Miller v. Kirkpatrick

833 A.2d 536, 377 Md. 335, 2003 Md. LEXIS 695
CourtCourt of Appeals of Maryland
DecidedOctober 9, 2003
Docket2, Sept. Term, 2003
StatusPublished
Cited by29 cases

This text of 833 A.2d 536 (Miller v. Kirkpatrick) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Maryland primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Miller v. Kirkpatrick, 833 A.2d 536, 377 Md. 335, 2003 Md. LEXIS 695 (Md. 2003).

Opinion

HARRELL, J.

On 31 October 2000, Harold Miller, Jr. and his wife, Bride (“the Millers”), Petitioners here, filed a complaint in the Circuit Court for Dorchester County against Respondents, Roger Kirkpatrick and his wife, Elsie (“the Kirkpatricks”). The complaint was in response to the Kirkpatricks’ installation of two parallel barbed wire fences (“the fences”) along an access road within a right-of-way easement created by deed and benefitting the Millers. Among various claims in the complaint, the Millers sought a declaration to quiet title, damages based on trespass, and an order requiring removal of the fences from the right-of-way.

A three-day trial was held in the spring of 2001. The equitable claims were tried to the court while a jury concurrently considered the damages claim. At the conclusion of all the evidence, the trial judge found, as a matter of law, that the Millers possessed an express grant of a right-of-way easement, twenty feet in width, accomplished by a reservation in a deed, across the Kirkpatricks’ property. The jury then found *341 that the Kirkpatricks were not liable to the Millers for interference with use of the easement or failure to contribute to the maintenance of the roadway within the right-of-way, and declined to award compensatory damages. Following the jury verdict, the trial judge refused to order removal of the fences from the right-of-way. Subsequently, he also denied various post-trial motions filed by the Millers, including a motion for new trial in which the judge’s recusal was sought based on alleged acts of bias against the Millers and their attorneys during the trial.

On direct appeal by the Millers, the Court of Special Appeals, in an unreported opinion, affirmed the judgment. We granted Petitioners’ petition for writ of certiorari, Miller v. Kirkpatrick, 374 Md. 82, 821 A.2d 370 (2003), to consider two questions:

1. Where the Trial Court has declared that a right-of-way is 20 feet in width, was it error for the Trial Court to refuse to grant injunctive relief for the removal of two parallel barbed wire spite fences constructed within the right-of-way, on the basis that the jury refused to award monetary damages for past interference?
2. Does the requirement of this Court in Surratt v. Prince George’s County, 320 Md. 439, 578 A.2d 745 (1990), that under appropriate circumstances, a different judge should hear the evidence on allegations of judicial misconduct, apply to a hearing on post-trial motions where court personnel are prepared to testify about the one-sided misconduct of the Trial Judge before the jury, and that Trial Judge himself puts on the record, his strongly-felt previously undisclosed bias arising from unrelated cases up to three years earlier, against counsel for the dominant tenement, as an apparent explanation for his conduct?

I.

A. Factual Background

We quote from the unreported opinion of the Court of Special Appeals:

*342 “On or about December 9, 1957, Thomas M. Galbreath Jr. and his wife, Ethel, obtained a survey of their property, known as Travers Farm, in order to subdivide it into two distinct parcels. The survey also platted a twenty-foot wide right-of-way as the means of unrestricted access to and from the smaller parcel of property and the public road. The right-of-way is located on the larger parcel, now owned by members of the Kirkpatrick family, and is contiguous to the northern boundary of the smaller property. [Petitioners] own the smaller of the two parcels (the ‘Miller property’), which includes the original residential farmhouse and tillable lands.
“By deed dated February 7, 1958, the Galbreaths conveyed the smaller of the two parcels, including the farmhouse, to Stanton H. Davis and his wife, Ruth Noe Davis. On February 23, 1966, the elder Kirkpatricks acquired the larger parcel. The deed stated that the conveyance was subject tó the right-of-way granted to Mr. and Mrs. Davis. Then, by deed dated October 27, 1977, Mr. and Mrs. Davis conveyed their parcel to [Petitioners]. The deed included an easement for the right-of-way. At the time of the conveyance, the 1957 survey was recorded in the land records. It is undisputed that there were no fences in the right-of-way when it was created.
“Mr. Kirkpatrick initially farmed the Miller property and also maintained the right-of-way. In 1984, however, when the Millers hired another person to farm their land, their relationship with Mr. Kirkpatrick deteriorated substantially. As a result, Mr. Miller assumed primary responsibility for maintenance of the right-of-way, and [Petitioners] claimed that Mr. Kirkpatrick interfered with that effort. According to [Petitioners], Mr. Kirkpatrick repeatedly put obstacles on the road that damaged their equipment and threatened the Millers with physical harm. For example, on one occasion, Mr. Kirkpatrick approached Mr. Miller while holding a rifle, poked Mr. Miller with it in the chest, and threatened bodily harm if Mr. Miller continued to maintain the entire right-of- *343 way. That incident was the subject of a criminal prosecution.”

In July 2000, Mr. Kirkpatrick erected two parallel barbed wire fences, inside the drainage ditches, along each side of the access road, approximately twelve feet apart. The fences foreclosed the Millers’ ability to use or maintain forty percent of the right-of-way and prevented access directly from the right-of-way to the Millers’ farm fields. Mr. Kirkpatrick testified that he erected the fences “to protect [his] property” because he “did not want Mr. Miller to steal it.” Respondents’ daughter, Deborah Kirkpatrick Harrison, when asked: “What function does the fence serve as you understand it?,” replied “I think nothing says keep out more than a barb wire fence.”

B. Procedural History In the Trial Court

As noted above, the Millers filed a complaint in the Circuit Court for Dorchester County on 31 October 2000. Their flagship claims sought a declaration to quiet title, removal of the fences, and damages based on trespass.

At the conclusion of the evidence at the three day trial, the trial judge found preliminarily, as a matter of law, that the right-of-way existed and was twenty feet wide. The judge then submitted the following pertinent questions to the jury on the verdict sheet:

1. Do you find that the Defendants, or any of them, are liable to the Plaintiffs for intrusion upon their seclusion?
Yes No
If your answer is “no”, go to question 2.
2. Do you find that the Defendants or any of them, are liable to the Plaintiffs for interference with and/or for failure to contribute to the maintenance of the common roadway?
*344 Yes No

The jury answered “no” to both questions.

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Bluebook (online)
833 A.2d 536, 377 Md. 335, 2003 Md. LEXIS 695, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/miller-v-kirkpatrick-md-2003.