James Wenzel Forbes v. Jason W. Cantwell

CourtCourt of Appeals of Virginia
DecidedSeptember 12, 2023
Docket0212223
StatusPublished

This text of James Wenzel Forbes v. Jason W. Cantwell (James Wenzel Forbes v. Jason W. Cantwell) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Virginia primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
James Wenzel Forbes v. Jason W. Cantwell, (Va. Ct. App. 2023).

Opinion

COURT OF APPEALS OF VIRGINIA PUBLISHED

Present: Judges Malveaux, Ortiz and Causey Argued at Lexington, Virginia

JAMES WENZEL FORBES, ET AL. OPINION BY v. Record No. 0212-22-3 JUDGE DORIS HENDERSON CAUSEY SEPTEMBER 12, 2023 JASON W. CANTWELL

FROM THE CIRCUIT COURT OF ROCKBRIDGE COUNTY Edward K. Stein, Judge

Meredith L. Yoder (Trevor B. Reid; Parker, Pollard, Wilton & Peaden, P.C., on briefs), for appellants.

John B. Simpson (MartinWren, P.C., on brief), for appellee.

This appeal involves an express easement to benefit land, the dominant estate, owned by

James Wenzel Forbes and Desirea Smolka Forbes (“the Forbeses”), burdening the land, the servient

estate, of Jason W. Cantwell (“Cantwell”). After a trial to interpret the terms of the easement and to

clarify, via declaratory judgment, the parties’ rights under the easement, the Forbeses challenge

several of the circuit court’s rulings. Cantwell assigns cross-error to one of the circuit court’s

rulings. For the following reasons, we reverse and remand in part and affirm in part.

BACKGROUND1

Francis and Donna Cantwell owned land on Stoneview Circle in Lexington, Virginia. In

2005, they split their land into two portions—Lots 6 and 7. Francis and Donna Cantwell sold Lot 7

1 “We summarize and review th[e] evidence in the light most favorable to [Cantwell], the prevailing part[y] below.” Pizzarelle v. Dempsey, 259 Va. 521, 525 (2000) (determining whether encroachments within the easement area described in the deed needed to be removed). to Greg Higgins. The deed conveying Lot 7 to Higgins (“Higgins deed”) contained the following

easement, for the benefit of Lot 6, owned by Francis and Donna Cantwell:

The Grantors do hereby RESERVE unto themselves, their heirs and successors in title, a 40[-]foot easement along the westerly boundary of Lot 7, for the purpose or [sic] providing ingress and egress over existing driveway, fencing and landscape buffer for the benefit of Lot 6; said easement being shown on the aforesaid plat.

No plat attached to the deed shows the easement. Lot 7 was foreclosed upon and bought by

Cantwell, the son of Francis and Donna Cantwell. Lot 6 was then foreclosed upon and bought

by the Huntsmans. The Huntsmans sold Lot 6 to the Forbeses, the current owners of Lot 6.

Cantwell remains the current owner of Lot 7. The Forbeses and Cantwell do not contest that

both Lot 6 and Lot 7 are subject to the easement in the Higgins deed. Cantwell owns the servient

estate. The Forbeses own the dominant estate.

Lots 6 and 7 are bound on their southern sides by Stoneview Circle, a public street. The

easement is located on the western side of Lot 7, where Lots 6 and 7 border each other. If one

stands on Stoneview Circle facing Lots 6 and 7, Lot 6 would be on the left, Lot 7 on the right,

and the easement between the two lots, on Lot 7. Although the Forbeses and Cantwell disagree

over the scope of the easement, they agree that the ingress/egress easement provides an “existing

driveway” from Lot 6 to Stoneview Circle.

The circuit court consolidated several claims between the Huntsmans2 and Cantwell and

the Forbeses and Cantwell and held a trial to determine the scope of the easement, interpret the

express easement, and resolve the parties’ claims. The Forbeses requested a declaratory

judgment clarifying the parties’ rights under the easement. They also requested injunctive relief

directing Cantwell to remove fencing and gates within the easement area, prohibiting him from

2 The original dispute over the easement was between the Huntsmans and Cantwell, but once the Huntsmans sold their lot to the Forbeses, the dispute continued between the Forbeses and Cantwell. -2- installing “any gates, fences, landscaping or plantings” and interfering with any such structures

installed by the Forbeses. Although the Forbeses argued that the easement language was

unambiguous, the circuit court ruled that the easement was ambiguous and permitted the

introduction of parol evidence. This parol evidence included testimony from Francis Cantwell,

the original drafter of the easement, about the intent and meaning of the fencing and landscape

easement:

[W]hat was important to us was that the buffer, that we maintain the privacy, because God forbid the Higgins decided to go into the logging business or just clear-cut the place, we would end up staring at this house, which it now was, and staring at neighbors. We would lose all of our privacy. And there was a little fence in there that we had had. It was a piece of two rails split, an[] old split-rail fence and had a couple of rosebushes on it. So I said, well, let’s protect the existing fence, the existing landscape buffer, let’s leave it there.

After hearing all the evidence, the court made the following rulings in its final order,

relevant to this appeal:

1. That the easement for ingress and egress for Lot 6 . . . is located and configured as shown in the Plat attached hereto [the circuit court’s order] as Exhibit “A” . . . [and] is hereby incorporated by reference.

2. That the landscape component[s] of the easement . . . extends forty feet (40') from the western boundary of Lot 7, as otherwise shown on [the attached Plat] and constitutes a negative easement which prevents the owner of Lot 7 from interfering with what was the then-existing landscape buffer, and Cantwell is hereby enjoined from such interference, but such Landscaping Easement does not give the owner of Lot 6 control of or the right to make any changes to any part of Lot 7 outside the Ingress/Egress Easement . . . and the Forbeses are so enjoined.

3. That the fencing component of the easement created by the [Higgins] deed . . . extends forty feet (40') from the western boundary of Lot 7, as otherwise shown on [the attached Plat] and constitutes a negative easement which prevents the owner of Lot 7 from interfering with what was the then-existing fencing, and Cantwell is hereby enjoined from

-3- such interference, but such Fencing Easement does not give the owner of Lot 6 control of or the right to make any changes to any part of Lot 7 outside the Ingress/Egress Easement . . . and the Forbeses are so enjoined.

4. The claims of Cantwell seeking damages against [the] Huntsman[s] for, trespass, waste and/or nuisance with respect to the actions taken by the Huntsmans to regrade, gravel or otherwise improve the gravel driveway within the Ingress/Egress Easement are denied with prejudice.3

5. That the removal of trees and expansion of the driveway . . . outside of the Ingress/Egress Easement, constituted a trespass which was extensive and ongoing after they were given notice for which the Court awards Cantwell judgment for nominal damages in the amount of $5,000.00 against the Huntsmans.

6. That Cantwell is entitled to fence Lot 7 by erecting fencing within the boundaries of Lot 7, but he is not permitted to install gates at the entry of the Ingress/Egress Easement at Stoneview Circle or where the Ingress/Egress Easement is adjacent to the . . . garage on Lot 6. Cantwell is hereby ordered to remove such gates, if any, at either location.4

This appeal follows.

ANALYSIS

On appeal, the Forbeses argue that the circuit court erred in: determining that the

easement language was ambiguous and admitting parol evidence, interpreting the deed to find

that the ingress/egress easement was less than 40 feet wide, finding that the fencing easement

constituted a negative easement, finding that the landscape easement constituted a negative

easement, “failing to enjoin . . . Cantwell from maintaining and erecting fencing within the

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James Wenzel Forbes v. Jason W. Cantwell, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/james-wenzel-forbes-v-jason-w-cantwell-vactapp-2023.