Joseph T. Buxton v. Roger A. Murch ( 2002 )


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  •                        COURT OF APPEALS OF VIRGINIA
    Present: Judges Benton, Willis and Clements
    Argued at Richmond, Virginia
    JOSEPH T. BUXTON, III, AND
    MARY WAKEFIELD BUXTON
    MEMORANDUM OPINION * BY
    v.   Record No. 1805-01-2               JUDGE JEAN HARRISON CLEMENTS
    JULY 2, 2002
    ROGER A. MURCH AND
    URSULA B. MURCH
    FROM THE CIRCUIT COURT OF MIDDLESEX COUNTY
    Ernest P. Gates, Judge Designate
    J. Gray Lawrence, Jr. (Faggert & Frieden,
    P.C., on briefs), for appellants.
    Roger G. Hopper for appellees.
    Joseph T. Buxton, III, and Mary Wakefield Buxton appeal
    from a final decree of the trial court holding them in civil
    contempt of court and awarding Roger A. Murch and Ursula B.
    Murch $10,283.25 for their attorney's fees and costs expended as
    a result of the Buxtons' contemptuous conduct.    On appeal, the
    Buxtons contend the trial court erred in (1) finding them in
    contempt and (2) awarding the Murches their attorney's fees and
    costs.   For the reasons that follow, we affirm the trial court's
    judgment.
    * Pursuant to Code § 17.1-413, this opinion is not
    designated for publication.
    As the parties are fully conversant with the record in this
    case and because this memorandum opinion carries no precedential
    value, this opinion recites only those facts and incidents of the
    proceedings as necessary to the parties' understanding of the
    disposition of this appeal.
    I.   BACKGROUND
    On March 18, 1994, the trial court entered a final decree in
    a dispute between the Buxtons and Murches affirming the report of
    the commissioner in chancery dated November 1, 1993.   That decree
    established the existence of an appurtenant easement, which had
    been created by court decree in 1939, over the "Street" depicted
    on the 1952 Stiff survey plat "as a right-of-way to the
    Rappahannock River" in favor of the Murches' non-waterfront
    property on Kent Street and "all other non-waterfront lots or
    parcels on Obert Avenue, Kent Street and Elliott Street in the
    Richardson Subdivision in the Town of Urbanna."   The 1994 decree
    also permanently enjoined the Buxtons, the owners of the
    waterfront property adjoining the "Street" to the east, from using
    the easement and from "denying, impeding or otherwise hindering in
    any manner or way the use and enjoyment of said easement by the
    owners of said non-waterfront lots."
    On appeal, the Supreme Court affirmed the trial court's
    judgment that an express easement had been created by court decree
    in 1939 and that "the easement established in 1939 is now located
    across the land designated as 'Street' on the 1952 Stiff survey."
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    Buxton v. Murch, 
    249 Va. 502
    , 508, 
    457 S.E.2d 81
    , 84-85 (1995).
    The Supreme Court did, however, "reverse and annul that portion of
    the [trial court's] judgment that restrict[ed] the use of the
    easement to owners of non-waterfront lots and that portion of the
    injunction which prohibit[ed] the Buxtons and their successors
    from using the easement."   
    Id. at 510, 457
    S.E.2d at 85.
    On July 24, 2000, the Murches filed a verified "Petition for
    Show Cause Order for Contempt" against the Buxtons for interfering
    with their use of the easement.   The Buxtons moved for a bill of
    particulars, which the Murches filed.   After viewing the subject
    property, hearing evidence ore tenus, and considering the
    arguments of counsel, the trial court entered a final decree on
    June 21, 2001, setting forth the permissible uses of the express
    easement by the Murches and other qualified lot owners and finding
    that the Buxtons had "denied the Murches the use of the Easement."
    Specifically, the court ruled
    [t]hat the Murches and the Lot Owners [had]
    the unhindered and unobstructed right to use
    the Easement to boat, to swim, and to use the
    River for lawful purposes; they [had] the
    right to drive vehicles across the Easement,
    the right to park vehicles on it for thirty
    (30) minutes at a time, the right to
    construct a walkway and/or stairs down the
    bank and over the riprap that the Buxtons
    installed which prevents people from safely
    accessing the River, and the right to put a
    platform there for the launching and
    retrieving of small boats—subject to all
    necessary governmental permits.
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    The trial court then found the Buxtons had
    taken complete control of the Easement for
    their own use, . . . set a basketball goal in
    concrete upon it, . . . extended their yard
    over it and planted flowers and shrubs on it,
    regularly park[ed] their vehicles on it,
    . . . caused feces to collect upon it, and
    . . . completely confiscated the use of the
    Easement from the Murches.
    Accordingly, the court held the Buxtons in contempt and
    ordered them to pay the Murches $10,283.25 to cover the attorney's
    fees and costs incurred by the Murches as a result of the Buxtons'
    failure to comply with the court's injunction.     This appeal
    followed.
    II.    FINDING OF CONTEMPT
    "Where the court's authority to punish for contempt is
    exercised by a judgment rendered, its finding is presumed correct
    and will not be reversed unless plainly wrong or without evidence
    to support it."   Brown v. Commonwealth, 
    26 Va. App. 758
    , 762, 
    497 S.E.2d 147
    , 149 (1998).     On appeal, we view the evidence in the
    light most favorable to the Murches, the parties prevailing below.
    See Hayes v. Aquia Marina, Inc., 
    243 Va. 255
    , 257, 
    414 S.E.2d 820
    , 821 (1992); Glanz v. Mendelson, 
    34 Va. App. 141
    , 148, 
    538 S.E.2d 348
    , 351-52 (2000).
    The Buxtons advance several arguments, on appeal, in support
    of their claim that the trial court erred in finding them in
    contempt.   They first argue that, because the trial court's 1994
    decree enjoining them from interfering in the use of that easement
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    as a right-of-way to the Rappahannock River "did not explicitly
    . . . prohibit specific conduct and failed to clearly define the
    duties or obligations imposed on" them, it may not serve as the
    basis for a finding of contempt.    The 1994 decree, the Buxtons
    assert, did not indicate how the owners of non-waterfront lots
    were entitled to use and enjoy the subject right-of-way to access
    the Rappahannock River. 1   Hence, the Buxtons argue, the decree did
    not make clear what use and enjoyment of the easement the Buxtons
    were prohibited from "denying, impeding or otherwise hindering."
    Accordingly, they conclude, the 1994 decree is not "a proper
    foundation for a contempt proceeding."
    We find the Buxtons' premise erroneous.    While it is true
    generally that, "in instances where [an] order does not explicitly
    direct, mandate or prohibit specific conduct, it is insufficient
    to sustain a finding of contempt," Mardula v. Mendelson, 34 Va.
    App. 120, 128, 
    538 S.E.2d 338
    , 342 (2000), here, the 1994 decree,
    as modified by the Supreme Court, explicitly proscribed specific
    conduct.   As modified, it expressly prohibited the Buxtons from
    "denying, impeding or otherwise hindering in any manner or way the
    use and enjoyment of [the] easement by the owners of [the
    appropriate] lots."   The decree established the easement "over and
    1
    The Buxtons concede the Murches have the right to use the
    easement to access the Rappahannock River by foot and insist
    they have not interfered with that right. The Buxtons argue,
    however, that the Murches' rights in the easement do not extend
    to driving cars and trucks on the easement.
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    across the 'Street' as shown on [the 1952 Stiff survey plat] as a
    right-of-way to the Rappahannock River."   The 1952 Stiff survey
    plat not only identified the parcel over which the easement runs
    as a "Street," it depicted the "Street" as being thirty feet wide
    and connecting Kent Street, an existing road in the Richardson
    Subdivision, to the Rappahannock River.    Furthermore, nothing in
    the decree or referenced plat restricted the use of the easement
    to foot traffic.   See Cushman Corp. v. Barnes, 
    204 Va. 245
    , 253,
    
    129 S.E.2d 633
    , 639 (1963) (holding that "[w]hen a right of way is
    granted over land . . . and the instrument creating the easement
    does not limit the use to be made thereof, it may be used for any
    purpose to which the dominant estate may then, or in the future,
    reasonably be devoted").
    We hold, therefore, that, because it was identified on the
    survey plat as being thirty feet in width and a roadway, rather
    than a path, trail, or walkway, for example, the easement
    established by the 1994 decree was clearly intended to accommodate
    general vehicular traffic, including motor vehicles, as well as
    foot traffic.   No other construction of the decree is reasonably
    possible.   Accordingly, we hold that the 1994 decree is
    sufficiently explicit, in terms of setting forth the specific
    conduct from which the Buxtons are enjoined, to serve as a basis
    for a finding of contempt.
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    The Buxtons further argue that the evidence presented to the
    trial court was insufficient to prove that the Buxtons were guilty
    of civil contempt.   We disagree.
    In determining whether the Buxtons had violated the 1994
    decree, the dispositive issue before the trial court was whether
    the Buxtons had denied, impeded, or hindered "in any manner or way
    the use and enjoyment" of the designated easement by the Murches.
    The record established that the Buxtons routinely parked their
    vehicles on the easement, planted flowers, shrubs, and trees
    across the easement, and placed a basketball goal in concrete on
    the easement, all of which blocked the Murches from using the
    easement to access the Rappahannock River by car or truck.   We
    find that this evidence supports the trial court's finding that
    the Buxtons violated the injunction.   We hold, therefore, that the
    evidence was sufficient, as a matter of law, to prove the Buxtons
    were in contempt of court.
    The Buxtons also argue that the trial court erred in
    concluding that the title to the land underlying the easement was
    irrelevant to the issue of whether the Buxtons were in contempt of
    court.   We disagree.
    As the Supreme Court noted in its opinion in this case, the
    parties stipulated at the commissioner's hearing "that title to
    the property underlying the claimed easement was 'beyond the
    ambit of this case.'"   
    Buxton, 249 Va. at 504
    , 457 S.E.2d at 82.
    Indeed, the Buxtons acknowledged at the contempt hearing that the
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    title to the property underlying the easement was not at issue and
    concede on appeal that the title to the property was not at issue
    before the commissioner in chancery, the trial court, or the
    Supreme Court when the injunction in this case was entered and
    then modified on appeal.    Thus, the trial court, charged with
    determining whether the Buxtons were in contempt of court,
    correctly found that the issue of the underlying title was not
    relevant to the issue of contempt before it.
    The Buxtons further argue the trial court erred "in going
    outside the bill of particulars in finding the Buxtons guilty of
    contempt."   We disagree.
    In reviewing the record, we find that the trial court did not
    "go outside" the Murches' bill of particulars in finding the
    Buxtons in contempt of court.   The bill of particulars, as well as
    many of the exhibits attached to it, included numerous references
    to the Buxtons' "vehicles, basketball goal, and other
    obstructions" impeding the Murches' "free and unobstructed use of
    the right-of-way to the [river]."   The trial court based its
    finding of contempt on the fact that the Buxtons "set a basketball
    goal in concrete upon [the easement], . . . extended their yard
    over it and planted flowers and shrubs on it, regularly park[ed]
    their vehicles on it, [and] . . . caused feces to collect upon
    it."   Accordingly, we find that, in holding the Buxtons in
    contempt, the trial court did not "go outside" the allegations
    made by the Murches in the bill of particulars.
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    Finally, the Buxtons argue the trial court erred when, in
    construing the express easement at issue, it ruled the Murches and
    other lot owners had the right to park on the easement, to
    construct a walkway and stairs on it, "and, especially, to build
    beyond the right-of-way and into the river."        Similarly, the
    Buxtons contend the trial court erred in not granting their
    motion to enjoin the Murches from exercising such "expansive
    rights."
    We first note that the decree entered by the trial court says
    nothing about building any structure "beyond the right-of-way and
    into the river."   Rather, in construing the express easement at
    issue, the trial court held that the Murches and other lot owners
    had the right, in using the easement to access the river, to drive
    on the easement, to park their vehicles for up to thirty minutes
    on the easement, "to construct a walkway and/or stairs down the
    bank and over the riprap that the Buxtons installed which prevents
    people from safely accessing the River, and . . . to put a
    platform there [i.e., "over the riprap"] for the launching and
    retrieving of small boats." 2   (Emphasis added.)    Such a platform,
    built over the riprap, would not exceed the physical limits of the
    express easement, which is shown on the 1952 Stiff survey plat as
    extending fully to the river itself.    Accordingly, we need not
    further address the Buxtons' claim that the trial court erred in
    2
    The riprap was placed along the bank of the river to
    prevent erosion.
    - 9 -
    granting the Murches and other lot owners the right "to build
    beyond the right-of-way and into the river."
    Likewise, having previously addressed the issue of driving
    on the easement, we need not repeat that discussion here.
    Turning, then, to the Buxtons' argument that the trial
    court erred in permitting the lot owners to park and build
    structures on the easement, we observe that the applicable legal
    principle was stated in 
    Hayes, 243 Va. at 258-59
    , 414 S.E.2d at
    822, as follows:
    As a general rule, when an easement is
    created by grant or reservation and the
    instrument creating the easement does not
    limit the use to be made of it, the easement
    may be used for "any purpose to which the
    dominant estate may then, or in the future,
    reasonably be devoted." Cushman Corporation
    v. Barnes, 
    204 Va. 245
    , 253, 
    129 S.E.2d 633
    ,
    639 (1963). Stated differently, an easement
    created by a general grant or reservation,
    without words limiting it to any particular
    use of the dominant estate, is not affected
    by any reasonable change in the use of the
    dominant estate. Savings Bank v. Raphael,
    
    201 Va. 718
    , 723, 
    113 S.E.2d 683
    , 687 (1960)
    (citing Ribble, 1 Minor on Real Property
    § 107, at 146 n.2 (2d ed. 1928)). However,
    no use may be made of the easement which is
    different from that established at the time
    of its creation and which imposes an
    additional burden upon the servient estate.
    Cushman 
    Corporation, 204 Va. at 253
    , 129
    S.E.2d at 639-40.
    Here, neither the 1939 decree creating the original easement
    for access to the Rappahannock River nor the 1994 decree
    establishing the easement for access to the river over the
    "Street" depicted on the 1952 Stiff survey plat contained terms of
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    limitation as to the easement's use.    Likewise, both instruments
    clearly indicated that the easement was intended to allow the lot
    owners in the Richardson Subdivision to access the river.     In
    addition, the record reflects that the easement was historically
    used by the lot owners in the subdivision to access the river for
    recreational purposes, until, as the Supreme Court noted, "[i]n
    1984, the Buxtons apparently prohibited use of the "Street" by
    others."   
    Buxton, 249 Va. at 506
    , 457 S.E.2d at 83.
    Furthermore, the evidence presented supports the conclusion
    that the parking of vehicles on the easement for up to thirty
    minutes as well the construction of a walkway, stairs, and
    platform down the bank and over the riprap are reasonable uses of
    the easement for the purpose of accessing the river.      As the
    trial court noted, parking for thirty minutes would allow those
    accessing the river time to unload their boats or supplies
    without overburdening others' use of the easement.
    Additionally, the stairs, walkway, and platform would allow the
    users of the easement to safely access the river over the
    hazardous riprap along the bank of the river.
    The evidence further supports the conclusion that the
    construction of the walkway, stairs, and platform would "not,
    'in and of itself,' impose an 'additional burden' upon the
    easement, even though the 'degree of burden' may be increased."
    
    Hayes, 243 Va. at 260
    , 414 S.E.2d at 823 (quoting Cushman
    
    Corporation, 204 Va. at 253
    , 129 S.E.2d at 640).       Accordingly,
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    such improvements to the easement are permissible.      See 
    id. at 261, 414
    S.E.2d at 823 (holding that "the owner of a dominant
    estate has the right to make reasonable improvements to an
    easement, so long as the improvement does not unreasonably
    increase the burden upon the servient estate").
    For these reasons, we hold that the trial court did not err
    in construing the easement established by the 1994 decree as
    allowing the Murches and other lot owners to park their vehicles
    for up to thirty minutes on the easement and to build a walkway,
    stairs, and a platform on the easement in order to safely access
    the river.   Because such uses of the easement are permissible,
    we further hold the trial court did not err in denying the
    Buxtons' motion to enjoin those uses.
    III.   ATTORNEY'S FEES AND COSTS
    The Buxtons contend the trial court erred in awarding the
    Murches attorney's fees and costs.      They argue, firstly, that
    "[n]o sanctions should have been awarded against them" because
    they did not violate a court order and, secondly, that the fee
    application of the Murches' counsel was "insufficient as a
    matter of law."   We disagree with both arguments.
    Having affirmed the trial court's finding that the Buxtons
    violated the trial court's 1994 decree, as modified by the
    Supreme Court, we need not address the Buxtons' first argument,
    except to note that the trial court "was justified in imposing
    sanctions on [the Buxtons] by awarding counsel fees to [the
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    Murches] in order to indemnify [them] for the expenses incurred
    in investigating and prosecuting the contempt proceeding and to
    restore the status quo as far as possible."   Arvin, Inc. v. Sony
    Corp. of America, 
    215 Va. 704
    , 706, 
    213 S.E.2d 753
    , 755 (1975).
    With regard to the Buxtons' second argument that the fee
    application of the Murches' counsel was "insufficient as a
    matter of law," we find that the evidence in the record supports
    the trial court's award of attorney's fees and costs.    The trial
    court clearly indicated in its ruling from the bench that its
    award would comprise "the costs that the Murches have expended
    and will expend as a result" of the Buxtons' contemptuous
    conduct.   At the court's direction, counsel for the Murches
    submitted an affidavit of the Murches' attorney's fees and costs
    along with a detailed summary showing the time, effort, and
    expenses he spent investigating and prosecuting the proceedings
    directly resulting from the Buxtons' violation of the
    injunction.   Upon considering the affidavit and summary, and
    counsel's argument and representations related thereto, the
    trial court awarded the Murches $10,283.25.   We conclude that
    there was, as a matter of law, sufficient evidence presented
    "upon which [an] able and experienced trial judge could arrive
    at a reasonable fee."   
    Id. at 707, 213
    S.E.2d at 755.
    Accordingly, we will affirm the trial court's decree finding
    the Buxtons in civil contempt of court and awarding the Murches
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    their attorney's fees and costs expended as a result of the
    Buxtons' contemptuous conduct.
    Affirmed.
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