John Moyers v. Sheun Lai Poon and Brenda Lee Poon
John Moyers v. Sheun Lai Poon and Brenda Lee Poon
Opinion
¶ 1. Following a decision from a three-justice panel of this Court issued on June 26, 2017, * involving these parties and this litigation and affirming a final judgment order, the civil division attempted to conduct further hearings as if the matter had been remanded. The Poons challenged *588 continuation of the litigation by the trial court, asserting that, in the absence of an express remand from the Supreme Court in the June 26th decision, the trial court lacked subject matter jurisdiction to conduct further hearings. The trial court denied the motion and the Poons were granted permission by the Supreme Court to appeal the denial on an interlocutory basis. We reverse.
¶ 2. This litigation, with a tangled procedural history, concerns a dispute over the use of a driveway near commercial buildings in Bristol. Plaintiff, John Moyers, initially filed suit against defendants, Sheun Lai Poon and Brenda Lee Poon, who own a nearby building, alleging that he owned the driveway and that the Poons' use of it for deliveries and storage of waste containers and fuel tanks constituted a trespass. Moyers sought damages and injunctive relief for the trespass. The Poons counterclaimed, asserting they had a right to use the driveway for various commercial purposes, including, but not limited to, receiving deliveries. The Poons claimed the right to use the driveway either due to a prescriptive easement or because they had acquired a possessory interest through adverse possession. While asserting that they had prescriptive or adverse possession rights, the Poons did not acknowledge that Moyers was the titled owner of the property. The specifics of the various claims and counterclaims are set forth in our earlier decision and are not necessary to recount here. See
Moyers
, No. 2016-432,
¶ 3. Moyers moved for summary judgment, asserting he was the titled owner of the property and that the Poons could not establish any prescriptive rights through adverse possession. In his pleadings, Moyers admitted to the existence of a deeded right for the Poons to use the driveway for deliveries. The extent of the Poons' easement for deliveries was not established. The trial court granted summary judgment in favor of Moyers on the Poons' claims for prescriptive and possessory rights in the driveway. The trial court's summary judgment decision did not address Moyers's claims for damages or injunctive relief based upon trespass and did not address whether the Poons had exceeded the scope of any deeded right to use the driveway for deliveries.
¶ 4. Subsequent to the summary judgment decision, the trial court considered additional motions, including Moyers's motion to dismiss claims seeking damages for trespass and shared driveway expenses and Poons' motion to amend the summary judgment decision because no deeded right of access had been produced. The Poons did not oppose the motion to dismiss the claim seeking damages for trespass. The motion was confusing in that it also sought the entry of a final judgment in connection with the summary judgment decision, despite the fact that the trespass claim had not been adjudicated. The motion was reasonably interpreted by the trial court as seeking to dismiss the trespass claim in its entirety; this was only clarified by Moyers filing an objection to that characterization of the motion asserting that he was still seeking injunctive relief. In its order on the Poons' motion to amend, the court also clarified its determination that a right of access by the Poons to use the driveway existed either through a deed right or through the admission by Moyers of a deeded right to access for deliveries whether an actual deeded right existed.
¶ 5. Following its clarification of the summary judgment ruling, the trial court entered final judgment in favor of Moyers on the prescriptive and adverse possession claims and enjoining the Poons from using the driveway other than for accessing deliveries, *589 despite no judicial determination or admission by the Poons that a trespass was occurring. Both parties appealed, the Poons arguing the grant of summary judgment was in error and Moyers arguing he was entitled to further and more specific injunctive relief. These appeals formed the basis of this court's June 26th decision.
¶ 6. In the June 26th decision, this Court affirmed the trial court's decision in all respects except for the grant of injunctive relief, which was struck.
Moyers
,
¶ 7. Neither party filed a motion to reargue the June 26th decision pursuant to V.R.A.P. 40. Accordingly, the mandate affirming the trial court's final order issued pursuant to V.R.A.P. 41 twenty-one days following the June 26th decision.
¶ 8. Three days after the three-justice decision, Moyers filed a motion for hearing on trespass in the trial court. That motion did not acknowledge the absence of a remand from this Court. The Poons responded to the request to schedule a hearing on trespass with a motion to dismiss for lack of subject matter jurisdiction, asserting the absence of a remand in this Court's decision divested the trial court of subject matter jurisdiction to conduct further proceedings in this matter. The Poons further asserted that res judicata barred any opportunity for the trial court to consider the trespass claim further. The trial court denied the motion to dismiss in a brief entry order. This interlocutory appeal followed.
¶ 9. We have long recognized that unless a remand is ordered when the final judgment or decree is entered in the Supreme Court, the lower court is without jurisdiction to consider the case further.
Turner v. Bragg
,
¶ 10. The Poons are correct that the trial court is without jurisdiction to consider the instant case further and the motion to dismiss for lack of subject matter jurisdiction should have been granted. The judgment rendered June 26th by this Court, which did not include a remand, was final.
Moyers
,
¶ 11. To remove uncertainty in the event of a future suit between these parties, we address the Poons' additional contention that res judicata, also known as claim preclusion, bars the trial court from
*590
further consideration of any trespass claim for damages or injunctive relief as a result of the final judgment previously rendered. Res judicata "bars the litigation of a claim or defense if there exists a final judgment in former litigation in which the parties, subject matter and causes of action are identical or substantially identical."
Berlin Convalescent Ctr., Inc. v. Stoneman
,
¶ 12. A subsequent suit seeking an injunction or damages from trespass may not be barred, however, if it is based on facts that could not have been addressed in the first litigation because this would amount to a new cause of action. See
id
. ¶ 11 (explaining that determining whether two causes of action are similar for claim preclusion turns on whether same evidence supports the claims). Any subsequent suit by Moyers seeking an injunction for trespass will have to demonstrate a current continuing trespass or the threat of one. As we stated in
Evans v. Cote
, "A permanent injunction may be awarded in response to a continuing trespass because damages are inadequate to address the wrong."
Reversed .
Moyers v. Poon
, No. 2016-432,
Reference
- Full Case Name
- John MOYERS v. Sheun Lai POON and Brenda Lee Poon
- Cited By
- 1 case
- Status
- Published