Shepheard v. Boggs

94 S.E.2d 300, 198 Va. 299, 1956 Va. LEXIS 206
CourtSupreme Court of Virginia
DecidedSeptember 4, 1956
DocketRecord 4539
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 94 S.E.2d 300 (Shepheard v. Boggs) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Virginia primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Shepheard v. Boggs, 94 S.E.2d 300, 198 Va. 299, 1956 Va. LEXIS 206 (Va. 1956).

Opinion

Whittle, J.,

delivered the opinion of the court.

The case before us as developed in the court below is limited to a question involving the riparian rights of certain owners of lots bor *300 dering on Lafayette river in an exclusive residential development known as “Riverpoint” in the City of Norfolk.

Marie T. Shepheard and nine other lot owners (hereinafter sometimes called Shepheard, et al.) filed their bill against Charles E. Boggs, Jr., and Florence J. Boggs (hereinafter sometimes called the Boggses), owners of lot 4, block 12, in the subdivision.

The bill asserted that riparian rights were appurtenant to each of the lots owned by the parties to the litigation and alleged (1) that the Boggses had constructed a dam extending from the rear of their property into the Lafayette river, interfering with complainants’ riparian rights; (2) that they were carrying on noxious or offensive activities upon their property in violation of the applicable restrictive covenants; and (3) that they had constructed a pier into the river from the dam or neck of land without the approval required by the covenants.

The prayers of the bill were for injunctive relief requiring the Boggses to remove the alleged earthen dam and the pier, and to cease using their property in a manner offensive to complainants.

An amendment to the original bill asserted that the dam had been constructed in an area reserved by the Riverpoint Corporation, the developers of the subdivision, as a boat basin. It contained the same prayers as the original bill.

A receiver was appointed for the defunct Riverpoint Corporation and filed an answer joining in the prayers of the bill.

The Boggses’ answer asserted that they had built the pier and had lawfully improved the neck of land extending into the river from the rear of their lot which they had a right to do as riparian owners. It denied that the area designated on the subdivision as a boat basin had been reserved by the developers, Riverpoint Corporation, as such, and denied that they were using their property in a manner offensive to complainants.

The cause was referred to a commissioner in chancery who was required to determine certain questions posed in the decree of reference. The commissioner conducted hearings and took evidence upon the issues joined. In the course of these hearings counsel for Shepheard, et al. abandoned their position that the Boggses should be required to remove the “earthen dam” or neck of land, but insisted that they be required to restore the property to the condition in which it was at the time they purchased their lot, thus giving Shepheard, et al. access to the Lafayette river.

*301 The commissioner reported on the issues as follows:

1. That Shepheard, et al. were entitled to no relief as to the alleged “offensive activities” as there was no evidence to sustain the allegation; nor were they entitled to the requested relief that the pier be removed;

2. That the Boggses could lawfully improve the neck of land extending from the rear of their lot, by reason of the riparian rights contained in their deed, but in so doing they could not obstruct any existing riparian rights to which Shepheard, et al. were entitled;

3. That the Boggses, in improving the neck of land, had filled with broken concrete, asphalt and brick bats and had completely blocked a small stream or “gut” that ran between the bluff fine of the lot and the neck of land jutting out into the river, depriving Shepheard, et al. of their riparian rights.

The commissioner recommended that the Boggses, at their own cost and expense, be put upon terms and required to remove so much of the described debris from the stream or gut as to allow full and free access by water to the respective lots. This was the extent of the relief recommended for Shepheard, et al. However, it was recommended that the costs of the litigation be taxed equally between the parties.

Exceptions were taken to the report by all parties. The Boggses excepted to the finding that they had filled and blocked the small stream or gut and should be required to remove the debris therefrom, and further excepted to the recommendation that they be required to pay any part of the costs. The exceptions of Shepheard, et al. were directed to the other findings of the commissioner.

The trial court, after hearing argument on the exceptions, entered a decree sustaining the exceptions of the Boggses and dismissing the bill, taxing all costs against Shepheard, et al. To the entry of this decree we granted an appeal.

In argument before us Shepheard, et al. apparently abandoned all claims except that involving the blockage of the stream or gut at the rear of the Boggs lot. Therefore the question is narrowed to the issue: What is the rear boundary fine of the Boggs lot?

Shepheard, et al. contend that the court erred in failing to decree that the rear boundary fine of the Boggs property, as well as the rear boundary line of the respective lots owned by them, is the bulkhead line. In the alternative they argue that if the court did not err in failing to find that the bulkhead line is the limit of the lots then it did err “in failing to sustain and confirm the finding of fact of the *302 commissioner * * * that (the) low water mark at the rear of said lot 4, in block 12, plat of Riverpoint, is marked by the small stream or watercourse that ran along the bluff and bulkhead line at the rear of said lot 4”, which accorded them access to the river.

With the latter assertion we are in accord. In those parts of the commissioner’s report here applicable, he found that in 1946, four years prior to the acquisition of lot 4, block 12, by the Boggses, some of the appellants (Shepheard, et al.), one of whom at the time owned the lot now owned by the Boggses, formulated a plan to dredge out the area shown on the plat marked “reserved for boat basin”. This dredging operation was done on the theory that it would prove mutually advantageous to the owners of property bordering on the basin.

The dredging project, says the commissioner, proved a failure. It developed that the material was of such a fluid quality that it would not remain upon the embankment, “its consistency was such that it silted and ran back into the waterways from which it was taken”. The report further stated that “it was found that the only places upon which it could be deposited were the more or less submerged sand bars with solid bases running into the water from lots 3 and 4, block 12, * * *. Upon these bars or foundation the dredged material was placed, as high and as wide as they would hold it. Subsequent to the dredging operation which failed so disastrously, the defendants (the Boggses) by the aforesaid deed dated September 7, 1950, acquired title to lot 4 block 12, which is the property concerned in this controversy.”

The commissioner further found that at the time the Boggses acquired their lot its physical condition showed it to be a “high lot”, running back between diverging lines to the bulkhead of Lafayette river. The water end of the lot sloped down to the water from a bluff line, at the bottom of which slope was a marsh.

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Bluebook (online)
94 S.E.2d 300, 198 Va. 299, 1956 Va. LEXIS 206, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/shepheard-v-boggs-va-1956.