City of Fredericksburg v. Yarboro

54 Va. Cir. 612, 1998 Va. Cir. LEXIS 568
CourtSpotsylvania County Circuit Court
DecidedDecember 11, 1998
DocketCase No. CH96-507
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 54 Va. Cir. 612 (City of Fredericksburg v. Yarboro) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Spotsylvania County Circuit Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
City of Fredericksburg v. Yarboro, 54 Va. Cir. 612, 1998 Va. Cir. LEXIS 568 (Va. Super. Ct. 1998).

Opinion

By Judge William H. Ledbetter, Jr.

The sole question before the court in this easement case is whether a settlement agreement, reached by the parties on December 11, 1997, is enforceable.

Background

Because no evidence has been presented, the facts recited are gleaned from the pleadings, papers in the court file, and representations of counsel in oral arguments on December 7,1998.

In its bill of complaint, the City of Fredericksburg seeks to enjoin interference with its right of way between State Route #619 and property owned by Fredericksburg around the Motts Run reservoir. Fredericksburg claims that it acquired the access by various deeds in the 1960s and by a 1970 court order in a condemnation suit. The defendants own the properties that the right of way allegedly traverses.

The case was referred to a commissioner in chancery, who scheduled an evidentiary hearing for December 11,1997. On the morning of the hearing, the parties reached a compromise settlement. Because they were at the commissioner’s office and a court reporter was present, counsel stated the [613]*613terms of the agreement for the court reporter. The recitation was transcribed with an exhibit attached. In essence, the agreement relocated Fredericksburg’s right of way and allocated the costs of the proceeding among the parties.

In order to understand the relocation, a few additional “facts,” yet unproved, must be noted.

Apparently, the original right of way begins on Route 619 (Mill Road); runs across a small segment of what is now Lot 10 of Turkey Run Estates, owned by the Boyces; then onto Lot 9 of Turkey Run Estates, owned by the Copenhavers; and finally onto and across Lot 8 of Turkey Run Estates, owned by the Yarboros. On Lot 10, the easement crosses the Boyces’ gravel driveway. On Lot 9, the Copenhavers’ well is situated within the easement. Traversing Lot 8, the easement crosses the Yarboros’ driveway, cuts through their residence, and meanders across the rear of that parcel onto a tract of land owned by Fredericksburg.

Under the terms of the settlement, the point of origin of the easement would be shifted to Lot 8 at Route # 619. The new easement is almost completely on Lot 8 running, for the most part, along the southern boundary of Lot 8. At some places, a portion of the thirty-foot wide easement is. on Lot 9. Thus, the relocation would remove the easement entirely from Lot 10, would avoid the well on Lot 9, and would bypass the dwelling on Lot 8. The new easement would be a “permanent easement.” The agreement also provided for a “temporaiy easement,” at a slightly different location, to be used by Fredericksburg until it improves the “permanent easement.”

Further, the parties agreed that the new easement would be surveyed and duly recorded in the land records, that the suit would be dismissed, and that Fredericksburg would “abandon” and “quitclaim” its original right of way “to the appropriate parties.”

The agreement also provided that the new easement “will be unobstructed at all times.”

In accordance with the agreement, Fredericksburg caused the surveyor to create a new plat showing the new easement That plat dated Januaiy 6,1998, shows an electrical transmission box squarely within the new easement. The box sits on Lot 8 near Route #619 where the easement connects with the public road. The box does not appear on the July IS, 1997, plat upon which the parties sketched the new easement in conjunction with their agreement.

Current State of the Case

When the transmission box appeared on die new plat, Fredericksburg told the defendants to remove it. The defendants refused, citing the $2,700.00 cost [614]*614quoted by Virginia Power to move it. Fredericksburg then filed a motion asking the court to enforce the parties’ agreement and to compel the defendants to remove the transmission box.

The court heard arguments on December 7,1998.

All parties agree that the only hindrance to a full resolution of this controversy is the transmission box. Fredericksburg contends that the agreement of December 11, 1997, should be enforced and the defendant should be compelled to remove the box because it is an “obstruction” under the terms of the agreement. The Yarboros likewise contend that the agreement should be enforced, but they argue that the box is Fredericksburg’s problem since Fredericksburg knew or should have known that the box was there when the agreement was made. The Copenhavers also ask the court to enforce the agreement, but they point out that, because the box is not located on their property, they should not have to bear any responsibility for its removal. The Boyces’ argument is similar to that of the Copenhavers. Further, the Copenhavers and the Boyces suggest that the court find a fair “middle ground” by which the new easement could become reality and the dispute over the box could be resolved.

Decision

It is elementary that mutuality of assent, or a “definite meeting of the minds,” is an essential element of all contracts, including compromise settlement agreements. The minds of the parties must meet upon the terms of the agreement. However, the law imputes to a person an intention corresponding to the reasonable meaning of his words and acts. Marefield Meadows v. Lorenz, 245 Va. 255, 427 S.E.2d 363 (1993). Generally, one who makes an agreement is bound by its terms, and ignorance of the terms does not affect the liability of such person under the contract. Stated differently, if the words of a party, reasonably interpreted, manifest an intention to agree, his contrary unexpressed state of mind is immaterial. Lucy v. Zehmer, 196 Va. 493, 84 S.E.2d 516 (1954).

Here, the parties clearly understood, in good faith, that they had reached a compromise settlement of their dispute on December 11, 1997. Their agreement relocated the right of way to the satisfaction of everyone involved. The relocated right of way was hand-sketched on an existing plat with the understanding that a new plat would be prepared to show the precise courses and distances of the new easement. The parties agreed that the new easement would be unobstructed.

[615]*615However, it is also clear that Fredericksburg did not mean to establish a new easement with a transmission box in the middle of it, making the right of way practically unusable; nor did the defendants intend to agree that the easement would be unobstructed if in fact the easement was already obstructed. The parties’ true intentions regarding the matter cannot be determined from the terms of the agreement because the agreement does not mention the box and the plat upon which they sketched the new easement contains no reference to it.

Given the present status of the case, the court cannot enforce the agreement. As noted above, the agreement, transcribed by the court reporter, makes no reference to the transmission box. The plat attached to the agreement, upon which the parties illustrated the location of the new easement, does not show the transmission box.

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Related

City of Fredericksburg v. Yarboro
57 Va. Cir. 124 (Virginia Circuit Court, 2001)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
54 Va. Cir. 612, 1998 Va. Cir. LEXIS 568, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/city-of-fredericksburg-v-yarboro-vaccspotsylvani-1998.