Greenwood Estates Ass'n v. King & Evans

15 Va. Cir. 199, 1988 Va. Cir. LEXIS 274
CourtSpotsylvania County Circuit Court
DecidedNovember 23, 1988
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 15 Va. Cir. 199 (Greenwood Estates Ass'n v. King & Evans) 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
Greenwood Estates Ass'n v. King & Evans, 15 Va. Cir. 199, 1988 Va. Cir. LEXIS 274 (Va. Super. Ct. 1988).

Opinion

By JUDGE WILLIAM H. LEDBETTER, JR.

In this case, a subdivision lot owner sues another lot owner to enjoin him from using his lot for access to a tract outside the subdivision.

Greenwood Estates Section One is a residential subdivision consisting of twenty-seven large lots near Wilderness Run in a rural part of Spotsylvania County. The subdivision was created in 1979 by Sealy-Simms, Inc., a real estate developer. A plat was approved and recorded (Plat Book 13, page 52), restrictive covenants were recorded (Deed Book 488, pages 52-61), and lots were sold. The complainant, Robinson, purchased Lot 6; the respondents, King and Evans, purchased Lot 1. A property owners’ association was organized and incorporated in 1982.

The subdivision is not on a public road. Access is by way of a deeded easement across adjoining lands to State Route 640. The only street in the subdivision is a private right-of-way which runs the length of the subdivision and intersects the access road. Lot owners on both sides of the street own to the center of the street. The restrictive covenants provide that the street "is not dedicated to public use, and the general public shall [200]*200not have an easement over or on the said street . . . The property owners’ association makes assessments and maintains the street.

King and Evans also own a 500-acre tract, known as the "Bleak House Tract," which adjoins the subdivision on the north.

Shortly after they purchased Lot 1, King and Evans constructed a road across that lot. Since Lot 1 is located at the intersection of the subdivision street and the access road, an extension of the access road across the street and across (front-to-back) Lot 1 provides direct access between Route 640 and the Bleak House Tract.

Activity on the Bleak House Tract, which involved vehicular traffic across Lot 1, caused Robinson to call a meeting of the low owners. After expressing their concern to King, to no avail, this litigation ensued.

In his bill, Robinson seeks an injunction against the use of Lot 1 and the easements as an access to and from the Bleak House Tract.

King and Evans answered. They also filed a cross-bill, discussed below.

The matter was referred to a commissioner in chancery. After conducting an evidentiary hearing on May 3, 1988, the commissioner filed a report favorable to Robinson. King and Evans filed exceptions. Arguments on the exceptions, and on Robinson’s motion to dismiss the exceptions, were heard on November 21, 1988.

Timeliness of the Exceptions

The commissioner’s report was filed in the Clerk’s Office on October 13, 1988. King filed exceptions to the report on November 2, 1988.

Virginia Code § 8.01-615 provides that exceptions to the report of a commissioner in chancery shall be filed within ten days after the report has been filed.

The history of § 8.01-615 is different from other statutes and rules of court that impose specific mandatory time limitations in Virginia procedure. The predecessor statute provided that a commissioner’s report must lay in the clerk’s office ten days before a hearing could be held on exceptions. Be that as it may, the language of the statute now seems to be mandatory. Nevertheless, [201]*201the statute contains a proviso that enables a court to extend the time "for good cause shown." Further, as King and Evans point out, § 8.01-610 makes it clear that equity practice does not allow a court to confirm a commissioner’s report simply because exceptions are not filed. Rather, the court must confirm or reject the report in whole or in part "according to the view which it [i.e., the court] entertains of the law and the evidence."

The court is of the opinion that it must conduct an independent reviéw of the case in any event. Having reviewed the pleadings, the commissioner’s report, the transcript of the commissioner’s hearing, and the various exhibits, and having researched the law applicable to the case, the court deems it unnecessary to rule on Robinson’s motion to dismiss the exceptions, for the reasons stated herein.

Decision

A report of a commissioner in chancery does not have the weight of a jury verdict on conflicting testimony. Section 8.01-610. However, it is entitled to great weight and should not be arbitrarily disturbed. This well-recognized rule applies with particular force to the commissioner’s findings of facts upon evidence taken in his presence, but the rule is not applicable to pure conclusions of law contained in the report. Raiford v. Raiford, 193 Va. 221 (1952); Hudson v. Clark, 200 Va. 325 (1958); Jamison v. Jamison, 3 Va. App. 644 (1987).

As noted above, the court has reviewed the pleadings, the evidence and the legal authorities independently, and finds that the commissioner’s findings of facts are correct and that his conclusions of law, except as herein modified, are proper.

In the law of easements, it is clear that the owner of an easement is not entitled to use it to benefit any property other than that for which it was originally established, Clark v. Reynolds, 125 Va. 626 (1919), especially if the additional use will create a "surcharge" or an added burden upon the servient estate. This principle is applicable to all easements, whether by prescription, implication, express grant, or necessity, since the scope [202]*202of the easement, not the manner in which it was created, is the issue. Robertson v. Robertson, 214 Va. 76 (1973).

Here, the addition of a 500-acre tract to the use of the access easement, intended to serve the subdivision, obviously would greatly increase the scope of the easement and the burden upon the servient estate.

If Robinson is not the owner of the servient estate, i.e., the land traversed by the access road, how can he be heard to argue that the use of the easement for the Bleak House Tract impermissibly burdens the servient estate? It is conceded that Robinson is not the owner of the land between the subdivision and Route 640 which the access road crosses. However, he is the owner of a lot in the subdivision for which the access road easement was established. As such, he has standing, as a joint user of the easement, to complain about increased burdens upon that easement.

The use of Lot 1 as an access route to the Bleak House Tract also violates the restrictive covenants of Greenwood Estates Section One.

The deed of dedication of Greenwood Estates Section One establishes the subdivision street as a private street, "not dedicated, to public use, and the general public shall not have an easement over or on said street . . . ." The property owners’ association is charged with the responsibility of levying assessments against lot owners and maintaining the street.

Section A, paragraph 3, provides that all lots "shall be used for residential purposes incidental thereto."

Section A, paragraph 13, declares that "each lot shall constitute the site for one principal residence only" and shall not be subdivided "in any manner."

Section B, paragraph 15, provides: "The streets in Greenwood Estates Section One, and easements for ingress and egress are private and shall be maintained by the owners of the lots located in said subdivision."

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
15 Va. Cir. 199, 1988 Va. Cir. LEXIS 274, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/greenwood-estates-assn-v-king-evans-vaccspotsylvani-1988.