Zimmerer v. Romano

679 S.E.2d 601, 223 W. Va. 769, 2009 W. Va. LEXIS 32
CourtWest Virginia Supreme Court
DecidedApril 30, 2009
Docket34269
StatusPublished
Cited by37 cases

This text of 679 S.E.2d 601 (Zimmerer v. Romano) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering West Virginia Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Zimmerer v. Romano, 679 S.E.2d 601, 223 W. Va. 769, 2009 W. Va. LEXIS 32 (W. Va. 2009).

Opinion

PER CURIAM.

The plaintiffs below and appellants herein, Ann Morgan Zimmerer and Gerald Lee Zimmerer 1 (hereinafter referred to separately as “Mrs. Zimmerer” and “Gerald Zimmerer,” or collectively as the “Zimmerers”), appeal from an order entered October 12, 2007, by the Circuit Court of Nicholas County. By that order, the circuit court denied the Zimmerers’ motion for reconsideration of the circuit court’s previous order granting summary judgment to the defendants below and appellees herein, Mark E. Romano and Robin J. Romano (hereinafter referred to collectively as the “Romanos”). The order granting summary judgment to the Romanos was entered June 4, 2007. By that order, the circuit court found that the Romanos were the owners in fee simple of 20.29 acres of land, and further, that the defendant below and *774 appellee herein, the West Virginia Department of Transportation, Division of Highways (hereinafter referred to as the “DOH”) properly sold a 1.18 acre tract of its right of way interests to the Romanos. Based upon the parties’ arguments, 2 the record designated for our consideration, and the pertinent authorities, we affirm, in part, and reverse, in part, the decisions of the circuit court, and remand this matter to the circuit court.

I.

FACTUAL AND PROCEDURAL HISTORY

This case involves a property dispute over the ownership in fee simple of 20.29 acres of land, as well as the proper right of way ownership of 1.18 acres of land. 3 The property in question was originally part of an 82.65 acre farm in Nicholas County, West Virginia, which had been owned for generations by the Hill family. The 82.65 acre tract of land owned by the Hill family adjoined another ancestral, farm, which had been owned by the Zimmerers’ family for generations, and remains in the possession of the Zimmerers. There is no challenge to the Zimmerers’ current ownership of the Zimmerer family’s ancestral farm. Rather, the controversy arises over the ownership rights to the 20.29 acre tract, along with the 1.18 acre right of way contained therein, which was part of the original Hill family’s 82.65 acre ancestral farm.

In 1971, pursuant to an eminent domain action, the DOH was vested with a right of way interest 4 in three separate tracts of land that was part of the Hills’ 82.65 acre farm. The rights of way were for the purpose of constructing and improving United States Route 19. The three parcels of land in which the DOH obtained a right of way interest totaled 20.29 acres, and is the land whose ownership is in question before this Court. 5 The two issues before this Court are: (1) the fee simple ownership of the 20.29 acres of land, and (2) the propriety of the DOH’s decision to sell 1.18 acres of its right of way interests to the Romanos. 6

By deed dated April 6, 1995, the Hill family 7 conveyed the ancestral farm to Greenwood Timber, Inc. (hereinafter referred to as “Greenwood Timber”). 8 The deed stated “the [Hills] do hereby grant, sell, and convey unto [Greenwood Timber] with Covenants of General Warranty of Title the surface only of that certain tract or parcel of land....” The language is followed by a description of the boundaries of the property, which culminates in the statement that the land described “containfs] 82.65 acres, more or less.” Subsequent to the boundary summary, the deed states that “there is reserved from the above description that previous outconveyanee to the West Virginia Department of Highways *775 of 20.29 acres, leaving a residue of 62.36 acres, more or less.”

Thereafter, on November 19, 1998, Greenwood Timber conveyed a portion of its land to the Romanos. The 1998 deed contained the same property boundary description as the 1995 deed from the Hills to Greenwood Timber, along with the same language that the land described “contain[s] 82.65 acres, more or less.” The deed further states that “this conveyance is subject to all previous outeonveyances of record, including the following: (1) That 20.29 acres previously conveyed unto the West Virginia Department of Highways____” Greenwood Timber also reserved to itself a portion of property out of the description of the original property boundaries.

The Hill heirs, believing that the 1995 deed to Greenwood Timber had reserved to them a fee simple interest in the 20.29 acres of land that was encumbered by the DOH’s right of way interests, purportedly conveyed fee simple title to the 20.29 acres to the Zimmerers by quitclaim deeds in 1997, 1998, and 2002. 9 The Zimmerers own the farmland adjoining the 20.29 acres that were purportedly conveyed to them by the Hills. Mrs. Zimmerer then conveyed an undivided one-fourth fee simple interest in the 20.29 acres to her son and appellant herein, Gerald Zimmerer. Thus, the Zimmerers maintain that they own the 20.29 acres in fee simple as the grantees from the Hill hems. Conversely, the Romanos allege that the deed from the Hills to Greenwood Timber did not reserve fee simple ownership interests to the Hills but, rather, only reserved to the Hills the interests of the DOH, which were right of way interests. Because the Romanos contend that the Hills passed fee simple ownership of the land to Greenwood Timber, the Romanos contend that they received the fee simple title to the land pursuant to the 1998 outconveyance from Greenwood Timber.

The Romanos and the Zimmerers, both believing that they owned the 20.29 acres in fee simple encumbered by the right of way interests of the DOH, approached the DOH on separate occasions and requested the option to purchase portions of the right of way interests maintained by the DOH. The DOH determined that it no longer needed 1.18 acres of the 20.29 right of way interests, and further, that without this 1.18 acre right of way interest, the Romanos would be landlocked with no point of ingress or egress from their property to the public road. Thus, the DOH asserts that, in compliance with W. Va.Code § 17-4-47 (1963) (Repl. Vol. 2004), it sold a 1.18 acre right of way interest to the Romanos.

In 2004, the Zimmerers filed the underlying action to eject the Romanos from land that the Romanos claim is their sole property. Both the Zimmerers and the Romanos filed motions for summary judgment. A hearing was conducted before the circuit court on February 12, 2007. In its June 4, 2007, order, the circuit court granted summary judgment to the Romanos. In so ruling, the circuit court found that

4. The Commissioner of the West Virginia Department of Transportation, Division of Highways, conveyed ... 1.18 acres of the original 82.65 acres to Mark E. Romano and Robin J. Romano. Giving said 1.18 acre parcel to anyone other than the [Romanos] would block Romanos’ access to U.S. Route 19.
5. The Commissioner of the West Virginia Department of Transportation, Division of Highways, did not abuse his discretion in conveying the 1.18 acre excess right of way to Mark E. Romano and Robin J.

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Bluebook (online)
679 S.E.2d 601, 223 W. Va. 769, 2009 W. Va. LEXIS 32, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/zimmerer-v-romano-wva-2009.