Gourmet's Delight Mushrooms, LP v. Keating, P. ( 2022 )


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  • J-A04019-22
    NON-PRECEDENTIAL DECISION - SEE SUPERIOR COURT I.O.P. 65.37
    GOURMET’S DELIGHT MUSHROOMS,           :   IN THE SUPERIOR COURT OF
    LP                                     :        PENNSYLVANIA
    :
    :
    v.                        :
    :
    :
    PAUL D. KEATING AND SUSAN S.           :
    KEATING, ET AL.                        :   No. 1416 EDA 2021
    :
    :
    APPEAL OF: SEAN C. SMITH,              :
    MALLORY P. AUSTIN, SARAH               :
    BERDOULAY, TROY ST. JOHN,              :
    ARTHUR TAYLOR, CYNTHIA TAYLOR,         :
    RICK MASHA, TERESA MASHA,              :
    GARY M. MACK, BARBARA L. MACK,         :
    WILLIAM D. WALKER, MARGARET W.         :
    WALKER, JOSEPH S. COX, PATRICK         :
    G. TALWIN, LINDA A. TIBERIA,           :
    ROBERT S. REYNOLDS, WENDY L.           :
    REYNOLDS, LOUIS F. DONOGHUE,           :
    MARIANNE C. DONAGHUE,                  :
    CHRISTOPHER M. WURM, VIRGINIA          :
    C. NORTH, JANET A. SMITH, MARY         :
    ANN HITCHENS, ANTHONY L.               :
    LAURIA, LINDA S. LAURIA, DANNY         :
    MILANO, CARRIE MILANO AND LYNN         :
    ARRINGTON                              :
    Appeal from the Judgment Entered June 24, 2021
    In the Court of Common Pleas of Chester County Civil Division at No(s):
    2017-07576-RC
    BEFORE: LAZARUS, J., NICHOLS, J., and McLAUGHLIN, J.
    MEMORANDUM BY NICHOLS, J.:                         FILED APRIL 27, 2022
    Appellants, Sean C. Smith, Mallory P. Austin, Sarah Berdoulay, Troy St.
    John, Arthur Taylor, Cynthia Taylor, Rick Masha, Teresa Masha, Gary M. Mack,
    J-A04019-22
    Barbara L. Mack, William D. Walker, Margaret W. Walker, Joseph S. Cox,
    Patrick G. Talwin, Linda A. Tiberia, Robert S. Reynolds, Wendy L. Reynolds,
    Louis F. Donoghue, Marianne C. Donaghue, Christopher M. Wurm, Virginia C.
    North, Janet A. Smith, Mary Ann Hitchens, Anthony L. Lauria, Linda S. Lauria,
    Danny Milano, Carrie Milano And Lynn Arrington (collectively, the Neighbors),1
    appeal from the judgment entered on June 24, 2021, in favor of Appellee
    Gourmet’s Delight Mushrooms, LP (Gourmet).2                 On appeal, the Neighbors
    contend that the trial court erred by (1) failing to apply the law of the case
    doctrine;    (2)   concluding      that   the    relevant    deed   restrictions   were
    unambiguous; (3) finding that because the deed restrictions contained
    building restrictions, rather than use restrictions; and (4) concluding that the
    activities occurring on adjacent land were not relevant to the application of
    the deed restrictions. After review, we affirm the judgment entered in favor
    of Gourmet.
    ____________________________________________
    1 The trial court noted that default judgments were entered against Paul D.
    Keating, Susan S. Keating, Julie B. Engiles, Anne M. Jeavons, and Eric G.
    Jeavons. Trial Ct. Op., 3/18/21, at 1.
    2 On July 12, 2021, the Neighbors filed an appeal from the June 15, 2021
    order denying their post-trial motions. However, we note that the appeal
    properly lies from the judgment entered following disposition of the post-trial
    motions. See Mackall v. Fleegle, 
    801 A.2d 577
    , 580 (Pa. Super. 2002)
    (explaining that an appeal does not properly lie from order denying post-trial
    motions, but rather from the judgment entered following disposition of post-
    trial motions). The record reveals that on June 24, 2021, Gourmet filed a
    praecipe for the entry of judgment following the disposition of the post-trial
    motions. Accordingly, the appeal lies from the judgment entered on June 24,
    2021, and we have corrected the appeal paragraph accordingly.
    -2-
    J-A04019-22
    The record reflects that on August 2, 2017, Gourmet filed a declaratory
    judgment action against the Neighbors seeking a declaration that certain deed
    restrictions concerning the term “mushroom house” did not apply to the Phase
    I composting facility approved for development on Gourmet’s property. The
    parties each filed motions for summary judgment, and on October 26, 2018,
    the trial court granted summary judgment in favor of Gourmet and denied the
    Neighbors’ motion for summary judgment.
    The Neighbors filed a timely appeal, and on August 16, 2019, a panel of
    this Court held that there was an issue of material fact concerning the
    definition of “mushroom house” and whether the deed restrictions applied to
    Gourmet’s    proposed    land   development   plan.    Gourmet’s     Delight
    Mushrooms, LP v. Keating, 3413 EDA 2018, 
    2019 WL 3854930
     (Pa. Super.
    filed August 16, 2019) (unpublished mem.) (Gourmet I).        Therefore, the
    Court affirmed the trial court’s order denying the Neighbors’ motion for
    summary judgment, reversed the trial court’s order granting Gourmet’s
    motion for summary judgment, and remanded for further proceedings. 
    Id.
    On remand, the trial court permitted additional discovery and then
    conducted a two-day non-jury trial.    Thereafter, the trial court made the
    following findings of fact:
    1. Gourmet owns a property in London Grove Township (“London
    Grove Property”), on which Gourmet has operated a mushroom
    growing business since 1979.
    2. This litigation concerns two properties Gourmet purchased in
    Franklin Township, which are contiguous to its London Grove
    Property.
    -3-
    J-A04019-22
    3. In 1950, Lester and Janet Kirkman owned a single tract of land,
    consisting of over 120 acres, in Franklin Township (“Original
    Tract”).
    4. In 1951, the Kirkmans conveyed approximately 7.5 acres of the
    Original Tract to Jay and Margaret Irwin (“Irwin Property”), with
    the following deed restriction:
    ALSO UNDER AND SUBJECT to the provision that no
    mushroom houses shall be erected or maintained upon the
    above-described premises by said Grantees, their heirs,
    assigns or occupiers of said premises.
    5. In 1955, the Kirkmans conveyed approximately 79.7 acres of
    the Original Tract to Fred and Agnes Shoun (“Shoun Tract”), with
    the following deed restriction:
    UNDER AND SUBJECT, also, to the restriction that no
    mushroom house shall be erected on the within conveyed
    premises for a period of ninety (90) years.
    6. In 1972, a portion of the Shoun Tract was subdivided and
    developed into sixteen residential lots along a new cul-de-sac
    road, Queen Lane (“Queen Lane Subdivision”).
    7. The remaining Shoun Tract, a 24-acre parcel, was sold in 1980
    to Leslie Benmark (“Benmark Property”). The Benmark Property
    remained undeveloped.
    8. Gourmet’s London Grove Property is adjacent to the Benmark
    Property.
    9. In 2005, Gourmet purchased the 24-acre Benmark Property.
    10. In 2014, Gourmet purchased the 7.5-acre Irwin Property.
    11. Gourmet purchased the Benmark Property and the Irwin
    Property to expand its mushroom growing operation.
    12. Gourmet subsequently merged the Franklin Township
    properties to form a 32.45-acre tract known as 420 Auburn Road,
    Franklin Township (“Consolidated Property”).
    13. The Neighbors are homeowners whose properties lie
    immediately to the southwest of the Consolidated Property, in the
    Queen Lane Subdivision.
    -4-
    J-A04019-22
    14. Mushroom growing consists of six steps: 1.) Phase I
    composting, 2.) Phase II composting, 3.) Phase III spawning, 4.)
    Phase IV casing, 5.) Phase V pinning, and 6.) Phase VI cropping.
    15. Phase I composting is an outdoor process that is designed to
    breakdown certain bulk ingredients. During this phase, bulk
    ingredients, such as horse and chicken manure, hay, and
    corncobs, are wet and then mixed by a compost turner.
    16. Phase I composting is the most odiferous phase of mushroom
    growing.
    17. Phase I composting can take place on a pad adjacent to a
    mushroom house, on an open-air wharf, or in a partially enclosed
    bunker.
    18. Phase I composting cannot take place in a mushroom house.
    19. Mushrooms cannot be grown in Phase I compost.
    20. Phase II composting, known as pasteurization, is necessary to
    kill insect, pest fungi, and other pests that may be present in the
    compost. In this phase, the compost is conditioned to remove
    ammonia formed during Phase I composting[.]              Phase II
    composting can only occur in environmentally controlled enclosed
    rooms.
    21. In Phase III, spawn is mixed into the compost. Spawn act like
    seed.
    22. In Phase IV, casing, which is a top dressing of peat moss, is
    applied to the spawn run compost.
    23. In Phase V, pinning, mushrooms begin to develop.
    24. Phase VI is the final growth stage and includes harvesting the
    mushrooms.
    25. Gourmet’s business includes Phase I composting. Gourmet
    began composting at the London Grove Property in 1987.
    26. Gourmet’s Phase I composting takes place outdoors on the
    London Grove Property on a flat pad as well as within a three-
    sided, open air shed.
    27. Separate and apart from the composting facilities, there are
    mushroom houses and a packaging facility on the London Grove
    Property.
    -5-
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    28. Sometime in 2005, when Gourmet was considering the
    purchase of the Benmark Property, representatives of Gourmet
    contacted property owners in the Queen Lane Subdivision to
    inquire whether they would agree to rescind the deed restrictions
    with respect to the prohibition against erecting mushroom houses.
    29. At that time, Richard Pia, owner of Gourmet, signed an
    affidavit that was circulated among the Queen Lane Subdivision
    property owners representing that Gourmet was “not interested
    in using the Benmark property for Phase I Composting (also
    known as preparation of fresh mushroom substrate) or for the
    Composting of Unused Mushroom Substrate (also known as Spent
    Mushroom Composting).”
    30. Mr. Pia’s representation was conditioned on “the cooperative
    effort of all the residents of Queen Lane . . . in having the current
    deed restrictions against mushroom houses removed from the
    Benmark property . . . .”
    31. Mr. Pia believed that the residents of Queen Lane found
    composting activities more objectionable than mushroom houses
    and he wished to develop the Benmark Property to grow
    mushrooms.
    32. Not all of the residents of Queen Lane agreed to the removal
    of all of the deed restrictions. Therefore, no agreement was
    reached.
    33. The representations made by Mr. Pia and others on behalf of
    Gourmet reflect a position taken in negotiations to modify the
    deed restrictions and are not a concession of the meaning of the
    deed restrictions.
    34. At the time Gourmet purchased the Franklin Township
    properties, the zoning regulations in Franklin Township, applicable
    to the properties, prohibited both composting and mushroom
    growing.
    35. In 2014, Gourmet challenged the validity of the zoning
    regulations under the Agricultural, Communities and Rural
    Environment Act, 3 Pa.C.S. §§ 311-318 (“ACRE”).
    36. Gourmet was successful in its ACRE challenge and as a result
    Franklin Township amended its zoning ordinance and [Subdivision
    and Land Development Ordinance (SALDO)] and approved
    Gourmet’s final land development plan on December 21, 2016
    -6-
    J-A04019-22
    permitting Gourmet to construct a composting facility on the
    Consolidated Property.
    37. Gourmet’s plans for the Consolidated Property have evolved
    over time, including during the pendency of this litigation.
    Gourmet bound itself at trial to its plans for a composting facility
    that will conduct only Phase I composting on either a concrete slab
    wharf or within a three-sided partially enclosed bunker with
    aerated floors.
    38. Gourmet will not conduct Phases II-VI of mushroom growing,
    all of which take place inside mushroom houses, on the
    Consolidated Property.
    39. All of Gourmet’s mushroom houses will be located on the
    London Grove Property. Gourmet has approval from London
    Grove to expand its mushroom growing operations on the London
    Grove Property.
    40. Gourmet will use the Phase I compost produced on the
    Consolidated Property principally for growing mushrooms at the
    London Grove Property; however, excess Phase I compost will be
    sold.
    41. When considering the meaning of the term “mushroom
    house”, we are concerned with the meaning assigned in or about
    1951 - 1955 when the Kirkmans placed the restrictions on the
    deeds to their property.
    42. The Kirkmans, as granters, are not available to testify and no
    evidence was brought forward to address what the Kirkmans
    meant by “mushroom house.” We are left to discern the meaning
    of mushroom house generally in the community at the time the
    Kirkmans put the restrictive covenants on the deeds. The findings
    below are directed to that time, 1951 - 1955.
    43. A mushroom house is a four-sided, roofed building where
    mushrooms are grown in a room controlled for light, heat and
    humidity.
    44. The sole purpose of a mushroom house is to grow mushrooms.
    45. A source of Phase I compost is necessary to grow mushrooms.
    46. Phase I compost has no use other than as the first stage of
    the medium that will be used to grow mushrooms.
    -7-
    J-A04019-22
    47. Phase I compost was produced by the mushroom farmer for
    personal use.
    48. Synthetic composting, a type of Phase I composting, was
    introduced in the 1940’s, which led to commercial composting.
    Synthetic compost is compost that primarily uses hay, takes
    longer to prepare, requires more space and equipment, and is
    more productive.
    49. Commercial composters produce Phase I compost to be sold
    to farmers who were growing mushrooms.
    50. Phase I composting was conducted not only as part of the
    process of mushroom growing, but also as an activity separate
    and apart from mushroom growing to create a product available
    for sale.
    51. Phase I composting was conducted on concrete pads adjacent
    to mushroom houses, on ground or in bunkers not adjacent to but
    near mushroom houses, and on ground or in bunkers at a distance
    from mushroom houses.
    52. When present, concrete pads adjacent to mushroom houses
    were used for filling, casing and emptying the mushroom houses,
    in addition to Phase I composting.
    53. When present, bunkers consisted of concrete walls and a roof
    with an opening at the front, like a shed, to load and unload the
    bunker. Bunkers are only suitable for Phase I composting.
    54. The objection to mushroom houses was the unattractive
    appearance of the building.
    55. The objection to mushroom farming was the odiferous nature
    of Phase I composting, flies and run-off.
    56. Mushroom growing was not a year-round activity because
    temperature and humidity could not be controlled in the summer
    months until the use of air conditioning became widespread.
    Without air conditioning, growing activities would cease in or
    about early June and resume with Phase I composting in or about
    early August. Phase I composting lasts for three to four weeks
    during every growing cycle.
    57. The off-site impacts of commercial mushroom growing,
    including increased odor, flies and stormwater run-off, became
    more and more problematic as the intensity of mushroom farming
    -8-
    J-A04019-22
    increased while at the same time residential development
    encroached agricultural areas, which resulted in           the
    implementation of regulatory and zoning controls in the 1970’s
    and 1980’s.
    58. The conditions of the 1970’s and 1980’s have no relevance to
    the meaning of restrictions placed on deeds in the early to mid
    1950’s.
    Trial Court Op., 3/18/21, at 1-8 (some formatting altered and footnote
    omitted).
    The trial court concluded that the language in the deed restrictions was
    not ambiguous. Id. at 19. Additionally, the trial court found that the deed
    restrictions were building restrictions, and not use restrictions, and that the
    building restrictions were limited to the erection and maintenance of a
    mushroom house. Id. at 20. The trial court further concluded that a Phase I
    composting facility is not a mushroom house, and that there was no restriction
    against the use, development, construction, or occupancy of a Phase I
    composting facility on the subject property. Id. at 21. Judgment was entered
    in favor of Gourmet and against the Neighbors.
    The Neighbors filed a timely notice of appeal and a court-ordered
    Pa.R.A.P. 1925(b) statement. The trial court issued a Rule 1925(a) opinion
    addressing the Neighbors’ claims.3
    On appeal, the Neighbors raise the following issues:
    ____________________________________________
    3 In its Rule 1925(a) opinion, the trial court incorporated by reference and
    relied upon the March 18, 2021 opinion and the trial court’s July 14, 2021
    order that disposed of the Neighbors’ post-trial motions.
    -9-
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    1. Whether the trial court erred by determining that the deed
    restrictions were unambiguous and limiting its analysis only to
    the language of the deed restrictions, when the Superior Court
    previously held as a matter of law that the deed restrictions
    were ambiguous and remanded the case for the trial court to
    resolve the ambiguity by considering the nature of the subject
    matter, the object of the parties and the surrounding
    circumstances?
    2. Whether the trial court erred by determining that the deed
    restrictions were building restrictions and not use restrictions,
    thereby artificially excluding from the restrictions the adjoining
    composting wharf, which was essential to the operation of a
    mushroom house in the 1950s?
    3. Whether the trial court erred by determining that activities
    occurring on adjacent land are irrelevant to the application of
    the deed restrictions, where Gourmet is proposing to use the
    deed restricted property and Gourmet’s adjacent property as a
    single, fully integrated use for growing mushrooms?
    The Neighbors’ Brief at 3 (some formatting altered).
    When reviewing a trial court’s verdict in a non-jury trial, we bear in mind
    the following principles:
    Our standard of review in non-jury trials is to assess whether the
    findings of facts by the trial court are supported by the record and
    whether the trial court erred in applying the law. Upon appellate
    review the appellate court must consider the evidence in the light
    most favorable to the verdict winner and reverse the trial court
    only where the findings are not supported by the evidence of
    record or are based on an error of law. Our scope of review
    regarding questions of law is plenary.
    * * *
    Moreover, 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.
    - 10 -
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    Century Indem. Co. v. OneBeacon Ins. Co., 
    173 A.3d 784
    , 802 (Pa. Super.
    2017) (citations omitted and some formatting altered).
    Law of the Case
    As part of their first issue, the Neighbors assert that in Gourmet I, a
    prior panel of this Court ruled that the term mushroom house was ambiguous
    as a matter of law. The Neighbors’ Brief at 33. The Neighbors contend that
    the trial court “was bound by [the Gourmet I Court’s] legal determination,
    and erroneously defied it by finding that the deed restrictions were
    unambiguous and failing to apply the appropriate legal evaluation and make
    factual findings.” Id. at 33-34. The Neighbors argue that the term mushroom
    house is ambiguous as the law of the case from the Gourmet I decision, and
    the trial court was bound by that conclusion. Id.
    Gourmet contends that the Gourmet I Court did not make a binding
    determination that the term mushroom house was ambiguous or that the
    determination was the law of the case. Gourmet’s Brief at 22-23. Gourmet
    asserts that although this Court recognized that the term mushroom house
    may possibly have both a literal and figurative meaning, there was never a
    dispute regarding the literal meaning of mushroom house.         Id. (citing
    Gourmet I). Instead, Gourmet contends that this Court remanded the matter
    to the trial court only for the purpose of providing the Neighbors with an
    opportunity to establish that mushroom house had become a term of art and
    gained a new figurative meaning. Id. at 23.
    - 11 -
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    The law of the case doctrine provides, in relevant part, that a lower court
    is prohibited from reopening issues that were decided by a higher court in an
    earlier appeal in the same case.           See Heart Care Consultants, LLC v.
    Albataineh, 
    239 A.3d 126
    , 131 (Pa. Super. 2020). However, the prohibition
    corresponding to the law of the case doctrine applies only where the appellate
    court actually ruled on the issue in question. See 
    id.
    In the instant case, the Gourmet I Court concluded as follows:
    There is enough evidence in the record, which, if believed, would
    permit a reasonable fact-finder to conclude that the deed
    restrictions prohibit mushroom growing and that the deed
    restrictions would apply to Gourmet’s proposed land development
    plan for the restricted properties. Thus, we hold that there is a
    dispute of material fact as to what “mushroom house” means and
    whether the deed restrictions apply to Gourmet’s proposed land
    development plan. Accordingly, we affirm the trial court’s order
    denying the Neighbors’ motion for summary judgment, reverse
    the trial court’s order granting Gourmet’s motion, and remand for
    proceedings consistent with this memorandum.
    Gourmet I, 
    2019 WL 3854930
    , at *7 (footnote omitted).
    This text reflects the Gourmet I Court’s conclusion that there was an
    issue of fact precluding summary judgment.4 Gourmet I, 
    2019 WL 3854930
    ,
    ____________________________________________
    4The standard of review this Court applies when reviewing an order granting
    summary judgment is as follows:
    We may reverse if there has been an error of law or an abuse of
    discretion. Our standard of review is de novo, and our scope
    plenary. We must view the record in the light most favorable to
    the non[-]moving party and all doubts as to the existence of a
    genuine issue of material fact must be resolved against the
    moving party. Furthermore, [in] evaluating the trial court’s
    (Footnote Continued Next Page)
    - 12 -
    J-A04019-22
    at *7. However, Gourmet I did not direct the trial court to believe or accept
    the Neighbors’ assertion concerning the definition of mushroom house.
    Further, the Gourmet I Court did not rule that the term mushroom house
    was ambiguous as a matter of law or in a manner that could be construed as
    the law of the case. Indeed, the Gourmet I Court did not “rule” on this issue
    at all. See Heart Care Consultants, LLC, 239 A.3d at 131.
    Instead, the Gourmet I court applied the summary judgment standard
    of review and concluded that there was an issue of material fact concerning
    the parties’ “competing definitions of ‘mushroom house.’” Gourmet I, 
    2019 WL 3854930
    , at *7. The Court noted that if the finder of fact believed the
    Neighbors’ assertion regarding the meaning of mushroom house, then the
    term mushroom house may be ambiguous. Gourmet I, 
    2019 WL 3854930
    ,
    at *7. Therefore, the Gourmet I Court remanded the matter for the trial
    court to determine whether the term mushroom house was unambiguous or
    ____________________________________________
    decision to enter summary judgment, we focus on the legal
    standard articulated in the summary judgment rule. The rule
    states that where there is no genuine issue of material fact and
    the moving party is entitled to relief as a matter of law, summary
    judgment may be entered. Where the nonmoving party bears the
    burden of proof on an issue, he may not merely rely on his
    pleadings or answers in order to survive summary judgment.
    Failure of a non-moving party to adduce sufficient evidence on an
    issue essential to his case and on which he bears the burden of
    proof establishes the entitlement of the moving party to judgment
    as a matter of law.
    Carlino E. Brandywine, L.P. v. Brandywine Vill. Ass’n, 
    197 A.3d 1189
    ,
    1199-1200 (Pa. Super. 2018) (citation omitted).
    - 13 -
    J-A04019-22
    whether, as the Neighbors asserted, the definition of mushroom house was a
    term of art describing multiple phases of the mushroom growing process. Id.
    at *6. On remand, the trial court conducted a two-day non-jury trial where
    the parties had the opportunity to make arguments as to whether the term
    mushroom house had gained a figurative definition beyond the deed
    restrictions.5 Trial Ct. Op., 3/18/21, at 1.
    Following our review, we conclude that the Gourmet I Court’s ruling on
    summary judgment did not establish the law of the case.            Further, the
    Gourmet I Court did not rule that the term mushroom house was ambiguous.
    Therefore, on this record, we conclude that the Neighbors’ law-of-the-case
    argument fails and no relief is due.
    Ambiguity of the Meaning of Mushroom House
    In the next part of its first issue, the Neighbors contend that the trial
    court erred when it concluded that the term mushroom house was
    unambiguous and that the meaning of mushroom house could be determined
    without looking beyond the language of the deed restrictions. The Neighbors’
    Brief at 35. The Neighbors assert that the language in the deed restrictions
    is ambiguous. Id. Therefore, the Neighbors argue that trial court applied the
    wrong standard and scope of review, and that the trial court should have
    looked outside of the deed restrictions and considered all the attending
    ____________________________________________
    5 We note that if the Gourmet I Court ruled that mushroom house was
    ambiguous as a matter of law, there would have been no need to remand on
    that issue.
    - 14 -
    J-A04019-22
    circumstances existing at the time of the execution of the deed. Id. However,
    aside from reiterating their law-of-the-case argument, the Neighbors offer no
    further support for this claim.
    “The same principles that apply to the interpretation of a contract apply
    to the interpretation of a deed.” Starling v. Lake Meade Property Owners
    Assoc., Inc., 
    162 A.3d 327
    , 341 (Pa. 2017) (citation omitted). “Contractual
    language is ambiguous if it is reasonably susceptible of different constructions
    and capable of being understood in more than one sense.” Lenau v. Co-
    eXprise, Inc., 
    102 A.3d 423
    , 430 (Pa. Super. 2014) (citation and quotation
    marks omitted).
    When reviewing the interpretation of deed restrictions or restrictive
    covenants, this Court has explained:
    The interpretation of any contract is a question of law for the
    Court. As a general rule of contract interpretation, the intention
    of the parties at the time the contract is entered into governs. The
    same is true in interpreting restrictive covenants. However, there
    is an important difference in the rule of interpretation as applied
    to restrictive covenants on the use of land. Restrictive covenants
    are limitations on a person’s free and unconstrained use of
    property. [These restrictions] are not favored by the law, yet they
    are legally enforceable. As such, they are to be strictly construed
    against persons seeking to enforce them and in favor of the free
    and unrestricted use of property.
    As a matter of law, nothing short of a plain disregard of the
    restrictive covenant’s express terms can create violation of the
    covenant. In deciding whether there has been a plain disregard
    of a restrictive covenant, the court must rely upon the ordinary
    meaning of the language used in the covenant to ascertain the
    parties’ intent, and cannot enlarge by implication a restraint on
    the use of land.
    - 15 -
    J-A04019-22
    In order to ascertain the intentions of the parties, restrictive
    covenants must be construed in light of: (1) their language; (2)
    the nature of their subject matter; (3) the apparent object or
    purpose of the parties; and (4) the circumstances or conditions
    surrounding their execution. Pennsylvania courts will enforce a
    restriction if a party’s actions are in clear defiance of the provisions
    imposed by the covenant. The courts will also enforce a restrictive
    covenant where it is established that the restriction is still of
    substantial value to the owners of the restricted tract.
    When the restrictive covenant is unambiguous, the Court’s review
    is limited to the confines of the covenant . . . the court need not
    stray beyond the confines of the restriction to find its meaning. If
    restrictions are not ambiguous, the intent of the parties should be
    gained from the writing itself.[]
    Pocono Summit Realty, LLC v. Ahmad Amer, LLC, 
    52 A.3d 261
    , 269 (Pa.
    Super. 2012) (formatting altered and citations omitted).          “However, when
    ambiguity exists, every doubt and ambiguity in a restrictive covenant’s
    language will be resolved in favor of the owner.”          
    Id.
     (citation omitted).
    Moreover, if ambiguity exists, “then all of the attending circumstances existing
    at the time of the execution of the instrument should be considered to aid in
    determining the apparent object of the parties.” Starling, 162 A.3d at 341
    (citations omitted).
    Here, following this Court’s remand in Gourmet I, the trial court
    permitted additional discovery, and it held a two-day trial. After reviewing
    the evidence, the trial court concluded that the Neighbors failed to prove that
    mushroom house was a term of art or that it had gained a figurative meaning
    beyond the plain definition. Trial Ct. Op. at 12-13, 19. Likewise, the trial
    court found no support for the Neighbors’ argument that mushroom house
    had an additional meaning beyond the terms of the deed restriction. Id. at
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    J-A04019-22
    12, 19.   Therefore, the trial court concluded that there was no ambiguity
    concerning the definition of mushroom house. Id. at 15.
    In its order disposing of the Neighbors’ post-trial motions, the trial court
    pointed out that the Neighbors “conflate[d] the standard to be applied when
    interpreting a restrictive covenant with the standard to be applied if it is
    determined that there is an ambiguity.” Order, 6/14/21, at n.1. Further, the
    trial court reiterated that there was no ambiguity in the meaning of the term
    mushroom house.
    Specifically, the trial court explained:
    The language at issue is:
    ALSO UNDER AND SUBJECT to the provision that no
    mushroom houses shall be erected or maintained upon the
    above-described premises by said Grantees, their heirs,
    assigns or occupiers of said premises.
    UNDER AND SUBJECT, also, to the restriction that no
    mushroom house shall be erected on the within conveyed
    premises for a period of ninety (90) years.
    Under this restrictive language, whatever a mushroom house may
    be, none shall be erected or maintained on the Consolidated
    Property. Both parties agree that a mushroom house is a light,
    temperature and humidity controlled four-sided building with a
    roof in which mushrooms are grown. Both parties agree that
    Phase I composting cannot and does not occur inside a mushroom
    house. Gourmet argues that a mushroom house is nothing more
    than the structure, the building itself. The Neighbors argue that
    in addition to the building, the term “mushroom house”
    encompasses the area outside of and immediately adjacent to the
    building, known as a pad, where Phase I composting and other
    activities related to growing mushrooms take place. Gourmet
    proposes the development of a Phase I composting facility on the
    Consolidated Property. Gourmet will not grow mushrooms on the
    Consolidated Property and will not erect buildings in which
    mushrooms are grown. The structures proposed for the Phase I
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    J-A04019-22
    composting facility are either a concrete slab wharf or a three-
    sided partially enclosed bunker with aerated floors, both suitable
    for Phase I composting only and not mushroom growing.
    Trial Ct. Op., 3/18/21, at 8-9 (some formatting altered). The trial court further
    stated:
    The term “mushroom house” has an ordinary and commonly
    understood meaning as a four-sided, roofed building that is light,
    temperature and moisture controlled and suitable for growing
    mushrooms. There is no credible evidence that “mushroom
    house” was legal shorthand for the process of growing
    mushrooms.
    All the words in the deed restrictions have meanings that are clear
    and unambiguous and as such compel a literal interpretation. See
    Kripp v. Kripp, 
    849 A.2d 1159
    , 1163 (Pa. 2004) (“In cases of a
    written contract, the intent of the parties is the writing itself. If
    left undefined, the words of a contract are to be given their
    ordinary meaning.”). In such circumstances, the court is limited
    to the confines of the instrument and there is no reason to stray
    beyond the confines of the instrument to find meaning. Richman
    [v. Mosites], 704 A.2d [655,] 658 [(Pa. Super. 1997)].
    Since the language and the subject matter of the deed restrictions
    is clear, for the Neighbors to make their case it is incumbent upon
    them to show that there was some object or purpose, not literally
    expressed, either in meaning or as a result of surrounding
    circumstances, that would support the implied meaning they
    assert. There is no credible testimony or evidence that in the early
    to mid-1950’s anyone used the term “mushroom house” to
    reference a use or the process of growing mushrooms. To
    override the clearly expressed and understood meaning of
    “mushroom house” as a building, in favor of an implied meaning
    as a use or process, is contrary to the holding in Richman, 704
    A.2d [at] 655.
    Trial Ct. Op., 3/18/21, at 19-20 (formatting altered).
    Following our review of the record, we agree with the trial court’s
    conclusions.   Although the Neighbors called Attorney L. Peter Temple as an
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    J-A04019-22
    expert witness in real estate to support their claim that mushroom house was
    a term of art encompassing the mushroom growing process,6 the trial court
    did not find Attorney Temple’s testimony credible. See Century Indem. Co.,
    173 A.3d at 802 (stating that credibility is for the trial court as the finder of
    fact). Additionally, the Neighbors do not dispute that a mushroom house is
    four-sided building with a roof, and it is light, temperature, and moisture
    controlled for growing mushrooms. Trial Ct. Op., 3/18/21, at 8-9. Considering
    the undisputed and plain definition of mushroom house, and with no credible
    evidence to the contrary, the trial court found that mushroom house does not
    have a figurative meaning, nor is it a term of art. Id. at 19-20. Rather, the
    trial court concluded that a mushroom house is a building for growing
    mushrooms. Id.
    On this record, we discern no error of law in the trial court’s conclusion
    that the term mushroom house was unambiguous. Therefore, there was no
    need for the trial court to look beyond the deed to interpret the term
    mushroom house. Pocono Summit Realty, LLC, 
    52 A.3d at 269
    ; Starling,
    162 A.3d at 341. Accordingly, the Neighbors’ claim fails and no relief is due.
    Deed Restrictions
    The Neighbors next contend that the trial court erred when it concluded
    that the deed restrictions were “building restrictions” rather than “use
    ____________________________________________
    6N.T., 2/10/21, at 51. We note that Gourmet conceded that Temple was “real
    estate” expert, but it objected to Attorney Temple being considered a
    “mushroom industry” expert.” Id. at 55. The trial court overruled the
    objection but took the matter under advisement. Id. at 55-56.
    - 19 -
    J-A04019-22
    restrictions.” The Neighbors’ Brief at 41-42. The Neighbors assert that the
    deed restrictions were intended to preclude the use and maintenance of
    buildings and accessory structures used for the process of growing
    mushrooms. Id. at 42-43.
    “[R]estrictive covenants are divided into two categories, building
    restrictions and use restrictions.”     Richman, 704 A.2d at 658 (citation
    omitted).   “Building restrictions are concerned with the physical aspect or
    external appearance of the buildings. . . .       Use restrictions involve the
    purposes for which the buildings are used, the nature of their occupancy, and
    the operations conducted therein.”       Id. (formatting altered and citation
    omitted).   “[When] a restriction refers to what may be erected on the
    property, it is a building restriction; to create a use restriction, the deed’s
    language must squarely address the use or manner of occupation of the
    property.” Groninger v. Aumiller, 
    644 A.2d 1266
    , 1267 (Pa. Super. 1994)
    (citing Jones v. Park Lane for Convalescents, 
    120 A.2d 535
    , 538 (Pa.
    1956)). “A building restriction and a use restriction are wholly independent
    of one another, and in view of the legal principles above stated, the one is not
    to be extended so as to include the other unless the intention [to do so] is
    expressly and plainly stated; to doubt is to deny enforcement.” Jones, 120
    A.2d at 538.
    As stated above, the deed restrictions in the instant matter provide as
    follows:
    - 20 -
    J-A04019-22
    ALSO UNDER AND SUBJECT to the provision that no
    mushroom houses shall be erected or maintained upon the
    above-described premises by said Grantees, their heirs,
    assigns or occupiers of said premises.
    UNDER AND SUBJECT, also, to the restriction that no
    mushroom house shall be erected on the within conveyed
    premises for a period of ninety (90) years.
    Trial Ct. Op., 3/18/21, at 2 (quoting 1951 “Irwin Property” Deed, and 1955
    “Shoun Tract” Deed). The trial court concluded that there was no credible
    evidence that the words “mushroom house” referred to a use or the mushroom
    growing process. Id. at 20. The trial court further explained:
    The deed restrictions refer to a building and not a use. The
    Neighbors assert a substantially broadened definition for the term
    “mushroom house” and in so doing delete the words “erect”,
    “maintain” and “house” from the deeds and add the words
    “entire”, “growing operation” and “composting” to read the deed
    restrictions to preclude “the entire mushroom growing operation
    including composting” on the Consolidated Property.             The
    Neighbors advocate rewriting and adding omitted words to the
    deed restrictions, which is contrary to the holding in Siciliano [v.
    Misler], 160 A.2d [422,] 425 [(Pa. 1960)] (“The analysis of the
    language set out above satisfies us that the appellants’ view of
    the words themselves is clear and that the appellees’ is not, unless
    the words are added to.”) The Neighbors seek an overbroad,
    unreasonable, and impermissible expansion of the literal language
    of the deeds.
    If the Kirkmans wished to prohibit more than a building, they could
    have added “mushroom growing” or “preparation of compost” to
    the deed restriction, but the only qualifying terms they chose to
    employ was “erect” and “maintain.” Had the Kirkmans wished to
    preclude mushroom growing and/or composting on their property,
    they only needed to say so. The words of a restrictive covenant
    must be self-sustaining. Siciliano, 160 A.2d at 425.
    The court may not attempt to remedy omissions of those creating
    restrictive covenants and extend, by implication, restraint on use
    of land. Richman, 
    704 A.2d 655
    .
    - 21 -
    J-A04019-22
    Phase I composting, while a stage in the growing of mushrooms,
    is an activity that cannot take place inside a mushroom house and
    can be and was in the early to mid-1950’s conducted separate and
    apart from mushroom growing.
    Activities occurring on adjacent or nearby unrestricted land are
    irrelevant to the application of the restrictive covenant to the
    restricted land since the restrictions run with the land and are not
    personal to a common owner.
    The Phase I composting facility proposed by Gourmet for
    development of the Consolidated Property is not a “mushroom
    house” as the term was understood and used at the time the deed
    restrictions were imposed.        Therefore, the construction and
    operation of the Phase I composting facility, with a concrete slab
    wharf or within a three-sided partially enclosed bunker with
    aerated floors, will not violate the deed restrictions.
    Trial Ct. Op., 3/18/21, at 20-21 (formatting altered).
    After review, we agree with the trial court’s finding that “[t]he deed
    restrictions in the matter before us address only the erection and maintenance
    of a type of building, a mushroom house, and do not address a use.” Trial Ct.
    Op., 3/18/21, at 14. By their terms, the deed restrictions prohibit a mushroom
    house on the property, which constitutes a building restriction, not a use
    restriction. Further, although the deed states that mushroom houses cannot
    be erected or maintained on the property, there is no restriction against a
    Phase I composting facility. On this record, the Neighbors are due no relief.
    Adjacent Land
    In their final issue, the Neighbors assert that Gourmet intends to use
    the deed-restricted property to supply compost to its entire integrated
    mushroom growing operation. The Neighbors’ Brief at 43-44. The Neighbors
    contend that deed restrictions “prevent an accessory necessary component of
    - 22 -
    J-A04019-22
    a restricted use even when the principal restricted use is on an adjacent
    property not subject to the deed restriction.”      
    Id.
     at 44 (citing Pocono
    Summit Realty, LLC, 
    52 A.3d at 265-266
    ).
    In Pocono Summit Realty, LLC, a panel of this Court concluded that
    where a deed restriction prohibits not only a grocery store building but the
    “operation of a . . . grocery store,” it also prohibited parking facilities and
    storm water management facilities for a grocery store because those ancillary
    facilities were a “necessary component” of the operation of a grocery store.
    Pocono Summit Realty, LLC, 
    52 A.3d at 266
    . Therefore, the Court Pocono
    Summit Realty, LLC, concluded that the deed restriction at issue in that case
    expressly forbade “the operation” of a grocery store, and not merely the
    store’s physical structure.   See 
    id. at 268
    .
    After review, we conclude that Pocono Summit Realty, LLC is
    distinguishable from the instant case. Additionally, we agree with the trial
    court that the activities occurring on land adjacent to the subject property are
    irrelevant to the application of the instant deed restrictions. Trial Ct. Op.,
    3/18/21, at 21.
    Here, the deed restrictions prohibit a mushroom house, which is a
    physical structure.   Unlike the situation in Pocono Summit Realty, LLC,
    here, there is no restriction on the operation of the mushroom growing
    process. Phase I composting facilities are not a “necessary component” of a
    mushroom house, the prohibited structure.       Although Phase I composting
    facilities are a component of the mushroom growing process, by its terms, the
    - 23 -
    J-A04019-22
    deed restrictions clearly do not restrict the “operation” of a mushroom growing
    process, only a mushroom house itself. Therefore, the Neighbors’ claim fails
    and no relief is due.
    Conclusion
    In conclusion, we discern no error of law or abuse of discretion in the
    trial court’s findings or legal conclusions.   The Gourmet I Court did not
    conclude that the term mushroom house was ambiguous as a matter of law,
    nor did the Court’s ruling on summary judgment become the law of the case.
    Although we appreciate and understand Neighbors’ arguments, the trial court
    reviewed the evidence and concluded that the term mushroom house was not
    ambiguous, and therefore, the trial court did not need to look beyond the
    language of the deed restrictions to discern the meaning of mushroom house.
    Moreover, the deed restrictions by their plain language were building
    restrictions and not use restrictions, and the deed restrictions prohibited
    mushroom houses.        However, aside from the erection and maintenance of
    mushroom houses, there was no restriction on using the subject property as
    part of the mushroom growing process, including Phase I composting. For
    these reasons, we affirm the judgment entered in favor of Gourmet.
    Judgment affirmed.
    - 24 -
    J-A04019-22
    Judgment Entered.
    Joseph D. Seletyn, Esq.
    Prothonotary
    Date: 4/27/2022
    - 25 -
    

Document Info

Docket Number: 1416 EDA 2021

Judges: Nichols, J.

Filed Date: 4/27/2022

Precedential Status: Precedential

Modified Date: 4/27/2022