Pamela Jean Hayes v. Larry Brady

CourtWest Virginia Supreme Court
DecidedJune 8, 2016
Docket15-0518
StatusPublished

This text of Pamela Jean Hayes v. Larry Brady (Pamela Jean Hayes v. Larry Brady) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering West Virginia Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Pamela Jean Hayes v. Larry Brady, (W. Va. 2016).

Opinion

STATE OF WEST VIRGINIA SUPREME COURT OF APPEALS FILED June 8, 2016 PAMELA JEAN HAYES, released at 3:00 p.m. RORY L. PERRY, II CLERK Plaintiff Below, Petitioner SUPREME COURT OF APPEALS OF WEST VIRGINIA

vs.) No. 15-0518 (Upshur County Civil Action No. 14-C-123)

LARRY BRADY AND DAWNA MICHELLE BOONE BRADY, Defendants Below, Respondents

MEMORANDUM DECISION

Petitioner, plaintiff below, Pamela Jean Hayes (“Ms. Hayes”), appeals from an order of the Circuit Court of Upshur County, West Virginia, granting the motion of the Respondents, defendants below, Larry Brady and Dawna Michelle Boone Brady (“the Bradys”), to dismiss Ms. Hayes’ complaint on grounds that her claims were res judicata.1 The order further denied Ms. Hayes’ motion for relief from judgment in a prior action on grounds that Ms. Hayes’ allegations in support of the motion were immaterial and thus insufficient to establish fraud, accident, or mistake.

This Court has considered the parties’ briefs and oral arguments, as well as the record on appeal. Upon consideration of the standard of review and the applicable law, the Court finds no substantial question of law and no prejudicial error. For these reasons, a memorandum decision affirming the circuit court’s order is appropriate under Rule 21 of the Revised Rules of Appellate Procedure.

On March 13, 2013, Ms. Hayes filed a pro se complaint against the Bradys, Case No. 13-C-29, seeking injunctive relief. Ms. Hayes alleged that she had a longstanding right-of-way across the Bradys’ property, which had been blocked by the Bradys, thus denying her access to her own property. In their answer, the Bradys denied that the right-of-way in question crossed their property, alleging that “the right-of-way described by [Ms. Hayes] in her complaint links [Ms. Hayes’] property with the public highway without going across properties of [the Bradys].”

1 Ms Hayes is represented in this appeal by J. Burton Hunter, III. The Bradys are represented by Trena Williams.

The parties proceeded with discovery and filed cross motions for summary judgment, both of which were denied by the circuit court. Ms. Hayes filed a motion to amend the complaint, which was granted over objection; the amended complaint sought damages as well as injunctive relief, but did not assert any additional causes of action. On March 20, 2014, the case was tried to the circuit court on one theory only: that Ms. Hayes’ deed to her property contained a right-of-way across the Bradys’ property, said right-of-way originally established in a 1924 predecessor deed and contained in every deed thereafter. In this regard, it should be noted that, although the court had precluded Ms. Hayes from moving any exhibits into evidence as a sanction for her failure to provide an exhibit list, Ms. Hayes was not prejudiced because the circuit court took judicial notice of all the deeds in her chain of title. The Bradys contended that the language in the 1924 deed established nothing more than a personal license, not a right-of-way.

At the conclusion of Ms. Hayes’ case-in-chief, the court granted the Bradys’ motion for judgment as a matter of law. In its order entered on September 29, 2014, the circuit court first quoted the relevant language from the November 7, 1924, deed from W.E. Boone to Robert Boone:

The said parties of the first part also reserve the right of egress and regress over and through the above described tract of land to and from a tract of land now owned by them lying east of this tract.

Painstakingly tracking Ms. Hayes’ chain of title from the 1924 Boone deed forward, the circuit court found that the first deed to contain any more descriptive language concerning the “right of egress and regress” was a deed from Gary Samples to Glenn Samples dated December 1, 1990:

For the aforesaid consideration, there is further granted and conveyed unto the said party of the second part a right of way for ingress and egress from the Wilsontown Road to the tract herein conveyed over and across the present roadway, said right of way being heretofore conveyed to A.M. Samples in a deed from Okey Boone, et ux. . . .

The circuit court noted that the exact language in the Samples deed was the language set forth in Ms. Hayes’ deed, dated June 21, 1994, wherein she purchased the property from Glenn Samples.

The circuit court held that Ms. Hayes’ case failed because the language of the

1924 deed was insufficient as a matter of law to establish a right-of-way, as it contained no information as to the location of the right-of-way, its starting or ending points, or its dimensions; and it had no information as to physical and/or external markers from which such location could be inferred. “Given the utterly vague and ambiguous description contained within the deed, there is simply no indication of where the contemplated right of way once existed or if it is the same right-of-way now sought by [Ms. Hayes].” The circuit court acknowledged that Ms. Hayes’ deed specifically references a right-of-way from Wilsontown Road across the present roadway on the Bradys’ property, but held that Ms. Hayes’ grantor, Glenn Samples, “may not give away that which one does not have.” In short, Mr. Samples could not expand upon or enlarge the right-of-way originally conveyed from W. E. Boone to Robert Boone in 1924.

At the conclusion of its order, the circuit court noted that “this ruling does not touch upon the issues of presumptive easement and easement by necessity. These issues were not pled or identified in [Ms. Hayes’] Complaint or Amended Complaint and are not properly before the Court at this time.”

Ms. Hayes did not appeal the circuit court’s ruling. Instead, she retained counsel and, on November 25, 2014, filed a second lawsuit against the Bradys, Case No. 14-C-123, titled “Civil Complaint and Motion for Relief Under Rule 60(b)(1).” In her complaint, Ms. Hayes alleged that the location of her right-of-way could be established “through documentary evidence, testamentary evidence, and a view of the property”; that if Ms. Hayes does not have a right-of-way, she could establish her entitlement to a way of necessity; and that she was entitled to relief from the judgment in the earlier case, No. 13-C-29, because the court’s decision was based on the Bradys’ mistake or misrepresentation that “the Wilsontown Road was different than the Salem Ridge Road.” The Bradys filed a motion to dismiss, alleging that the matters set forth in the lawsuit were barred by the doctrine of res judicata.

On April 27, 2015, following a hearing and review of the record in No. 13-C-29, the court granted the Bradys’ motion to dismiss, finding that Ms. Hayes had a full and fair opportunity to litigate all of her claims in the earlier case and that the claims were therefore res judicata. The court further denied Ms. Hayes’ motion for relief under Rule 60(b)(1) of the West Virginia Rules of Civil Procedure, finding that the alleged mistake or misrepresentation by the Bradys at trial “had no impact on the Court’s finding that the original attempted reservation in the [Boone] deed . . . was insufficient as a matter of law.”

This appeal followed.2

With respect to the circuit court’s ruling on the Bradys’ motion to dismiss, “‘“[a]ppellate review of a circuit court’s order granting a motion to dismiss a complaint is de novo.” Syllabus point 3, State ex rel. McGraw v. Scott Runyan Pontiac-Buick, Inc., 194 W. Va. 770, 461 S.E.2d 516 (1995).’ Syl. Pt. 1, Longwell v. Bd. of Educ. Of the Cnty. Of Marshall, 213 W. Va. 486, 583 S.E.2d 109 (2003).” Syl. pt. 5, Malone v. Potomac Highlands Airport Auth., No. 14-0849, 2015 WL 5928513, ___ W. Va.

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Pamela Jean Hayes v. Larry Brady, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/pamela-jean-hayes-v-larry-brady-wva-2016.