Thomas E. Morris v. Anthony Heath Parker

CourtCourt of Appeals of Virginia
DecidedJanuary 23, 2024
Docket1700221
StatusUnpublished

This text of Thomas E. Morris v. Anthony Heath Parker (Thomas E. Morris v. Anthony Heath Parker) 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
Thomas E. Morris v. Anthony Heath Parker, (Va. Ct. App. 2024).

Opinion

COURT OF APPEALS OF VIRGINIA

Present: Judges O’Brien, AtLee and Malveaux UNPUBLISHED

Argued at Norfolk, Virginia

THOMAS E. MORRIS, ET AL. MEMORANDUM OPINION* BY v. Record No. 1700-22-1 JUDGE MARY GRACE O’BRIEN JANUARY 23, 2024 ANTHONY HEATH PARKER, ET AL.

FROM THE CIRCUIT COURT OF THE CITY OF CHESAPEAKE John W. Brown, Judge

Douglas E. Kahle (Basnight, Kinser, Leftwich & Nuckolls, P.C., on briefs), for appellants.

Mark R. Baumgartner (Kristen R. Jurjevich; Pender & Coward, P.C., on brief), for appellees.

Thomas and Karen Morris appeal a final order that denied their claim for an implied

easement over a right of way allegedly abutting their property and that refused to enjoin their

neighbors, Anthony and Donna Parker, from interfering with their use of the purported easement.

The Morrises argue the court misapplied the law of implied easements by requiring proof of

necessity and prior use of the right of way. The Morrises also contend the court erred by

ignoring evidence that their right to use the easement was created “pursuant to the deeds and

recorded plats and surveys appearing in their chain of title.” For the following reasons, we

affirm.

* This opinion is not designated for publication. See Code § 17.1-413(A). BACKGROUND

In October 1998, the Morrises acquired a tract of land in Chesapeake consisting of two

parcels, “Parcel 3” and “Parcel 5” (collectively, the “Morris property”). At the time of

conveyance, Parcel 3 comprised the west side of the Morris property and Parcel 5 comprised the

east side. The 1998 deed incorporated a land survey showing the two parcels. As reflected in

the survey, a right of way named “Flurry Road” borders Parcel 5 on its east side. More recent

land records identify Flurry Road as “Fluridy Road.” The Morrises have never used any right of

way they claim to be Flurry/Fluridy Road; instead, they access the Morris property via

Sanderson Road (southern border) and Foreman Road (western border).

The Parkers own two parcels of land on the other side of the platted Flurry/Fluridy Road,

which they acquired in 2003 (collectively, the “Parker property”). The two parcels are depicted

as “Tract D” and “Tract E” on a plat attached to their 2003 deed.1 The Parkers access their home

via a gravel road, which they claim is depicted on the plat attached to their 2003 deed as a dotted

“dirt lane” to the east of their property line and thus entirely on their property (the “gravel road”).

In 2017, the Morrises re-subdivided the Morris property, eliminating Parcel 5 and

creating a smaller “Parcel 5-A” that now borders Flurry/Fluridy Road as depicted on a 2017 plat.

The Morrises wanted to sell Parcel 5-A and install a driveway connecting Parcel 5-A to

the gravel road, which they assert is the platted Flurry/Fluridy Road and which would provide

access to a public thoroughfare to the south. When Thomas Morris discussed the proposed

driveway with Anthony Parker, however, Parker objected and told Morris that he could not “use

[Parker’s] property.” In January 2020, the Morrises filed a declaratory judgment action against

the Parkers, seeking an order “confirming [the Morrises’] right . . . to use [the gravel road] to

1 The Parker property stretches across a city boundary line dividing Chesapeake to the west and Virginia Beach to the east. -2- access the Morris Property” and to “enjoin the [Parkers] from interfering with or otherwise

impeding that right.”

After the parties exchanged discovery, the Morrises moved for summary judgment,

arguing that the undisputed evidence demonstrated they had an implied easement across the

gravel road and the Parkers had no basis for denying them access.2 Opposing the motion, the

Parkers argued that the Morrises “fail[ed] to provide the [c]ourt with any reasonably accurate

description of the location of the easement” and the “burden rests squarely on the [Morrises] to

prove the grant or dedication of an easement, and the location and scope of that easement.” The

court denied the summary judgment motion, finding inter alia “[d]isputes of material fact

regarding . . . the location of the alleged easement in comparison to that of the [Parker]s’

driveway.”

The parties proceeded to trial. The Morrises introduced evidence, including expert

testimony from title examiner Tiffany Abramowski, showing that the Morris property and the

Parker property were once owned by a common grantor, that the Morrises’ deed as well as the

Parkers’ deed, together with other deeds and documents in their chains of title, consistently

describe their respective properties by reference to a 1909 subdivision plat recorded in the clerk’s

office for the city of Chesapeake, and that this 1909 subdivision plat depicts the Morris property

and the Parker property abutting Flurry/Fluridy Road, directly across from one another.

Abramowski testified that, consistent with the 1909 subdivision plat, the plat attached to

the Parkers’ 2003 deed shows that the Parker property abuts the east side of Flurry/Fluridy Road

and that Flurry/Fluridy Road, as platted, is not located within the boundaries of the Parker

property. She stated that, in her expert opinion, the land records established that neither the

Morrises nor the Parkers owned the platted Flurry/Fluridy Road.

2 The Morrises abandoned an adverse possession claim asserted in their initial complaint. -3- Abramowski did not testify about the physical location of Flurry/Fluridy Road, merely its

location as platted in the land records. Regarding the platted Flurry/Fluridy Road, she testified

that she did not know “[w]hether it was developed or not, whether it’s gravel or dirt or whatever”

and “[t]here’s no way to really tell exactly where it is.”

The Morrises introduced a photograph of a “Fluridy Road” street sign posted at the gravel

road leading to the Parkers’ residence. However, Thomas Morris testified, “I don’t know” when

asked whether the gravel road was “in the same place” as the platted Flurry/Fluridy Road. He

acknowledged that a large ditch separates the parties’ properties.

The Parkers disputed that the gravel road was the same as the Flurry/Fluridy Road

depicted in land records. Instead, Anthony Parker testified that the gravel road is located on the

Parker property, to the east of a “pin” marking his property’s western boundary. The Parkers

maintained that the Flurry/Fluridy Road, as platted, is undeveloped and actually runs along the

ditch separating the parties’ respective properties:

[T]here’s a ditch, and that’s where [Flurry/]Fluridy Road is platted. And if Mr. Morris wants to fill in that ditch and get approval from . . . the [c]ity to fill in that ditch and build himself a superhighway, he can do that, but what he can’t do is come to this [c]ourt and say, “I want to drive across Mr. Parker’s lane” without first establishing Mr. Parker’s lane is within the right-of-way that was platted as Flurry Road. And it’s not. There’s no evidence to say that it does.

Counsel for the Parkers proffered, without objection, that the “Fluridy Road” street sign was

yellow and thus denoted a private-property lane rather than a city street. Additionally, Parker

pointed out that neither the Morrises nor their predecessors in title had ever used the purported

easement and therefore any rights had been abandoned. Finally, Parker testified that he had

improved the gravel road, once used primarily for hunting access, into a driveway for his

residence.

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Thomas E. Morris v. Anthony Heath Parker, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/thomas-e-morris-v-anthony-heath-parker-vactapp-2024.