Lawrence v. National Fruit Product Co.

43 Va. Cir. 516, 1997 Va. Cir. LEXIS 428
CourtWinchester County Circuit Court
DecidedNovember 4, 1997
DocketCase No. (Chancery) 97-196
StatusPublished

This text of 43 Va. Cir. 516 (Lawrence v. National Fruit Product Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Winchester County Circuit Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Lawrence v. National Fruit Product Co., 43 Va. Cir. 516, 1997 Va. Cir. LEXIS 428 (Va. Super. Ct. 1997).

Opinion

By Judge John E. Wetsel, Jr.

This case came before the Court for trial on October 31,1997, on the issue of the parties’ respective rights to own or use Strother’s Lane, a road which now bisects the property of National Fruit but which historically was die northern boundary of the property which National Fruit owned south of Strother’s Lane. The parties appeared with their counsel, and evidence was heard ore terns and argued by counsel. Upon consideration whereof the Court has made the following decision determining that Strother’s Lane is a private road ova* which the Lawrences, Smith, and die City of Winchester have a right of ingress to and egress from their respective properties and that National Fruit may not place a gate across the right of way.

I. Findings of Fact

The following facts are found by the greater weight of the evidence.

[517]*517A. The Character of the Parties 'Property

Plaintiff Lawrence and Defendant Smith own property at the western end of a road in Winchester, Virginia, called Strother’s Lane. The Lawrence and Smith properties are part of the former Strother Farm, which originally consisted of several hundred acres lying to the west of the old Town of Winchester. When Winchester was originally platted in 1752, the property embraced by what came to be called the Strother Farm was not within the town. As late as 1921, the Strother Farm was not in the City of Winchester (see Plaintiff’s Exhibit 21), and the eastern boundary of the Strother Farm was the city limit of the City of Winchester. Both the Smith and Lawrence properties are undeveloped and are pastoral in character despite their now being within the City Winchester and surrounded by development

National Fruit Product Company (“NFP”) has assembled a tract of land comprised of over sixty acres in the City of Winchester, which lies on the north side of Fairmont Avenue and east of the old Strother Farm. See NFP Ex. 3. National Fruit’s property contains an extensive apple processing facility and attendant structures and uses.

National Fruit acquired its first parcel on Fairmont Avenue in 1915, and in 1926 it built an apple processing plant there whose operations have continued and greatly expanded since that time.

Until 1935, all of National Fruit’s land lay south of the road which has come to be called Strother’s Lane. NFP’s deeds prior to 1985 describe its northern boundary as “Strother’s Lane” (Plaintiff’s Exhibit 1), “the south side of a private toad” (NFP Exhibit 6), and “Strother Lane on tire north” (NFP Ex. 7).

hi 1985, NFP acquired the property lying north of Strother’s Lane from Shenandoah Apple, which deed into NFP describes the property’s southern boundary as “a concrete monument in the Northern Line of Strother’s Lane; then with said line.” (NFP Ex. 9.) See also NFP Ex. 16, which uses similar language.

The City of Winchester has no deed of dedication or other recorded instrument conveying any interest in Strother’s Lane to the City of Winchester for use as a public road.

hi 1953 tiie City of Winchester acquired a reservoir site on the north side of Strother’s Lane (Frederick County Deed Book 230, page 48), and all of the City’s activities on Strother’s Lane date from that time.

[518]*518B. Strother b Lane h status as shown by the title instruments

Deed to National Fruit dated April 1,1915, recorded in Winchester Deed Book 31 at page 91, which shows Strother’s Lane as a boundary.

Deed to National Fruit dated March 1,1923, recorded in Winchester Deed Book41 at page 89, which shows Strother’s Lane as a boundary.

Deed to National Fruit dated June 28, 1949, recorded in Winchester Deed Book 73 at page 203, which shows Strother’s Lane as a boundary.

Deed to National Fruit dated July 31, 1985, recorded in Winchester Deed Book 194 at page 724, which shows Strother’s Lane as a boundary.

The first reference in NFP’s chain of tide to its property on the south side of Strother’s Lane to a road in the location of the present Strother’s Lane is in the 1859 Deed to NFP’s predecessor in tide, NFP Ex. 35, which describes die property as "bounded on the north by a lane [Strother’s Lane] running westward from the North Frederick Turnpike Road [now Fairmont Avenue].”

The first reference in NFP’s chain of tide to its property on the north side of Strother’s Lane (the former Shenandoah Apple property) to a road in die location of die present Strother's Lane is in the 1853 Deed to NFP’s predecessor in tide, NFP Ex. 25, which describes the property as going to a “comer in the old Weaver Road [Strother’s Lane] then dong the road.”

By 1867 the private lane at the location of Strother’s Lane was clearly acknowledged by the adjoining property owners, because tire February 23, 1867, Wolfe deed (NFP Ex. 34) describes the property, which comprises National Fruit parcels A, B, and D on NFP Ex. 3, as being twenty-one feet from Thatcher’s line. Thatcher owned die property to the north of the lane and is in die Shenandoah Apple chain.

The 1953 Plat of the City’s reservoir site, which is recorded in Frederick County Deed Book 230, at page 50, and which was prepared by the City Engineer, does not show Strother's Lane as a public road.

The Lawrences' and Smith’s predecessors in tide, The Clearbrook Woolen Company, Inc., and William H. Lawrence and Nancy C. Lawrence, as well as William C. Miller and others treated Strother’s Lane as a roadway and identified it as such in die chain of tide, reference being made to a 1916 deed showing the property to be at "the Western terminus of Strother’s Lane,” and to a 1942 Deed identifying a "present roadway,” shown on an attached plat as Strother’s Lane. Also, J. Fred Strother, a previous owner, referenced this roadway, also called the "Old Pughtown Road,” in anT889 Deed of Trust

The express easement over Strother’s Lane was also implicitly recognized by National Fruit when it conveyed a 9,768 square foot parcel to Clearbrook Woolen Company, Incorporated, in 1949, citing Strother’s Lane as a boundary [519]*519and without providing any express right of way to Fairmont Avenue, other than mentioning Strother’s Lane. Plaintiffs Exhibit 10.

C. Historical References to Strother Lane on Maps

The 1857 Washington Blythe Map, Plaintiffs Ex. 15, shows a "Lane” in die location of Strother’s Lane.

The 1894 USGS Map, Plaintiffs Ex. 18, and the 1885 Atlas of Frederick County, Plaintiffs Ex. 20, show a road along the course of Strother’s Lane which does not traverse the Strother Farm but rather ends well within the eastern part of the Strother Farm at or near the present Edward Lawrence residence.

The 1939 DeGrange Map of the City of Winchester, Plaintiffs Exhibit 33, shows a road in the location of Strother’s Lane, but that road is not designated as such nor is it listed in the Sheet Index on the map.

The 1921 Boundary Line Map of the City of Winchester shows Strother’s Lane. Plaintiffs Exhibit 24.

D. Historical Use of Strother i Lane

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Bluebook (online)
43 Va. Cir. 516, 1997 Va. Cir. LEXIS 428, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/lawrence-v-national-fruit-product-co-vaccwinchester-1997.