Catoctin Ridge Homeowners Association, Inc. v. George L. Biller

CourtCourt of Appeals of Virginia
DecidedMarch 25, 2025
Docket0981244
StatusPublished

This text of Catoctin Ridge Homeowners Association, Inc. v. George L. Biller (Catoctin Ridge Homeowners Association, Inc. v. George L. Biller) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Virginia primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Catoctin Ridge Homeowners Association, Inc. v. George L. Biller, (Va. Ct. App. 2025).

Opinion

COURT OF APPEALS OF VIRGINIA PUBLISHED

Present: Judges Friedman, Chaney and Raphael Argued by videoconference

CATOCTIN RIDGE HOMEOWNERS ASSOCIATION, INC. OPINION BY v. Record No. 0981-24-4 JUDGE STUART A. RAPHAEL MARCH 25, 2025 GEORGE L. BILLER

FROM THE CIRCUIT COURT OF LOUDOUN COUNTY James P. Fisher, Judge

Stephen C. Price (Theresa D. Small; McCandlish & Lillard P.C., on briefs), for appellant.

Jacqueline A. Kramer (Westlake Legal Group, PLLC, on brief), for appellee.

Virginia continues to follow the common-law “stranger” rule, sometimes called the

“stranger to the deed” rule. Shirley v. Shirley, 259 Va. 513, 516-18 (2000). The stranger rule

provides “that, in a deed, a reservation or exception in favor of a stranger to the instrument does

not create in the stranger any right or interest in the property being conveyed.” Id. at 515. The

stranger rule applies only to reservations and exceptions, not to express grants. See id. at

520 n.8.

Appellant Catoctin Ridge Homeowners Association, Inc. argues that the trial court defied

the stranger rule when it found that a 1995 deed conveyed an express easement to an adjoining

lot then-owned by appellee’s mother, who was not a party to the deed. But the 1995 deed is best

construed as granting an express easement, not reserving or excepting one. Accordingly, we

affirm the trial court’s holding that the stranger rule does not apply and that the 1995 deed

granted an express easement that entitles appellee to access his property. BACKGROUND1

On December 5, 1995, developer Catoctin Ridge Limited Partnership executed a “deed of

subdivision, easement, vacation, conveyance and release” to subdivide its land into lots and

parcels for the creation of a residential neighborhood. The deed included a plat that showed the

lot layout. The other parties to the deed were two trustees under a deed of trust, appellant

Catoctin Ridge, and the Board of Supervisors of Loudoun County. The deed conveyed to the

Board of Supervisors a 100-year floodplain easement and an easement for ingress and egress for

the construction and maintenance of utilities and the performance of other governmental

functions.

South of the subdivision property are four lots, including Lot 8, owned in 1995 by

Charlotte H. Biller (“Charlotte”), the mother of appellee George L. Biller (“Biller”). The owners

of those four lots access their properties along a private road, running east-west along the

southern boundary of the subdivision and lying within the subdivision property.

The 1995 deed created that 50-foot-wide access easement for the benefit of three of those

lots, including Lot 8. The deed recited, as relevant here, that the grantors

do hereby create and establish easements for ingress and egress . . . as shown on the Plat, designated thereon as . . . “50’ private access easement for the exclusive use of adjoining lots 4, 7 and 8”, for the use and benefit of the lots served thereby.

The deed also conveyed three lots (Parcels A, B, and C) to Catoctin Ridge for use as common

space, “together with easements for ingress and egress across the access easements, including

those for Lots 5, and the adjoining Lots 4, 7 and 8.” The access easement at issue was located

1 We review the facts in the light most favorable to appellee George L. Biller, the prevailing party below. E.g., Mintbrook Devs., LLC v. Groundscapes, LLC, 76 Va. App. 279, 283 (2022). -2- within Parcel A. The attached plat showed the access easement and identified Lot 8 as

then-owned by “Charlotte H. Biller.”

In September 1996, the developer executed a separate deed granting Charlotte the same

50-foot access easement referenced in the 1995 deed and plat. The 1996 deed stated that the

50-foot access easement connects to a 10-foot easement that Charlotte acquired to use a road

over Lot 9A, directly to the east of her lot.

In February 1999, Charlotte granted a one-half undivided interest in Lot 8 to Biller as

tenants in common. She granted the remainder of the fee interest to Biller in December 2002.

Biller started building his house on Lot 8 in 1995, and he began living there in 1995 or 1996.2

Since then, he has used the road crossing both Lot 9A and Parcel A to access his home. So did

others, including Amazon delivery drivers, pizza delivery drivers, Verizon Fios technicians,

neighbors, and friends.

In early 2021, Catoctin Ridge learned that some of the trees on Parcel A within Biller’s

easement had been cut down. Ryan Schelske was the president of Catoctin Ridge’s board. Over

the next few months, Schelske noticed that more trees had been cut down. Biller approached

him one day and revealed that he had cut down the trees to clear space for a recreational vehicle

he intended to park in the easement.

Schelske told Biller that Catoctin Ridge had engaged the board’s lawyer out of concern

that the tree cutting violated the association’s obligations under a tree-conservancy agreement

with Loudoun County. The lawyer sent Biller a letter stating that Catoctin Ridge did not wish to

restrict him from using his driveway but requesting that Biller stop cutting down trees. Later,

2 At trial, Biller testified that he or members of his family had lived on Lot 8 since 1977 and had previously used more of the surrounding land. His limited use of the Lot 9A/Parcel A access easement began when the 1995 deed “corrected” his easement. -3- however, Catoctin Ridge determined with its lawyer that the entire easement “was never validly

issued.”

Catoctin Ridge sued Biller in August 2021 for a declaratory judgment that the 1995 and

1996 deeds had not conveyed a valid easement to Charlotte and an injunction to stop Biller from

using the easement. After the court overruled Biller’s plea in bar, Biller filed an answer

asserting, among other defenses, “easement by prescription,” “easement by necessity,”

“easement [by] recorded plat” or “deed,” “equitable estoppel,” and “laches.”

At the one-day bench trial in March 2024, Biller moved to strike Catoctin Ridge’s

evidence on the ground that the 1995 deed and plat granted an express easement. Catoctin Ridge

responded, among other things, that the easement was invalid under the stranger rule in Shirley

because Charlotte was not a party to the deed. The court asked Biller, “do we even have to go

there if you have an easement by prescription?” After Biller’s counsel represented that Biller

intended to testify to his “exclusive, continuous use” of the easement, the court took the motion

to strike under advisement.

Biller then testified that he had used the easement to access his home since 1995 or 1996,

that others regularly used it for the same purpose, and that he had never stopped using it. He said

that there was no other way to access Lot 8 without using the easement. Biller also elaborated on

his plan to park an RV on the easement. On cross-examination, Biller admitted that he used the

easement only with “the belief that [the 1995 deed and plat] gave [him] the express right to use

[it] as an access easement.”

Biller also presented the testimony of his neighbor, Henry Davison, the owner of Lot 9A.

Davison testified that Biller’s easement over Davison’s property could not, in its current form,

replace the easement over Parcel A. Davison added that Biller’s neighbors also used the road

over Parcel A to access their own homes, consistent with the 1995 deed and plat.

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