Scott v. Karmy

52 Va. Cir. 118, 2000 Va. Cir. LEXIS 238
CourtShenandoah County Circuit Court
DecidedMarch 30, 2000
DocketCase No. (Chancery) 00-60
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 52 Va. Cir. 118 (Scott v. Karmy) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Shenandoah County Circuit Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Scott v. Karmy, 52 Va. Cir. 118, 2000 Va. Cir. LEXIS 238 (Va. Super. Ct. 2000).

Opinion

By Judge John E. Wetsel, Jr.

This case came before the Court on March 29, 2000, for trial on the issue of whether the Defendants have a drainage easement across the Plaintiffs’ property, and if so, the nature and extent of that easement. The parties appeared with their counsel, all of the prefiled exhibits were admitted, evidence was heard, the Court viewed the property, and the case was argued. Upon consideration whereof, the Court has made the following decision.

I. Findings of Fact

The following facts are found by the greater weight of the evidence.

By Deed of Assumption dated January 28,1997, the Plaintiffs purchased “Lot 6, Lakeview Farms Development, Section 3, further shown on a plat prepared by Fred S. Price, Land Surveyor, Patton Harris Rust & Associates, P.C., dated 4/17/95 and recorded in Deed Book 736, at Page 289, among the land records of Shenandoah County, Virginia.” Defendants’ Exhibit 1. Lot 6 is improved by a townhouse, which is part of a complex of townhouses.

There is a water drainage problem along the rear of the Lots 4 and 5, and the Defendants, claiming that they have an easement, want to enter the Plaintiffs’ property and regrade a drainage swale along the west side and rear of the Plaintiffs’ lot in the 10 foot easement area shown on the plat which was appended to the deed to the Plaintiffs’ predecessor in title.

[119]*119The Plaintiffs have filed this suit for an injunction to restrain the Defendants from entering their property, and the Defendants have filed a cross-bill seeking an injunction to enter the property and to recover their costs of this suit and the costs of restoring the land to its contours prior to the Plaintiffs’ constructing their fence and regrading their lot.

The Plat at Deed Book 736, Page 289, which was appended to the deed to the Plaintiffs’ predecessor in title clearly shows a ten foot drainage easement on the front, back, and west side boundary lines of the Plaintiffs’ lot, and a note on the plat refers to an existing drainage easement in Deed Book 693, Page 750. Defendants’ Exhibit 2.

The Final Plat of Lakeview Farms Development Section 3 is recorded in Deed Book 693, Page 750. While this plat does not show an easement along the west side of Lot 6, there is a note on the bottom left comer of the plat, which states “A 10’ utility and drainage easement is reserved on the front, rear, and side (end unit lots) lot lines.” Both Lot 6, which is the Plaintiffs’ lot, and Lot 7 are end unit lots, because they are each at the end of their respective block of townhouse units, so the center line of the drainage easement is coterminous with the boundary line between Lots 6 and 7. Accordingly, the area within the drainage easement is actually twenty feet wide along the common boundary between Lots 6 and 7.

According to the original design, the watershed for water flowing along the rear lot lines of the townhouse complex is at the rear boundary of lots 6 and 7. According to the original design for the drainage of surface water, water was to flow from Lot 6 to Lot 1 and from Lot 7 to Lot 11 in the drainage easement at the rear of the lots; water was also to flow from southeast to northwest along the common boundary between Lots 6 and 7 towards the street.

When the townhouse complex was constructed, the rear down spouts were diverted to an underground pipe which runs along the rear of the patios and rainwater in this pipe flows from Lot 1 to the property line between Lot 6 and 7, where it exits into the drainage easement between Lots 6 and 7. The entry of this volume of downspout water into the drainage system can be expected to substantially increase the storm water flow from the point of exit to the street.

The grades for the townhouse complex as built bare little semblance to the original design for the water diversion, and the water flow at the rear of the lots is substantially different from that contemplated in the original plan. In very heavy rains, water occasionally ponds at the rear of Lots 4 and 5 (Defendants’ Exhibits 7 and 8), and to correct that problem, the Developer proposes to grade a swale from Lot 4 across Lots 5 and 6 to the boundary [120]*120between Lots 6 and 7. There is a transformer on a concrete pad in the ten foot utility easement at the rear of Lot 6, which compounds the problem because it interferes with the construction of the swale. The contemplated swale on Lot 6 will vary in width from about four feet to ten feet in width, and its maximum depth would be 6 to 10 inches.

The area to be drained by the proposed swale at the rear of Lots 4 to 6 is not great, because the total area in the three backyards of those lots is only about 3000 square feet.

In 1996, Mr. Hardy, who then owned Lot 6, added about a dump truck load of dirt to the rear yard of Lot 6, raising the level of the rear yard of Lot 6 by about 3 to 4 inches.

The Owner of Lot 3 has also improved and fenced his rear yard. There is a large maple tree near the southeast comer of Lot 3, and that tree is the high point along the rear line of Lots 1 to 6. Water on the east side of the tree flows generally from the tree in a northeast direction in the drainage easement at the rear of Lots 2 and 1. Water on the west side of the maple tree flows southwest along the rear drainage easement onto Lots 4 and 5.

After occupying Lot 6, the Plaintiffs constructed a fence paralleling the side and rear boundaries of Lot 6. The fence which the Plaintiffs constructed encroaches onto the 10 foot drainage and utility easement area.

In 1997-98, an apartment complex was built on the property which adjoins the rear of the Townhouse complex, and since that time less water flows onto the rear of Lots 1 to 6.

The first page of the Declaration of Covenants and Restrictions recorded in Deed Book 668, Page 153, specifies that Defendants Judy P. Cooper and Robert J. Karmy are referred to in the Declaration as “Declarant.” Defendants’ Exhibit 5.

Article 3 of the Declaration deals with Easements. Section 3.2 of the Declaration provides for easements in the “Common Area,” which is defined in the Declaration Section 1.1(5) to mean “all the Property, other than any Lot(s), then owned by the Association.” Exhibit 5, page 157. “Property” is defined in Section 1.1(13) to mean “the real estate then subject to this Declaration and includes all improvements and appurtenances thereto now or hereafter existing.” Defendants’ Exhibit 5, page 158. While Plaintiffs’ Lot 6 is part of the “Property,” it is not part of the “Common Area”; therefore, Section 3.2 of the Declaration does not apply to the drainage and utility easement across Lot 6.

Article 3.5 of the Declaration deals with utility easements, and it states:

[121]*121Section 3.5. Utilities. The Property is hereby made subject to an easement for the provision to any portion(s) of the Property of all utilities, including (without limitation) water, sewers and drain systems, electricity, gas, telephone, and paid subscription television service. Any pipes, conduits, lines, wires, transformers and any other apparatus useful for the provision or metering of any utility may be installed, maintained or relocated where initially installed with the permission of the Declarant, where contemplated on any site plan approved by the Declarant, or where approved by resolution of the Board of Directors.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
52 Va. Cir. 118, 2000 Va. Cir. LEXIS 238, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/scott-v-karmy-vaccshenandoah-2000.