Causey v. Lanigan

159 S.E.2d 655, 208 Va. 587, 1968 Va. LEXIS 152
CourtSupreme Court of Virginia
DecidedMarch 4, 1968
DocketRecord 6566
StatusPublished
Cited by15 cases

This text of 159 S.E.2d 655 (Causey v. Lanigan) 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
Causey v. Lanigan, 159 S.E.2d 655, 208 Va. 587, 1968 Va. LEXIS 152 (Va. 1968).

Opinion

Snead, J.,

delivered the opinion of the court.

Dorothy Ann Causey, complainant, appealed from an adverse decree entered by the court below in which it was determined that she had not established an easement, by “prescription or otherwise,” across the property owned by L. Mae Lanigan, defendant.

In her bill of complaint, Mrs. Causey alleged, inter alia, that she was the owner of a parcel of real estate with improvements thereon, designated as 1219 Wilmer avenue, in Henrico county; that Miss Lanigan, the defendant, was the owner of land with improvements thereon adjoining complainant’s property on the west, known as 1221 Wilmer avenue; that in 1925 William H. Kelley, a predecessor in title, “installed the existing driveway” along the boundary line *588 between the properties and situated on both parcels with “the acquiescence and knowledge” of Clarence J. Kelley and his wife, defendant’s predecessors in title, and that the use of the driveway by complainant and her predecessors in title has been “continuous, uninterrupted, adverse, hostile, notorious, and exclusive for more than 20 years next last past with full knowledge and acquiesence of the defendant and her predecessors in title.”

The complainant further alleged that she had acquired an easement by prescription in that portion of the driveway situated on defendant’s land, and that the erection of a fence along the boundary line by defendant had closed the driveway and prevented her from further use of it. In her prayer, complainant asked that defendant be required to remove the fence and restore the driveway to its previous condition; that defendant be enjoined from “doing any act which may interfere with the free enjoyment and use” of the driveway, and that it be decreed that complainant had acquired by prescription a right to the continued use of the driveway.

The defendant filed a demurrer to the bill and it was overruled. Within the prescribed time defendant filed her answer denying, among other things, that the complainant had acquired an easement by prescription on her portion of the driveway. She asserted that the use of the driveway was by “permission and license” of each owner to the other, and that the fence was erected along the boundary line upon the “suggestion,, insistence and acquiescence of plaintiff, by her duly authorized agent.”

The evidence was heard ore tenus and consisted of the testimony of Mrs. Causey, the complainant, C. W. Guthrie, the complainant’s father, Miss Lanigan, the defendant, and Ernest M. Kelley, Jr., a predecessor in title to defendant’s property. Their testimony may be summarized as follows:

In the fall of 1945 C. W. Guthrie, his wife and seven children moved to 1219 Wilmer avenue. The property was purchased in the name of Mrs. Guthrie and she later died intestate. In September 1964, Guthrie and the children conveyed their respective interests in the property to Mrs. Causey, the oldest child. Mrs. Causey had moved from the premises in September 1953, when she married. Guthrie had “control of the property” and resided with one of his sons at the premises when this case was heard. When the family moved to 1219 Wilmer avenue in 1945 there was a narrow dirt driveway with some gravel on it between 1219 and 1221 Wilmer avenue, and it has remained in substantially the same condition. The boundary *589 line separating the two parcels is approximately in the center of the driveway and extends from Wilmer avenue in a southward direction approximately 150 feet. There were two garages in the rear of the properties and the one on Mrs. Causey’s parcel was razed in 1960 because of termites.

Miss Lanigan, the defendant, purchased 1221 Wilmer avenue in 1961 from Ernest M. Kelley, Jr., who had lived there continuously from his birth in 1932 until 1959. According to Kelley, the driveway was in existence before his birth.

Until Miss Lanigan caused a fence to be erected along the boundary line separating the two parcels of land in March 1965, the driveway was used by the owners of both parcels, their friends, occupants and.business invitees, but it was not open to the public. No objections were ever made by any of the owners of either parcel to such use of the driveway. None of the witnesses knew of the existence of any agreement, written or oral, that governed the use of the driveway.

The evidence is conflicting as to what transpired between Miss Lanigan and Guthrie pertaining to the erection of the boundary line fence. Miss Lanigan testified that Guthrie told her in September 1964, that he planned to sell the property (1219 Wilmer avenue) and that he had to make repairs to the corner of the property by the driveway in order to obtain a higher FHA appraisal. She stated that he “indicated that he was going to put a wall on this corner and I showed him the line and told him that was where the wall * * * should be but not to come on my side and not to move the pin.” On another occasion, she said Guthrie told her that “he was willing to do anything I wanted to do even to closing the driveway. I told him I would like to sleep on it.” Shortly thereafter Miss Lanigan informed Guthrie that she “was agreeable to closing the driveway and he could proceed with his work”.

Miss Lanigan further testified that she relied upon the understanding she had with Guthrie, and in March 1965, she employed persons at considerable expense to move her shrubbery up to the property line, cut a new driveway, and to "Srect the fence along the line. During the night of March 13, the fence was knocked down. According to Miss Lanigan, Eddie Guthrie, son of C. W. Guthrie, admitted doing the act.

C. W. Guthrie testified that lie did not authorize Miss Lanigan to move the fence to the boundary line. He said: “I never had any idea the fence would be moved until I came home and found it in *590 the middle of the driveway. It was done on a Saturday and no one was around.” On cross-examination Guthrie was asked whether he recalled a conversation with Miss Lanigan about the driveway in the fall of 1964. He replied: “I do not recall, it could have been. I do not recall the details what we did”. Then he stated: “Well, the only conversation that I could tell you was one day when my sons were putting up this straightened edge, or ragged edge, when Miss Lanigan came up and said why don’t you close it all, and I thought she was joking.”

The complainant makes three assignments of error. However, the dominant question presented is whether complainant acquired an easement by prescription over that portion of defendant’s property used along with a portion of complainant’s property as a common driveway. The precise question is one of first impression for this court.

The general principles of law governing easements by prescription in Virginia are summarized in Craig v. Kennedy, 202 Va. 654, 657, 119 S.E.2d 320, 322, 323, as follows:

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Bluebook (online)
159 S.E.2d 655, 208 Va. 587, 1968 Va. LEXIS 152, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/causey-v-lanigan-va-1968.