative, the trial court also made the
    following specific findings of fact:
    2.    The parties trace their respective titles to the land owned
    by Solomon Mierley, who at his death[] devised “my mountain
    land lying on Sidling Hill . . .” to his two sons, John and George
    Mierley.
    ****
    -2-
    J-S64020-15
    4.   In 1893, the Mierley brothers deeded a portion of this
    property (nine acres and the usual allowances) to Joshua
    Gosnell. The deed was recorded on July 17, 1893. This parcel is
    now owned by [the Reeds].
    5.    Subsequently, George and John Mierley conveyed “nine
    acres and the usual allowances” to brother[] George Mierley
    (deeded December 5, 1893, recorded April 4, 1900). This parcel
    is now owned by the [Nicarrys].
    6.    The common boundary line dividing the properties in
    question is described in [the Reeds’] deed by the following call:
    “thence south 76 ½ degrees east 17 perches to a stone heap,
    the place of beginning.”
    7.    The same line is described in the [Nicarrys] deed by the
    following call: “thence by lands now or formerly of John Mierley,
    part of this survey, North 76 ½ degrees [w]est, 17 perches to a
    stone heap.”
    8.     The descriptions of the common line have been consistent
    in all of the conveyances since there was unity of ownership of
    the two properties over one hundred years ago.
    9.   The location of this common line is the issue in this case
    and was the subject matter of the testimony of the two experts.
    10. In March of 1980, Lois O. Lucas (a predecessor in the
    [Reeds’] title) hired Gary L. Young to survey what is now the
    [Nicarrys’] land.
    12. In September of 2012, Kirby Lockard, a surveyor for Africa
    Engineering, was hired by [the Nicarrys] to prepare a survey of
    their land.   Lockard testified as an expert witness for the
    [Nicarrys].
    13. Surveyor John Young testified as the [Reeds’] expert. He
    had assisted when his brother Gary Young conducted the 1980
    surveys of both properties, and he performed a retracement
    survey of the Reed tract in 2005.
    14. While both surveyors testified that the deed descriptions of
    the line were problematic in locating the line in the field, each
    went about resolving the problem using different methods.
    ****
    -3-
    J-S64020-15
    17. The difference in opinion between the surveyors comes
    down to the placement of [C]orner #6 in 1980 ([the Reeds’]
    survey) and Corner #7 in 2012 ([the Nicarrys’] survey).
    18. The difference between Corners #6 and #7 creates a
    triangular area encompassing 0.624 acres.
    19. In 1980 the Youngs were unable to locate the “stone heap”
    referred to in each of the deeds, and they placed what has now
    been referred to as Corner #6. The Youngs placed an iron pin in
    the location that they believed best replicated the location of the
    missing “stone heap.”
    20. Not surprisingly, when completing a 2005 retracement
    survey John Young located Corner #6 in the same location where
    he and his brother had placed it when they performed their 1980
    [s]urveys.
    21. In their 1980 surveys of the properties at issue, the
    Youngs changed the bearing and direction of the dividing line in
    question in an effort to reconcile the distance and area of their
    surveys to compensate for the missing “stone heap.”
    ****
    24. Kirby Lockard of Africa Engineers . . . discovered the 1980
    surveys of the two properties when conducting research in
    preparation for his survey performed for [the Nicarrys] in 2012.
    25. In the process of conducting his 2012 survey, Lockard
    came to the conclusion that Corner #6, as identified by the 1980
    surveys and 2005 retracement survey, was not in accord with
    [the Nicarrys’] deed.
    26. In an effort to compensate for the missing “stone heap,”
    Lockard maintained the bearing and direction of the lines in
    question and changed the distances and adjusted the acreage to
    establish the boundary line.
    27. The location of Corner #7 was established by Lockard by
    holding the deed angle of the line on top of Sidling Hill.
    28. The angle created between the two lines connecting
    Corners #1 and #7 is precisely the angle called for in each deed.
    -4-
    J-S64020-15
    29. When reconciling boundaries, the general order of priority
    is to be given first to valid monuments, next to directions, then
    to distances and lastly to area.
    30. The general order of priority should be disregarded when
    the errors are large or the measurements are obviously
    incorrect. In such a case, other evidence should prevail over the
    order of priority.
    31. No credible evidence has been presented to indicate that
    the general order of priority should be dismissed in favor of an
    exception.
    32. Corner #7, placed in 2012, is the factually correct location
    for the terminus of the boundary line dividing the properties
    owned by [the Reeds] and [the Nicarrys].
    33. Corner #6, placed in 1980, is a factually incorrect location
    for the terminus of the boundary line dividing the properties
    owned by [the Reeds] and [the Nicarrys].
    34. No credible evidence was presented as to a dispute or an
    agreement between Lois O. Lucas and Robert M. Mierley (who
    owned the respective properties in 1980) regarding the
    boundary line.
    35. The 1980 surveys prepared by the Young brothers were
    never recorded.
    36. The properties in question were conveyed on several
    occasions after 1980, however, the deed descriptions conveying
    the properties did not utilize the surveys to reform the metes
    and bounds descriptions of the property.
    Id. at 1-4 (citations omitted).
    These findings were drawn from a one-day bench trial held on October
    2, 2014, after which the trial court invited the parties to file proposed
    findings of fact and conclusions of law.    The parties complied, and, on
    December 23, 2014, the trial court issued a memorandum finding in favor of
    the Nicarrys and against the Reeds on the Reeds’ action in ejectment, in
    -5-
    J-S64020-15
    effect validating Lockard’s placement of Corner 7 and confirming that the
    disputed triangular parcel in question properly was included in the Nicarry’s
    property.2 The Reeds filed post-trial motions, which the trial court ultimately
    denied on April 27, 2015.3 On May 7, 2015, before the trial court entered
    judgment upon its verdict, the Reeds filed the instant appeal.     On May 8,
    2015, the trial court entered an order directing the Reeds to file a concise
    statement of errors complained of on appeal pursuant to Pa.R.A.P. 1925(b).
    The Reeds timely complied on May 18, 2015. On May 19, 2015, this Court,
    noting that the Reeds’ appeal was not ripe for want of a trial court entry of
    final judgment upon the verdict, entered an order directing the Reeds to
    praecipe for the entry of judgment, and to document same with this Court.
    The Reeds complied, perfecting their appeal. The trial court entered its Rule
    1925(a) opinion on July 2, 2015, wherein it recited the Reeds’ issues and
    directed this Court to the appropriate passages of its December 23, 2014
    ____________________________________________
    2
    The trial court correctly noted that the Reeds’ action to quiet title was
    incompatible with an action in ejectment, and that only the latter would lie
    under the circumstances of this case. See T.C.O. at 5-6 (citing Moore v.
    Duran, 
    687 A.2d 822
    , 827 (Pa. Super. 1996); Plauchak v. Boling,
    
    653 A.2d 671
     (Pa. Super. 1995); Riverwatch Condo. Owners Ass’n v.
    Restoration Dev. Corp., 
    931 A.2d 133
    , 141 (Pa. Cmwlth. 2007)). The
    parties do not dispute the trial court’s ruling in this regard.
    3
    In the interim, a number of procedural hiccups, including the Reeds
    filing a premature appeal to this Court, protracted these proceedings. They
    need not be recited at length.
    -6-
    J-S64020-15
    memorandum, from which we have excerpted the above passages.                 This
    case is now ripe for our review.
    Before this Court, the Reeds raise the following issues:
    A.    Did the trial [court] abuse [its] discretion when [it]
    concluded that [the] Reeds did not prove, to a preponderance of
    the evidence, a consented[-]to line by “dispute and compromise”
    because [the] Reeds did not prove a “dispute” as to the location
    of the common line between the Reed [t]ract and the Nicarry
    [t]ract?
    B.    Did the trial [court] abuse [its] discretion when [it]
    concluded that [the] Reeds did not prove, to a preponderance of
    the evidence, a consented[-]to line by “recognition and
    acquiescence” because [the] Reeds did not prove that the line
    established in 1980 was recognized by anyone other than [the]
    Reeds in 2005?
    Brief for the Reeds at 4.
    Analyzing this case strictly as presenting an action in ejectment, see
    supra n.1, the trial court correctly stated the governing law as follows:
    The [plaintiff’s] burden in an action in ejectment at law is clear:
    they must establish the right to immediate exclusive possession.
    See, e.g., Hallman v. Turns, 
    482 A.2d 1284
    , 1287
    (Pa. Super. 1984); Harbor Marine Co. v. Nolan, 
    366 A.2d 936
    (Pa. Super. 1976). Additionally, recovery can be had only on the
    strength of their own title, not the weakness of [the defendant’s]
    title. See Artz v. Meister, 
    123 A. 501
     (Pa. 1924); Ratajski v.
    W.     Penn     Mfg.    &    Supply       Corp.,    
    182 A.2d 243
    (Pa. Super. 1962). The root of an ejectment action, therefore,
    rests with the plaintiff[’s] ability to identify, by a preponderance
    of the evidence, the boundaries of a parcel of land to which [he
    or she is] out of possession, but for which [he or she]
    maintain[s] paramount title. Doman v. Brogan, 
    592 A.2d 104
    ,
    108 (Pa. Super. 1991).
    -7-
    J-S64020-15
    T.C.O. at 6 (citations modified).     Our standard of review allows us to
    consider only whether the trial court’s findings of fact are supported by
    competent evidence and whether the court misapplied the law. We view the
    evidence in the light most favorable to the verdict-winner, granting the
    prevailing party the benefit of every favorable inference.      Anderson v.
    Litke Family Ltd. P’ship, 
    748 A.2d 737
    , 739 (Pa. Super. 2000). “The trial
    court’s findings are especially binding on appeal, where they are based upon
    the credibility of the witnesses, unless it appears that the court abused its
    discretion or that the court’s findings lack evidentiary support or that the
    court capriciously disbelieved the evidence.” Shaffer v. O’Toole, 
    964 A.2d 420
    , 422-23 (Pa. Super. 2009) (brackets omitted).
    The Reeds claim that they are entitled to relief under either of two
    rules that, together, comprise the doctrine of consentable lines.
    The doctrine of consentable lines has emerged as a separate and
    distinct theory from that of traditional adverse possession.
    There are . . . two ways in which one may prove a consentable
    line:   by dispute and compromise, or by recognition and
    acquiescence. Both methods of proving a consentable line were
    reviewed in Inn Le’Daerda, Inc., v. Davis, 
    360 A.2d 209
    (Pa. Super. 1976). First, the court explained, one may prove a
    consentable line by evidence of:
    (1) a dispute with regard to the location of a common
    boundary line, (2) the establishment of a line in
    compromise of the dispute, and (3) “the consent of both
    parties to that line and the giving up of their respective
    claims which are consistent therewith.”       Newton v.
    Smith, 
    40 Pa. Super. 615
    , 616 (Pa. Super. 1909).
    “[W]here such a line has been clearly established and the
    parties on each side take possession or surrender
    -8-
    J-S64020-15
    possession already held up to that line, it becomes binding,
    under the application of the doctrine of estoppel.” 
    Id.
    ****
    The establishment of this kind of boundary is always
    a matter of compromise, in which each party
    supposes he gives up for the sake of peace
    something to which in strict justice he is
    entitled . . . .
    Perkins v. Gay, 3 Serge & Rawle 327, 332 (Pa. 1817).
    Inn Le’Daerda, 
    360 A.2d at 215
    .
    Proof of a consentable line by recognition and acquiescence was
    explained by the [Inn Le’Daerda Court] as follows:
    Our courts have long recognized . . . that a boundary line
    may be proved by a long-standing fence without proof of a
    dispute and its settlement by a compromise. In Dimura
    v. Williams, 
    286 A.2d 370
     (Pa. 1972), the [C]ourt noted:
    It cannot be disputed that occupation up to a fence
    on each side by a party or two parties for more than
    twenty-one years, each party claiming the land on
    his side as his own, gives to each an incontestable
    right up to the fence, and equally whether the fence
    is precisely on the right line or not.
    Id. at 371.
    In such a situation the parties need not have specifically
    consented to the location of the line. Id. at 371. It must
    nevertheless appear that for the requisite twenty-one
    years a line was recognized and acquiesced in as a
    boundary by adjoining landowners. See Miles v. Penna.
    Coal Co., 
    91 A. 211
     (Pa. 1914); Reiter v. McJunkin,
    
    33 A. 1012
     (Pa. 1896).
    Inn Le’Daerda, 
    360 A.2d at 215-16
    .
    Niles    v.   Fall   Creek   Hunting    Club,   Inc.,   
    545 A.2d 926
    ,   930
    (Pa. Super. 1988) (citations modified).
    -9-
    J-S64020-15
    We review the Reeds’ arguments in turn. In support of their “dispute
    and compromise” claim, the Reeds argue that the Reeds’ and Nicarrys’
    predecessors’ mutual retention of Gary Young in 1980 to locate the
    boundary between their parcels viewed in tandem with the pin located in
    what Gary Young located as the corner, which neither the original retaining
    parties or their successors in interest appear to have disturbed or disputed,
    were evidence both of dispute and of compromise.         Brief for the Reeds
    at 12-22.
    The trial court in its memorandum opinion asserted that the Reeds had
    presented no evidence to establish the first prong of the test, because
    “[t]here was no admissible, credible evidence that established a dispute
    regarding the subject properties in 1980.” T.C.O. at 7. Having so found, the
    trial court did not clearly state a finding regarding the existence of a
    compromise.   However, the trial court, in its Rule 1925(a) opinion, noted
    that “the hiring of a surveyor hardly evidences the settlement of a dispute.”
    Rule 1925(a) Opinion, 7/2/2015, at 2 (emphasis added).
    The Reeds focus virtually all of their energy upon the first finding,
    asserting that the trial court “[o]stensibly conced[ed] that [the] Reeds had
    established the second and third elements [of the test] (a compromised line
    and the consent of both parties).” Brief for the Reeds at 12. They go on to
    insist at considerable length that there was, in fact, a dispute between the
    1980 owners of the property, because only that would explain those parties’
    mutual retention of a surveyor. See id. at 14-20.
    - 10 -
    J-S64020-15
    First, we do not read the trial court’s reasoning so restrictively. In its
    initial memorandum, it is true that the court’s only clearly stated basis for its
    ruling was the lack of evidence of a dispute. However, in its Rule 1925(a)
    opinion, the court specifically stated that the evidence did not establish the
    settlement of a dispute, which goes farther than merely citing the lack of
    evidence of a dispute in the first instance. Secondly, in its separate ruling
    rejecting the Reeds’ alternative “recognition and acquiescence” theory, taken
    up   infra,    the   trial   court   explicitly   found   insufficient   evidence   of   a
    “compromised line.” See T.C.O. at 8 (“Most telling in [the Reeds’] attempt
    to establish recognition and acquiescence is their failure to prove that the
    line established in 1980 was ever recognized by anyone other than the
    [Reeds] in 2005[, at the time of the survey retracement].”).                It would be
    problematic indeed to find (as we do) no error in the trial court’s recognition
    and acquiescence ruling but simultaneously determine that the court found
    that there was, in fact, a compromised line.
    In any event, this Court may affirm the trial court on any legally valid
    basis.      Plasticert, Inc., v. Westfield Ins. Co., 
    923 A.2d 489
    , 492
    (Pa. Super. 2007).       Even if we agreed with the Reeds that the trial court
    erroneously determined that the Reeds had failed to establish by a
    preponderance of the evidence that their predecessors in title disputed the
    location of the boundary line in 1980, and that their dispute prompted them
    to enlist the assistance of Gary Young, there simply is no evidence upon
    which a fact-finder reasonably could conclude that those predecessors
    - 11 -
    J-S64020-15
    mutually agreed to accept Gary Young’s survey as a settlement of such a
    hypothetical dispute. A fact-finder could not reasonably interpret the mere
    placement of a marker at the disputed corner of the property, without more,
    as preponderant evidence of a settlement of the dispute. As the trial court
    noted, neither the survey nor any other documentation of the purported
    compromise boundary was recorded or otherwise substantiated beyond the
    mute insertion of a pin at the corner located by Young, and in none of
    several post-1980 transfers did anyone seek to reform the irreconcilable
    metes and bounds on the respective titles for the purpose of their future
    conveyances.   See T.C.O. at 8.    While it is perhaps the case that neither
    gesture would be required as a matter of law to establish a dispute and a
    compromise, here it is not just the absence of these events, but the absence
    of any events of a similar sort that renders the Reeds’ proofs insufficient to
    establish a dispute and compromise by a preponderance of the evidence.
    Hence, the trial court did not err or abuse its discretion in rejecting the
    Reeds’ claim of a dispute and compromise that solemnized Gary Young’s
    1980 survey as an agreed-to boundary between the parcels.
    Furthermore, even if we were persuaded that the evidence would
    support the conclusions pressed by the Reeds, that would be a far cry from
    establishing that the trial court’s findings to the contrary were unsupported
    by the record and constituted an abuse of discretion.     At a minimum, the
    thin record on these points furnished the trial court with ample basis to find
    - 12 -
    J-S64020-15
    that the Reeds failed to establish a dispute and compromise by a
    preponderance of the evidence. See Shaffer; Anderson, 
    supra.
    The Reeds next contend that the trial court erred or abused its
    discretion in rejecting their claim of recognition and acquiescence. The trial
    court rejected the Reeds’ claim upon the following basis:
    Most telling in [the Reeds’] attempt to establish recognition and
    acquiescence is their failure to prove that the line established in
    1980 was ever recognized by anyone other than the [Reeds] in
    2005. The 1980 surveys were never recorded, nor did any
    subsequent deed description ever refer to the 1980 surveys.
    The property now owned by the Reeds was transferred in 1993,
    1994 and again when the Reeds took title in 2000. The Nicarry
    property was transferred in 1986, 2004, 2006, 2008 and finally
    to the Nicarrys in 2012. There was never an indication in any of
    those deeds of the 1980[-]created boundaries. In fact, the deed
    descriptions today mirror those from 1883.
    This circumstance is not as if there is a fence or a wall dividing
    two properties in the middle of a neighborhood or in the city for
    all to see. These properties are in rural Huntingdon County in
    the woods.     We cannot make a finding of recognition and
    acquiescence when [the Reeds] have failed to present any
    credible evidence that the predecessors in title of either property
    acknowledged the line in question. The argument seems to be
    “if no one objected to the surveys, then everyone must have
    acknowledged and agreed with the survey.” This theory would
    contradict the long held legal ten[et] that the [p]laintiff has the
    burden to prove [his or her] case, and [he or she] may not do so
    through mere speculation.
    Id. at 8-9 (footnote omitted).
    - 13 -
    J-S64020-15
    In support of their contention that their evidence was sufficient not
    only to support a finding of recognition and acquiescence but to compel it, 4
    the Reeds rely exclusively upon this Court’s decision in Niles.      However,
    Niles is distinguishable from the instant case in multiple dimensions, 5 and
    militates more against the Reeds’ claim of recognition and acquiescence than
    in its favor.    In Niles a purchaser of one parcel called into question the
    location of its boundary with an adjacent parcel. The purchaser invited the
    owners of the adjacent property to assist a surveyor in settling the location
    of the boundary.        The parties met with the surveyor, and the surveyor
    identified what he believed to be the proper boundary and painted the
    proposed line in yellow. The surveyor prepared a map for the purchaser and
    a deed reflecting the new survey was prepared and utilized to complete the
    purchase. The purchaser ran a strand of wire along the line in question and
    posted no trespassing signs along the agreed-to boundary. In the ensuing
    decades, posted no trespassing signs were maintained along the line, and
    the line further was marked by the strand of wire as well as blaze marks on
    ____________________________________________
    4
    They must establish exactly that in order to prevail, because where the
    evidence is such that it would support either outcome, we will not disturb the
    fact-finder’s decision as to which outcome is just. See Shaffer; Anderson,
    
    supra.
    5
    The Reeds allow that there are two distinguishing facts between Niles
    and this case. Brief for the Reeds at 13. One might quibble with the precise
    number of distinguishing factors, but, as the list to follow makes clear, there
    certainly are more than two.
    - 14 -
    J-S64020-15
    the trees.   Additionally, a visible timber cut line ran along the agreed-to
    boundary and additional evidence showed that the adjacent owner had
    detoured a logging road to steer clear of the line, had posted along the line,
    and had leased hunting rights that ran up to that line. Niles, 545 A.2d at
    928. This was strong evidence of acquiescence to the surveyor’s line.
    By comparison, in the instant matter the only marking that the Reeds
    can identify as on par with those recited in Niles is the lone pin placed at
    the corner Gary Young identified as proper in 1980. There was no evidence
    of any sort of posting along the proposed boundary. There was no physical
    barrier or other visible evidence of a boundary such as a timber cut until
    long after 1980. The Reeds introduced no evidence of the parties’ respective
    usage of their parcels up to some line corresponding to that proposed by
    Gary Young in 1980. Indeed, in their lengthy argument, the only relevant
    evidence they recite that is supported by the record involves timbering up to
    the putative property line by the Reeds in 2005 and 2006, but that neither
    establishes recognition by the Nicarrys or their predecessors nor does it
    establish that any such recognition encompassed twenty-one years.
    Even if the Reeds established an evidentiary basis upon which the trial
    court could have ruled in their favor, which the trial court certainly did not
    believe and which appears to us to require stretching the record to its
    breaking point, to prevail before this Court they must do more. They must
    persuade this Court that the trial court could have ruled no other way.
    Based upon our review of the record, they have failed to do so. After careful
    - 15 -
    J-S64020-15
    review of the record, a fact-finder reasonably could have concluded that the
    Reeds failed to establish by a preponderance of the evidence that the owners
    of the two parcels at issue recognized the 1980 boundary and acquiesced to
    it through their usage and treatment of the property for a twenty-one-year
    span. Accordingly, the trial court did not abuse its discretion or commit an
    error of law.6, 7
    ____________________________________________
    6
    The Reeds dedicate over one third of their argument to insisting that
    the trial court’s opinion betrayed the court’s partiality, prejudice, bias, or ill
    will. See Brief for the Reeds at 28-37. Distilled to its essence, their
    argument derives from the trial court’s curt language regarding what it took
    to be the Reeds’ reliance upon evidence not of record. In particular, the
    Reeds home in on the trial court’s dedication of a little over a page and a
    half of its original memorandum to criticizing the Reeds for submitting a new
    document not in evidence as an attachment to their post-trial Memorandum
    in Support of Proposed Findings of Fact and Proposed Conclusions of Law, a
    discussion that the Reeds identify as containing “[e]xtreme and excessive
    criticism.” Id. at 35. The document in question was submitted in support of
    their expert’s testimony, but had not been admitted into evidence or
    addressed by the parties’ expert witnesses. See, e.g., T.C.O. at 10 (“While
    it is surely appropriate to vociferously argue a point, it is just as
    inappropriate to attempt to present inadmissible evidence to the fact[-]
    finder.”). Remarkably, the Reeds acknowledge that they “were in error” but
    maintain that “the error was greatly exaggerated by the trial [court],” and
    became the “crown jewel” of the trial court’s opinion. As noted, supra,
    Gregory Reed is an attorney. Perhaps the trial court’s concise, and at times
    curt rejections of Reeds’ claims and arguments were more pointed than was
    strictly necessary, but we find a good deal more raw invective in the Reeds’
    appellate brief than in the trial court’s opinion. Gregory Reed seems inclined
    to take personally what most seasoned attorneys accept as an occupational
    hazard—that a trial court may find one’s arguments unconvincing and may
    not offer a spoonful of sugar as a digestif. We detect nothing in the trial
    court’s opinion to suggest the sort of partiality, prejudice, bias, or ill will that
    might reflect an abuse of discretion.
    - 16 -
    J-S64020-15
    Judgment affirmed.
    Judgment Entered.
    Joseph D. Seletyn, Esq.
    Prothonotary
    Date: 12/16/2015
    _______________________
    (Footnote Continued)
    7
    In their Rule 1925(b) statement, the Reeds also contended that the
    trial court should not have favored the Lockard survey over the Youngs’
    survey and survey retracement. Thus, they argue, the trial court should
    have adopted Lockard’s methodology. To some extent, they intertwine their
    argument on this issue within their lengthy complaint about the trial court’s
    tone in rejecting their claims. However, this does not constitute meaningful
    legal argument. Moreover, they make no reference to this issue in the
    statement of the questions presented provided in their brief. Because they
    have not properly identified the issue as one they seek to press before this
    Court and have provided no clear legal argument in support of it, the issue is
    waived. See Pa.R.A.P. 2116(a) (“No question will be considered unless it is
    stated in the statement of questions involved or is fairly encompassed
    thereby.”), 2119(a) (requiring the discussion of pertinent authorities).
    - 17 -