Anolick v. Holy Trinity Greek Orthodox Church, Inc.

787 A.2d 732, 2001 Del. Ch. LEXIS 14, 2001 WL 85681
CourtCourt of Chancery of Delaware
DecidedJanuary 22, 2001
DocketC.A. 17897
StatusPublished
Cited by13 cases

This text of 787 A.2d 732 (Anolick v. Holy Trinity Greek Orthodox Church, Inc.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Chancery of Delaware primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Anolick v. Holy Trinity Greek Orthodox Church, Inc., 787 A.2d 732, 2001 Del. Ch. LEXIS 14, 2001 WL 85681 (Del. Ct. App. 2001).

Opinion

MEMORANDUM OPINION

LAMB, Vice Chancellor.

I. INTRODUCTION

The defendant owns a large parcel of land in the City of Wilmington. A 20-foot wide alley provides access from a side street to the rear of this land. Several other parcels of land also share a boundary with the alley, and some of the owners of those parcels use the alley as a driveway. In 1997, defendant erected a gate across the alley at a point where a gate had existed before the mid-1970s.

Plaintiffs use the alley to access a garage located at the rear of their property. The location of the gate interferes with the plaintiffs’ use of the alley by making it more difficult for them to back their cars into or out of the garage. Plaintiffs claim that they are entitled to the unimpeded use of the entire length of the alley and seek an order requiring the removal of the gate, and other relief. The parties have cross-moved for summary judgment.

A careful review of the records leads me to conclude that the original 1884 deed for the parcel of land now owned by plaintiffs conveyed no interest in or right to use the alley. Rather, the alley came into existence later, when the grantor conveyed other parts of his lands in such a way as to define the alley, and conveyed the shared right to use the alley to those other grantees. For these reasons, I will deny plaintiffs’ motion for summary judgment and allow defendant’s cross-motion, to the extent that those motions relate to plaintiffs’ rights claimed to derive from their legal chain of title.

*734 There is, nevertheless, substantial evidence that plaintiffs and their predecessors-in-interest have obtained some rights to use the alley as a driveway by prescription, or adverse possession and use. The language in plaintiffs’ deed granting them an interest in “a certain driveway leading from Ninth Street” to the rear of their lot first appeared in their chain of title in a 1960 deed. While this language is not evidence that the plaintiffs’ original grant- or conveyed any such right, it does show that, by 1960, the owners of the parcel had (or purported to have) the right to use the alley as a driveway. Similarly suggestive of the existence of such a right is the fact that plaintiffs’ garage has been located in the same place since at least 1936.

From this, I have little trouble concluding that plaintiffs have the right to use that portion of the alley between their garage and the street as a driveway. I also am able to conclude from the record that this limited easement does not encompass the right to use the entire length of the alley but only so much of it as is necessary to enter or leave the garage. But the record does not currently allow me to determine whether the plaintiffs are entitled to the use of a small part of the alley now lying beyond the gate for the purpose of turning their cars when entering or exiting the garage. To that extent, the cross-motions for summary judgment will be denied.

II. FACTUAL BACKGROUND

A. Background of the Litigation

Holy Trinity Greek Orthodox Church is a Delaware not-for-profit corporation, owning a fee simple interest in a parcel of land located at 808 N. Broom St., Wilmington. Colin and Elizabeth P. Anolick reside at and hold the fee simple interest in a parcel of land located at 815 N. Franklin St., Wilmington. These two parcels are parts of the same city block. The Anolicks sued Holy Trinity after Holy Trinity erected a gate across an alley that runs along the rear of both Holy Trinity’s parcel and the Anolicks’ parcel. The Anolicks claim to have the right to the use of the entire length of the alley and are seeking injunc-tive relief and damages for trespass, conversion, and nuisance resulting from the locked gate’s presence in the alley. Holy Trinity filed a motion for judgment on the pleadings and plaintiffs countered with their cross-motion for summary judgment. 1 I heard oral arguments on the motions and, thereafter, asked that further research be done on the conveyancing history of the alley.

B. Description of the Alley and the Gate’s Placement

The alley in controversy is 230 feet 6 inches long and 20 feet wide. It extends south from Ninth St. into the middle of the city block bounded by Eighth, Ninth, Franklin, and Broom Streets in Wilmington. The rear property line of the Anol-icks’ parcel abuts the alley’s eastern edge, beginning at a point 90 feet from Ninth St. and continuing south approximately 40 feet 6 inches. Holy Trinity’s property abuts the alley on both its western edge, beginning at a point approximately 130 feet 6 inches from Ninth St. and continuing 100 feet to the end of the alley, and then along the entire 20 feet of the alley’s southern edge. Six other parcels border this property at various points, but only the Anol-icks and Holy Trinity are involved in this dispute. The following schematic diagram illustrates the existing situation.

*735 [[Image here]]

As can be seen on Figure 1, the gate extends across the alley on a line that is parallel to the Anolicks’ side lot line. The record shows that there was a gate in this same position from the 1930s until shortly after 1975. Although the presence of the gate does not prevent the Anolicks’ use of the alley to access their garage, it does interfere with it. This is so because one side of the Anolicks’ garage is on or near the same side lot line as the gate. Since the gate is closed, the Anolicks find it more difficult to get their cars out of their garage. Before the gate was erected, the Anolicks were able to back their cars out of the garage while turning the wheels in order to point the front of their car toward the street. Now, due to the presence of the gate, they find it necessary either to back down the length of the alley or back across the alley onto a neighbor’s land before going forward down the alley to the street. They confront a similar problem if they want to back into their garage.

C. Creation of the Alley

Because the cross-motions require me to determine the respective rights of Holy Trinity and the Anolicks in the alley, I will need to go into some detail regarding the creation of the alley. The following schematic diagram illustrates the history of conveyances.

*736 [[Image here]]

In 1852, Charles W. Howland (“How-land”) owned most of the block in question. The rest of it (including all of the land facing Eighth St. — denoted on Figure 2 as the hatched rectangle bordering Eighth St.) was owned by D.H. Kent. By 1884, Howland began to divide his land along Franklin St. by conveying parcels with a uniform depth of 150 feet. These parcels extend back from Franklin St. to what is now the eastern boundary of the alley.

In 1884, Howland conveyed the Anolieks’ parcel, 815 N. Franklin St., to Anna M. Jackson. The language of the deed describing the metes and bounds of the land conveyed does not refer to the existence of any alley. Neither does any other part of the deed make express reference to the existence of an alley or expressly convey to Jackson the right to the use of an alley.

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787 A.2d 732, 2001 Del. Ch. LEXIS 14, 2001 WL 85681, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/anolick-v-holy-trinity-greek-orthodox-church-inc-delch-2001.