Reybold Venture Group IX, LLC v. Summit Plaza Shopping Center, LLC

CourtSupreme Court of Delaware
DecidedMarch 18, 2026
Docket124, 2025
StatusPublished

This text of Reybold Venture Group IX, LLC v. Summit Plaza Shopping Center, LLC (Reybold Venture Group IX, LLC v. Summit Plaza Shopping Center, LLC) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Delaware primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Reybold Venture Group IX, LLC v. Summit Plaza Shopping Center, LLC, (Del. 2026).

Opinion

IN THE SUPREME COURT OF THE STATE OF DELAWARE

REYBOLD VENTURE GROUP IX, § LLC, § § No. 124, 2025 Plaintiff Below, § Appellant, § Court Below: Court of Chancery § of the State of Delaware v. § § C.A. No. 2020-0982 SUMMIT PLAZA SHOPPING § CENTER, LLC, § § Defendant Below, § Appellee. §

Submitted: January 7, 2026 Decided: March 18, 2026

Before SEITZ, Chief Justice; VALIHURA, TRAYNOR, LEGROW, and GRIFFITHS, Justices, constituting the Court en Banc.

Upon appeal from the Court of Chancery. REVERSED.

John H. Newcomer, Jr., Esquire, R. Eric Hacker, Esquire, (argued), MORRIS JAMES LLP, Wilmington, Delaware, for Plaintiff Below, Appellant.

Phillip A. Giordano, Esquire, GORDON, FOURNARIS & MAMMARELLA, P.A., Wilmington, Delaware, for Defendant Below, Appellee. SEITZ, Chief Justice:

Reybold Venture Group IX, LLC and Summit Plaza Shopping Center, LLC

own adjoining properties along Routes 301 and 896 in Middletown, Delaware. They

have been sparring over whether a cross-easement exists that would allow traffic

from Reybold’s parcel to use the highway entrance on Summit’s parcel. Without the

easement, Reybold is restricted to right turns in and out of its property, which,

Reybold argues, makes its property less valuable. The Summit entrance has a right

turn in and out and a left turn out.

A Magistrate in Chancery ruled that the property owner established a cross-

easement between the parcels and Reybold could enforce the cross-easement. After

review of exceptions, the Vice Chancellor disagreed with the Magistrate’s report.

The court held that a record plan notation establishing a cross-easement was a “note”

under the County Code, and only the County can enforce record plan notes. The

court also held that, other than the record plan note, there was no evidence that the

property owner intended to create a cross-easement between the two properties.

On appeal, Reybold argues that the court should have accepted the

Magistrate’s recommendation because the property owner signed and certified the

record plan with the note stating that “a cross easement is hereby established.” And,

according to Reybold, it can enforce a private express easement regardless of any

County limitations on enforcing record plan notes. We agree and reverse. I.

A.

Most of the relevant facts are undisputed. Viola Carter owned 196 acres

bordering Routes 301 and 896 in Middletown, Delaware. In 1983, she planned to

sell part of her property to a developer who wanted to build a shopping center. A

shopping center required a rezoning and subdivision of the property.

Under the New Castle County Code in effect at the time, the rezoning and

subdivision process followed three stages. First, the owner, developer, or their

representative submits an exploratory plan. The exploratory plan is a sketch of the

proposed subdivision with general locations for buildings and parking. Next, if the

County found the exploratory plan acceptable, the applicant submits a preliminary

plan with more engineering details and calculations. The New Castle County

Department of Planning’s Subdivision Advisory Committee (“SAC”), composed of

state and local agencies, reviews the preliminary plan. The Department of Planning

(“Department”) collects the agencies’ comments and provides them to the applicant.

Finally, those comments are incorporated into a record plan, and, after County

approval, the record plan is recorded by the property owner.

Franco R. Bellafante, Inc., an engineering firm hired by the developer,

submitted an exploratory plan to rezone and subdivide the Carter property. The

Department reviewed the exploratory plan and found that it was generally satisfactory but needed to address certain items. The same day, Bellafante submitted

a preliminary plan that included the suggested revisions.

The SAC reviewed the preliminary plan and provided comments. The

Delaware Department of Transportation (“DelDOT”) also provided comments.

According to a DelDOT internal memo, it wanted one highway entrance to

consolidate the entrance and exit as future development occurred:

The Department would be amenable to pursuing a cross- easement agreement between subject parcel and the R–2 parcel with respect to combined entrance-exit facilities in the future when and if the adjacent residential parcel is developed with a use or uses other than residential. [DelDOT] agreed and said that [it]s comments would be forthcoming and will state basically the above.1

To address DelDOT’s concern, the Department requested the following note

on the preliminary plan:

A CROSS EASEMENT IS HEREBY ESTABLISHED BETWEEN THE SUBJECT PARCEL AND OTHER LANDS OF VIOLA CARTER, FOR VEHICULAR AND PEDESTRIAN TRAFFIC. ADDITIONALLY, A COMBINED ENTRANCE/EXIT FACILITY MAY BE REQUIRED IN THE FUTURE WHEN AND IF THE LANDS LABELED “OTHER LANDS OF VIOLA CARTER” ARE DEVELOPED FOR USES OTHER THAN RESIDENTIAL2

Bellafante incorporated all comments into the final record plan. Viola Carter

1 App. to Appellant’s Opening Br. at A109 [hereinafter A__]. 2 A111; App. to Appellee’s Answering Br. at B119. The “subject parcel” is the Summit parcel. The “other lands of Viola Carter” include the Reybold parcel. A96. The parties agree that “[t]he [n]ote was a requirement of the Delaware Department of Transportation to obtain its approval of the [p]lan.” A97. signed the record plan and certified as follows:

I, VIOLA CARTER, WIDOW, HEREBY CERTIFY THAT I AM THE OWNER OF THE PROPERTY SHOWN ON THIS PLAN, AND THE SUBDIVISION PLAN THEREOF WAS MADE AT MY DIRECTION, THAT I ACKNOWLEDGE THE SAME TO BE MY ACT AND PLAN AND DESIRE THE SAME TO BE RECORDED AS SUCH ACCORDING TO LAW, AND IN ACCORDANCE WITH THE SUBDIVISION AND LAND DEVELOPMENT REGULATIONS OF NEW CASTLE COUNTY, AND THAT ALL STREETS SHOWN AND NOT HERETOFORE DEDICATED ARE HEREBY DEDICATED TO THE PUBLIC USE, AND THAT ALL PROPOSED MONUMENTS WILL BE SET AT THE LOCATIONS SHOWN, AND FURTHERMORE, I VOLUNTARILY AGREE TO SUBDIVIDE AND DEVELOP THE LAND IN ACCORDANCE WITH THE CONCEPTS SHOWN ON THE APPROVED RECORD PLAN.3

After receiving final approval from the Department and the County, the

landowner recorded the final record plan in the Recorder of Deeds Office.

A year later, Carter sold to a developer another part of her property subject to

the record plan. The developer built a strip shopping center, Summit Plaza, which

is now owned by Summit.4 The Summit property intersection has a right in/right out

and a left turn out. Each deed in the Summit property chain of title refers to the

record plan, which contains the easement note, and states that the conveyance is

subject to all easements and restrictions of record.5

3 A111. 4 A95, A125–26, A458, A465. 5 A112–26, A312. B.

In 2020, Reybold bought the Viola Carter land south of Summit’s property to

build a self-storage facility. The Reybold property was part of the record plan.

DelDOT would only approve a “rights in, rights out” entrance for the Reybold

property, meaning DelDOT limited Reybold’s tenants to right-hand turns to enter

and exit the property. According to Reybold, the property was more valuable if

tenants could also turn left onto the roadway using Summit’s intersection. Reybold

raised the cross-easement with Summit. Summit refused to recognize the cross-

easement.

C.

Reybold sued Summit in the Court of Chancery to enforce the cross-easement.

The case was assigned to a Magistrate in Chancery. After a one-day trial, the

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Reybold Venture Group IX, LLC v. Summit Plaza Shopping Center, LLC, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/reybold-venture-group-ix-llc-v-summit-plaza-shopping-center-llc-del-2026.