Presidential Gardens/Duke Street Ltd. Partnership v. Salisbury Slye, Ltd.

802 F.2d 106
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Fourth Circuit
DecidedOctober 1, 1986
DocketNo. 85-2353
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 802 F.2d 106 (Presidential Gardens/Duke Street Ltd. Partnership v. Salisbury Slye, Ltd.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Fourth Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Presidential Gardens/Duke Street Ltd. Partnership v. Salisbury Slye, Ltd., 802 F.2d 106 (4th Cir. 1986).

Opinion

ERVIN, Circuit Judge:

Salisbury Slye, Ltd. (Slye) appeals the district court’s decision that Slye defaulted on agreements for the purchase of real estate from Presidential Gardens/Duke Street Limited Partnership and the individual appellees (hereinafter collectively referred to as Presidential Gardens). We conclude that the recorded deed of vacation, which purported to vacate certain lots and streets of a recorded subdivision included in the agreements, was a nullity. Thus, the deed of vacation afforded no justification for Slye’s refusal to settle under the agreements. Accordingly, we affirm.

I.

In March 1984, the parties entered into three agreements under which Presidential Gardens agreed to sell certain real estate in Alexandria, Virginia to Slye. The property consisted of land developed with Presidential Gardens Apartments and adjacent undeveloped land. The undeveloped land was subject in part to a recorded subdivision plat, the Sunnyside Subdivision.

Pertinent to this appeal, the agreements provided that Slye was required to pay an earnest money deposit of approximately $200,000 into escrow, which would be for[108]*108feited if Slye defaulted.1 In July, the parties executed addenda to the agreements which extended the original settlement date to “on or before November 1, 1984, time being of the essence.” In consideration of the extension, the escrow deposit was increased to $250,000. The addenda, as well as the original agreements, further provided that Slye was required to give to Presidential Gardens “written notice of the date, time and place of settlement, at least ten (10) days prior to the date on which settlement is to occur.”

Under the agreements, Presidential Gardens was obligated to convey the land by special warranty deed. The requisite quality of title was stipulated in paragraph 5(b) as follows:

Fee simple title to the Property is to be conveyed at the time of settlement, free of liens and encumbrances; subject, however, to those matters affecting title to the Property ... which are set forth on the List of Permitted Title Exceptions ... Title is to be merchantable and insurable (subject to the Permitted Exceptions) ... by a recognized title insurance company ...

The first of November arrived and Slye had not complied with the ten-day notice of settlement provision. On November 1, Slye, however, arranged a meeting of the parties for that day. At the meeting, Slye informed Presidential Gardens that Slye desired an extension of the settlement date, and furthermore, that Slye’s title insurance company, First American Title Insurance Company (First American), had discovered certain “problems” with the title. The parties could not agree on terms for extension. Presidential Gardens then tendered their special warranty deeds for the property. Slye refused the tender.

The “problems” raised by First American included a “deed of vacation” recorded in the chain of title of the property. The deed of vacation purported to vacate certain lots and streets of the Sunnyside Subdivision plat. First American listed the deed of vacation as an exception in its title insurance commitment. Maintaining that the deed of vacation was a title exception not permitted by the agreements, on November 2, Slye notified Presidential Gardens that it considered the title not marketable and insurable as required by the agreements. Accordingly, Slye sought to terminate the agreements and recoup its deposit.

On November 6, Presidential Gardens advised Slye that Presidential Gardens was entitled, pursuant to the agreements, to cure any title defects identified by Slye. Presidential Gardens further advised Slye on November 13 that it rejected Slye’s assertion of a defect in the title. That same communication notified Slye that Presidential Gardens would retender the deeds to the property on November 20. In anticipation of the retender, Presidential Gardens modified the deed conveying the Sunnyside Subdivision by adding a provision that quitclaimed to Slye any interest Presidential Gardens possessed in certain streets that the deed of vacation purported to vacate. On November 20, Presidential Gardens attempted to retender the deeds to the property, but Slye refused to attend the closing.

In March 1984, Presidential Gardens entered into agreements with and sold the property to another purchaser at the same price at which Slye had agreed to purchase. Pursuant to those agreements, Presidential Gardens quitclaimed any interest in the subdivision streets and the deed of vacation was explicitly listed as a permitted title exception.

Subsequently, Presidential Gardens brought this declaratory judgment action in federal court, based on diversity jurisdiction, to establish Presidential Gardens’ right to Slye’s escrowed earnest money deposit. Slye counterclaimed for the deposit. Virginia law controls the action.

After a bench trial, the district court ruled, inter alia, that “[t]he unilaterally executed deed of vacation was a nullity [109]*109since the City of Alexandria did not join in its execution” as required by Va.Code Ann. § 15.1-482 (1981). Because the deed of vacation, therefore, did not justify Slye’s refusal to settle, the district court awarded the deposit plus interest to Presidential Gardens. Slye appealed.

II.

The essence of Slye’s argument on appeal is that the deed of vacation constituted a defect in the title to the property, which rendered the title not marketable and not insurable. Because Presidential Gardens was unable to tender marketable and insurable title as required by the agreements, Slye contends that it was not obligated to settle and should recover the escrowed earnest money.

As a threshold matter, we consider the district court’s ruling that the deed of vacation was a nullity.2 Section 15.1-482 of the Virginia Code governs the vacation of a valid subdivision plat3, or a part thereof, where as here a lot in the subdivision has been sold. That statute provides for vacation by an instrument executed by the owners of the platted lots and the municipality. See Va.Code Ann. § 15.1-482(a).4 It is undisputed that the City of Alexandria did not join in the deed of vacation here. Thus, the deed did not comply with the vacation statute.

The courts of Virginia have not addressed the status of a deed of vacation which is executed unilaterally by the lot owners in the subdivision and not by the municipality, contrary to the statute. However, the rule in other jurisdictions is that an instrument purporting to vacate dedicated land, which does not comply with the applicable vacation statute, is a nullity. See Sprague v. City of Las Vegas, 101 N.M. 185, 679 P.2d 1283, 1285 (1984) (failure to comply with statute governing vacating platted land rendered municipal “resolution” attempting to vacate “void”)5; see also Barrett v. Ballard, 483 So.2d 304, 306-07 (Miss.1985) (reversing trial court which had dismissed petition to set aside municipal decree regarding vacation of subdivision plat where decree failed to comply with applicable statute); Boise City v. Fails, 94 Idaho 840, 499 P.2d 326

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802 F.2d 106, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/presidential-gardensduke-street-ltd-partnership-v-salisbury-slye-ltd-ca4-1986.