Court Opinion

ID: 3160266
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2015-12-05 00:07:14.715973+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T10:55:27.824138
License: Public Domain

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                           2015 Pa. Super. 253

NORTHERN FORESTS II, INC.                  IN THE SUPERIOR COURT OF
                                                 PENNSYLVANIA
                      Appellant

                 v.

KETA REALTY COMPANY, KETA GAS AND
OIL COMPANY, KETA GAS AND OIL
CORPORATION, GEORGE C. LEVIN,
UNITED STATES BANKRUPTCY TRUSTEE
AND MANUFACTURERS LIGHT AND HEAT
COMPANY, THEIR SUCCESSORS AND
ASSIGNS AND ANYONE CLAIMING BY,
THROUGH OR UNDER THEM, OR ANY OF
THEM, ANADARKO E & P ONSHORE, LLC,
SOUTHWESTERN ENERGY PRODUCTION
COMPANY, RONALD SAWYER, KATHLEEN
SAWYER, DALE BLACK, LORI BLACK,
MICHAEL CENTINI, KAREN CENTINI,
VINCE DANDINI, SARA DANDINI, EDGAR
SHENK, ELAINE SHENK, DAVID HAUS,
SHARON HAUS AND GAYLA LOCH, ULTRA
RESOURCES, INC., INTERNATIONAL
DEVELOPMENT CORPORATION, WEVCO
PRODUCTION, INC., JACKSON CORNER
SPORTSMEN, INC., SAMUEL ROCKEY,
KAREN ROCKEY, CHESAPEAKE
APPALACHIA, LLC, STATOIL USA
ONSHORE PROPERTIES, INC.,
LANCASTER EXPORATION &
DEVELOPMENT COMPANY, LLC,
TRUSTEES OF THOMAS E. PROCTOR
HEIRS TRUST, TRUSTEES OF THE
MARGARET O. F. PROCTOR TRUST,
FOREST RESOURCES, LLC, KOCJANCIC
FAMILY LIMITED PARTNERSHIP, HAROLD
H. WOLFINGER, JR., WILLIAM L.
HEMENWAY, HARVEY HINMAN, SARAH C.
PRESTON, LINDA DAVIDGE, PENNLYCO,
LTD., GLEN W. HEFFELFINER, MICHAEL
E. DAPAOLI, JOHN F. GERRITY, JOAN M.
GERRITY, STEVEN M. STROUSE, RENEE
M. STROUSE, DAVID W. CRITICS,
ANGELA R. CRITICS, MARK S. CONRAD,
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DOLORES CONRAD, DAVID B. DUSEL,
MARY LOUISE WATERS, ENERPLUS
RESOURCES (USA) CORPORATION,
ENERPLUS RESOURCES, BROOKE E.
FULLER, RICKY E. YOUNG, NADINE C.
YOUNG, STEPHEN MATTO, KIM L.
MATTO, JOHN F. KNOPP, SANDRA J.
KNOPP, JAMES D. WEATHERWAX,
NICOLE R. WEATHERWAX, DUTCH HILL
HUNTING CLUB, ATLANTIC
HYDROCARBON, LLC, EXCO
PRODUCTION COMPANY (PA) LLC, EXCO
RESOURCES, INC., BG PRODUCTION
COMPANY (PA) LLC, WADE E. JUNE,
MELISSA L. JUNE, MICHAEL J. SNYDER,
TIMOTHY C. BOWEN, THERESE L.
BOWEN, PAUL D. CRISSMAN, MARK A.
MCGOVERN, RONDA J. MCGOVERN,
JAMES A. ROBINSON, COGAN HOUSE
TOWNSHIP, MOUNTAIN DEVELOPMENT
GROUP, DAVID ROCKEY, OHIO
KENTUCKY OIL CORPORATION, MITSUI E
& P USA, LLC, GCO MINERALS
COMPANY, DANNA WEBBER, TRAVIS
CROOKS, FRANCINE CROOKS, CYNTHIA
STANTION-MCKENNEY (POA TERRY
GEISE) AND AS TO ANY AND ALL
ENTITIES WHICH CLAIM ANY INTEREST
WHATSOEVER TO SUBJECT MATTER OF
THIS SUIT

                       Appellee                Nos. 1007 MDA 2014 AND
                                                    1054 MDA 2014

                  Appeal from the Order Dated May 20, 2014
              In the Court of Common Pleas of Lycoming County
                  Civil Division at No(s): CV-1988-002356-QT

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BEFORE: BOWES, J., JENKINS, J., and PLATT, J.*

OPINION BY JENKINS, J.:                             FILED DECEMBER 04, 2015

        Northern Forests II, Inc. (“NF”) filed an action to quiet title in 1988

and entered a default judgment in its favor in 1989. In 2013, the trial court

ordered the judgment stricken as void ab initio due to lack of jurisdiction.

Subsequently, NF filed an amended complaint alleging that it owned the

subject property via adverse possession on the basis of the 1989 judgment.

In an order entered on May 20, 2014 and clarified on June 16, 2014, the

trial court sustained the preliminary objections of multiple defendants and

dismissed the amended complaint for failure to state a cause of action.

        NF and Ultra Resources, Inc. (“Ultra”), a lessee of NF, filed timely

appeals from the order of dismissal. We affirm.

                                               I.

        Pursuant to a deed dated June 24, 1987, NF acquired approximately

3,665 acres of land in Lycoming County designated as Warrants 1620, 1621,

1622 and 1626 (“the Property”). On December 12, 1988, NF filed an action

to quiet title against five named defendants,1 their heirs and assigns, and

anyone claiming by, through or under them. NF’s complaint alleged that NF
____________________________________________

*
    Retired Senior Judge assigned to the Superior Court.
1
  Keta Realty Company; Keta Gas And Oil Company; Keta Gas And Oil
Corporation; George C. Levin, United States Bankruptcy Trustee For The
Estate of Keta Gas And Oil Company; and Manufacturers Light And Heat
Company.

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owned all oil, gas and mineral subsurface rights relating to the Property on

the theory of adverse possession. At the time of NF’s action, however, none

of the named defendants had any ownership interest in the subsurface

rights, a fact that was evident from instruments of record in the Lycoming

County Recorder of Deeds.           Instruments of record as of December 1988

showed that record title owners of subsurface rights included Clarence Moore

(“Moore”),2 Kenneth Yates, a co-tenant of Moore (“Yates”),3 and the heirs of

Thomas Proctor (“Proctor Heirs”).4

       On December 13, 1988, one day after filing the complaint, NF’s

attorney filed a “motion and affidavit for leave to obtain service by

advertisement”.       The affidavit consisted of one sentence in which the

attorney averred that he “does not know the current whereabouts of the

defendants, and the principals of the corporate entities are unknown, and he

does not know any successors or assigns of the above or anyone claiming
____________________________________________

2
 Moore was the record title owner of subsurface rights in Warrants 1620,
1622 and 1626 via deeds dated April 30, 1975 and December 7, 1983.
3
  Yates was a title owner and tenant in common with Moore as to a 12.5%
interest in Warrants 1620, 1622 and 1626 by virtue of an instrument dated
October 15, 1984.
4
  Thomas Proctor acquired title to surface and subsurface rights in Warrant
1621 pursuant to a June 3, 1891 deed recorded in the Lycoming County
Land Records at Book 128, Page 392. Proctor later sold the surface rights
but reserved the subsurface rights for himself, his heirs and assigns.
Proctor’s rights and interests are now held by his heirs (the Thomas E.
Proctor Heirs Trust and the Trustees of the Margaret O. F. Proctor Trust).

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by, through or under them, or any of them.” The affidavit requested that

the court permit service “on the defendants, their successors and assigns,

and anyone claiming by, through or under them or any of them by

publication.” The affidavit said nothing about whether the attorney did any

investigation into the defendants’ whereabouts before filing his motion for

alternative service.

      On December 16, 1988, the trial court granted NF’s motion for

alternative service.   Subsequently, counsel for NF entered six separate

publications in local newspapers relating to the complaint. Each publication

stated that NF had filed an action to quiet title and identified the metes and

bounds of the land subject to the quiet title action.         None of these

publications, however, named Moore, the Proctor Heirs, or Yates; they

merely purported to notify the five named defendants and their “successors

and assigns” about the lawsuit.

      On February 6, 1989, counsel for NF filed a petition for judgment along

with his affidavit that defendants had been served by publication but had not

filed an answer “although the time [in] which to do so has expired.”       On

February 10, 1989, the court entered a default judgment against all

defendants “unless defendants, within thirty days of this order commence an

action in ejectment.” No defendant filed an action in ejectment. On April 4,

1989, NF entered a final judgment via praecipe.

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       Between 1989 and 2012, various energy companies entered into real

estate transactions and oil/gas leases with regard to the Property. In late

2012 and early 2013, these energy companies – International Development

Corporation      (“IDC”),      Southwestern         Energy    Production     Company

(“Southwestern”),       Lancaster     Exploration      and   Development     Company

(“Lancaster”), and two Anadarko entities, Anadarko E & P Company and

Anadarko Petroleum Corporation (collectively “Anadarko”) – filed petitions to

strike or open the judgment, alleging that they own certain subsurface rights

in the Property as successors in interest to Moore, Yates and/or the Proctor

Heirs.5    Southwestern and Anadarko claimed that Moore, Yates and the

Proctor Heirs were indispensable parties in NF’s 1988 action, and NF’s failure

to join them rendered NF’s judgment void. Moreover, all petitioners claimed

that NF’s counsel’s 1988 affidavit failed to explain why NF could not make

regular service on the named defendants or the nature or extent of NF’s

investigation    to   locate   potential       defendants.   This,   petitioners   said,

____________________________________________

5
  It is unnecessary to identify the precise boundaries within which each
company claims to own subsurface rights. The following will suffice for
purposes of this appeal. Southwestern alleges that it is the successor in title
to subsurface rights previously owned by Moore and the Proctor Heirs.
Anadarko alleges that it is the successor in title to subsurface rights
previously owned by Moore and Yates. Lancaster alleges that pursuant to
several leases, the Proctor Heirs leased to Lancaster subsurface rights in
Warrant 1621, and Lancaster subsequently assigned Southwestern a portion
of Lancaster’s interests under these leases. IDC alleges that it is the
successor in title to subsurface rights previously owned by Moore.

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constituted another defect on the face of the record which rendered the

judgment void.6

       In a memorandum and order dated February 8, 2013, the trial court

struck NF’s judgment on the ground that NF failed to make proper service of

process on the original named defendants.7 The court certified the order for

immediate interlocutory appeal, but the Superior Court subsequently denied

NF’s motion for leave to take an interlocutory appeal.

       Subsequently, the trial court granted NF leave to file an amended

complaint.    On January 29, 2014, NF filed an amended complaint alleging

three counts: (1) adverse possession for more than 21 years before 1988,

(2) adverse possession based on the 1989 judgment, and (3) a declaratory

judgment that NF owned the mineral rights, subject only to certain interests

under or through NF. NF’s amended complaint named over 90 defendants,

including several of NF’s successors and assigns whose interests are similar

to   NF’s,    viz.,   Ultra    Resources       (“Ultra”),   Chesapeake   Appalachian

(“Chesapeake”), and Statoil USA (“Statoil”).

____________________________________________

6
  The Proctor Heirs did not file a petition to strike. Instead, in March 2013,
they filed statements notifying all parties that they are record title owners of
acreage in Warrant 1621 on the Property. Neither Moore nor Yates filed a
petition to strike or any other document.
7
 The trial court did not discuss whether Moore, Yates and the Proctor Heirs
were indispensable parties.

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       Multiple defendants – Mountain Development Group, Inc., Cynthia

McKenney, the Proctor Heirs, IDC and Lancaster – filed preliminary

objections alleging that NF failed to state a cause of action. Anadarko and

Southwestern       both    filed   answers           to   the   amended   complaint   and

subsequently filed motions for summary judgment. Chesapeake and Statoil

filed an answer to the amended complaint. Ultra did not file a responsive

pleading.

       In an opinion and order on May 20, 2014, the court sustained the

preliminary objections and dismissed NF’s amended complaint for failure to

state a cause of action. On June 16, 2014, the court amended its order to

clarify that the order of dismissal applied to all defendants.8 NF and Ultra

filed timely notices of appeal, and NF, Ultra and the trial court complied with

Pa.R.A.P. 1925.

                                               II.

       NF raises the following issues on appeal:

       1. Did the trial court, in its Order filed on February 11, 2013
       (later amended by Order filed on March 6, 2013 to grant the
       Plaintiff permission to take an interlocutory appeal), err in
       striking the 1989 Judgment?

       2. Should a judgment which established the status of real
       property rights (not a mere money judgment), which has been
       extensively relied upon by private property owners and various
       business entities and which has been unchallenged and
____________________________________________

8
  This order was appealable as a final order because it “dispose[d] of all
claims and all parties.” Pa.R.A.P. 341(b)(1).

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      unquestioned for more than 23 years be automatically stricken
      due to the fact that the affidavit supporting the service by
      publication was allegedly not in full technical compliance with
      Pa.R.C.P. 430 and was stricken without any consideration of the
      facts and circumstances regarding the same, without any
      consideration of: laches, reliance by good faith purchasers for
      value, the equities involved in this matter and of other relevant
      factors which support allowing the judgment to stand?

      3. Did the trial court err in granting preliminary objections in the
      form of a demurrer and dismissing with prejudice the First
      Amended Complaint?

      4. Where 3,665 acres of oil gas and mineral rights are the “res”
      of a Quiet Title action, where there were eight separate
      advertisements in newspapers in general circulation prior to the
      entry of a final judgment in such action, where such final
      judgment has been in existence and undisturbed for over 23
      years, where numerous persons and entities have relied on said
      Final Judgment in conducting their real property and business
      affairs, and where Northern Forests which obtained such
      judgment was also the surface owner of the 3,665 acres of land,
      do these factors, together the other relevant factors and
      circumstances which exist in this case, constitute actual
      possession for adverse possession purposes or does the First
      Amended Complaint otherwise state a cause of action for any
      other similar legal doctrines such as repose, statute of
      limitations, estoppel, waiver, or other similar doctrines relating
      to equitable principles?

Brief For NF, at 3-4. Ultra raises the following issues on appeal:

      1. Whether under Pennsylvania law a default judgment is
      required to be stricken, under all circumstances -- regardless of
      principles of reliance, estoppel, waiver, laches, delay, actual
      notice, prejudice, futility, materiality, intervening good-faith-
      purchasers-for-value and any other facts -- solely because it is
      later shown that an affidavit filed in connection with service by
      publication under Rule 430 of the Pennsylvania Rules of Civil
      Procedure (“Rules”) Rule 430 in the action did not contain a
      description of the plaintiff’s investigation to locate defendants
      prior to effecting service by publication?

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      2. Whether Rule 430 only requires that a plaintiff file an affidavit
      stating that assigns of a named former owner are “unknown” in
      order for the court to permit service by publication on such
      assigns?

      3. Whether a quiet title judgment that has been outstanding and
      unchallenged for over twenty-one years may give rise to a claim
      for adverse possession under Pennsylvania law?

Brief For Ultra, at 4.

      Preliminarily, we note that although Ultra failed to file a responsive

pleading to NF’s amended complaint below, this omission does not constitute

a waiver of Ultra’s arguments in this appeal, because NF’s amended

complaint did not include a notice to plead. See Pa.R.Civ.P. 1026(a) (“every

pleading subsequent to the complaint shall be filed within twenty days after

service of the preceding pleading, but no pleading need be filed unless the

preceding pleading contains a notice to defend or is endorsed with a notice

to plead”).

      We also note that although Chesapeake and Statoil jointly filed a brief

raising the same issues as NF and Ultra, Chesapeake and Statoil cannot

obtain relief in this Court because they failed to file a notice of appeal from

the June 16, 2014 order of dismissal.

                                      III.

      We address the first two issues in NF’s and Ultra’s briefs together,

because they boil down to one question: did the trial court properly strike

the 1989 judgment entered in favor of NF? We answer this question in the

affirmative.

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       This Court’s review of an order striking a judgment “is limited to

whether the trial court manifestly abused its discretion or committed an

error of law.”      Koresko & Associates, P.C. v. Farley, 826 A.2d 6, 7

(Pa.Super.2003).

       A petition to strike a judgment

       may be granted only if a fatal defect or irregularity appears on
       the face of the record... In considering the merits of a petition to
       strike, the court will be limited to a review of only the record as
       filed by the party in whose favor the [judgment] is given, i.e.,
       the complaint and the documents [of record]. Matters dehors the
       record filed by the party in whose favor the [judgment] is given
       will not be considered. If the record is self-sustaining, the
       judgment will not be stricken.

Osprey Portfolio, LLC v. Izett, 32 A.3d 793, 795-96 (Pa.Super.2011).9

The lack of jurisdiction is a proper basis for striking a judgment when the

jurisdictional defect is evident on the face of the record. DeCoatsworth v.

Jones, 639 A.2d 792, 796 (Pa.2004).

       In this case, two jurisdictional defects appear on the face of the

record, either of which constituted sufficient reason to strike NF’s judgment:

NF failed to join indispensable parties in its 1988 action to quiet title, and NF

failed to make proper service of process on any defendant in the 1988 quiet

title action. We discuss each defect in turn.

____________________________________________

9
 In contrast, in a petition to open judgment, the court may consider matters
dehors the record. Acquilino v. Philadelphia Catholic Archdiocese, 884
A.2d 1269, 1283 (Pa.Super.2005).

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      The failure to join an indispensable party is a non-waivable defect that

implicates the   trial court’s subject     matter   jurisdiction.   Sabella v.

Appalachian Dev. Corp., 103 A.3d 83, 90 (Pa.Super.2014).              “Failure to

join an indispensable party goes absolutely to the court’s jurisdiction and the

issue should be raised sua sponte.” Barren v. Dubas, 441 A.2d 1315, 1316

(Pa.Super.1982).

      A party is indispensable

      when his or her rights are so connected with the claims of the
      litigants that no decree can be made without impairing those
      rights. City of Phila. v. Commonwealth, [], 838 A.2d 566,
      581 (Pa.2003), quoting Sprague v. Casey, [], 550 A.2d 184,
      189 (Pa.1988). ‘If no redress is sought against a party, and its
      rights would not be prejudiced by any decision in the case, it is
      not indispensable with respect to the litigation.’ Grimme
      Combustion, Inc. v. Mergantime Corp., [], 595 A.2d 77, 81
      (Pa.Super.1991), citing Sprague, supra. We have consistently
      held that a trial court must weigh the following considerations in
      determining if a party is indispensable to a particular litigation:

      1. Do absent parties have a right or an interest related to the
         claim?

      2. If so, what is the nature of that right or interest?

      3. Is that right or interest essential to the merits of the issue?

      4. Can justice be afforded without violating the due process
      rights of absent parties?

      Martin v. Rite Aid of Pa., Inc., 80 A.3d 813, 814
      (Pa.Super.2013); accord Mechanicsburg Area Sch. Dist. v.
      Kline, [], 431 A.2d 953, 956 (Pa.1981). ‘In determining whether
      a party is indispensable, the basic inquiry remains ‘whether
      justice can be done in the absence of a third party.’ Pa. State
      Educ. Ass’n v. Commonwealth, [], 50 A.3d 1263, 1277
      (Pa.2012), quoting CRY, Inc. v. Mill Serv., Inc., [], 640 A.2d
372, 375 (Pa.1994).

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      This Court has held that in a quiet title action, all parties who
      claimed title to the property at issue must be joined as
      indispensable parties. Hartzfeld v. Green Glen Corp., [], 552
A.2d 306, 310 (Pa.Super.1989).

Orman v. Mortgage I.T., 118 A.3d 403, 406-07 (Pa.Super.2015).

      Although the trial court did not decide whether NF failed to join

indispensable parties, we will address this issue because of its jurisdictional

nature. Sabella, 103 A.3d at 90; Barron, 441 A.2d at 1316. Moore, Yates

and the Proctor Heirs owned subsurface rights on the Property at the time of

NF’s quiet title action.   NF sought in its quiet title action to divest Moore,

Yates and the Proctor Heirs of their ownership rights, but the record is clear

that NF failed to join these persons as defendants. Because they obviously

were indispensable parties, NF’s failure to join them as defendants

mandated that NF’s judgment be stricken.        Orman, 118 A.3d at 406-07

(citing Hartzfeld, 552 A.2d at 310).

      NF claims that it failed to name Moore, Yates and the Proctor Heirs as

defendants in 1988 due to conveyancing errors committed by their

predecessors in title. Specifically, NF contends: (1) a deed to a prior title

holder, Keta Gas and Oil Company, was erroneously listed in the Grantor’s

Index of the Recorder of Deeds as a deed to Reta Gas and Oil Company; and

(2) Astra Oil and Gas Corp., a prior title holder, failed to file a separate

instrument identifying the change of its corporate name from Astra Oil and

Gas Corp. (“Astra”) to KGA Industries, Inc. (“KGA”), in accordance with

required recording practices of Lycoming County. These errors, NF claims,

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prevented it from learning that (1) Keta Realty Co. conveyed its interest in

the Property to Keta Gas and Oil Company, (2) Keta Gas and Oil Company

conveyed its interest to Astra, (3) Astra changed its name to KGA, and (4)

KGA conveyed its interest to Moore. We disagree. The law requiring joinder

of indispensable parties is strict and non-waivable.            No matter how

exhaustive or diligent the plaintiff’s title search may be, its failure to join an

indispensable party deprives the court of jurisdiction.10 See, e.g., Orman,
118 A.3d at 406-07.

       In the trial court, NF suggested that its act of naming Keta Gas and Oil

Company as a defendant along with Keta’s “heirs and assigns” made NF’s

complaint and judgment valid against successors in title such as Moore,

Yates and the Proctor Heirs.         Again, we demur.   Notice “is a fundamental

requirement of due process,” but notice is adequate only when it is

“reasonably calculated to inform a party of the pending action and provides

[him with] an opportunity to present objections to the action.” Wilkes ex

rel. Mason v. Phoenix Home Life Mut. Ins. Co., 902 A.2d 366, 383

(Pa.2006). Naming a predecessor in title and his “heirs and assigns” is not
____________________________________________

10
    In any event, NF’s search for parties clearly was not diligent. Public
records which Anadarko and Southwestern appended to their petition to
strike demonstrate that none of the parties sued by NF had any interest in
the Property as of 1955, 33 years before NF’s lawsuit. The same records
show that Keta Gas and Oil Company, the final party to hold title among the
parties sued by NF, conveyed its interest to Astra in 1955, yet NF failed to
join Astra as a defendant -- let alone any person holding an ownership
interest in 1988.

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reasonably calculated to notify a successor in interest of the lawsuit.     The

complaint must name the successor in interest individually, not merely

group him within the category of “heirs and assigns”. See Ress v. Barent,

548 A.2d 1259, 1265 (Pa.Super.1988) (upon concluding that Sadye and

Sanford, two heirs of company founder, had standing to sue successor

company, panel ordered Sadye and Sanford to amend complaint to aver that

they are the sole heirs and assigns, or, in the alternative, to aver “the

names of all heirs and assigns”).

      The second jurisdictional defect on the face of the record is NF’s failure

to make proper service of process on any defendant in its 1988 action.

Although the trial court issued an order in 1989 permitting NF to serve all

interested parties via publication, the record demonstrates that this order

was issued in error, for NF failed to provide any justification for serving

process in this “extraordinary” manner. Sisson v. Stanley, 109 A.3d 265,

270 (Pa.Super.2015).

      “The rules relating to service of process must be strictly followed,”

because “jurisdiction of the court over the person of the defendant is

dependent upon proper service having been made.” Sharp v. Valley Forge

Med. Center & Heart Hosp., Inc., 221 A.2d 185, 187 (Pa.1966).

Pa.R.Civ.P. 410 provides the general service provisions for actions involving

real property: “In actions involving title to [or] interest in … real property,

original process shall be served upon the defendant in the manner provided

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by [Pa.R.Civ.P.] 400 et seq.”    Pa.R.Civ.P. 410(a).    Proper service usually

requires handing a copy to the defendant or to other individuals enumerated

in Pa.R.Civ.P. 402(a).   Other rules apply in limited circumstances.        See,

e.g., Pa.R.Civ.P. 404 (service outside the Commonwealth).

      If service is unsuccessful under these rules, the plaintiff may move for

leave to make alternative service under Pa.R.Civ.P. 430. Rule 430 provides

in relevant part:

      (a) If service cannot be made under the applicable rule the
      plaintiff may move the court for a special order directing the
      method of service. The motion shall be accompanied by an
      affidavit stating the nature and extent of the investigation which
      has been made to determine the whereabouts of the defendant
      and the reasons why service cannot be made...

      (b)(2) When service is made by publication upon the heirs and
      assigns of a named former owner or party in interest, the court
      may permit publication against the heirs or assigns generally if it
      is set forth in the complaint or an affidavit that they are
      unknown.

Rule 430 “applies only where ‘service cannot be made’ in the normal

fashion.” Sisson, 109 A.3d at 270-71 (citing Pa.R.Civ.P. 430(a); emphasis

added in Sisson).     Rule 430 “governs motions for service by special order

of court, including service by publication.” Id. at 269. “Service of process

by publication is an extraordinary measure and great pains should be taken

to ensure that the defendant will receive actual notice of the action against

him.” Sisson, 109 A.3d at 270.

      Because “service by publication is the exception, not the rule,” the

plaintiff must first meet the requirements of Rule 430(a) to avail itself of the

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publication provisions within Rule 430(b).       Deer Park Lumber, Inc. v.

Major, 559 A.2d 941, 945 (Pa.Super.1989). Rule 430(a) prescribes that a

motion for leave to make alternative service must include “an affidavit

stating the nature and extent of the investigation undertaken to locate the

defendant.” Deer Park, 559 A.2d at 944. The affidavit must demonstrate

that the plaintiff exhibited “due diligence and good faith” in attempting to

locate the defendants. Sisson, 109 A.3d at 271. One illustration of a good

faith effort involves “(1) inquiries of postal authorities including inquiries

pursuant to the Freedom of Information Act [...], (2) inquiries of relatives,

neighbors, friends, and employers of the defendant, and (3) examinations of

local telephone directories, voter registration records, local tax records, and

motor vehicle records.” Note, Pa.R.Civ.P. 430(a). While this illustration “[is]

by no means exhaustive, [it] is at least indicative of the types of procedures

[intended under] Rule 430. In essence, it provides that more than a mere

paper search is required before resort can be had to the publication

provisions of Rule 430(b).” Deer Park, 559 A.2d at 946.

      Here, NF’s counsel’s affidavit totally failed to describe what efforts he

made to discover the whereabouts of any person holding an interest in the

Property. Therefore, the trial court properly struck the judgment due to NF’s

failure to satisfy the requisites for service of process by publication.

      The analysis in Sisson, a recent Rule 430 decision, is especially

pertinent to our decision. The parties in Sisson disputed ownership of the

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right to mine Marcellus Shale gas underlying property in Susquehanna

County. In 1953, Joseph Stanley transferred ownership of the property to

Pauline Battista subject to a reservation of “all of the oil and gas underlying

the [Property].” In 1986, Battista transferred the property to the Sissons,

subject to the same reservation. Chesapeake Appalachia, LLC, approached

the Sissons with a proposed lease agreement that would allow Chesapeake

to extract shale gas underlying the property. Chesapeake advised the

Sissons of a cloud in their title based on the reservations in the 1953 and

1986 deeds. The Sissons filed an action to quiet title naming as defendants

“Joseph M. Stanley, his heirs, successors, executors, assigns, and any

persons claiming by, through or from them.” The trial court issued an order

authorizing service of the complaint by publication based upon an affidavit

by the Sissons’ attorney that he could not locate the defendant or his heirs

despite searching local deed records and telephone directories as well as

“various Internet sites”. Id. at 268. The Sissons published a notice of the

pending action in a local newspaper. No interested party came forward to

defend against the action, and the trial court ultimately entered judgment

against the named defendants.

      Three months later, Joseph Stanley’s widow filed a petition to open,

alleging that the trial court lacked jurisdiction to enter judgment because the

Sissons failed to effect proper service of process. The trial court agreed and

entered an order opening judgment. Subsequently, the court dismissed the

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Sissons’ action under the statute of limitations.        This Court affirmed,

reasoning that “[the Sissons’ attorney’s] affidavit is facially deficient. An

examination of each paragraph of this affidavit evidences a complete lack of

due diligence and good faith to locate any of the named defendants to this

action.” Id. at 271 (emphasis added). The Court analyzed the affidavit as

follows:

      In paragraph 1, counsel indicates he searched the records in the
      Recorder of Deeds Office of Susquehanna County. In their
      action, [the plaintiffs] named Joseph Stanley, his heirs,
      successors, executors, assigns, and any persons claiming by,
      through, or from them. One would presuppose that a good faith
      effort to locate heirs would include a search for records at the
      Register of Wills office. Although counsel notes that the Recorder
      of Deeds office in Susquehanna County also houses the Register
      of Wills, his affidavit only mentions a search of the Recorder of
      Deeds records. Counsel already had the relevant deeds to the
      property in which Joseph M. Stanley transferred real property to
      Pauline M. Battista subject to a reservation of rights in the
      underlying oil and gas. It is therefore not clear what counsel
      hoped to gain from his search of the Recorder of Deeds office.
      Regardless, the affidavit does not indicate in any manner that a
      relevant search was performed to locate any wills or other
      probate records. A good faith search for heirs should have
      included at least this basic research. Had this been done, counsel
      would have found, as the trial court noted, the will of E.J.
      Stanley, Joseph’s father, which identified no fewer than twelve
      siblings to Joseph.

      Concerning paragraph 2 of the affidavit, counsel apparently did
      not consider that some or all of Joseph M. Stanley’s heirs could
      have moved since 1953. A search of local telephone directories
      is certain to be fruitless if any surviving heir is no longer local.
      Certainly, the age of the 1953 Deed and [the plaintiffs]’ naming
      all heirs as defendants suggests searches of other records, such
      as obituaries, should have been performed. In their petition to
      open and/or strike, [the defendants] assert a simple search of
      the local newspaper obituaries would have revealed Joseph’s
      death and identified his surviving sister, nieces and nephews.

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     Yet, counsel did not perform this seemingly logical search. We
     are not setting forth a per se rule requiring an obituary search
     for possible heirs, but in this case counsel’s failure to check local
     death record resources illustrates how his efforts so clearly fell
     below the reasonable due diligence necessary to justify service
     by publication.

     Finally, with regard to paragraph 3, counsel’s complete failure to
     identify which Internet sites he visited or what searches he ran
     provides no basis upon which to ascertain if counsel exercised
     due diligence and good faith in his efforts to locate Joseph
     Stanley’s heirs. Given the ease of identifying and using
     sophisticated Internet services to trace ancestry and family
     history, it is inconceivable that counsel, employing good faith
     efforts, was unable to locate a single Stanley heir.

Id. at 271-72. Furthermore:

     Counsel’s attempt to locate any of the named defendants to this
     action does not demonstrate even a minimal effort to conduct a
     search of those resources identified to the Note to Rule 430(a).
     Resources noted to Rule 430(a) include inquiries of postal
     authorities, inquiries pursuant to the Freedom of Information
     Act, inquiries of relatives, neighbors, friends, and employers of
     the defendant, and examinations of local telephone directories,
     voter registration records, local tax records, and motor vehicle
     records. Pa.R.C.P. 430(a), note. With the exception of a non-
     specific reference to local telephone directories, counsel’s
     affidavit falls woefully short of even the minimal good faith
     efforts suggested under Rule 430(a).

     Counsel’s search in [Deer Park] which [the Deer Park] Court
     deemed insufficient, included local ‘deed books, tax records, will
     books, and a voter registration list.’ Deer Park, 559 A.2d at
     945. That search, though defective, was more thorough than the
     one documented in counsel’s affidavit. In particular, we note that
     the Deer Park search included will books. Instantly, as
     explained by [the defendants], a search of will books in the
     Susquehanna County Register of Wills office would have revealed
     the will of E.J. Stanley, devising real property to his son Joseph
     M. Stanley. E.J. Stanley’s will also identifies twelve siblings of
     Joseph M. Stanley, each of whom received a devise of real
     property or a bequest of money. The last surviving sibling has
     come forward to challenge [the plaintiffs’] quiet title action.
     Here, as in Deer Park, a very simple and minimal investigation

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       would have revealed to [the plaintiffs] the identity of potentially
       interested parties.

Id. at 272-73.

       Finally, in a footnote, the Court commented that “no discovery,

evidentiary hearing or fact finding was necessary” to determine whether the

affidavit satisfied Rule 430(a), because the affidavit was “facially deficient.”

Id. at 271 n. 6.

       We have quoted Sisson at length to drive home the fact that counsel’s

investigation in Sisson was more extensive than NF’s counsel’s investigation

in the present case.           Because Sisson held that counsel’s affidavit was

“facially deficient”, logic dictates that NF’s counsel’s affidavit is facially

deficient as well.11,     12
                                NF’s counsel’s affidavit did not merely contain

____________________________________________

11
   On August 25, 2015, our Supreme Court granted allocatur in Sisson on a
single issue:

       Whether the Superior Court erred when it affirmed the trial
       court’s decision granting the rule to show cause, opening the
       judgment, and granting judgment on the pleadings, where the
       trial court conducted its own investigation of public records and
       decided disputed issues of material fact without evidence in the
       certified record to support those decisions.

Sisson v. Stanley, 141 MAL 2015 (Pa., 8/25/15). Despite this order, this
Court’s decision in Sisson continues to remain good law. See Marks v.
Nationwide Ins. Co., 762 A.2d 1098, 1101 (Pa.Super.2000) (decision of
Superior Court remains precedential until it has been overturned by
Supreme Court). Moreover, the issue on which the Supreme Court granted
allocatur has no bearing on the present case, for in this case, the trial court
did not “conduct[] its own investigation of public records” or “decide[]
disputed issues of material fact” in the course of striking NF’s judgment.
(Footnote Continued Next Page)

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“technical” defects, as NF would have us conclude.13       The affidavit was an

abject failure to comply with the rules of service and to provide interested

parties with adequate notice of NF’s quiet title action.    Therefore, the trial

court properly struck NF’s judgment.

      NF and Ultra maintain that the trial court’s order was erroneous based

on Myers v. Mooney Aircraft, Inc., 240 A.2d 505 (Pa.1967).              We find

Myers distinguishable. The defendant corporation in Myers moved to strike

the judgment on the ground that the plaintiff did not serve the defendant in

compliance with rules governing service on corporations, because the person

whom the plaintiff served with process was only an independent contractor

                       _______________________
(Footnote Continued)

The trial court simply found, quite correctly, that NF’s counsel’s Rule 430(a)
affidavit was deficient on its face.
12
   One technical difference between Sisson and this case bears mention. In
Sisson, the trial court opened judgment, whereas the trial court in this case
struck the judgment. This distinction is immaterial. The reason why the
trial court did not strike the judgment in Sisson was because the defendants
merely asked that the court open the judgment. Had the defendants in
Sisson asked the court to strike the judgment, it might well have done so
due to the facial deficiencies in the affidavit. In this case, the defendants did
request that judgment be stricken, and for the reasons given above, the trial
court properly struck the judgment.
13
   For an example of one such technicality, see City of Philadelphia Water
Revenue Bureau v. Towanda Properties, Inc., 976 A.2d 1244
(Pa.Cmwlth.2009). There, the attorney described his good faith investigation
under Rule 430 in a verified motion for alternative service instead of in an
affidavit attached to the motion.    The Commonwealth Court held that
placement of the attorney’s summary in a motion instead of in an affidavit
was a mere defect in form that did not amount to failure to conduct a good
faith investigation. Id. at 1249.

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and not an agent of the corporation, and the location of service was the

independent contractor’s own office but not the defendant’s office.        The

Supreme Court held that a motion to strike the judgment was not a proper

vehicle for relief, because the alleged errors in service were not evident on

the face of the record but could only be supported with facts outside the

record.   Through this decision, Myers appeared to suggest that the

defendant could only seek relief in a petition to open judgment, not a

petition to strike. In this case, two fatal defects were evident on the face of

the record: NF’s failure to join indispensable parties and its failure to

effectuate proper service of process.    Therefore, in contrast to Myers, a

motion to strike was the appropriate remedy.

      NF and Ultra argue at great length that “equitable considerations”

preclude striking the 1989 judgment – i.e., in the past quarter century, so

many people have transacted business in reliance on the 1989 judgment

that it would be unjust to strike the judgment now, notwithstanding any

defect in the record in 1989.     The defendants could have attacked the

judgment years earlier, NF proclaims, so it is unfair for them to attack it

now. In support of this theory, NF cites Judge Spaeth’s concurrence in Tice

v. Nationwide Ins. Co., 425 A.2d 782, 787-92 (Pa.Super.1981), multiple

decisions from other jurisdictions, and the Restatement (Second) of

Judgments § 75, all of which posit that a court may properly deny relief from

a void judgment when (1) the petitioner has tarried too long before moving

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for relief, (2) the judgment winner might suffer prejudice, and (3) innocent

third parties deserve protection for relying on the judgment. This argument

misses the mark. Unlike fine wine, void judgments in Pennsylvania do not

improve with age; void ab initio, void for all time.                 Romberger v.

Romberger, 139 A. 159, 160 (Pa.1927) (a void judgment is a “mere blur on

the record, and which it is the duty of the court of its own motion to strike

off, whenever its attention is called to it”); Clarion, M. & P. R. Co. v.

Hamilton, 17 A. 752 (Pa.1889) ( “a void judgment is no judgment at all”);

Oswald     v.   WB   Public        Square     Associates,    80 A.3d 790,   797

(Pa.Super.2013) (judgment that is void ab initio must be stricken without

regard to passage of time).

                                            IV.

     Having determined that the trial court’s order striking the 1989

judgment was proper, we turn to the final two questions in NF’s brief along

with the final question in Ultra’s brief, because they all concern the same

subject:   whether   the   trial    court    properly   sustained   the    defendants’

preliminary objections to the amended complaint and dismissed the

amended complaint for failure to state a cause of action.

     The applicable scope and standard of review is as follows:

     A preliminary objection in the nature of a demurrer is properly
     granted where the contested pleading is legally insufficient.
     Preliminary objections in the nature of a demurrer require the
     court to resolve the issues solely on the basis of the pleadings;
     no testimony or other evidence outside of the complaint may be
     considered to dispose of the legal issues presented by the

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     demurrer. All material facts set forth in the pleading and all
     inferences reasonably deducible therefrom must be admitted as
     true.

     In determining whether the trial court properly sustained
     preliminary objections, the appellate court must examine the
     averments in the complaint, together with the documents and
     exhibits attached thereto, in order to evaluate the sufficiency of
     the facts averred. The impetus of our inquiry is to determine the
     legal sufficiency of the complaint and whether the pleading
     would permit recovery if ultimately proven. This Court will
     reverse the trial court’s decision regarding preliminary objections
     only where there has been an error of law or abuse of discretion.
     When sustaining the trial court’s ruling will result in the denial of
     claim or a dismissal of suit, preliminary objections will be
     sustained only where the case i[s] free and clear of doubt.

     Thus, the question presented by the demurrer is whether, on the
     facts averred, the law says with certainty that no recovery is
     possible. Where a doubt exists as to whether a demurrer should
     be sustained, this doubt should be resolved in favor of overruling
     it.

Weiley v. Albert Einstein Medical Center, 51 A.3d 202, 208-09

(Pa.Super.2012) (citations omitted).

     Count I of NF’s amended complaint is an action for adverse possession

of all subsurface rights by adverse possession.      One who claims title by

adverse possession

     must prove actual, continuous, exclusive, visible, notorious,
     distinct and hostile possession of the land for twenty-one
     years...However, under certain circumstances, the periods of
     possession of prior owners may be added on to the period of
     possession of the present owners [by] a process, called
     ‘tacking’... but only where there is privity between [successive
     occupants]. For our purposes, ‘privity’ refers to a succession of
     relationship to the same thing, whether created by deed or other
     acts or by operation of law.

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Baylor v. Soska, 658 A.2d 743, 744-45 (Pa.1995). In Baylor, the Baylors

claimed that they held the disputed land via adverse possession by tacking

the period that their predecessor in title held the disputed land.           The

Supreme Court held that the Baylors could not tack the period of time in

which their predecessor in title held the disputed land, because the

predecessor failed to identify the disputed land in her deed to the Baylors:

      The only method by which an adverse possessor may convey the
      title asserted by adverse possession is to describe in the
      instrument of conveyance by means minimally acceptable for
      conveyancing of realty that which is intended to be conveyed. In
      this case, the predecessor in title did not meet this requirement
      so far as regards the disputed tract.

Id. at 746.

      NF’s claim of adverse possession in Count I is defective for the same

reason as the Baylors’ claim of adverse possession in Baylor.          The 1987

deed to NF does not purport to convey subsurface rights or any adverse

possession of subsurface rights. Nor does the amended complaint allege any

facts which show that NF’s predecessor in interest intended to convey any

adverse possession interest in subsurface rights. As a result, NF’s claim of

adverse possession fails as a matter of law.

      Count II of the amended complaint contends that adverse possession

arises from the stricken 1989 judgment.        The trial court correctly rejected

this argument.   First, as one Pennsylvania federal court recently held, a

judgment does not satisfy the adverse possession elements of visible and

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notorious possession.        Hoffman v. Arcelormittal Pristine Resources,

2011 WL 1791709 (W.D.Pa.2011).14

       In Hoffman, the plaintiff/grantee’s deed contained an exception giving

the grantor oil and gas subsurface rights. Nevertheless, the plaintiff leased

subsurface rights to various persons in 1971, 1981 and 2006. She claimed

that by virtue of leasing the subsurface rights and recording the leases, she

exercised adverse possession over the subsurface. The court disagreed:

       [In] Thomas v. Oviatt, 5 Pa. D & C 4th 83, 83 (C.C.P. Warren
       Cty.1989) … the Court of Common Pleas of Warren County
       summarily rejected the exact same argument advanced by
       plaintiff herein, that is: by leasing the mineral rights on three
       separate occasions beginning in 1971 and recording the leases
       openly in the Washington County Recorder of Deeds, she now
       maintains title to the mineral rights through the law of adverse
       possession. The Court stated:

              Plaintiffs’ contention, that plaintiffs’ intention to hold the
              subsurface for themselves, was manifested by the granting
              of the aforesaid three leases is woefully lacking in that one
              may not lose title to realty simply by one claiming a right
              thereto. If this were so, no estate would be free from
              attack and acquisition. Plaintiffs argue defendants could
              have, with due diligence, checked the indexes at the
              courthouse periodically to determine if there was any
              activity affecting their oil, gas and minerals. A property
              owner does not have to daily visit the Recorder’s Office to
              ascertain if one is making a claim for his property.

       Id. at 85.

____________________________________________

14
  Although we are not bound by the holdings of federal district courts, we
may utilize the reasoning in these decisions to the extent we find them
persuasive. Stephens v. Paris Cleaners, Inc., 885 A.2d 59, 68
(Pa.Super.2005).

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     As defendants have emphasized, other state courts that have
     considered this issue have held the same—in order achieve title
     to oil and natural gas by adverse possession, actual possession,
     meaning drilling and production, of the minerals must occur.
     See e.g. Natural Gas Pipeline Co. of America v. Pool, 124
S.W.3d 188 (Tex.2003); Schaneman v. Wright, 470 N.W. 566,
     577 (Neb.1991) (mere execution, delivery or recording of oil and
     gas lease or mineral deeds will not constitute adverse
     possession); Piney Oil & Gas Co. v. Scott, 258 Ky. 51, 79
S.W.2d 394, 401 (Ky.1934) (adverse occupation and use of
     property ‘cannot be wrought in the office of the county clerk no
     matter how many deeds or leases the would-be disseisor may
     record there.’) Lyles v. Dodge, 228 S.W. 316, 317
     (Tex.Civ.App.1921) (registration of oil lease, even if they had
     been recorded for a sufficient length of time to meet the
     requirements of the statute, would not constitute notice of
     adverse possession of the minerals.)

     In this case, judging the facts in the light most favorable to
     plaintiff, there is not even an allegation that plaintiff or her
     alleged ‘leaseholders’ drilled or attempted to drill on the property
     at any point since the date she bought and first leased the
     property. On the contrary, the material facts as set forth by
     plaintiff demonstrates that she has merely leased this property
     and there has not, to date, been any further cultivation of the
     subject property. Therefore, plaintiff fails to meet the first
     element required under the law of adverse possession: that
     there be actual possession on some part of the land at issue.
     Without belaboring the point, since there has never been any
     drilling on the property, it necessarily follows then, that plaintiff
     has failed to demonstrate other crucial elements of the law of
     adverse possession—that the possession was visible and
     notorious. Stark v. Pennsylvania Coal Co., [], 88 A. 770
     (Pa.1913). The Court will not continue to address the remaining
     elements of adverse possession because each of these elements
     must be satisfied in order to acquire title through the law of
     adverse possession. [Recreation Land Corporation v.]
     Hartzfeld, 947 A.2d [771,] 774 [(Pa.Super.2008)].

Id., 2011 WL at 1791709, *6-7. We concur with Hoffman’s determination

that merely recording a judgment does not support a claim for adverse

possession.

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      Anadarko and the Proctor Heirs point out, and we agree, that Count II

fails for a second reason -- a void judgment, such as the 1989 judgment

herein, is a legal nullity that has no force and effect. First Seneca Bank v.

Greenville Distributing Company, 533 A.2d 157, 162 (Pa.Super.1987) (“a

void judgment is not entitled to the respect accorded to, and is attended by

none of the consequences of, a valid adjudication. Indeed, a void judgment

need not be recognized by anyone, but may be entirely disregarded or

declared inoperative by any tribunal in which effect is sought to be given to

it. It has no legal or binding force or efficacy for any purpose or at any place.

It cannot affect, impair, or create rights, nor can any rights be based

thereon”).    Under this broad precept, NF cannot exploit the void 1989

judgment for any purpose, including acquisition of title by adverse

possession.

      Count III of the amended complaint is an action for declaratory

judgment that NF owns the subsurface right under the Property. Because

the trial court properly dismissed Counts I and II, NF’s request in Count III

to declare its rights on the basis of Counts I and II necessarily fails as well.

                                       V.

      Based on the foregoing reasons, we affirm the trial court’s order

dismissing NF’s amended complaint against all defendants.

      Order affirmed.

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Judgment Entered.

Joseph D. Seletyn, Esq.
Prothonotary

Date: 12/4/2015

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