Jones v. Beavers

269 S.E.2d 775, 221 Va. 214, 1980 Va. LEXIS 238
CourtSupreme Court of Virginia
DecidedAugust 28, 1980
DocketRecord 781086
StatusPublished
Cited by11 cases

This text of 269 S.E.2d 775 (Jones v. Beavers) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Virginia primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Jones v. Beavers, 269 S.E.2d 775, 221 Va. 214, 1980 Va. LEXIS 238 (Va. 1980).

Opinion

CARRICO, J.,

delivered the opinion of the Court.

This appeal is from a decree declaring the rights of the parties in a 30-foot road and a landing shown on the plat of a waterfront subdivision. The plaintiffs, Gladys S. Beavers and others, 1 are the owners of lots or parcels derived from a portion of a 110-acre tract formerly belonging to a common grantor of all the parties to this proceeding. The defendant, Thomas H. Jones, is the owner of the residue of the 110-acre tract; the subdivision plat locates the subject road and landing on this residue.

In the court below, the plaintiffs filed a motion for declaratory judgment against the defendant. In their motion, the plaintiffs sought a determination that they were entitled to an easement in, and the use of, the 30-foot road and the landing. The plaintiffs also prayed for an injunction restraining the defendant from interfering with the exercise of their rights in the property in question.

Responding, the defendant denied that the plaintiffs had any interest in the road or the landing. By way of cross-bill, the defendant sought an injunction prohibiting the plaintiffs from interfering with his use of the disputed property.

In its final decree, the trial court held that the plaintiffs were “entitled as a matter of law, in conjunction with the defendant, to the use of and an appurtenant easement in and across the 30 foot road . . . and also in the landing.” From this decree, the defendant has appealed.

*216 The final decree shows that the trial court disposed of the case solely upon “the pleadings and the exhibits introduced herein.” Apparently, the parties submitted the matter without introducing evidence other than the exhibits. Consequently, the record on appeal consists entirely of the pleadings and the exhibits.

From this skeletonized record, it appears that, in 1965, Elise S. Bennett was the owner of the 110-acre tract from which the properties of the plaintiffs and the defendant are derived. The tract bordered Whitings Creek (or Whitens Creek) on the north and State Route 33 on the south.

By separate deeds dated June 11, 1965, Mrs. Bennett conveyed to Frank B. and Lucy G. Sadler 2 Lot A and to the plaintiffs Gladys S. and W. Sherwood Beavers (mother and son) Lot 6, 3 both as shown “on the plat of survey hereinafter referred to.” Later recitals in the deeds state that, for a metes and bounds description of the property conveyed, “reference is made to the plat of survey made by W. H. Stiff, C.L.S., dated March 8, 1965.”

A copy of the Stiff plat is attached to the Sadler deed, and the copy is reproduced at the end of this opinion. The surveyor’s certificate states that the plat “represents 7 Lots of the Queens Point Subdivision . . . and are. . . the 7 numbered Lots and 7 Lots not numbered and are being developed.” The plat depicts the relative locations of Queen’s Point Drive, the 30-foot road, the landing, the 7 numbered lots, Lot A, the 7 unnumbered lots, and a portion of the remaining land of Mrs. Bennett.

The Sadler and Beavers deeds both include an “easement of right of way” over Queen’s Point Drive to Route 33. Both deeds contain also certain covenants, restrictions, and conditions “binding on all lots in . . . Queen’s Point Subdivision.” One of these provisions states that Mrs. Bennett “will not be responsible or liable for any accidents or damages to persons or property on any lot, pier or piers or roads leading thereto.”

By deed dated April 15, 1966, Mrs. Bennett conveyed to the County of Middlesex a strip of land, the strip “being forty (40') feet in width and extending northwardly [from Route 33] approximately five-tenths (.5) of a mile to the road leading to the landing on *217 Whiting Creek.” A plat attached to the deed shows a road marked “To Landing,” leading northeastwardly from the strip. 4

By deed dated January 13, 1967, Mrs. Bennett conveyed to L. L. Martin 102.65 acres, constituting the residue of her original 110-acre tract. The deed refers to the Stiff plat to exclude from the conveyance the land previously transferred to the Sadlers and the Beavers.

During his ownership, by reference to the Stiff plat, Martin conveyed Lot 7 to the plaintiffs Gladys S. and W. Sherwood Beavers, Lot 8 to the plaintiffs Alexander and Elva W. Carter, and Lots 10, 11, and 12 to the plaintiffs Charles L. and Dorothy H. Tomlin. The Tomlin deed designates the 30-foot road as the eastern and southern boundaries of the property conveyed by the deed.

In addition, Martin conveyed to the plaintiffs Douglas M. and Vivian W. Pierce a 3-acre parcel fronting 450 feet on the westerly side of Queen’s Point Drive, adjacent to the southerly line of Lot A, and consisting of a portion of the unnumbered lots shown on the Stiff plat. The Pierce deed, however, makes no reference to the Stiff plat.

Also included in the record is a deed conveying Lot 9, by reference to the Stiff plat, from Mellville T. Chick and wife to the plaintiffs Russell E. Carter, Sr., and Lena M. Carter. The deed recites that Lot 9 was acquired by the Chicks from L. L. Martin. The deed states further that Lot 9 is bounded on the east by “a cove of Whitings Creek and a landing.” 5

In February, 1973, Martin conveyed to Queen’s Point Limited Partnership 91 acres, constituting the land then remaining of the original 110-acre Bennett tract. Then, in May, 1974, the partnership conveyed the same land to the defendant, Thomas H. Jones. Neither the deed nor an attached plat refers to the 30-foot road or the landing. Following his purchase, the defendant “blocked [the plaintiffs’] use of the landing.” The present litigation resulted.

At the outset of our discussion of the issues, we note that the plaintiffs make no claim that the 30-foot road and the landing have been dedicated to public use or that, as members of the public, the plaintiffs have any rights in the road and the landing. We note *218 further that, on brief and at the bar of this court, the defendant’s counsel conceded that the plaintiffs, with the exception of the Pierces, are entitled to the use of the 30-foot road. In his turn during oral argument, counsel for the plaintiffs conceded that, because the deed to the Pierces did not refer to the Stiff plat, the Pierces are “excluded” from use of the 30-foot road and the landing. Accordingly, we dispose of all issues concerning the 30-foot road by declaring that the plaintiffs, with the exception of the Pierces, have an easement in and the right to use the road as shown on the Stiff plat. And, with respect to the Pierces’ alleged right to use the landing, we declare that they are without such right.

This leaves for decision the question whether the plaintiffs, with the exception of the Pierces, are entitled, as a matter of law and of private right, to an easement in, and the use of, the landing.

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Bluebook (online)
269 S.E.2d 775, 221 Va. 214, 1980 Va. LEXIS 238, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/jones-v-beavers-va-1980.