Hedgepeth v. Parker's Landing Property Owner's Assn., Inc.

388 F. App'x 242
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Fourth Circuit
DecidedJuly 2, 2010
Docket09-1768
StatusUnpublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 388 F. App'x 242 (Hedgepeth v. Parker's Landing Property Owner's Assn., Inc.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Fourth Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Hedgepeth v. Parker's Landing Property Owner's Assn., Inc., 388 F. App'x 242 (4th Cir. 2010).

Opinion

Affirmed by unpublished opinion. Judge WILSON wrote the opinion, in which Judge GREGORY and Senior Judge BEAM joined.

Unpublished opinions are not binding precedent in this circuit.

WILSON, District Judge:

Plaintiff-appellant, Allen Toby Hedge-peth (“Hedgepeth”), brought an action pursuant to the district court’s diversity jurisdiction against Parker’s Landing Property Owners Association, Inc. (the “Association”), defendant-appellee, seeking a declaratory judgment that he has an easement over an established drive owned by the Association benefiting an adjoining tract of land he purchased at a foreclosure sale. Alternatively, Hedgepeth sought a judgment declaring that quasi-estoppel precludes the Association from denying the existence of that easement. The district court entered a declaratory judgment recognizing two historical easements but not the easement Hedgepeth claimed and Hedgepeth appealed. We affirm.

I.

In 1894, a tract of land in Currituck County, North Carolina, was severed from common ownership into two tracts. The smaller of the two tracts — the “Harbor Shore Tract” — is bordered on the east by the Currituck Sound. The only access to the Harbor Shore Tract is through the larger tract — -Parker’s Landing Subdivision (“Parker’s Landing”) — which borders the Harbor Shore Tract on the west and south. U.S. Highway 158, the primary means of travel in the area, makes up the western border of Parker’s Landing. Both Harbor Shore and Parker’s Landing were used for agricultural purposes until the late 1980s when steps were taken to develop them for residential use. Before this development, access to the Harbor Shore Tract was available via two historical easements that cross Parker’s Landing. 1

In 1987, two brothers, Donnie and Lan-nie Belangia, along with their wives (the “Belangias”), purchased the Harbor Shore Tract intending to develop it into a residential subdivision called Harbor Shore. At that time, Midgette Development Enterprises, Inc. (“MDE”), which was owned by members of the Midgette family, owned Parker’s Landing. The Belangias approached the Midgettes to assess their interest in jointly developing the tracts. Both the Belangias and the Midgettes hired William T. Robbins (“Robbins”), a surveyor, to prepare plats of their respective properties and to obtain county approval for their proposed subdivisions. 2 *244 Robbins succeeded in obtaining preliminary plat approval for both tracts from the Currituck County Board of Commissioners (the “Board of Commissioners”). The Currituck County Planning Board (the “Planning Board”), however, only granted approval of Parker’s Landing’s final plat because Harbor Shore lacked the fifty foot access required for development.

After the Planning Board denied approval of Harbor Shore’s final plat, the Belangias continued negotiating with the Midgettes in an effort to reach an agreement for an easement over Parker’s Landing’s main road, Parker’s Landing Drive (the “Drive”). Despite extensive negotiations and the exchange of various proposed agreements, those negotiations, according to the deposition testimony of the Mid-gettes and the Belangias, ultimately failed to result in an executed agreement. Jody Midgette, MDE’s Vice President, testified that negotiations had never produced an agreement, that “there was nothing ... final ever done” (J.A. 160); Lannie Belan-gia responded “no” to the question of whether they had ever come to an agreement for access (J.A. 202); and when asked whether negotiations had ever resulted in written agreements, Donnie Be-langia testified: “I think there [were] some prepared. But none were ever signed.” (J.A. 216-17.) Left without the access necessary for development, the Be-langias permitted Harbor Shore to enter foreclosure.

Before purchasing the property at foreclosure in January of 1993, Hedgepeth claims he: inspected the property (which he accessed via one of the historical easements); checked records at the county tax office and courthouse; reviewed statements contained in minutes of the Board of Commissioners’ meeting of October 17, 1988, (the “Board Minutes”), which state that “approval of a permanent easement through Parker’s Landing to [Harbor Shore] has been proposed and has been signed for the County Attorney to review”; and examined the 1989 Final Plat of Parker’s Landing (the “Final Plat”), which contains a note, Note # 7, which cryptically states: “additional area required for 50’ R/W as per agreement with Harbor Shore Subdivision.” Hedgepeth, however, neither conducted a title search, nor contacted either the Belangias or the Midgettes to inquire about access to the property. Only after he purchased the property at the foreclosure sale 3 did he contact the County Attorney’s office to search for the agreement that he claims he inferred from the cryptic note on the Final Plat. No one at the County Attorney’s office knew of the alleged agreement.

After purchasing the Harbor Shore Tract at the foreclosure sale, Hedgepeth sent employees to view the property, which they accessed via the Drive. The Midgettes warned Hedgepeth’s employees that they had no right to use the Drive, and if they did not vacate the premises, the Midgettes would have them arrested. Fourteen years after purchasing the Harbor Shore Tract, Hedgepeth filed this diversity action against the Association — the successor in title to MDE to Parker’s Landing’s “common areas,” including the Drive 4 — seeking a judgment declaring that Parker’s Landing is subject to an *245 easement benefiting the Harbor Shore Tract via the Drive and declaring that quasi-estoppel precludes the Association from denying the existence of that easement.

Hedgepeth moved for summary judgment. The district court denied the motion, but nevertheless concluded that there were no issues of material fact for trial and proceeded to rule that the evidence supported neither the easement Hedgepeth claimed nor the elements of his quasi-estoppel claim. Although the district court rejected Hedgepeth’s claims, it concluded that Parker’s Landing is subject to two historical easements benefiting the Harbor Shore Tract. Accordingly, it entered a judgment declaring Hedgepeth’s rights as to those historical easements but not the easement Hedgepeth claimed. 5 Hedgepeth filed this appeal. Neither party raises the case’s procedural posture as an issue on appeal. 6 Rather, Hedgepeth frames the issue simply as: “Was Hedgepeth conveyed a right-of-way over [the] Drive from [the Harbor Shore Tract] to U.S. Highway 158 by the final plat of Parker’s Landing subdivision?” (Appellant’s Brief at 1.)

II.

Hedgepeth’s opening brief contends that “Note # 7 on the final plat of the [Parker’s Landing] Subdivision is an express grant of a right-of-way over the Drive to the [Harbor Shore] Tract.” (Appellant’s Brief at 8.) At oral argument, however, Hedge-peth conceded that the Final Plat standing alone could not create an easement and that “you’ve got to go somewhere else”— i.e.

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388 F. App'x 242, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/hedgepeth-v-parkers-landing-property-owners-assn-inc-ca4-2010.