Walton v. Holland
Walton v. Holland
Opinion of the Court
delivered the opinion of the Court.
In this case we determine whether the conveyance of land, together with an access easement over a private road
On August 28, 1962, Wilmer L. Swicegood and Lalla W. Swicegood, his wife (collectively Swicegood), who owned 110 acres in Gloucester County, recorded a plat of a portion of their property, described as Sections 1 and 2, Woodland Park subdivi
The subdivision plat was attached to Swicegood’s deed of August 21, 1962 to John D. Briggs, conveying Parcel A together with a 50-foot right-of-way from Parcel A over Springdale Road and thence over Hillside Drive to Route 17. On August 30, 1977, Briggs conveyed Parcel A and two other parcels of land to one of the defendants, J. Harris Holland.
One of the other two parcels was composed of two lots, described as lots 1 and 2 of “Crockets.” The “Crockets” boundary is indicated on the attached sketch as “-x-.” The second of those two parcels, not fully described in the deed, was northeast of “Crockets” and southwest of Swicegood’s property. It is indicated on the sketch as “Parcel X.”
Although the easement granted in Swicegood’s deed to Briggs was limited to Parcel A, Briggs’s August 30, 1977 deed to J. Harris Holland recited that the property was being conveyed together with “an easement of right of way over and across Springdale Road and Hillside Drive, ... for purposes of ingress and egress to and from U.S. Route 17 at all times.” There is no evidence, however, that Swicegood previously conveyed an easement to Briggs, or to any of his predecessors in title, except the easement to serve Parcel A.
On January 5, 1982, Briggs conveyed lot 3 of “Crockets” to J. Harris Holland and Gladys S. Holland.
On August 10, 1987, James S. Walton and others,
On June 24, 1988, following a hearing ore tenus, the trial court held that J. Harris Holland and Gladys S. Holland were entitled to use the roads described on the Woodland Park subdivision plat which were adjacent to their properties and granted other relief to the Hollands and the servient owners, not material in this appeal. The servient owners appeal only that portion of the decree which permits J. Harris Holland and Gladys S. Holland to use the right-of-way for access to properties other than Parcel A.
We need not decide whether the August 30, 1977 deed from Briggs to J. Harris Holland might be read as an attempt to convey a right-of-way over the roads in the Woodland Park subdivision for the benefit of those properties Briggs had acquired from persons other than Swicegood and later conveyed to J. Harris Holland and Gladys S. Holland. Even if it were an attempt to convey an easement, it would be ineffectual. Briggs could convey no more than he received in his deed from Swicegood. Phillips v. Wells, 147 Va. 1030, 1040-41, 133 S.E. 581, 584-85 (1926).
Furthermore, J. Harris Holland’s easement for Parcel A may not be expanded to benefit other properties south of Springdale Road. In a similar factual situation, we held that this would “impose an additional burden on the servient estate which was not intended in the grant.” Robertson v. Robertson, 214 Va. 76, 81, 197 S.E.2d 183, 187 (1973).
The fact that Springdale Road is adjacent to Parcel X does not create any right of passage serving the owners of Parcel X over Springdale Road. As we said in Robertson, “[a] landowner may lay off a private roadway along his property line without thereby entitling the adjoining landowner to use it.” 214 Va. at 80, 197 S.E.2d at 187.
Accordingly, we will reverse that portion of the final decree which authorized J. Harris Holland and Gladys S. Holland to use any part of the roadways, not dedicated to the public, for access to any of their properties other than Parcel A and enter final judgment affirming the decree as modified.
Reversed in part, modified, and final judgment as modified.
The parties have stipulated that there are no public rights of passage over the roadways in question. Apparently, Gloucester County had not adopted subdivision regulations authorized by the Virginia Land Subdivision Act at the time the plat was recorded. For that reason, the plat’s recordation did not create any public rights in the road areas shown on the plat. See Acts 1962, c. 407 (current version at Code §§ 15.1-465 and -478). In 1975, the General Assembly required that all counties or municipalities adopt subdivision regulations, which meant that the subsequent recordation of any plat operated to transfer a public right in the streets shown on the plat. See Code §§ 15.1-465 and -478.
They are Marion L. King, Jr. and Jean M. King, Joseph A. Lombard, Jr. and Betty A. Lombard, Edward L. Garrett and Rebecca H. Garrett, Harold B. Dumas and Katherine H. Dumas, Cabot H. Williams and Joyce B. Williams, John L. Priest and Janet M. Kroskey, and John T. Myles and Joan P. Myles. J. Douglas Hall and Laura H. Hall were later joined as complainants.
Reference
- Full Case Name
- James S. Walton v. Randy L. Holland
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- Published