Robert Walker, Jr. v. Charles L. Williams

CourtCourt of Chancery of Delaware
DecidedJune 23, 2016
DocketCA 9667-VCG
StatusPublished

This text of Robert Walker, Jr. v. Charles L. Williams (Robert Walker, Jr. v. Charles L. Williams) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Chancery of Delaware primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Robert Walker, Jr. v. Charles L. Williams, (Del. Ct. App. 2016).

Opinion

IN THE COURT OF CHANCERY OF THE STATE OF DELAWARE

ROBERT WALKER, JR., JOHN KANE, ) CAROL KANE, and MARGARET ) FOULKE, ) ) Plaintiffs, ) ) v. ) C.A. No. 9667-VCG ) CHARLES L. WILLIAMS, ) ) Defendant. )

MEMORANDUM OPINION

Date Submitted: March 2, 2016 Date Decided: June 23, 2016

Dean A. Campbell, of THE LAW OFFICE OF DEAN A. CAMPBELL, LLC, Georgetown, Delaware, Attorney for Plaintiffs.

Richard E. Berl, Jr., of BERL AND FEINBERG, LLP, Lewes, Delaware, Attorney for Defendant.

GLASSCOCK, Vice Chancellor In his prose poem “Knoxville: Summer of 1915,”1 James Agee described how

commonplace sights and sounds of his boyhood—cicadas, horses, a trolley, auto

traffic, the music made by water spraying from hoses—formed a reassuring and

comforting backdrop, the shared experience of his small neighborhood. The

testimony in the two-day trial in this matter stands as a dystopian counterpoint, a

kind of “Milton: 2015.”2 The Defendant, Mr. Williams, has a not-uncommon

hobby—working on cars—that he pursues with an uncommon vigor, in a large shop

beside his house. The Plaintiffs, his neighbors, contend that the resulting sights,

smells, and sounds have disturbed the quiet enjoyment of their property. These are

issues that neighborly people could have resolved with reasonable give-and-take,

and reached thereby a result superior to that which can be achieved through a binary

court decision based upon property rights. Unfortunately, the parties were unable to

achieve such a civil accommodation.

Accordingly, the Plaintiffs seek an injunction forcing Williams to remove the

parts of his shop allegedly out of compliance with the Sussex County Zoning Code

and Building Code (the “County Code”) and to cease pursuit of his hobby. As with

most nuisance claims, this inquiry is fact-driven: does Williams’ use of his property

1 James Agee, Knoxville: Summer of 1915, 5 The Partisan Review, no. 3, Aug.–Sept. 1938, at 22, 22–25. 2 The parties all have Milton postal addresses. The small neighborhood in which they live is located in a rural and unincorporated area of Sussex County between Lewes and Harbeson, south of Cool Spring.

1 amount to an incidental intrusion onto his neighbors’ property of the type, living in

an actual rather than an ideal world, we all must endure; or is it so disruptive of the

Plaintiffs’ property rights as to justify a remedy in tort? The matter was tried, and

after careful review of the resulting record, I find the former. The Plaintiffs’ request

for nuisance-based relief is accordingly denied. The Plaintiffs also contend that an

easement across Walker’s property has been overburdened by use in furtherance of

Williams’ auto-repair hobby; I agree, and enjoin certain use of the easement by

Williams and his guests. Finally, the Plaintiffs allege that the use of the property is

in violation of the County Code in numerous respects, in ways for which they have

sought redress, unsuccessfully, from the County. They seek relief here. Those

allegations require further briefing. My reasoning follows.

I. FACTS AND STAGE OF THE PROCEEDINGS

The following are the facts as I find them after trial, by a preponderance of

the evidence.3 I include only those facts pertinent to the common-law nuisance claim

and involving the easement.

A. The Parties

Defendant Charles Williams resides at 19833 Summer Place in Milton,

Delaware.4 The Plaintiffs are Williams’ current and former neighbors: Margaret

3 Citations to the parties' joint trial exhibits appear as “JX,” and to the trial transcript as “Trial Tr.” 4 Trial Tr. 156 (Williams).

2 Foulke, Robert Walker, Jr.,5 and John and Carol Kane. Williams’ property directly

borders that owned by Foulke and Walker.6

From July 30, 1999 to September 5, 2007, Williams owned the entire 5-acre

plot of land previously known as 27347 Martins Farm Road (a.k.a. County Road

291), which extended north from Martins Farm Road and bordered Foulke’s

property to the west.7 The entire parcel, together with Foulke’s original lot, is

represented in Figure 1, below. On September 5, 2007, Williams subdivided his

property to create three lots: a front lot, labeled “Proposed Lot A” in Figure 1 below,

which borders Martins Farm Road; a middle lot, labeled “Proposed Lot B”; and a

rear lot.8 In Figure 1, north is to the left:

Figure 19

5 Robert Walker, Jr. indicated at trial that he intended to rent out his property. Id. at 140:5–7 (Walker). Plaintiffs’ Opening Post-Trial Brief suggests that he has since done so. Pls’ Opening Post-Trial Br. 16. 6 JX 3. 7 Id. 8 JX 3, 40. 9 JX 3.

3 Williams kept for himself the approximately 1.6-acre lot designated “Proposed Lot

B” and deeded the other two lots to his neighbors, Plaintiff Foulke and non-party

George DeFrehn, as tenants in common.10 At the time of the subdivision, Williams

had only a residence and two small sheds on Proposed Lot B.11

Through the deed conveying Proposed Lot A (the “Lot A Deed”), Williams

retained a 50-foot wide right-of way (the “Easement”) across the lot in order to

connect his property, Proposed Lot B, to Martins Farm Road.12 The Lot A Ddeed

provides that:

The Grantor [Williams] and Grantees [DeFrehn and Foulke], their respective heirs, successors and assigns agree to maintain jointly and keep clear the 50’ right of way that serves as access to lands of the Grantor, identified as Proposed Lot B on the Plot referred to aforesaid to the end that said 50 foot access way which is paved shall be maintained and repaved as needed to keep it in reasonably good condition.13

A narrow strip of the Easement is now a paved lane known as Summer Place.14 The

language of the deed providing the right-of-way does not explicitly describe or

restrict its use, other than to provide “access” to the Williams parcel.15 After the

10 JX 40. 11 Trial Tr. 39 (Foulke). 12 JX 40. 13 Id. 14 According to a Division Survey Plan prepared for Williams, a “typical residential access” can be up to 29 feet wide without special approval. JX 3. Testimony from a Sussex County Council hearing, however, indicates that Summer Place is actually only about 10 feet wide. JX 10 at 97:20. 15 JX 40.

4 transaction, Foulke (and DeFrehn) owned a contiguous eight-plus acres surrounding

Williams on three sides and separating his property from the public road.

In the fall of 2008, Plaintiff Foulke apparently sold the front parcel, Proposed

Lot A, to the parents of Plaintiff Walker.16 The following February, Walker built a

residence on the front portion of the Proposed Lot A and began residing there

permanently.17 Walker’s parents deeded him the lot in May 2011.18 Currently,

Walker’s tenants occupy Proposed Lot A.19

B. Mr. Williams Builds His Dream House

Flush with cash from the sale of the front and rear lots, Williams pursued a

long-held wish: owning a shop where he could pursue his hobby of working on

cars.20 Using his own labor and that of friends and neighbors, he built a 1,920

square-foot pole building with a 600 square-foot lean-to addition on the back,

adjacent to his house trailer. Williams obtained a building permit, authorizing

construction of the pole building, in September 2007,21 and a certificate of

occupancy in February 2008.22

16 Trial Tr. 143 (Walker). 17 Id. at 142 (Walker). 18 JX 40. 19 See supra note 5. 20 Trial Tr. 162–63 (Williams). 21 JX 4. 22 JX 7.

5 Williams’ pole building dwarfs his home.

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Robert Walker, Jr. v. Charles L. Williams, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/robert-walker-jr-v-charles-l-williams-delch-2016.