Saunders v. Coleman

65 Va. Cir. 9, 2004 Va. Cir. LEXIS 283
CourtFauquier County Circuit Court
DecidedMarch 30, 2004
DocketCase No. (Chancery) CH02-122
StatusPublished

This text of 65 Va. Cir. 9 (Saunders v. Coleman) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Fauquier County Circuit Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Saunders v. Coleman, 65 Va. Cir. 9, 2004 Va. Cir. LEXIS 283 (Va. Super. Ct. 2004).

Opinion

By Judge Jeffrey W. Parker

This matter comes before the Court as a result of a Motion for Declaratory Judgment filed by the Plaintiff seeking determination of the rights and duties of the various parties in reference to the maintenance of an easement located in the Evergreen Mountain subdivision. The said subdivision for the purposes of this proceeding involves only residential lots 6 through 14, which front upon and are serviced by a private road easement. The Plaintiff owns lots 8 and 9, and the Defendants own the balance of the lots. The remaining five lots of the subdivision front on a public road.

When the subdivision was dedicated, the grantor failed to properly record any covenants relating to the maintenance of the easement, and hence, there are no express provisions on this issue. The deed establishing the easement contains only the following relevant language:

Such owners desire to and do hereby establish a 50-foot wide easement. ... The owners also reserve the right for themselves, their heirs, devisees, or assigns ... to dedicate at some future time if they so elect the 50-foot wide easement to public road use.

Deed Book 307, Page 34.

[10]*10Lots 7, 8, and 14 are the lots closest to the public road in this portion of the subdivision. The dispute began when the Plaintiff sought to use his personal equipment to clear cut the property from the edge of the fifty-foot easement up to the gravel road. The owners of lots 7, 8, and 14 objected to this action claiming they preferred the property to remain in its natural state and ejected the Plaintiffs workers and equipment.

It is the Plaintiffs position that proper maintenance of the easement requires the land adjoining the easement to be planted in grass and cleared of all underbrush. The gravel road portion of the easement is approximately sixteen feet in width. Although not specifically pleaded, there was considerable evidence presented at trial regarding rain water flow and how this impacted the easement.

The Plaintiff in his pleading requested inter alia, that the Court allow the Plaintiff to “undertake himself, to hire a crew or to contribute to the cost of’ cutting the grass along the easement, removing underbrush and rocks, removing tree limbs if they interfere with or endanger vehicles on the easement, and making minor improvements to the easement. He also desired the Court determine his right to obtain an injunction to enforce those established rights.

It was the Plaintiffs position at trial, that proper maintenance of the easement requires substantial ditching alongside the gravel roadway and the placement of numerous metal culverts perpendicular to and parallel with the easement to facilitate water flow. Further, the Plaintiff stated that ingress and egress was restricted without removal of trees and undergrowth along the easement.

The Defendants; Hall, Garrett, and Sanders did not believe that trimming of the trees was necessaty for ingress and egress. They allege that the Plaintiff only sought to trim this area back for aesthetic purposes. Defendant Stout, owner of Lot 11, situated across the road from the Plaintiff complained that the Plaintiff had cleared a great deal of natural tree growth and underbrush from his property and its superior elevation caused a considerable amount of rain water to flow down upon her lot. She opposed placing an additional culvert from the Plaintiffs property under the road to her property alleging it would exacerbate an already significant and damaging water flow.

Defendant, Stopper, owner of lot 12, did not oppose the relief sought by the Plaintiff as pleaded nor did Defendant, Taylor, owner of Lot 10, whose lot was located at the farthest end of the easement from the State road.

In this particular subdivision, each party holds both a servient and dominant tenement simultaneously. That is, each owner of a lot has the right to traverse the property of other lot owners while ingressing or egressing their property. Similarly, each party to this law suit is in a position of having their [11]*11property traversed by those in a dominant or superior position. As a result, each party could be in the position of asserting the rights and duties of a dominant and servient tenement in this matter.

However, the Plaintiff is only approaching this case from the standpoint of a dominant tenement. As such, the Plaintiff asserts that he has a right and a duty to maintain the easement. See Hayes v. Aquia Marina, Inc., 243 Va. 255 (1992). The Plaintiff could have pleaded that the Defendants as co-dominant tenements also have the right and duty to maintain the easement. However, in paragraph 15 of the Plaintiffs pleading, he stated he was not entitled to a money contribution from the owners.

A litigant’s pleadings are as essential as his proof, and a Court may not award particular relief unless it is substantially in accord with the case asserted in those pleadings.

Jenkins v. Bay House L.P. Associates, 266 Va. 39, 43 (2003) (cites omitted).

Similarly, despite the degree of testimony on the culvert issue, this was not mentioned in the pleadings nor was there any relief particularly prayed for in this regard. It can be properly argued in equity that as this case deals with overall maintenance of the easement and that as water erosion causes a need for maintenance, therefore, erosion relief should be granted under the general prayer, despite the fact it was not specifically requested. “The only limitation placed on a grant of general relief is that it not be inconsistent with the case alleged by the bill. ...” Johnson v. Buzzard Island Shooting Club, 232 Va. 32, 36 (1986). Therefore, the Court will consider the culvert issue.

During trial, certain existing culverts were identified. However, existing culverts did not seem to be in controversy. The main culvert controversy was in reference to water flow from lot 9 of the Plaintiff to lot 11 of Stout, which, according to Ms. Stout, would increase an existing nuisance.

In support of his position, the Plaintiff relied upon the evidence of Peter Hitchen, an “expert in private road construction and maintenance” to testify that a culvert located between lots 1 and 9 would preserve the roadway in that area. Although Mr. Hitchen was deemed an expert, his qualifications were minimal at best and his testimony was largely unconvincing. Further, there was evidence that the Plaintiff had increased this particular problem by clearing a portion of his property and increasing the volume of the water run off. Based in part upon the Plaintiffs diagram # 26 submitted into evidence through Mr. Hitchen, it is apparent that the water flow should not be directed from the Plaintiffs property over that of Ms. Stout, but instead along the roadway easement to the east along the property line of the Plaintiffs property toward that of lot 10.

[12]*12There were numerous photographs placed into evidence which showed the quality of the easement in 1987 during the early stages of the subdivision compared to the quality of the easement now. By and large, there appears to be very little difference as to the overall condition of the road or that the road has been affected by rain run off. Further, the Court, at the request of the parties, conducted a view, walking the entire length of the easement. At that time, there did not appear to be any imminent threat to the road from water flow.

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Related

Jenkins v. Bay House Associates, L.P.
581 S.E.2d 510 (Supreme Court of Virginia, 2003)
Hayes v. Aquia Marina, Inc.
414 S.E.2d 820 (Supreme Court of Virginia, 1992)
Preshlock v. Brenner
362 S.E.2d 696 (Supreme Court of Virginia, 1987)
Johnson v. Buzzard Island Shooting Club, Inc.
348 S.E.2d 220 (Supreme Court of Virginia, 1986)
BOARD OF SUPERVISORS OF JAMES CITY CTY. v. Rowe
216 S.E.2d 199 (Supreme Court of Virginia, 1975)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
65 Va. Cir. 9, 2004 Va. Cir. LEXIS 283, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/saunders-v-coleman-vaccfauquier-2004.