Malloy v. Reyes

61 V.I. 163, 2014 WL 3697332, 2014 V.I. Supreme LEXIS 38
CourtSupreme Court of The Virgin Islands
DecidedJuly 22, 2014
DocketS. Ct. Civil No. 2012-0081
StatusPublished
Cited by30 cases

This text of 61 V.I. 163 (Malloy v. Reyes) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of The Virgin Islands primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Malloy v. Reyes, 61 V.I. 163, 2014 WL 3697332, 2014 V.I. Supreme LEXIS 38 (virginislands 2014).

Opinion

OPINION OF THE COURT

(July 22, 2014)

CABRET, Associate Justice.

Lori Gilmore Malloy appeals a Superior Court judgment holding that an unpaved trail providing access to her property on St. John is no longer a public right-of-way. We reverse because the Superior Court erred in concluding that the trail was abandoned and that, as a result, the trail lost its public status. Furthermore, we remand for the Superior Court to set out the metes and bounds of the public easement.

I. FACTUAL AND PROCEDURAL BACKGROUND

First settled by Danish colonists in the 1720s, the east end peninsula of St. John was an isolated and sparsely populated area of the Danish West Indies. In 1780, Peter Oxholm surveyed the islands of the Danish West Indies for the Danish government. At that time, there were five settlements on the east end, linked to Cruz Bay on the west end — the administrative and economic center of the island — by a road Oxholm marked in yellow. This road connected the wider network of roads throughout the island to the settlements in the east end peninsula by first running south near the coast then turning east, toward Newfound Bay, to reach inland settlements at higher elevations. Another map created by Oxholm in 1800 depicted the same road marked in yellow connecting the east end community to the rest of St. John.

Between 1822 and 1913, the east end was divided into fifty-one parcels, with deeds from this time referencing a public road in the area. Then, in 1916, Denmark and the United States entered into a treatytransferring the Danish West Indies ■— comprising the islands of St. John, transferring [168]*168the Danish West Indies — comprising the islands of St. John, St. Thomas, St. Croix, Water Island, and associated islands and cays — to the United States.2 Soon after assuming control over these islands on March 31,1917, the U.S. government — like Denmark before it — sent a survey team to the newly established United States Virgin Islands. The resulting survey map, produced by the U.S. Coast and Geodetic Survey (“CGS”), depicted the east end road turning inland into the hills of the east end like Oxholm’s maps before it.

[[Image here]]

St. John’s east end peninsula as depicted in the U.S. Coast and Geodetic Survey map. Malloy introduced the full map as an exhibit at trial.

[169]*169The CGS’s accompanying descriptive report explained that “[t]he roads are scarcely more than good mountain trails. As they are all public roads and maintained they are shown in full.” This map was republished in 1934, still marking the road as originally depicted in Oxholm’s maps, but later 1958 and 1982 reproductions showed the road on the east end taking a different path — continuing south along the coast instead of turning inland. Later maps maintained by the Virgin Islands Government similarly showed the road continuing south along the coast. This road, running to Long Bay at the southern tip of the east end peninsula, is commonly referred to as East End Road and is officially designated as Route 10 by the Virgin Islands Government. The portion of this road turning inland toward Newfound Bay remains unpaved, and is still marked on more recent survey maps with notes indicating uncertainty as to whether this portion of the road — commonly referred to as Old Broad Road — is a public right-of-way or just a trail on private property.

In 1993, Malloy purchased one of the parcels on the east end, Parcel 6S of Estate Hansen Bay, also called “Pleasant Lookout.” After purchasing Parcel 6S, Malloy used Old Broad Road several times to access her property before leaving the island in 2000. In 2004, the owners of neighboring Parcel 6T, “Estate Hard Labor,” and Parcel 9A of Newfound Bay, agreed to grant one another easements over the portion of the road crossing their properties, and to divide the cost of paving and expanding Old Broad Road to make Parcels 6T and 9A accessible by vehicle. On April 11, 2008, Malloy was informed by email that the Virgin Islands Department of Public Works (“DPW”) issued a permit allowing the owners of Parcels 6T and 9A to develop a private roadway that she would not be able to use without obtaining an easement. See 20 V.I.C. § 7(a) (“No person shall cut, grade, construct or cover with concrete or any other surface material any private road or driveway which intersects with a public road without first applying for, and obtaining, a permit from the Commissioner of Public Works.”).

Malloy returned in 2009 to discover a chain and “no trespassing” sign blocking Old Broad Road. She then brought this action against the owners of the neighboring properties and the Government of the Virgin Islands, seeking a declaratory judgment that Old Broad Road is a public right-of-way — or alternatively that she is entitled to a private prescriptive easement, easement by implication, or easement by necessity — and seeking injunctive relief ensuring access to her property.

[170]*170The Superior Court held a two-day bench trial beginning May 8, 2012. During the course of trial, Malloy testified first, followed by longtime east end residents Violet Sewer Mahabir, Guy Benjamin, and Kendell Antony, who agreed that Old Broad Road has always been considered a public right-of-way by the community, with Mahabir and Benjamin testifying that a DPW employee maintained a portion of the road from 1956 to sometime in the 1970s. This maintenance included relocating and straightening a portion of the road that was blocked by a boulder, allowing people to reach the house immediately west of Parcel 6S3 on Old Broad Road by vehicle.

Malloy also called historian George Tyson to provide expert testimony on the history of roads on the east end. Tyson testified that he had examined the historical documents, including the Oxholm and CGS maps, and concluded that Old Broad Road was a public right-of-way, or — as described in Danish times — a “King’s Road.” He based this conclusion partly on his determination that by marking this right-of-way in yellow in the 1780 and 1800 maps, Oxholm was marking it as a public road maintained by Danish colonial authorities. During Tyson’s research, he also came across two deeds — one from 1835 and another from 1912 — transferring land in the area, both referencing a public road in the area of what is now called Old Broad Road. Finally, Tyson testified that based on his analysis, the road depicted in the Oxholm and CGS maps ended at the top of the hill where Parcel 6S is located.

Malloy also introduced the video deposition testimony of Marvin Berning. In his deposition, Beming stated that he has extensive experience surveying the east end of St. John and served as a Special Master in property disputes in the Virgin Islands. He testified that he has done extensive surveying in the east end to determine property boundaries, searching through property records in the Virgin Islands and [171]*171Denmark, interviewing longtime residents, and commissioning aerial photography. Beming’s analysis resulted in the same conclusion as Tyson’s, that the road marked in the Oxholm and CGS maps ran to the top of the hill on Parcel 6S, and was consistently identified in these historical maps as a public right-of-way. Following Beming’s testimony, Malloy rested.

The Government then called Chester Paul, a DPW Territorial Surveyor.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
61 V.I. 163, 2014 WL 3697332, 2014 V.I. Supreme LEXIS 38, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/malloy-v-reyes-virginislands-2014.