Louis W. Epstein Family Partnership Levitz Furniture Corporation, Intervenor in D.C. v. Kmart Corporation

13 F.3d 762, 1994 U.S. App. LEXIS 504, 1993 WL 548155
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Third Circuit
DecidedJanuary 12, 1994
Docket93-1516
StatusPublished
Cited by157 cases

This text of 13 F.3d 762 (Louis W. Epstein Family Partnership Levitz Furniture Corporation, Intervenor in D.C. v. Kmart Corporation) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Third Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Louis W. Epstein Family Partnership Levitz Furniture Corporation, Intervenor in D.C. v. Kmart Corporation, 13 F.3d 762, 1994 U.S. App. LEXIS 504, 1993 WL 548155 (3d Cir. 1994).

Opinion

OPINION OF THE COURT

HUTCHINSON, Circuit Judge.

Appellant, Kmart Corporation (“Kmart”), appeals an order of the United States District Court for the Eastern District of Pennsylvania. In that order, the district court permanently enjoined Kmart from constructing certain barriers and traffic control devices on a piece of its property. Appellee, the Louis W. Epstein Family Partnership (“Epstein”), holds an easement over the Kmart property. The easement is- dedicated to ingress and egress from Epstein’s landlocked parcel. The district court’s order also enjoined Kmart from removing a sign on its property that had been erected and maintained by Epstein’s tenant, Levitz Furniture Co. (“Levitz”). It held that Levitz had an implied easement or, in the alternative, an easement by estoppel, permitting the sign on the Kmart parcel. Finally, the injunction prohibited Kmart generally from future violations of the Declaration of Easements. See Louis W. Epstein Family Partnership v. Kmart Corp., 828 F.Supp. 328 (E.D.Pa.1993).

Kmart asserts that its proposed plan to improve the disputed area by constructing traffic control devices does not interfere with the purpose of the easement. Kmart also challenges the injunction as overly restrictive and broad. We agree with the district court that Kmart’s proposed plan would substantially interfere, in some respects, with rights specifically conveyed in the Declaration of Easements, but we conclude that Epstein may not unreasonably enforce the easement to exclude all of the improvements Kmart plans. Thus we hold that the injunction as drafted by the district court is overly broad. We will, therefore, remand this case to the district court so that it may modify the injunction in a manner consistent with this opinion.

Kmart also contends that Levitz has not shown it has either an easement by implication or an easement by estoppel to maintain its sign on Kmart property. We agree. Thus, we will reverse the district court’s determination that Levitz has an easement to maintain its sign on the Kmart parcel. 1

I.

Prior to October 21, 1975, Louis W. Epstein (“Louis”) and Morris Epstein (“Morris”) owned a parcel of land on MacArthur Road in Whitehall Township, Lehigh County, Pennsylvania, as tenants in common. Levitz leased the northwestern portion of the parcel since 1962. On October 21, 1975, Morris and Louis divided the parcel. Louis acquired *765 sole ownership of the part Levitz leased and the land that lay immediately to the northwest of the Levitz parcel (“the dominant estate” or “Louis’s parcel”). Morris acquired the remainder of the land (“the servient estate” or “Morris’s parcel”). This division of the property would have land-locked Louis’s parcel but for the contemporaneous Declaration of Easements Louis and Morris executed and recorded. It established an “L-shaped” non-exclusive right-of-way across Morris’s property to secure ingress and egress from Louis’s property. The easement area is 100 feet wide at MaeArthur Road and then turns right at slightly less than a right angle to form the second leg which is 50 feet wide. The second leg leads to Louis’s property.

The Declaration states that the purpose of the easement is for “ingress, egress, and regress” to both parcels. Appellant’s Appendix (“App.”) at 112. The Declaration also states that “[n]o barriers, fences, curbs or other obstruction to the free and unhampered use of said easement area and right of way shall hereafter be permitted.” Id. It provides that maintenance expenses incurred in the upkeep of the easement, including the “painting of direction signals for the flow of traffic on said area,” will be shared by the parties. Id. at 113.

. At present, the 100-feet-wide portion of the easement is paved and access is gained from MaeArthur Road through two thirty-five-foot cuts in the curb, one for ingress and one for egress.

In 1963, before division of the original parcel, Levitz had erected and paid for a sign along MaeArthur Road, on what became the servient estate, outside the area which was to become the easement of way. The sign directs traffic to Levitz’s store which is set 518 feet from MaeArthur Road. At all times Levitz has assumed the expense of lighting the sign and paying for its maintenance. Neither the severance agreement nor the Declaration of Easements mentions the sign.

On November 4, 1992, Kmart acquired the servient estate from Morris for the purpose of erecting a shopping center that would house a number of retail establishments including a Kmart store. As part of its development plan, Kmart proposed substantial modifications to the easement area including erection of concrete barriers, painting of directional traffic lines, including an overhead sign, and erection of traffic control devices. The development plan also proposed moving the Levitz sign, which now sits adjacent to MaeArthur Road, in order to allow construction of a deceleration lane on MaeArthur Road.

The district court found that this plan would require all patrons who wish ingress to Louis’s parcel and the Levitz store to .use a right-hand lane fourteen feet wide, as the only lane from which a right-hand turn could be made. Epstein, 828 F.Supp. at 334-35. Patrons exiting Louis’s parcel and the Levitz store would be confined to two lanes of the easement which then widens to four lanes. The district court also found,- under the proposed plan, that delivery trucks, so-called “eighteen wheelers,” would be forced to go outside the lane marked for entry to Levitz’s store in order to complete the right-hand turn necessary to gain access to the Levitz parking area. Id. at 336.

In December of 1992, Epstein filed suit in the Court of Common Pleas of Lehigh County seeking injunctive relief. It claimed that Kmart’s proposed development plan violated the Declaration of Easements. Kmart removed the case to federal court and, shortly thereafter, Levitz intervened and sought in-junctive relief to prohibit removal of its - sign. Levitz and Epstein filed a motion for a pre-liminary injunction which the district court consolidated into a trial on the merits under Federal Rule of Civil Procedure 65(a)(2). The district court issued findings of fact and conclusions of law and permanently enjoined Kmart from erecting barriers or directional devices in the easement area. The injunction also restricted Kmart from all future violations of the Declaration. Holding that Levitz had obtained an easement over Kmart’s land both by estoppel and implication, the district court also enjoined Kmart from removing Levitz’s sign.

Kmart filed a timely notice of appeal.

II.

While we will reverse factual conclusions of the district court only if they are *766 clearly erroneous, see Fed.R.Civ.P. 52(a), we exercise plenary review over the trial court’s choice and interpretation of legal precepts and its application of those precepts to the historical facts. Universal Minerals, Inc. v. C.A. Hughes & Co., 669 F.2d 98, 102 (3d Cir.1981).

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
13 F.3d 762, 1994 U.S. App. LEXIS 504, 1993 WL 548155, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/louis-w-epstein-family-partnership-levitz-furniture-corporation-ca3-1994.