Dewey Beach Lions Club, Inc. v. Longanecker

905 A.2d 128, 2006 WL 2505652, 2006 Del. Ch. LEXIS 154
CourtCourt of Chancery of Delaware
DecidedAugust 21, 2006
DocketC.A. 162-S
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 905 A.2d 128 (Dewey Beach Lions Club, Inc. v. Longanecker) 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
Dewey Beach Lions Club, Inc. v. Longanecker, 905 A.2d 128, 2006 WL 2505652, 2006 Del. Ch. LEXIS 154 (Del. Ct. App. 2006).

Opinion

OPINION

LAMB, Vice Chancellor.

In this case, several vacation home owners raise exceptions to a Master’s Report which denies their claim to a prescriptive easement over land that the home owners have long used for the purpose of reaching parking in the back of their beach properties. The potentially servient landowner has also challenged the Master’s Report in several respects, but does not challenge the result of the Master’s adjudication. The court reviews the Master’s factual and legal findings de novo, and finds that the Master correctly held in favor of the Iand-owner and directs that judgment be entered accordingly. 1

I.

The facts of this case were ably laid out by the Master in his Draft and Final Reports. Nonetheless, for ease of reference, the court here briefly recapitulates the facts, supplemented as necessary by the court’s review of the evidence.

This matter involves a petition to quiet title to real property in Dewey Beach owned by the Dewey Beach Lions Club. Opposing the petition are the owners of four lots adjoining the Lions Club property (the “Owners”). These property Owners maintain that they have acquired a prescriptive easement across the lands of the Lions Club.

The Lions Club parcel, which consists of approximately 2.85 acres, fronts on Reho-both Bay on its western boundary, on McKinley Street to the south, and abuts the Owners’ lots on the east. 2 The Owners’ lots are improved by cottages used by them as summer retreats or rented to vacationers. The southernmost of the four lots, owned by Pearl Golden, borders on McKinley Street. The remaining three lots to the north do not border on a dedicated town street. In creating these four lots, the owner of the larger parcel from which they were created established by deed a 15-foot wide easement running from McKinley Street on the south to the northern most (Longanecker) lot. This 15-foot wide easement allows ingress and *130 egress to the otherwise landlocked lots. It occupies the western-most part of each of the parcels, abutting the property line common to the Owners and the Lions Club. However, as is clear from the evidence, this easement is often blocked by cars double-parked along the backs of the more southerly houses. Caroline Longa-necker testified, for example, that from 1995 to 2003 people parked in front of Golden’s cottage and thus blocked the 15-foot wide easement. 3 The deed restrictions also establish a 25-foot setback from this property line, meaning that, in addition to the 15-foot width of the easement, an additional 10 feet of open space should (by deed) exist between each cottage and the western boundary of each lot.

The Lions Club originally acquired a portion of its property in or about 1959, through the bequest of John T. Waples, and later acquired the remainder of the property through various quit claim deeds. In his will, Waples provided that a portion of the land given to the Lions Club should be maintained as a playground. Accordingly, the Lions Club maintains the Wa-ples playground, open for the use of the public, toward the southeastern portion of its parcel. The playground is surrounded by a fence. A portion of the Lions Club property to the north of the playground, until recently, was occupied by tennis courts. It is now vacant. Located between the property line separating the Lions Club lands from those of the Owners on the east, and the fence running along the playground and (formerly) the tennis courts on the west, is an open area 20 or 25 feet wide.

Fifteen feet of this area, called the “Strip” in this opinion, is occupied by a strip of gravel and sand. At all times pertinent to this case, the Strip has been used by the public as a right-of-way for access to the playground. People coming to use the playground drive along the Strip, abutting the Owners’ lots, and park along the playground fence just to the west.

Between 1980 and 2000, the property owned by the Lions Club on McKinley Street (including the area at issue here) was leased to Lisa’s Sailboats, Inc. Pursuant to the 1980 lease, the Lions Club leased its Dewey Beach property to Lisa’s for a term of five years. The lease provided for Lisa’s to move the then-existing Lions clubhouse to another location on the property, and to make improvements thereto. Lisa’s, in fact, moved the clubhouse to the beach area of the property, added to it, and operated, it as a restaurant. Lisa’s was also permitted to operate a sailboat rental business and to charge for the use of the tennis courts on the property. The lease provided that Lisa’s was to maintain the existing Waples playground as a public playground. The parties agreed that Lisa’s did not have the right to sublet the property. By the terms of the 1980 lease, Lisa’s also received an option to renew for three successive five-year terms, which it exercised. The effective term of the lease, therefore, was from 1980 through 2000.

In 1991, the lease was modified to exclude the area of the playground from the leased premises. As the Master observed, it is not clear from the face of the lease or the 1991 amendment whether the Strip was included in the area formally excluded from the leased property in the 1991 amendment. 4 It is clear, however, that for at least the period of 1980 to 1991, the entire Lions Club property, including the playground and the Strip, was in the legal *131 possession of Lisa’s, and that during that period the Lions Club held a reversionary interest which would become possessory only upon termination of the lease.

The Owners claim to have used the Strip for at least 20 years. Some record evidence of this use exists as early as 1981, when a lawyer for the Lions Club, Douglas D. Marshall, wrote to Owner Frank Watt proposing a sublease between Lisa’s and Watt. In that letter, Marshall proposed that a sublease could be negotiated if Watt was willing to sign a document which stipulated the following:

To the Dewey Beach Lions Club I acknowledge and agree that the strip of land between my western most property line and the fence currently enclosing the eastern most portion of the Dewey Beach Lions Club Tennis courts, approximately 15 feet between property line and fence is the undisputed property, owned and solely controlled by Dewey Beach Lions Club. I appreciate having used the property in the recent past but claim no right to continued use in the future. I acknowledge and agree that I have absolutely no right to use the land for any purpose without the permission of Dewey Beach Lions Club. 5

The record does not contain or reflect any follow-up to this letter.

Multiple parties testified at trial that the Strip was used by the Owners at various times throughout the allegedly prescriptive period. Wayne G. Steele, a member of the Lions Club, and a member of the board since 1990, testified that the Club had “traditionally ... let the property owners use that strip for ingress and egress” 6 in addition to allowing the public to use the Strip in order to access the playground.

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Bluebook (online)
905 A.2d 128, 2006 WL 2505652, 2006 Del. Ch. LEXIS 154, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/dewey-beach-lions-club-inc-v-longanecker-delch-2006.