Sun Yung Lee v. Zom Clarendon, L.P.

689 F. Supp. 2d 814, 2010 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 17117
CourtDistrict Court, E.D. Virginia
DecidedFebruary 24, 2010
DocketCivil Action 1:09cv402
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 689 F. Supp. 2d 814 (Sun Yung Lee v. Zom Clarendon, L.P.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, E.D. Virginia primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Sun Yung Lee v. Zom Clarendon, L.P., 689 F. Supp. 2d 814, 2010 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 17117 (E.D. Va. 2010).

Opinion

MEMORANDUM OPINION

T.S. ELLIS, III, District Judge.

At issue in this diversity easement dispute is whether plaintiffs evidence, presented at a bench trial, clearly and convincingly establishes an easement by prescription. 1 In essence, the parties *816 own adjacent properties located at N. Irving Street and Washington Boulevard in Arlington, Virginia, and the purported easement (the “driveway”) forms a 14-foot-wide “L-shape,” running from N. Irving Street alongside the northwest and southwest borders of the Reamy house, the property for which plaintiff claims the benefit of an easement by prescription. Plaintiff argues that her family has used the driveway continuously since 1956, and therefore that this use ripened into a prescriptive right by 1976 pursuant to the unrebutted presumption that this use was under claim of right. In response, defendant argues that plaintiffs use was neither adverse nor exclusive, and that plaintiffs evidence at trial does not meet the clear and convincing standard of proof. At the bench trial held on December 8, 2009 and February 4, 2010, the parties presented witnesses and exhibits in support of their contentions. 2 As the parties have fully briefed and argued their positions, plaintiffs claim to an easement by prescription is ripe for disposition.

I. Findings of Fact

The facts recited here are those found pursuant to Rule 52(a)(1), Fed.R.Civ.P., on the basis of the record as a whole, including a two-day bench trial. In the course of the bench trial, plaintiff, as well as her daughter and son-in-law, Jeannie and Donald Williams, testified as to the driveway’s use. 3 Defendant presented one fact witness, namely John Strother, the previous owner of the adjacent servient estate and the person from whom defendant acquired the property.

*817 1. Plaintiff is the owner of two adjoining parcels of real property in Arlington, Virginia. The first parcel consists of Clarendon Subdivision lots 238-240 and portions of lots 217 and 241. More familiarly, this property is located at the intersection of N. Irving Street and Washington Boulevard. The second parcel consists of portions of lots 217 and 241 of the Clarendon Subdivision, and bears the address 1122 N. Irving Street. This second parcel is described by the parties as the Reamy house. The putative easement runs alongside the northwest and southwest sides of the Reamy house, thus providing access to the rear of the Reamy house. Notably, the rear of the Reamy house is also accessible by passing through the structure or via a parking lot bordering the southeast side of the Reamy house. Plaintiff purchased these parcels in 1963. 4
2. The sole defendant-is ZOM Clarendon, L.P., a limited Delaware partnership authorized to do business in Virginia. Defendant owns the putative servient estate, which consists of Clarendon Subdivision lots 206-216, 242-247, and those portions of lots 217 and 241 that do not include the Reamy house. In 2006, defendant purchased this property, which is immediately adjacent to plaintiffs property, from the family of Channing Strother. Defendant intends to build a mixed-use high rise with both residential units and retail space on these lots.
3. In 1956, plaintiffs husband and father-in-law, as lessors, opened a Chinese restaurant located at 3211 Washington Boulevard. The restaurant and the Reamy house are located on adjoining parcels of land. The restaurant, which faces Washington Boulevard, is also accessible from the rear through the driveway at issue on N. Irving Street. In 1956, plaintiff owned none of these properties.
4. Plaintiff began regularly visiting the restaurant in 1956 to eat dinner. Between 1956 and 1959, plaintiff did not observe any cars parked on the purported easement.
5. In 1959, plaintiff began working at the restaurant four to five days a week. Although the restaurant was located on Washington Boulevard, plaintiff entered the restaurant using a rear entrance. On occasion, plaintiffs husband, with plaintiff as a passenger in the car, was unable to reach the rear entrance because cars were parked on the driveway. Plaintiffs father-in-law would then ask the Reamy house’s tenants to move their cars, which they did, allowing plaintiff and her husband to access the restaurant’s rear entrance. Plaintiff worked at the restaurant until 1996.
6. On November 15, 1963, plaintiffs family purchased the Reamy house. Plaintiffs family believed that a survey given to them at the closing conveyed the right to use the driveway and that they nonetheless had an inherent right to use the driveway in light of the property’s physical layout.
*818 7. In 1965, plaintiffs parents-in-law moved into the Reamy house’s second story and resided there until 1979. During this period, plaintiffs parents-in-law would clear garbage, trash, leaves, and sometimes snow from the driveway. In addition, plaintiffs mother-in-law planted a garden on the driveway containing beans, mint, and leeks.
8. Also in 1965, other tenants began to occupy the ground floor of the Reamy house. Specifically, the ground floor housed an antique store from 1965-1980, housed a bed frame store from 1980-1990, and was used by two carpenters around 1998 to store materials and tools. The antique store tenants parked on the purported easement from 1965-1980, and the bed frame store and carpenter tenants used the driveway to access the rear of the Reamy house from 1980-1990. In addition, visitors to the Reamy house — such as plaintiffs daughter, Jeannie Williams, and plaintiffs son-in-law, Donald Williams— sometimes parked on the driveway. In particular, Donald Williams used the driveway when he assisted plaintiffs husband in periodically repairing or repainting the Reamy house beginning in the late 1970s. Plaintiff did not receive any complaints or objections with respect to the use of the driveway in this manner.
9. In 1979, plaintiff and her husband began maintaining the driveway and grew vegetables there. Furthermore, plaintiff and her husband would also park on the driveway. Twice a year, beginning at an unspecified time, plaintiff used the driveway for a Chinese ceremony in which she would spread rice and coins on the ground.
10. Also in 1979, the family of Channing Strother purchased the property currently owned by defendant and thus became the owners of record of the driveway-easement at issue. Channing Strother and his son, John Strother, opened a printing store on their property in 1979. Notably, the shop could only be reached via the driveway off N. Irving Street because the store did not front Washington Boulevard, and as such the Strothers and their customers regularly used the driveway to reach the printing store. In an effort to ensure that customers could find and access the printing store, which was set back from N. Irving Street, the Strothers maintained the driveway, including having it repaved at one point.

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Bluebook (online)
689 F. Supp. 2d 814, 2010 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 17117, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/sun-yung-lee-v-zom-clarendon-lp-vaed-2010.