Edmison v. Vance

58 Va. Cir. 258, 2002 Va. Cir. LEXIS 60
CourtVirginia Circuit Court
DecidedFebruary 26, 2002
DocketCase No. (Chancery) CH01-197
StatusPublished

This text of 58 Va. Cir. 258 (Edmison v. Vance) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Virginia Circuit Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Edmison v. Vance, 58 Va. Cir. 258, 2002 Va. Cir. LEXIS 60 (Va. Super. Ct. 2002).

Opinion

By Judge Dennis L. Hupp

Lucy P. Edmison, Catherine Palmer Tessieri, and Nancy Palmer Clausen are the owners of a certain tract of real estate containing 79.29 acres located in Davis Magisterial District, Shenandoah County, Virginia. This real estate was devised to them from then mother, Elizabeth V. Palmer, and Lucy P. Edmison serves as Executor of that estate. These parties are the complainants in this suit in which they seek to establish a prescriptive easement over the lands of the defendants providing a means of ingress and egress to and from complainants’ real estate and State Route 648 and to have the Court further determine whether the same right-of-way will serve individual tracts into which the dominant tract has been subdivided. Elizabeth S. Vance, Larry E. Vance, and Gary L. Vance are the owners of an adjoining tract of real estate containing 139.560 acres, more or less, and the existing roadway claimed as a prescriptive easement runs over their land. The defendants acknowledge and accept the existence of a prescriptive easement along the existing roadway providing a means of ingress and egress to a tract of approximately 84 acres improved by one single-family residence with outbuildings. They object to [259]*259having the roadway serve additional residences located on that original tract. A small portion of that original tract has been conveyed to Kenneth Edmison and Lucy Edmison, and they have constructed a dwelling house on that parcel. The subdivision of the remaining 79.29-acre tract results in three tracts containing 18.459 acres, 32.578 acres, and 28.260 acres, respectively. As I understand it, the Edmisons intend to add the 32.578-acre tract to their existing parcel, and the other two tracts will be sold. It is anticipated that, in the future, three dwellings will be served by the subject roadway, the original dwelling on one of the three tracts, the Edmison dwelling on one of the three tracts, and a third dwelling to be constructed after sale of the third tract.

This case was set for trial on January 31, 2002. The parties reached a written stipulation of facts and presented it to the Court. The hearing was confined to argument of counsel. This was certainly an efficient and practical way to proceed, and I commend counsel and the parties for choosing to do so. The question presented to the Court, as phrased in the written stipulation of facts, is may the prescriptive right-of-way be used to serve additional residences located on tracts of real estate subdivided from the original dominant tract?

The nature and character of a prescriptive easement are defined by the use made thereof. Virginia Hot Springs Co. v. Lowman, 126 Va. 424, 101 S.E. 326 (1919). A new use of the easement may be permitted if it is “in all respects of the same nature and character as the old,” the difference being in degree only, and “no additional burden is put upon the servient estate.” Id. at 430. Those claiming the prescriptive easement have the burden of showing that the proposed change is one of degree only and not a change in the nature or character of the use and that the change imposes no additional burden on the servient estate. McNeil v. Kingrey, 237 Va. 400, 406, 377 S.E.2d 430 (1989). It does not help the complainants’ case that there is simply no evidence that the increased use would be an additional burden to the property. Id. at 405-06. At the risk of sounding coy, in the face of this burden, the complainants must affirmatively prove the negative.

In the present case, we are left with speculation for the most part as to the increased use, its nature and extent, and how it will affect the servient tract. While the plat subdividing the dominant tract was made in May 2001 and has been recorded in the Clerk’s Office of this Court, it is my understanding that the roadway still serves only one dwelling currently inhabited. It is certainly not now serving three dwellings as proposed. Hence, in the present case, the complainants could do no more in addressing the question of increased burden than they have done, that is, describing the proposed subdivision and anticipated use of the individual tracts and then arguing, as a matter of law, [260]*260that this will be a change in the degree of use and not in the nature and character of use and that the change will impose no additional burden on the servient tract.

From my review of the cases, it seems to me that the required analysis involves a two-fold inquiry, the first part being unitary and the second binary. (1) Will the new use be different in nature and character from the old use? Here, the answer is no. (2) Is the new use a change in degree only and does it impose an additional burden on the servient tract? Here, I believe the proposed use is a change in degree only since the proposed right-of-way will still provide a means of ingress and egress to and from residential/agricultural property. Resolution of the remaining issue is not so easy.

Will the increased use resulting from three dwellings located on three individual tracts of real estate increase the burden on the servient estate? Again, on this issue, the complainants have the burden of proof, and, in addressing this point, they rely on the law. To this end, the complainants have cited several opinions from local circuit courts. In Hastings v. Franklin, 39 Va. Cir. 340 (Shenandoah County 1996), the Honorable Perry W. Sarver, Judge, recited the well-settled principles of law and found that the proposed change in use of the dominant tract and the resulting change in use of the prescriptive easement would be more than a matter of degree and would be “a substantial variation from its prior use ... and not for the purposes for which it (the easement) was created.” (Material in parentheses added.) In that case, the owners of the dominant tract intended to begin a commercial timbering operation on land previously used for hunting, cutting fire wood, and taking timber in small quantities for the owners’ use.

In Simmons v. Morris, Circuit Court of Shenandoah County, In Chancery No. 3935 (1991), the Honorable John E. Wetsel, Jr., Judge, found the existence of a prescriptive easement, noting that the use of the dominant tract for a permanent residence where it had not been so used in the past does not affect the result in the case, implicitly finding that the resulting increase in use of the easement was a matter of degree only and did not increase the burden on the servient tract.

In Mitchell v. Catlett, Circuit Court of Warren County, In Chancery No. 91-0115 (1991), Judge Wetsel found the existence of a prescriptive easement and went on to state that the use of the dominant tract as a permanent residence “as opposed to ... more casual and infrequent use of the property ... has no effect on the result in this case.” In that case, he specifically found that the increased use was one of degree only and would put no additional burden on the real estate.

[261]*261The complainants cite Phillips v. Goetz, Circuit Court of Shenandoah County, In Chancery No. 1942 (1982), but acknowledge that the principles for which this case is cited are found in dicta. The Honorable Henry J. Whiting, then Circuit Court Judge, thoroughly discussed existing case law concerning changes in use of a prescriptive easement and the effect thereof.

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Bluebook (online)
58 Va. Cir. 258, 2002 Va. Cir. LEXIS 60, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/edmison-v-vance-vacc-2002.