Stephen R. Jones v. South Bay Shore LLC

CourtCourt of Appeals of Virginia
DecidedFebruary 6, 2024
Docket1712221
StatusUnpublished

This text of Stephen R. Jones v. South Bay Shore LLC (Stephen R. Jones v. South Bay Shore LLC) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Virginia primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Stephen R. Jones v. South Bay Shore LLC, (Va. Ct. App. 2024).

Opinion

COURT OF APPEALS OF VIRGINIA UNPUBLISHED

Present: Chief Judge Decker, Judges Beales and Raphael Argued at Norfolk, Virginia

STEPHEN R. JONES, ET AL. MEMORANDUM OPINION BY v. Record No. 1712-22-1 CHIEF JUDGE MARLA GRAFF DECKER* FEBRUARY 6, 2024 SOUTH BAY SHORE LLC, ET AL.

FROM THE CIRCUIT COURT OF THE CITY OF VIRGINIA BEACH Steven C. Frucci, Judge

Patrick R. Hanes (George H. Bowles; Williams Mullen, on briefs), for appellants.

John C. Lynch (Megan E. Burns; Troutman Pepper Hamilton Sanders LLP, on brief), for appellees.

This appeal involves a dispute between owners of adjacent lots of waterfront property. The

appellants, Stephen R. and Ludmilla L. Jones, own lot 35A, and South Bay Shore LLC owns lot

34A. James P. Karides owns South Bay Shore LLC.1 He resides on lot 34A with his wife, Guzin

N. Karides. South Bay Shore and the Karideses are the appellees. In 1999, before the appellees

acquired lot 34A, the appellants obtained an express “visual easement” over a portion of that lot by

deed. That easement permits the appellants to prevent lot 34A’s owner from placing structures in

the area covered by the easement. In 2020, the appellees bought the lot burdened by the appellants’

* This opinion is not designated for publication. See Code § 17.1-413(A). 1 The record establishes that James Karides at least partially owns the company. In the trial court, the appellants alleged a more complicated ownership structure involving a parent company of South Bay Shore LLC co-owned by James Karides and others. We need not consider the appellants’ more detailed allegations regarding ownership in order to resolve the appeal. easement and constructed a pier extending into the creek. The appellants sued to remove the pier,

claiming, in part, that it unreasonably interfered with the appellants’ enjoyment of their easement.

The trial court found that the language creating the easement was ambiguous and allowed

the appellants to present parol evidence about the intended scope of the easement. After

considering the parol evidence, the court found that the limits of the easement remained unclear and

that the appellants failed to prove the pier interfered with their easement. Accordingly, the court

granted the appellees’ motion to strike as to the issues relevant in this appeal. We conclude that the

deed unambiguously establishes the metes and bounds of the easement and that the trial court

ultimately did not err in concluding the appellants failed to prove that the pier unreasonably

interfered with their enjoyment of the easement. Therefore, we affirm the court’s judgment.

BACKGROUND2

Both the appellants and the appellees bought the lots at issue from the family of the same

common grantor, Carolyn S.G. Tyler. She originally owned five waterfront lots on South Bay

Shore Drive in Virginia Beach adjoining Little Neck Creek, referred to as lots 33 through 37. In

1999, she conveyed lots 35, 36, and 37 to the appellants while retaining lots 33 and 34. In

October 2000, Tyler and the appellants replaced the original deed with a deed of correction. The

corrected deed conveyed the same three lots but also incorporated a resubdivision plat depicting

lots 33, 34, and 35.

The resubdivision transferred a portion of Tyler’s lot 34 to the appellants’ lot 35, a

portion referred to as “Area ‘A.’”3 The plat renamed lots 34 and 35 as 34A and 35A. Although

2 When reviewing a trial court’s decision to strike a plaintiff’s evidence, appellate courts “view the evidence in the light most favorable to the plaintiff[s],” in this case the appellants. Volpe v. City of Lexington, 281 Va. 630, 639 (2011) (quoting TB Venture, LLC v. Arlington County, 280 Va. 558, 563 (2010)). 3 The original deed attempted to accomplish the same purpose but did not include the required resubdivision plat. -2- the appellants received ownership of Area A, they were not permitted to place structures “upon

Area ‘A’, which include[d] the adjoining portion of Little Neck Creek to the mean low water

line.” Two exceptions to that restriction permitted them to construct a fence within specificed

limits and repair or replace “the existing pool, patio, bulkheads and dock (so long as there [was]

no change in the size of [the] existing dock within Area ‘A’).” The restriction was “for the

benefit of [Tyler], her heirs and successors.”

In addition to Area A, the deed also “establishe[d] an easement for the benefit of the

[Joneses], their heirs, successors and assigns over, across, upon and through, in perpetuity, that

parcel of property shown as the visual easement more fully described . . . [in] the [r]esubdivision

[p]lat, and . . . referred to as the ‘[Joneses’] Visual Easement Area.’” The resubdivision plat

showed two triangles on lot 34A adjoining Area A and labeled those triangles “visual easement.”

The plat listed the measurements of those triangles.

The plat further included a line between the lots and Little Neck Creek labeled as the

“approx[imate] location of wood bulkhead.”4 The plat depicted both Area A and the visual

easement as terminating at the bulkhead. The plat explained, however, that the “bearing and

distances shown along [the] water” were “for computation purposes only” and that the “property

line” was the “mean low water.” The resubdivision plat is shown here:

4 A bulkhead is a “retaining wall along a waterfront.” Bulkhead, Webster’s Third New International Dictionary (1993). -3- After defining the “[Joneses’] Visual Easement Area” by reference to the plat, the deed

continued:

The restrictions imposed hereby on the use of the [Joneses’] Visual Easement Area, the acts which [Tyler] covenants to do or not to do and the restrictions which the [Joneses] are hereby entitled to enforce, shall be as follows: (1) the property encompassed within the said easement property, which includes the adjoining waters of Little Neck Creek to the mean low water line, shall be maintained free of any structures whatsoever (including, without limitation, any buildings, fences, walls, decks or storage sheds).

-4- (Emphasis added). The deed allowed Tyler and her heirs and successors to maintain, replace, or

repair the existing bulkhead. It also allowed the appellants and their heirs to “plant and maintain

grass, trees, shrubs, flowers and other landscaping on [their] Visual Easement Area” and “enjoy

and utilize the easement as an extension of the[ir] lawn and garden.”

In February 2020, Tyler’s heirs conveyed lot 34A to South Bay Shore LLC, an entity at

least partly controlled by James Karides. At the time, lot 34A was an undeveloped wooded lot.

Shortly thereafter, Karides and his wife began constructing a home on the property and applied

for a permit from the Virginia Marine Resources Commission to construct a pier. The proposed

pier was to begin at the bulkhead just south of the visual-easement area depicted on the plat and

extend into Little Neck Creek.

Stephen Jones objected to the Commission that the proposed pier violated his visual

easement, which he contended protected his view of “the entirety of Little Neck Creek” to the

southeast of his property. The Commission responded that the visual easement had “[no]

bearing” on its review of whether the proposed pier complied with the state laws and regulations

it was authorized to apply. The appellants sued, seeking a preliminary injunction to prevent the

appellees from constructing the pier. The trial court refused the injunction request, and the

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