Snow Shoe Twp., a Pennsylvania Municipal Corp. v. Boggs Twp., a Pennsylvania Municipal Corp. ( 2017 )


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  •         IN THE COMMONWEALTH COURT OF PENNSYLVANIA
    Snow Shoe Township, a                    :
    Pennsylvania Municipal Corporation       :
    :
    v.                           : No. 1209 C.D. 2016
    : Submitted: January 13, 2017
    Boggs Township, a Pennsylvania           :
    Municipal Corporation,                   :
    :
    Appellant       :
    BEFORE:     HONORABLE MARY HANNAH LEAVIT, President Judge
    HONORABLE PATRICIA A. McCULLOUGH, Judge
    HONORABLE JAMES GARDNER COLINS, Senior Judge
    OPINION NOT REPORTED
    MEMORANDUM OPINION BY
    SENIOR JUDGE COLINS                                      FILED: August 1, 2017
    Before this Court is the appeal of Boggs Township, a Pennsylvania
    Municipal Corporation (Boggs Township), from the June 23, 2016 order of the
    Court of Common Pleas of Centre County (Trial Court) overruling the exceptions
    filed by Boggs Township to the March 15, 2016 Report of the Board of Boundary
    Commissioners (Board), which followed the Petition filed on September 11, 2013
    by Snow Shoe Township, a Pennsylvania Municipal Corporation (Snow Shoe
    Township), to ascertain the boundary line between Boggs Township and Snow
    Shoe Township. For the following reasons, we affirm.
    Boggs Township and Snow Shoe Township are second class
    townships located in Centre County, Pennsylvania. The Second Class Township
    Code1 (Code), 53 P.S. §§ 65101-68701, provides for the ascertainment of disputed
    1
    Act of May 1, 1933, P.L. 103, reenacted and amended by the Act of July 10, 1947, as
    amended, 53 P.S. §§ 65101-68701.
    boundary lines by petition to the court of common pleas. Section 302 of the Code,
    53 P.S. § 65302. Once a petition has been filed, the court of common pleas
    [S]hall appoint three impartial citizens as commissioners,
    one of whom shall be a registered surveyor or engineer,
    to inquire into the request of the petition. After giving
    notice to parties interested as directed by the court, the
    commissioners shall hold a hearing and view the lines or
    boundaries; and they shall make a plot or draft of the
    lines and boundaries proposed to be ascertained and
    established if they cannot be fully designated by natural
    lines or boundaries. The commissioners shall make a
    report to the court, together with their recommendations.
    Upon the filing of the report, it shall be confirmed nisi,
    and the court may require notice to be given by the
    petitioners to the parties interested.
    Section 303 of the Code, 53 P.S. § 65303. Pursuant to the statutory authority
    provided by the Code, the Trial Court appointed the Board on October 31, 2013.
    Following discovery, Boggs Township filed a motion to establish the boundary
    line between the two Townships along the southern branch of Beech Creek. On
    June 25, 2014, the Trial Court held a conference with counsel for both Townships
    and issued an order memorializing an agreement between the Townships that the
    Board shall determine the boundary line, that thereafter either Township may file
    objections if it takes issue with the Board’s determination, and that the motion filed
    by Boggs Township and the reply and new matter filed by Snow Shoe Township
    would be held in abeyance pending the outcome of the Board’s determination.
    Pursuant to the course of action set forth in the Trial Court’s order, the
    Board held its first hearing on February 23, 2015. On October 15, 2015, the Board
    held a second hearing to allow for testimony and evidence to be submitted
    2
    regarding the generation of a set of three (3) geographic coordinates using global
    positioning survey (GPS) equipment in order to establish the geolocation of the
    boundary line and to permit the Board to view the geographic coordinates using a
    computer program known colloquially as “Google Earth,” that maps and represents
    the earth based upon satellite imagery, aerial photography, terrain elevation data,
    and data gathered from geographic information systems.
    During the October 15, 2015 hearing, Mark Saville of Sweetland
    Engineering and Associates, Inc. (Sweetland Engineering), which had been served
    with a subpoena during discovery, testified and a question arose as to whether all
    information responsive to the subpoena had been produced by Sweetland
    Engineering. On October 20, 2015, Boggs Township filed a motion to compel
    Sweetland Engineering to comply with the earlier issued subpoena and on October
    30, 2015, Sweetland Engineering produced to Boggs Township additional
    information responsive to the subpoena. On November 5, 2015, arguing that the
    Board had been denied the opportunity to take evidence regarding the additional
    information within Sweetland Engineering’s possession, Boggs Township filed a
    motion to appoint a replacement Board. On December 11, 2015, the Trial Court
    issued an opinion and order denying the motion. In its opinion, the Trial Court
    concluded the motion was premature and lacked support in the Code, which
    unambiguously establishes the exclusive procedure for challenging a report issued
    by the Board.
    On March 15, 2016, the Board filed its report. The report relies upon
    a 1992 surveyor’s report prepared by Sweetland Engineering                 for its
    recommendation of a boundary line, as supplemented by a representation of the
    correct GPS coordinates along the boundary line between the two Townships, and
    3
    the report discusses the proceedings before the Board. On March 22, 2016, the
    Trial Court confirmed the Board’s report nisi. Thereafter, on April 23, 2016,
    Boggs Township filed exceptions to the Board’s report.
    The Trial Court held a hearing to address Boggs Township’s
    exceptions on June 2, 2016. On June 23, 2016, the Trial Court issued an order and
    opinion overruling the exceptions filed by Boggs Township, which Boggs
    Township has appealed to this Court for review. This Court issued a briefing
    schedule on September 15, 2016, with which both Townships complied, and this
    matter was submitted on brief for disposition of the issues raised on appeal by
    Boggs Township on January 10, 2017. Subsequent to this Court’s order that the
    instant appeal be submitted on briefs for disposition, our Supreme Court issued a
    decision in Adams Township v. Richland Township, 
    154 A.3d 250
    (Pa. 2017),
    which addresses use of the doctrine of acquiescence in the resolution of a dispute
    over uncertain boundaries and holds that the doctrine was properly applied by the
    board of commissioners because the board was unable to ascertain the original
    location of the boundary in dispute.      Prior to reaching its holding in Adams
    Township, the Court engaged in an extensive review of the constitutional, statutory
    and common law authority out of which the procedure for resolving a true
    boundary dispute developed in the Commonwealth.
    Of particular significance to the matter before us is the Court’s
    discussion in Adams Township of the appropriate standard of review and the role of
    the board, the trial court, and an appellate court reviewing a boundary report issued
    by the board:
    Because resolution of a municipal boundary dispute
    requires commissioners to determine the legally correct
    4
    boundary, those commissioners are not restricted to
    considering only the lines proposed by an interested
    party, and there is no burden of proof to be allocated.
    When a trial court appoints a board of commissioners to
    determine the location of a municipal boundary, the
    board serves as the fact-finder and possesses the
    exclusive prerogative to determine the weight of the
    evidence presented. The board’s determination has the
    force and effect of a jury verdict and, therefore, when
    there is legally competent testimony to support the order,
    it will not be disturbed by a reviewing court. Section 303
    of the [Code] directs that, when a board files its report
    and recommendation with the appointing court, “it shall
    be confirmed nisi.” [footnote omitted] 53 P.S. § 65303.
    A reviewing court may not disturb the board’s
    determination unless the board committed an error of law
    or its conclusion was not supported by competent
    evidence.
    
    Id. at 258-259
    (internal citations omitted). The Court stressed that “[a]s the fact-
    finder, it is the board’s prerogative to weigh the evidence, to make credibility
    determinations, and to decide whether the evidence is sufficient to support a
    conclusion that the true boundary lies in a particular place, or whether, instead, the
    location of a disputed boundary remains uncertain.” 
    Id. at 265.
    Furthermore, the
    Court cautioned that while a board’s statutory duty is discharged where it is able to
    determine from the evidence the precise location of the boundary, “that duty does
    not require the board to resort to speculation or conjecture,” and instead, the board
    may consider whether a township’s long acquiescence to a boundary line, such as
    for purposes of taxing or for the provision of services, supports the adoption of a
    particular boundary line. 
    Id. The Court’s
    discussion in Adams Township of the board’s role as the
    fact-finder in a boundary dispute explicitly rejected this Court’s holding below on
    5
    the basis that this Court invaded the board’s exclusive province as the finder of fact
    by commanding that the record be reopened for the provision of additional
    evidence. 
    Id. at 266.
    Instead, the Court concluded that “if a [board] believes that
    the provision of additional evidence will aid in its determination, it may direct the
    parties to provide such evidence, as the board did in [In re Petition of Viola, 
    838 A.2d 21
    , 24 (Pa. Cmwlth. 2003)],” where the decision to reopen the record was
    made by the board and not a reviewing court. Adams 
    Township, 154 A.3d at 266
    .
    The Court again rooted its conclusion regarding the authority of the board in a
    boundary dispute to the board’s ultimate determination having “the force and effect
    of a jury verdict.” 
    Id. (citation omitted).
                 Before this Court, Boggs Township raises four issues that question
    whether the roles played by the Trial Court and the Board in resolving the
    boundary dispute between the two townships led to errors of law. First, Boggs
    Township argues that the Trial Court committed an error of law by failing to give
    the Board sufficient direction as to what the boundary was.          Second, Boggs
    Township argues that the Trial Court committed an error of law by not requiring
    the Board to issue a more comprehensive report of its findings and to allow a
    description of the boundary line that did not include metes and bounds. Third,
    Boggs Township argues that the Trial Court erred by not requiring the Board to
    conduct an in person view of a portion of the boundary line and to rely instead on
    aerial photography. Lastly, Boggs Township argues that the Trial Court committed
    an error of law by either not appointing a new board or requiring the Board to hold
    additional hearings when evidence responsive to a subpoena issued during
    discovery, which was not produced, came to light following testimony at the
    October 15, 2015 hearing.
    6
    Boggs Township’s first argument rests upon the distinction between
    the role of the Board as fact-finder and the Trial Court’s plenary standard of review
    over issues of law. Boggs Township contends that it is the duty of the Trial Court
    to instruct the Board as to what the original court-approved boundary was based on
    official records so that the Board may then carry out its proper function of
    physically locating where the boundary line is.
    In support of this argument, Boggs Township relies upon Miles Land
    Co. v. Hudson Coal Co., 
    91 A. 1061
    (Pa. 1914), an action in ejectment where the
    defendant sought judgment notwithstanding the verdict. Miles Land centers upon a
    dispute over whether the courses and distances given in the surveys of two grants
    of adjoining tracts of land should control or whether the Lackawanna River, a
    natural monument called as the western boundary in the survey, was
    determinative.2 Our Supreme Court affirmed per curiam the grant of judgment
    2
    Miles Land sets forth several rules of construction regarding boundary disputes that are helpful
    in understanding the issues presented in the instant matter. First,
    where land is described by courses and distances, and also by calls
    for adjoiners, the latter, where there is a discrepancy, invariably
    govern; and it is as applicable to conveyances as it is to official
    surveys. By reason of imperfection of instruments, as well as
    inequalities of surface and carelessness of assistants, extreme
    accuracy is not to be attained by the compass and chain; while, on
    the other hand, calls for natural objects, or, what is much the same,
    known and established lines of contiguous tracts, admit of perfect
    certainty. When a vendor, therefore, conveys by established
    landmarks, the subject of the grant will neither overrun nor fall
    short of them. They form the true boundary, and the courses and
    distances serve but to point towards the 
    place. 91 A. at 1062
    (internal citations omitted). Second,
    [t]hat lines actually marked on the ground constitute the survey of
    a land warrant, and control the surveyor’s return, even where that
    calls for a natural or other fixed boundary, and that where lines are
    not actually run and marked on the ground the survey is to be
    7
    notwithstanding the verdict in Miles Land, explicitly relying on the trial court’s
    conclusion that:
    Whether or not the Lackawanna river was a call, and the
    western boundary of lots numbers 3, 4, 5, and 6, is a
    question of law for the court, and not of fact for the
    determination of the jury. What are boundaries is a
    matter of law for the court; where they are, a matter of
    fact for the determination of the jury under proper
    instruction from the court. The meaning of a deed—
    that is, what it covers—is a question of law for the
    court; what the boundaries of a given piece of land
    are is a question of construction for the court also;
    where they are is a question of fact for the jury.
    Where the boundary lines of a grant are fixed by the
    grant itself, the question as to what these lines are is
    purely one of 
    law. 91 A. at 1064
    (emphasis added, internal citations omitted); see also Norwich v.
    Beaver, 
    474 A.2d 329
    , 330 (Pa. Super. 1984) (“This court has also repeatedly said
    ‘[t]he question of what is a boundary line is a matter of law, but where a boundary
    line, or corner, is actually located is a question for the trier of fact.’” (internal
    citations omitted)). Our Supreme Court held in Miles Land that the trial court
    properly entered judgment notwithstanding the verdict because the Lackawanna
    River was used as a call in the survey, the rules of construction mandate that calls
    are controlling over descriptions by courses and distances when determining the
    carried to its calls of adjoiners, even though it overrun the
    distances returned on the survey, are fixed and familiar rules of
    property that are not questioned in this case. Generally, a survey is
    to be carried to its calls, unless there are actual lines on the ground
    excluding them.
    
    Id. at 1063
    (internal citations omitted).
    8
    bounds of a grant to settle a dispute over a boundary line, and questions regarding
    the meaning and intent of a deed are for the court rather than the jury.
    However, Miles Land does not support the conclusion that the Trial
    Court committed an error of law in the instant matter. Unlike in Miles Land, the
    dispute here did not center upon the meaning and intent found within the four
    corners of an official document. Instead, one of the difficulties the Board was
    presented with in discharging its duty was the absence of official records of the
    original boundary between Boggs Township and Snow Shoe Township. As a
    result, unlike in Miles Land, the issue is primarily one of fact rather than law.
    Support for the conclusion that the Trial Court properly refrained from
    addressing factual rather than legal issues can be found in the very argument made
    by Boggs Township; although it contends that the Trial Court erred in failing to
    give greater direction to the Board, its argument is primarily supported by a
    reweighing of the evidence before the Board to persuade this Court that the Board
    lacked competent evidence to support its determination.          Whether or not the
    evidence is sufficient to support the Board’s ultimate boundary determination is a
    distinct question from whether the Board and the Trial Court performed their
    proper functions.
    The lynchpin of Boggs Township’s argument is that the Board
    erroneously relied upon and adopted a surveyor’s report that had been filed with
    the Trial Court as a part of a boundary dispute in 1992 because this report
    improperly relied upon field notes from an 1856 survey, which contains
    discrepancies, and for which records of a court commission were not found. When
    presented with this issue below, the Trial Court concluded that:
    9
    Boundary commissions traditionally rely on the previous
    and historical work from surveyors reports to complete
    their work. Moreover, the Court believes the [Board]
    would have wrestled with and resolved any alleged
    discrepancies in coming to its ultimate conclusion. In
    addition to the statutory authority, a reason courts appoint
    boundary commissions to ascertain township lines is
    because the members are in a much better position than a
    court to evaluate the technical evidence and determine
    the appropriate location of a line. As such, the Court
    cannot conclude that it was error for the [Board] to use
    and rely upon historical survey notes, and to accept the
    1992 Report.
    (Trial Court Op. at 3.) We agree. The Trial Court did not err in concluding that
    the issue was one of fact and not law, and therefore properly within the province of
    the Board.
    Boggs Township’s next argument is essentially that the report issued
    by the Board was insufficient—Boggs Township asserts that the report did not
    contain delineated findings of fact, did not make explicit credibility
    determinations, and did not discuss the Board’s resolution of discrepancies in the
    record. Separate but related to this issue is Boggs Township’s contention that the
    Board erred by using aerial imagery and GPS technology to locate the boundary
    line.
    The Code provides the exclusive remedy for resolving a boundary
    dispute. Where a boundary between townships is disputed, there is no burden of
    proof to be allocated. Moon Township v. Findlay Township, 
    553 A.2d 500
    , 504
    (Pa. Cmwlth. 1989).        A reviewing court may only disturb a boundary
    commission’s determination where it is not supported by competent evidence;
    inconsistencies in the evidence go to the weight of the evidence, not its
    10
    competence, and do not compel a reviewing court to grant relief any more than
    inconsistent evidence requires entry of a judgment notwithstanding a jury’s verdict.
    In re Petition of Viola, 
    838 A.2d 21
    , 27 (Pa. Cmwlth. 2003). The Code specifies
    that a boundary commission shall consist of three impartial citizens, one of whom
    shall be a registered surveyor or engineer. Section 303 of the Code, 53 P.S. §
    65303. The Code requires that the boundary commission hold a hearing, view the
    lines or boundaries, and that if the lines or boundaries cannot be fully designated
    by natural lines or boundaries, the Code requires that the boundary commission
    shall make a plot or draft of the lines and boundaries proposed to be established.
    
    Id. Finally, the
    Code requires that the boundary commission make a report and
    recommendation to the court. 
    Id. The report
    and recommendation made to the Trial Court by the Board
    states that the Board:
    Hereby adopt as their report the Surveyor’s Report dated
    April 29, 1992, prepared by Sweetland Engineering and
    Associates, Inc. which was previously adopted in the
    matter filed to No. 91-239 in this Honorable Court, which
    Surveyor’s Report is attached hereto as Exhibit “A”. The
    information in this Surveyor’s Report is supplemented by
    the Exhibit filed to the above captioned term and number
    as Petitioner’s Supplemental Exhibit No. 1 which is a
    representation of the correct GPS coordinates for points
    on the boundary line between Snow Shoe and Boggs
    Township in PA North Zone NAD 83 US Feet Datum,
    which Exhibit is also attached hereto as Exhibit “B”.
    Those Exhibits, together with the Outline of Proceedings
    filed herewith shall constitute the Report of the
    undersigned [Board].
    11
    (Board Report at 1, Reproduced Record (R.R.) at 670a.)              The Outline of
    Proceedings referred to by the Board details the filings made by the two Townships
    and the evidence, both in the form of testimony and documents, submitted into the
    record for review by the Board. At the close of the report, the Board states:
    Following the first hearing the Board had made a
    preliminary determination that no evidence had been
    presented to upset the decision of the previous Board in
    adopting the April 29, 1992 Surveyor’s Report of
    Sweetland Engineering; however the surveyor on the
    current Board had recommended that at least 3 points on
    the boundary line established by the prior Board, and
    adopted by the current Board, be documented by GPS
    coordinates. The October 15, 2015 hearing was held for
    that limited purpose, and to view those coordinates by
    means of Google Earth satellite view. The current Board
    had concluded that it was not feasible and would serve no
    useful purpose to physically go to the points along the
    boundary line since they were located in very remote
    locations. Accordingly this Board treated the view
    through Google Earth satellite as their [sic] view of the
    boundaries as required by [Section 303 of the Code], 53
    P.S. § 65303.
    Should this report be confirmed by this Honorable Court
    it is recommended that the three GPS coordinates set
    forth on Exhibit “B” be monumented at their ground
    location using permanent monuments by Snow Shoe
    Township.
    (Board Report at 29, R.R. at 699a.)
    We are unpersuaded by Boggs Township’s argument that the Board’s
    report is insufficient. There is nothing in the Code that requires the Board to
    delineate findings of fact and conclusions of law. The standard of review for a
    12
    reviewing    court   questions   whether        a   boundary   commission’s   ultimate
    determination is supported by competent evidence; therefore, beyond a
    requirement that a boundary commission articulate its ultimate determination, the
    standard of review necessitates that the boundary commission does so in a manner
    that allows for review of the record by a court for competent evidence.
    In the instant matter, the Board’s report reviews the evidence
    submitted into the record and identifies the record evidence it found persuasive.
    Whether or not a different determination could have been made based on the
    record before the Board is immaterial. Rather, the sole question for this Court is
    whether the evidence the Board did rely upon is competent.              While Boggs
    Township has identified inconsistencies in the 1992 Surveyor’s Report prepared by
    Sweetland Engineering that the Board relied upon in making its recommendation,
    such inconsistencies go to the weight of the evidence, not its competency. The
    Board’s report was not legally insufficient because it lacked findings of fact,
    conclusions of law, and a discussion of how it resolved inconsistent evidence.
    Rather, the Board’s report identified the evidence of record and provided the trial
    court with its ultimate determination of the boundary line, which was sufficient to
    satisfy the Board’s duty under the Code.
    Similarly, the Board did not err by using aerial imagery and GPS
    technology to locate the boundary line. The Code does not specify how a view
    must be conducted. While the understanding of what is denoted by the term
    “view” and the means by which a view is conducted is informed by the past, the
    text of the statute does not freeze the term or the means in past practices. As the
    Trial Court stated, the evidence showed that part of the line lies in rough and rocky
    terrain and that:
    13
    To require that each Commissioner personally travel into
    terrain comprised of cliffs, boulders, thickets of
    impenetrable rhododendron, and a menagerie of wild
    critters containing fangs, claws, and other dangerous and
    offensive weapons is unjust and unreasonable. In this
    day and age, to require that a Commissioner view a
    certain rock by standing upon it, rather than by viewing it
    from the air, will not only preclude the Court from
    selecting any but the most able-bodied and youthful
    applicants, but also might make recruitment of willing
    commissioners impossible.
    (Trial Court Op. at 3 n.2.) The inability to conduct a view in difficult terrain is
    perhaps why some boundary lines remain unclear today. Regardless, unless the
    method used to conduct a view is shown to be so unreliable that it is established
    that the statutory duty of the boundary commission to conduct a view has not been
    discharged then the question of how the view was conducted is an evidentiary
    rather than a legal question. Here, Boggs Township has not shown that the method
    used to conduct the view was so unreliable as to fail to constitute a view.
    Accordingly, the use of aerial mapping and other current software to conduct a
    view was not error.
    Finally, Boggs Township argues that the Trial Court should have
    appointed a new boundary commission or required the Board to hold additional
    hearings once testimony revealed that Sweetland Engineering had failed to produce
    all of the information within its possession that was responsive to Boggs
    Township’s subpoena. This argument is without merit. The Board’s report clearly
    identifies this alleged new evidence, along with the filings seeking a new boundary
    commission, as part of the record before the Board when it made its determination.
    Once the information Sweetland Engineering had failed to produce came to light, it
    14
    was within the Board’s discretion to hold or forego a new hearing. The Board
    declined to hold an additional hearing. There is absolutely no legal basis upon
    which to conclude the Board erred in its exercise of discretion or the Trial Court
    erred by concluding that appointment of a new boundary commission was not
    warranted.
    Accordingly, we hold that the Trial Court did not err in overruling the
    exceptions filed by Boggs Township.
    __________ ___________________________
    JAMES GARDNER COLINS, Senior Judge
    15
    IN THE COMMONWEALTH COURT OF PENNSYLVANIA
    Snow Shoe Township, a                 :
    Pennsylvania Municipal Corporation    :
    :
    v.                         : No. 1209 C.D. 2016
    :
    Boggs Township, a Pennsylvania        :
    Municipal Corporation,                :
    :
    Appellant      :
    ORDER
    AND NOW, this 1st day of August, 2017, the order of the Court of
    Common Pleas of Centre County in the above-captioned matter is AFFIRMED.
    __________ ___________________________
    JAMES GARDNER COLINS, Senior Judge
    

Document Info

Docket Number: Snow Shoe Twp., a Pennsylvania Municipal Corp. v. Boggs Twp., a Pennsylvania Municipal Corp. - 1209 C.D. 2016

Judges: Colins, Senior Judge

Filed Date: 8/1/2017

Precedential Status: Precedential

Modified Date: 8/1/2017