Watan Holdings, LLC v. Violet Blankenship ( 2023 )


Menu:
  •                                             COURT OF APPEALS OF VIRGINIA
    UNPUBLISHED
    Present: Judges Huff, O’Brien and AtLee
    Argued at Lexington, Virginia
    WATAN HOLDINGS, LLC
    MEMORANDUM OPINION* BY
    v.     Record No. 0136-23-3                                 JUDGE MARY GRACE O’BRIEN
    NOVEMBER 8, 2023
    VIOLET BLANKENSHIP, ET AL.
    FROM THE CIRCUIT COURT OF THE CITY OF LYNCHBURG
    J. Frederick Watson, Judge
    Joseph A. Sanzone (Sanzone & Baker, L.L.P., on brief), for
    appellant.
    Sherwood S. Day for appellees.
    Watan Holdings, LLC (Watan) appeals a ruling sustaining a demurrer to its amended
    complaint alleging a breach of general warranty of title. Watan asserts that the court erred by
    finding it had not sufficiently pled an actual or constructive eviction—a necessary element for a
    breach of general warranty claim. For the following reasons, we affirm.
    BACKGROUND
    Watan filed an amended complaint1 against Violet Blankenship and her husband’s estate,
    alleging a breach of general warranty of title.2 Watan purchased commercial property in
    *
    This opinion is not designated for publication. See Code § 17.1-413(A).
    1
    Violet Blankenship demurred to Watan’s initial complaint on the same ground at issue
    here: that Watan failed to plead sufficient facts demonstrating an actual or constructive eviction.
    The court sustained the demurrer with leave to amend.
    2
    The amended complaint also references fraudulent representations made by
    Blankenship and her husband. In its letter opinion, the court found that the amended complaint
    was solely a claim for breach of warranty despite the general references to fraud, and Watan has
    not assigned error to that finding. Thus, we treat Watan’s amended complaint solely as a claim
    Lynchburg from the Blankenships in 2016 and received a general warranty deed. At an
    unspecified time after the purchase, Watan became aware of a title defect—the 2016 deed
    conveyed parts of the “property which the [Blankenships] did not own.” Watan learned of the
    title defect after the city denied its application for a zoning modification because Watan did not
    own the entire property.3
    The amended complaint alleged that “[p]arts of the existing building, appurtenances
    concerning the existing building, and parking spaces in the northwest corner of the property are
    located on property owned by the Norfolk and Southern Railway Company, and a retaining wall
    believed to be on the property is actually owned by Virginia Eagle.” Watan claimed that, as a
    result, the property “is not in a condition to be fully used” and “cannot be repaired due to parts of
    the building and parking lot being located on the property of another.” Additionally, Watan’s
    tenants withheld rent because of the repairs required, and Watan could not secure a new tenant
    “due to [the building’s] general state of disrepair.” Watan asserted that these circumstances, and
    the city’s rezoning denial, taken together, constituted a constructive eviction from the property.
    Watan also claimed that “[a]n actual eviction occurred as a result of [the Blankenships’] actions
    for breach of general warranty. See Banks v. Commonwealth, 
    67 Va. App. 273
    , 289 (2017)
    (noting that an appellate court is “limited to reviewing the assignments of error presented by the
    litigant”); Rule 5A:20(c)(1) (“Only assignments of error listed in the brief will be noticed by this
    Court.”).
    3
    Watan alleged this fact in its initial complaint but failed to allege any facts about the
    city’s denial of a zoning modification in its amended complaint or incorporate by reference the
    initial complaint’s allegations. “[W]hen a circuit court sustains a demurrer to an amended
    [complaint] which does not incorporate or refer to any of the allegations that were set forth in a
    prior [complaint], we will consider only the allegations contained in the amended pleading to
    which the demurrer was sustained.” Hubbard v. Dresser, Inc., 
    271 Va. 117
    , 119-20 (2006)
    (quoting Yuzefovsky v. St. John’s Wood Apartments, 
    261 Va. 97
    , 102 (2001)). Thus, we do not
    consider the city’s actions because we may “consider only the allegations contained in the
    amended pleading to which the demurrer was sustained.” 
    Id.
     We refer to the city’s actions only
    to provide context for Watan’s assertion in the amended complaint that the city’s rezoning denial
    formed part of the basis for a constructive eviction.
    -2-
    stated herein since the property was in the actual possession of a third party under a paramount
    title at the date of the conveyance.”
    Blankenship demurred to Watan’s amended complaint, asserting that a complaint for a
    breach of warranty must plead sufficient facts to establish an actual or constructive eviction.4
    Blankenship argued that the facts pled in the amended complaint were legally insufficient to
    constitute an actual or constructive eviction because Watan failed to allege that a third party had
    asserted paramount title over any part of the property and that such assertion resulted in an
    ouster. Blankenship noted Watan had conceded at a prior hearing that Norfolk Southern and
    Virginia Eagle never asserted paramount title to the property. Blankenship contended that this
    concession was fatal to Watan’s action.
    Following a hearing, the court sustained Blankenship’s demurrer without leave to further
    amend and dismissed the case with prejudice. The court reasoned that Watan did not sufficiently
    plead an actual or constructive eviction from the property because it “failed to state facts
    demonstrating an assertion of paramount title” by a third party. Counsel for Watan signed the
    final order “[s]een and objected to.”
    ANALYSIS
    I. Rule 5A:18
    Blankenship first contends that Watan failed to preserve its arguments under Rule 5A:18
    because it only generally objected to the court’s ruling by signing the final order as “[s]een and
    objected to.” 5
    The estate of Blankenship’s husband did not file a separate demurrer but joined
    4
    Blankenship’s brief on appeal.
    5
    Blankenship also argues that Watan failed to file an adequate appendix under Rule
    5A:25; however, the clerk of the trial court filed a full electronic record that includes all
    pleadings, motions, orders, and transcripts. Per Rule 5A:25(a)(1), “[n]o appendix is required,”
    -3-
    Under Rule 5A:18, “[n]o ruling of the trial court . . . will be considered as a basis for
    reversal unless an objection was stated with reasonable certainty at the time of the ruling, except
    for good cause shown or to enable this Court to attain the ends of justice.” “Rule 5A:18 requires
    a litigant to make timely and specific objections, so that the trial court has ‘an opportunity to rule
    intelligently on the issues presented, thus avoiding unnecessary appeals and reversals.’” Brown
    v. Commonwealth, 
    279 Va. 210
    , 217 (2010) (quoting West v. Commonwealth, 
    43 Va. App. 327
    ,
    337 (2004)). “[E]ndorsing a decree ‘seen and objected to’ does not preserve an issue for appeal
    unless the record further reveals that the issue was properly raised for consideration by the trial
    court.” Twardy v. Twardy, 
    14 Va. App. 651
    , 657 (1992) (en banc); see also Canales v. Torres
    Orellana, 
    67 Va. App. 759
    , 770-72 (2017). “[I]f a trial court is aware of a litigant’s legal
    position[,] and the litigant did not expressly waive such arguments, the arguments remain
    preserved for appeal.” Brown, 279 Va. at 217; see also Code § 8.01-384(A).
    Here, the record demonstrates that Watan properly raised for the trial court’s
    consideration the issues it now argues on appeal. Twardy, 14 Va. App. at 657. At the hearing on
    Blankenship’s demurrer, Watan made the same arguments it makes on appeal and relied on the
    same authorities. The court considered Watan’s arguments and was well “aware of [Watan’s]
    legal position” when it decided the case. Brown, 279 Va. at 217. Nothing in the record suggests
    that the court was deprived of “an opportunity to rule intelligently on the issues presented” in this
    appeal. Id. (quoting West, 43 Va. App. at 337). Accordingly, Watan preserved its arguments.
    See Moncrief v. Div. of Child Support Enf’t ex rel. Joyner, 
    60 Va. App. 721
    , 728-30 (2012)
    (holding that an appellant did not waive issues by endorsing a final order “[s]een and [o]bjected
    because “the clerk of the trial court or other tribunal has filed the record electronically.” Thus,
    any defects with the appendix are immaterial.
    -4-
    to . . . for the reasons stated in oral argument” where the record reflected that he presented the
    trial court with the same arguments subsequently raised on appeal).
    II. Actual or Constructive Eviction
    We review de novo a court’s decision to sustain a demurrer, as it involves a pure issue of
    law. Butler v. Stegmaier, 
    77 Va. App. 115
    , 125 (2023). “The purpose of a demurrer is to
    determine whether a complaint states a cause of action upon which the requested relief may be
    granted.” Assurance Data, Inc. v. Malyevac, 
    286 Va. 137
    , 143 (2013). A demurrer is properly
    sustained “if the pleading, considered in the light most favorable to the plaintiff, fails to state a
    valid cause of action.” Qiu v. Huang, 
    77 Va. App. 304
    , 317 (2023) (quoting Hooked Grp., LLC
    v. City of Chesapeake, 
    298 Va. 663
    , 667 (2020)).
    “A demurrer tests the legal sufficiency of facts alleged in pleadings, not the strength of
    proof. Accordingly, we accept as true all properly pled facts and all inferences fairly drawn from
    those facts.” Dunn, McCormack & MacPherson v. Connolly, 
    281 Va. 553
    , 557 (2011) (quoting
    Abi-Najm v. Concord Condo., LLC, 
    280 Va. 350
    , 357 (2010)). “That interpretative deference,
    however, requires us to ‘distinguish allegations of historical fact from conclusions of law.’”
    Anderson v. Dillman, 
    297 Va. 191
    , 194 (2019) (quoting Coward v. Wellmont Health Sys., 
    295 Va. 351
    , 359 (2018)).
    In an action for a breach of a covenant of warranty, a claimant must plead that an actual
    or constructive eviction has occurred. Tull v. Fleming Bros. Lumber & Mfg. Co., 
    189 Va. 171
    ,
    181-82 (1949); see also Morgan v. Haley, 
    107 Va. 331
    , 334 (1907). “An adversary
    dispossession or a compulsory yielding up of the possession constitutes an actual eviction.”
    Jones v. Richmond, 
    88 Va. 231
    , 234 (1891). A constructive eviction occurs when “the premises
    are in the actual possession of a third party,” Tull, 
    189 Va. at 182
    , under “an adverse assertion of
    a paramount title” at the time of the conveyance, Jones, 
    88 Va. at 233, 235
     (“[W]here, at the time
    -5-
    of the conveyance, the grantee finds the premises in possession of one claiming under a
    paramount title, the covenant for quiet enjoyment or of warranty will be held to be broken,
    without any other act on the part of either the grantee or the claimant.” (quoting William Henry
    Rawle, A Practical Treatise on the Law of Covenants for Title § 139 (originally published
    1860))); see also Tull, 
    189 Va. at 181
    . A constructive eviction may also occur “without any
    actual change of possession” if the plaintiff was “compelled to purchase the paramount title,
    when the validity of such title has been established by the judgment or decree of a court[,] . . . for
    in such a case the [plaintiff] has the right to presume that if he does not become the purchaser he
    will be evicted.” Morgan, 
    107 Va. at 335
    ; see also First Am. Title Ins. Co. v. Chesapeake
    Holdings GSG, LLC, 
    633 F. Supp. 3d 789
    , 798-99 (E.D. Va. 2022) (applying Virginia law and
    finding sufficient allegations of a constructive eviction where, to maintain possession, the
    plaintiff was required to purchase a corrective deed from a third party asserting paramount title).
    Watan failed to sufficiently plead that either an actual or constructive eviction occurred.
    The amended complaint contains a single conclusory allegation that “[a]n actual eviction
    occurred” because “the property was in the actual possession of a third party under a paramount
    title at the date of the conveyance.” Watan argues that the amended complaint “establishes
    eviction by its stated language”; however, the assertion that “an actual eviction occurred” is
    merely a legal conclusion, not a statement of historical fact. See Anderson, 297 Va. at 194.
    “[W]e do not accept the veracity of conclusions of law camouflaged as factual allegations or
    inferences.” Id. (quoting Coward, 
    295 Va. at 359
    ). At most, Watan alleged that after
    discovering third parties might have better title, it abstained from entering the disputed parts of
    the property on its own volition due to unsubstantiated concerns that entry could be considered a
    trespass. Watan did not claim that any “adversary dispossession” or “compulsory yielding” of
    -6-
    possession occurred, Jones, 
    88 Va. at 234
     (emphases added), and thus failed to sufficiently allege
    an actual eviction.
    Watan also failed to sufficiently plead constructive eviction. Watan conceded that
    Norfolk Southern and Virginia Eagle have never asserted a paramount title over any part of the
    property. Indeed, the allegations in the amended complaint do not support an inference that
    Norfolk Southern or Virginia Eagle are even aware of the title issues. Watan merely alleged that
    these third parties have better title over “[p]arts of the existing building, appurtenances
    concerning the existing building, . . . parking spaces in the northwest corner of the property,” and
    a retaining wall. “The mere existence of a paramount legal title in a third person . . . which has
    never been asserted does not amount to a constructive eviction which will support an action for
    breach of covenant.” K.A. Drechsler, Annotation, What Amounts to Constructive Eviction
    Which Will Support Action for Breach of Covenant of Warranty or for Quiet Enjoyment, 
    172 A.L.R. 18
    , § II(b) (originally published 1948) (collecting cases); accord Jones, 
    88 Va. at 234
    (“The existence of an incumbrance, or the mere recovery in a possessory action under which the
    bargain has not been actually disturbed, are held, for technical reasons, not to be breaches of a
    covenant for quiet possession, or, in other words, upon warranties.”); Marbury v. Thornton, 
    82 Va. 702
    , 705 (1886) (“A covenant of warranty, however, can never be treated as a covenant
    against mere incumbrances.”).
    Watan relies on Tull v. Fleming Brothers Lumber & Manufacturing Co. to support its
    argument that it sufficiently pled constructive eviction. Tull, however, is distinguishable. Tull
    sold Fleming Brothers timber on land she claimed to own, but a third party prevented Fleming
    Brothers from removing the timber and claimed to have purchased the land at a judicial sale four
    years earlier. 
    189 Va. at 173-74
    . The third party threatened to “shoot [anyone] who trespassed
    on the land for the purpose of cutting their timber.” 
    Id. at 174
    . The Supreme Court affirmed a
    -7-
    finding that Fleming Brothers had been constructively evicted because “the premises and the
    timber [were] in [the] actual possession of the [third party] claiming under a paramount title.”
    
    Id. at 181
    . The Court noted that Fleming Brothers was “prevented by a most effective means
    from cutting and taking the timber into possession” and was under “no compulsion to commit a
    trespass in order to establish a lawful right in another action.” 
    Id.
    Watan argues the circumstances pled are similar because in Tull, a third party was “in
    possession of and owned the land [that the purported landowner] attempted to convey,” and here,
    Norfolk Southern and Virginia Eagle own parts of the land Blankenship conveyed. However,
    Watan ignores the significant distinction that the third party in Tull clearly asserted paramount
    title (by threatening to shoot anyone who entered the land) and that Fleming Brothers could not
    take possession of the property. See 
    id. at 174
    . Even accepting as true that Norfolk Southern
    and Virginia Eagle have better title over parts of the disputed property, the amended complaint
    failed to allege that they have ever asserted paramount title or kept Watan from possessing the
    property as the third party did in Tull.
    It is fundamental that an eviction of any kind requires some disturbance of possession.
    Jones, 
    88 Va. at 234
     (“[N]o action lies upon [a breach of warranty] until actual eviction, or at
    least disturbance of the possession.”). The only exception to this rule is when a plaintiff is
    “compelled to purchase the paramount title” to avoid an ouster or a disturbance. Morgan, 
    107 Va. at 335
    . There are no allegations in the amended complaint that Watan has ever been kept or
    expelled from any part of the property, or that there has been interference with its access. As in
    Marbury, “there is no averment that [plaintiffs] were kept out of possession of the premises by
    any person or persons in possession under a paramount title, or that they were evicted by
    judgment of eviction followed by ouster.” 
    82 Va. at 704
    . Nor did Watan allege that it was
    “hindered and prevented, by any one having a better right, from entering and enjoying the
    -8-
    premises.” Sheffey’s Ex’r v. Gardiner, 
    79 Va. 313
    , 317 (1884) (quoting Park v. Bates, 
    12 Vt. 381
    , 387 (1840)). Watan also never claimed that it was “compelled to purchase the paramount
    title” to avoid an ouster. Morgan, 
    107 Va. at 335
    . Merely because Watan treated the title defect
    as an eviction does not make it so; the facts alleged in the amended complaint, viewed in the
    light most favorable to Watan, are insufficient to constitute either an actual or constructive
    eviction.
    CONCLUSION
    Because Watan’s amended complaint failed to plead sufficient facts to satisfy an essential
    element of a breach of general warranty claim, the court did not err by sustaining Blankenship’s
    demurrer. For these reasons, we affirm the court’s judgment.
    Affirmed.
    -9-
    

Document Info

Docket Number: 0136233

Filed Date: 11/8/2023

Precedential Status: Non-Precedential

Modified Date: 11/14/2023