Atkisson v. Wexford Associates

493 S.E.2d 524, 254 Va. 449, 1997 Va. LEXIS 110
CourtSupreme Court of Virginia
DecidedOctober 31, 1997
DocketRecord 970069; Record 970071
StatusPublished
Cited by13 cases

This text of 493 S.E.2d 524 (Atkisson v. Wexford Associates) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Virginia primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Atkisson v. Wexford Associates, 493 S.E.2d 524, 254 Va. 449, 1997 Va. LEXIS 110 (Va. 1997).

Opinion

JUSTICE HASSELL

delivered the opinion of the Court.

In this appeal, we consider whether a court can enforce a judgment entered in a suit which did not include all the necessary parties.

This litigation, which has been active for over 11 years, reaches us in a very unusual procedural posture. George B. Atkisson and his wife, Carlotta T. Atkisson, filed their amended bill of complaint against the Fairfax County Park Authority, Wexford Associates, Inc., and 56 owners of lots located in the Wendover Subdivision, Section *452 HI, in Fairfax County. The Atkissons alleged that they owned a property interest in an easement that provided ingress and egress to their family cemetery and that the defendants had constructed obstructions which interfered with the Atkissons’ use of the easement. The chancellor granted the defendants’ demurrer to the amended bill. We awarded the Atkissons an appeal from that judgment, reversed the judgment by an unpublished order, and remanded the case for further proceedings. Atkisson v. Wexford Associates, Inc., Record No. 890169 (April 26, 1989).

Upon remand, the Atkissons nonsuited 38 of the 56 defendants who were lot owners, and the case proceeded against Wexford Associates (a developer), the Fairfax Park Authority, and certain owners of lots in the subdivision. At a 1993 trial, the Atkissons adduced evidence to support their claim that they had a property right in a 15-foot-wide express easement that extended from a county road to the cemetery.

The chancellor held, inter alia, that the Atkissons had an express easement that provided them ingress and egress to the cemetery. The chancellor established the location of the easement in his final decree which stated in part: “[t]he Court determined that this easement is located across the affected properties in accordance with the express grant contained in the Deed of 1892 located in Fairfax County Land Records. ... A view of the easement was taken by the parties and the Court. ...” The chancellor did not, however, grant the Atkissons injunctive relief because such relief would have required the property owners to remove improvements such as homes and swimming pools.

In 1993, the chancellor entered a judgment which required that each lot owner whose lot obstructed the easement pay $100 to the Atkissons and that Wexford Associates pay the Atkissons $10,000 in punitive damages. Neither the lot owners nor Wexford Associates appealed the chancellor’s decree. The chancellor also ordered that the Park Authority provide a new easement for the Atkissons on its land.

We awarded the Park Authority an appeal from the 1993 judgment. We held that the evidence adduced at trial supported the trial court’s holding that the Atkissons have an express easement which granted them access to the cemetery. We also held, however, that the chancellor was without authority to require the Park Authority to provide a new easement on its land, and we remanded the case with certain directions. Fairfax County Park Authority v. Atkisson, 248 Va. *453 142, 148-49, 445 S.E.2d 101, 105, cert. denied, 513 U.S. 1058 (1994).

While this proceeding was pending in the trial court upon the second remand, David D. O’Brien and Jane B. O’Brien, owners of a lot in the Wendover Subdivision, learned for the first time of this litigation and that the easement at issue may transverse their property. The O’Briens had purchased their lot from John and Katherine Kowalczyk, who had initially been named as defendants in this suit, but were nonsuited. The Atkissons did not file a lis pendens memorandum in the O’Briens’ chain of title, and the O’Briens purchased their lot without any notice, actual or constructive, of this litigation.

Subsequently, the O’Briens filed a petition to intervene and requested that the chancellor vacate the 1993 judgment and award a new trial. The chancellor conducted an ore tenus hearing and held that the O’Briens were necessary parties and that the dispositive rulings resulting in the 1993 judgment were made after the O’Briens were title owners of the property. The chancellor granted the O’Briens a new trial on all issues and scheduled a trial date.

The Atkissons then filed a petition for writ of mandamus in this Court, asserting that the chancellor acted beyond this Court’s mandate by ordering a new trial for necessary parties. We were of opinion that the writ should not issue, and we dismissed the petition. In re: George Atkisson, et al., Record No. 951726 (November 27, 1995).

In pretrial motions, Wexford Associates and certain other defendants asserted that they were not bound by the 1993 judgment and argued that it was void because the O’Briens, who were necessary parties, were deprived of an opportunity to participate in the prior trial. The chancellor, who was not the same chancellor who presided at the first trial, denied this motion because she was of opinion that the O’Briens’ interests were “separable” from the interests of these defendants. The chancellor did hold, however, that Wexford and certain other defendants were entitled to participate in subsequent proceedings to the extent these litigants challenged the specific location of the easement.

During the new trial, the chancellor heard evidence which was vastly different from the evidence adduced during the first trial. Consequently, the chancellor made factual findings which are, in many respects, contradictory to the factual findings made by the other chancellor at the first trial.

*454 Specifically, the chancellor found that the easement at issue was created to provide ingress and egress from a 15-acre parcel to a county road and that the easement was never intended to serve the Atkissons’ family cemetery. Thus, the chancellor held that as to the O’Briens and Donald and Joan Hall (defendants in this trial who were not named defendants in the first trial), “there is no express easement on their property that provides access to the cemetery, and that any such attempt to do so would constitute an impermissible additional burden on the servient estate.”

The chancellor also held that her ruling did not apply to the defendants who had participated in the first trial because they were bound by the 1993 judgment. Thus, the chancellor’s final decree locates an easement which extends from a Fairfax County road, identified as Bird Road, ceases at Halls’ property line and the O’Briens’ property line, and then recommences on the opposite side of the O’Briens’ property line and extends through several other lots until it concludes at the cemetery. Simply stated, the chancellor’s decree locates a 15-foot-wide easement which does not permit the Atkissons to travel to and from the cemetery.

Even though the Atkissons made numerous assignments of error in their brief * , they have chosen to limit their argument on brief to the following question presented: “The sole question in this case is whether ...

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Bluebook (online)
493 S.E.2d 524, 254 Va. 449, 1997 Va. LEXIS 110, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/atkisson-v-wexford-associates-va-1997.