Phillip D. Tice v. John S. Veach ( 2021 )


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  •                                  STATE OF WEST VIRGINIA
    SUPREME COURT OF APPEALS
    Phillip D. Tice,
    Defendant Below, Petitioner                                                         FILED
    March 3, 2021
    vs.)   No. 19-1117 (Randolph County 17-C-125)                                       released at 3:00 p.m.
    EDYTHE NASH GAISER, CLERK
    SUPREME COURT OF APPEALS
    John S. Veach,                                                                       OF WEST VIRGINIA
    Plaintiff Below, Respondent
    MEMORANDUM DECISION
    Respondent John S. Veach 1 holds an express, deeded right-of-way across Petitioner Phillip
    D. Tice’s 2 property. A 1960 agreement describes the right-of-way for a road, but the parties to
    that agreement did not get a survey. For approximately twenty-six years, Mr. Veach and his
    employee crossed Mr. Tice’s property along what they thought was the right-of-way—a route that
    cuts through Mr. Tice’s hayfield and close to a combined garage/apartment constructed around
    2000. After Mr. Tice blocked that route, Mr. Veach sued for a declaration (1) of the location of
    the right-of-way, and (2) a prescriptive easement along the route that he had allegedly used for
    twenty-six years. At trial, the jury found that the right-of-way was located as Mr. Veach claimed:
    through Mr. Tice’s hayfield and near his garage. And, the jury found that Mr. Veach had
    established the elements of a prescriptive easement. In the Judgment Order that followed, the
    circuit court ordered that the location and width of the prescriptive easement matched that of the
    right-of-way.
    On appeal, Mr. Tice essentially argues that Mr. Veach pulled a “fast one” at trial and used
    evidence relevant to his prescriptive easement theory to dupe the jury into locating the right-of-
    way through the field and near his garage. That duplicity, Mr. Tice contends, led to jury verdicts
    unsupported by the evidence and a Judgment Order that is plainly erroneous. We disagree with
    Mr. Tice’s first contention, but agree with his second. Plainly, the Judgment Order’s finding that
    Mr. Tice holds a prescriptive easement in the same location, and of the same width, as his express,
    deeded right-of-way is erroneous. But, we cannot say that the evidence offered at trial of the
    location of that right-of-way was so insufficient as to render the verdict a manifest injustice—a
    very high bar set by Mr. Tice’s failure to raise this objection, below. So, we affirm-in-part and
    reverse-in-part the circuit court’s Judgment Order and remand for entry of an order consistent with
    this decision.
    1
    Mr. Veach is represented by Harry A. Smith, III, Esq., Jory & Smith, L.C.
    2
    Mr. Tice is represented by Braun A. Hamstead, Esq., HAMSTEAD & ASSOCIATES,
    L.C.
    This case does not present a substantial question or law or fact. So, resolution of this appeal
    by memorandum decision is appropriate under Rule 21 of the West Virginia Rules of Appellate
    Procedure.
    I. FACTUAL AND PROCEDURAL BACKGROUND
    Mr. Tice and Mr. Veach own nearly contiguous tracts of real property in the Beverly
    District of Randolph County. Until 1936, the properties were part of a 136-acre tract held by the
    Wamsley family. A July 1936 deed severed and conveyed a 30.0262-acre portion of the Wamsley
    property to a predecessor in Mr. Tice’s chain of title, Adam Wamsley. 3 The July 1936 deed also
    excepted a right-of-way across the 30.062-acre tract for a road leading to what is now Mr. Veach’s
    property from State Secondary Route 24.
    On April 25, 1960, Owen Lutz, grantor to Mr. Veach, and Eunice McLaughlin,
    predecessor-in-title to Mr. Tice, formed a Right of Way Agreement in which they restated the
    right-of-way reserved in the July 1936 deed and attempted to define it. 4 The agreement states that,
    [T]he private road right of way leading from State Secondary
    Road No. 24 shall run from said State Secondary road in a westerly
    direction over the driveway or lane leading to the house located on
    said 30.062 acre tract; thence the same shall continue in a
    southwesterly direction around and to the South of a tool shed now
    located on said premises; thence in a northwesterly direction a
    straight line to the line fence separating the property of the parties
    of the first part and the party of the second part.
    We briefly describe Mr. Tice’s property to put the 1960 agreement and the analysis that
    follows in context. 5 A gravel driveway leading from Secondary Route 24 provides access to Mr.
    Tice’s property. After leaving Route 24, the driveway crosses a narrow strip of property owned
    by a third-party. The driveway then crosses onto Mr. Tice’s land and ascends a small hill to a flat,
    gravel area. Mr. Tice’s property extends to the left of the driveway, if viewed standing with one’s
    back to Route 24. Heading in that direction, one passes through a small orchard then reaches a
    property boundary shared with Mr. Walter Brown. 6 Mr. Tice’s garage sits to the left, adjacent to
    3
    The 30.0262-acre tract was later split. Mr. Tice took the remaining, approximately 17-
    acre tract. Mr. Tice does not dispute that the right-of-way burdens his property.
    4
    The agreement states that it was executed on April 25, 1950. Mr. Veach’s title expert,
    Terry Reed, Esq., testified that that date was a typo, and that the agreement was actually executed
    on April 25, 1960. Mr. Tice did not dispute this point.
    5
    In a similar fashion, the jury viewed Mr. Tice’s property before hearing testimony of the
    parties.
    6
    Mr. Brown is not a party to this case. This boundary post-dates the 1960 agreement.
    According to Mr. Tice, the right-of-way follows this property boundary to Mr. Veach’s property,
    even though it did not exist in 1960.
    2
    the gravel. Behind the gravel flat and the modern garage is a grassy area, beyond which a metal
    gate leads into Mr. Tice’s field. Mr. Tice’s field shares a boundary with another long, narrow strip
    of property owned by Mr. Brown, which roughly parallels Route 24. Mr. Veach’s property sits
    directly behind Mr. Brown’s property, separated by a fence and accessible through a sixteen-foot-
    wide gate.
    A 1930s-era frame farmhouse had stood on Mr. Tice’s property until the late 1990s, when
    he tore it down. The farmhouse sat to the right of the gravel flat, approximately opposite of where
    the garage stands today. Also, in the late 1990s, Mr. Tice demolished a white wooden structure
    (or series of connected structures) to make space to construct the garage. At one time or another,
    an outhouse, smokehouse, milkshed, and cow barn also stood on Mr. Tice’s property. Testimony
    at trial indicated that the milkshed and cow barn had stood in the field beyond Mr. Tice’s interior
    gate, apparently on the right-hand side as one passes through the gate. Neither structure exists
    today, but the foundation of the milkshed is still visible in the field. Mr. Tice’s father, Fred Tice,
    owned the property in the 1970s, and his brother, Denzil Tice, then had it from 1983 until 1994,
    when he sold it to Mr. Tice.
    Mr. Veach filed suit against Mr. Tice in October 2017, seeking a declaration as to the
    location of the express, deeded right-of-way described in the 1960 agreement. He also sought a
    declaration that his open, continuous, and uninterrupted use of what he believed to be the right-of-
    way had “ripened” into a prescriptive easement. Mr. Veach prayed for a judgment declaring that
    a thirty-five-foot-wide easement—express and prescriptive, both—burdened Mr. Tice’s property
    and that it followed a particular survey line, described below in greater detail. Mr. Tice answered
    and did not deny the existence of the right-of-way or the 1960 agreement. But, he did deny that
    the right-of-way followed the survey line as alleged by Mr. Veach, and that Mr. Veach had satisfied
    the elements of a prescriptive easement.
    The parties tried Mr. Veach’s claims in July 2019. In addition to his own testimony, Mr.
    Veach offered the testimony of Terry Reed, Esq., 7 qualified by the court as an expert in real estate
    law; Donald Teter, qualified by the court as an expert in land surveying; Richard Rosencrantz, Mr.
    Veach’s employee; and Mr. Brown. Mr. Tice testified, as did Denzil Tice.
    Mr. Veach testified that he had not known the location of the express, deeded right-of-way
    when he purchased his property in 1990 from Mr. Lutz. After closing, however, Mr. Lutz—a
    signatory to the 1960 agreement—walked and drove Mr. Veach across the right-of-way. Mr.
    Veach testified that, per Mr. Lutz, the right-of-way was
    [a] straight line after you come up out from 24, uphill a little
    bit, you reach the plateau, and then it’s a straight line to Mr. Tice’s
    interior gate. Thereafter, the gate opens toward you. The hinge is
    on the left. Thereafter, you pull your vehicle through there, then you
    7
    Mr. Reed testified to the parties’ chains of title. He opined that Mr. Tice’s property was
    subservient to Mr. Veach’s express, right-of-way, as specified in the 1936 deed and described in
    the 1960 agreement. Mr. Reed did not testify regarding the location of the right-of-way or a
    prescriptive easement.
    3
    make a left-angled turn for a distance, and then you make a right-
    angled turn in a straight line to my gate.
    Mr. Veach offered the expert testimony of Mr. Teter to support his construction of the 1960
    agreement and location of the express, deeded right-of-way. Mr. Veach had hired Mr. Teter in
    1992 to survey his property boundaries and the right-of-way. The plat rendered by Mr. Teter
    shows the location of a roadway (marked “R/W”) connecting Route 24 to Mr. Veach’s property
    through Mr. Tice’s field. See Figure 1.
    Figure 1
    Mr. Teter concluded that a roadway existed in that location because,
    [T]he part closest to the Secondary Route 24, down in here,
    that’s actually a gravel driveway there, which I believe is still there
    in that position. But, further back, particularly along this 563.7 foot
    long here, there were wheel tracks, not extremely prominent, but it
    was clear that there had been traffic in that vicinity repeatedly over
    a period of years, and I saw it apparently compacted there, and I
    could see evidence where the wheel tracks were based upon the
    difference in the grass, the vegetation growing up on that part of the
    field.
    Mr. Teter compared the 1992 survey to several aerial photographs of Mr. Tice’s property.
    Mr. Teter testified that one, taken in 1965, clearly depicted the driveway from County Route 24
    and then a road—or at least a variance in the land use consistent with a road—in a location that
    matched the roadway marked on the 1992 survey. The 1965 photograph did not clearly depict a
    road in any other location.
    Mr. Teter admitted that he had not reviewed the 1960 agreement when he surveyed the
    roadway in 1992. Later, though, he compared the description of the right-of-way in that agreement
    with the roadway he had surveyed. Mr. Teter testified that, as he read the 1960 agreement, the
    right-of-way followed the driveway to its end, to the front of the old farmhouse. Upon comparison,
    4
    he concluded that the surveyed roadway and the description of the right-of-way in the 1960
    agreement were not significantly inconsistent. He testified that while the 1965 photo showed
    buildings beside the driveway, he did not see a building in the picture that clearly appeared to be
    a tool shed. Mr. Teter also testified that Fred Tice, who had owned the property in the 1970s, told
    him that, “so far as he knew,” the express, deeded right-of-way followed the driveway and then
    the roadway that Mr. Teter had observed and marked on the plat as “R/W.” Mr. Teter did not
    opine on the location of the tool shed mentioned in the 1960 agreement, and emphasized that the
    1992 plat expressed his observations of a roadway then in use. But, Mr. Veach indicated that the
    roadway depicted on the 1992 plat matched the route he used to cross Mr. Tice’s property, that is,
    the route shown to him by Mr. Lutz in 1990.
    Mr. Tice vehemently disputed that the 1992 plat depicted the path of the deeded, express
    right-of-way. Mr. Tice contended that the right-of-way took a wholly different route, one that did
    not continue up the driveway past his garage and across his field. Mr. Tice based his construction
    of the 1960 agreement on the location of what his family had called “the tool shed,” the white
    wooden structure that he had demolished in the late 1990s. Mr. Tice offered two photographs to
    show the nature and location of that building. The first is undated, and depicts Mr. Tice’s youthful
    brother on a Honda motorbike, parked in a grassy area in front of a split rail fence. The family’s
    tool shed is visible behind the fence. The second photograph is dated 1976. In it, Denzil Tice,
    Fred Tice, and Mr. Tice’s grandfather gather at a split rail fence, again with the family’s tool shed
    behind them.
    Both Denzil and Mr. Tice testified that the family’s tool shed had stood near to the footprint
    of the modern garage, across the gravel flat from the now-demolished farmhouse. In view of the
    1960 agreement’s direction that the right-of-way ran over the driveway to the house (i.e.,
    farmhouse), and then “continue[d] in a southwesterly direction around and to the South of a tool
    shed now located on said premises,” Mr. Tice concluded that the former location of his family’s
    tool shed dictated that the right-of-way had to depart the driveway to the left before reaching his
    garage, and, therefore, before one would have reached the old farmhouse. According to Mr. Tice,
    the right-of-way then proceeded through the orchard to his property line with Mr. Brown, before
    finally turning and following that boundary to Mr. Veach’s property.
    The jury also heard conflicting testimony regarding the frequency with which Mr. Veach
    and his employee, Mr. Rosencrantz, crossed Mr. Tice’s property, as well as the route they took.
    According to Mr. Veach, he crossed Mr. Tice’s property along the course specified by Mr. Lutz at
    least monthly from 1990 until 2016 by dump truck, pickup truck, car, and bicycle for general
    ingress and egress to his property. Mr. Veach and Mr. Rosencrantz both testified that they
    traversed Mr. Tice’s property from time to time by tractor or pickup truck to reach other property
    owned by Mr. Veach and to tend cattle, repair fences, and brush hog the fields, there. Mr. Veach
    recalled that Fred Tice had seen him using the right-of-way several times and had not objected.
    Mr. Rosencrantz testified to similar interactions with Fred Tice.
    Mr. Tice testified that he had seen Mr. Veach cross his property only twice in the 1990s,
    once on foot and once on a bicycle, and had never observed Mr. Rosencrantz cross during that
    time period. He denied seeing any indication on the ground of someone crossing his field by
    5
    vehicle to reach Mr. Veach’s gate until 2008 or 2009. 8 Mr. Tice testified that he first saw Mr.
    Rosencrantz cross his property on July 4, 2013. When Mr. Tice saw Mr. Rosencrantz cross the
    property the next July, Mr. Tice testified that he told him that he had to take the prescribed right-
    of-way. 9 Mr. Rosencrantz testified that this encounter occurred on July 4, 2016. Mr. Tice also
    testified to the changing locations of gates and fencing in and around his property over time.
    Without objection, the circuit court submitted both of Mr. Veach’s claims to the jury. Mr.
    Tice did not object to any of the instructions offered by the court; in fact, he drafted the prescriptive
    easement instruction. Similarly, Mr. Tice did not object to the verdict forms, one on the location
    of the express, deeded right-of-way and the second on Mr. Veach’s prescriptive easement claim.
    Mr. Tice had moved for judgment as a matter of law during trial, arguing that Mr. Veach had not
    offered clear and convincing evidence of a prescriptive easement across Mr. Tice’s property. The
    court denied Mr. Tice’s motion, and he did not renew it at the close of the evidence.
    The jury returned both verdicts, completed. On the first, it found that the right-of-way was
    located as Mr. Veach claimed, along the roadway depicted on the 1992 survey. The jury also
    found that the right-of-way was fourteen-feet wide. On the second, the jury found that Mr. Veach
    had proven by clear and convincing evidence the elements of a prescriptive easement across Mr.
    Tice’s property. The court polled the jury at Mr. Tice’s request, but he did not object to the form
    of the verdicts returned by the jury.
    The court entered a Judgment Order on August 30, 2019. In it, the court restated the jury’s
    verdicts and ordered that (1) Mr. Veach has an express, deeded right-of-way across Mr. Tice’s
    property, (2) the express, deeded right-of-way is fourteen-feet wide and its centerline follows the
    roadway on the 1992 survey, (3) Mr. Veach has a prescriptive easement across Mr. Tice’s property,
    and (4) the location and width of the prescriptive easement matches the right-of-way. Specifically,
    the Judgment Order stated:
    1.    That Plaintiff, John S. Veach, has an express, deeded,
    right-of-way across a tract of real estate owned by Defendant,
    Phillip D. Tice, said real estate being a 17-acre tract situate in
    Beverly District, Randolph County, West Virginia, conveyed to
    Defendant by Denzil R. Rice [sic.] and Margaret R. Tice, by deed
    dated February 7, 1994, of record in the Office of the Clerk of the
    County Commission of Randolph County, West Virginia, in deed
    Book 431 at page 57.
    2.      That said express, deeded, right-of-way has a width
    of 14 feet, the centerline of which is as surveyed and platted by
    Donald L. Teter, licensed land surveyor, and as described as “R/W”
    (being approximately 1,032.4 feet in length) on a plat of survey,
    8
    Mr. Brown testified that he had never seen anyone use a right-of-way over Mr. Tice’s
    field, although he had seen evidence of vehicles crossing.
    9
    Mr. Tice also testified to first seeing Mr. Rosencrantz cross his property sometime in
    2004, 2005, or 2006.
    6
    entitled Plat of Survey for John S. Veach, admitted as evidence
    (Exhibit M) in the trial herein; a copy of said plat of survey, reduced
    in size, is attached hereto and incorporated herein as part of this
    Judgment Order.
    3.     That Plaintiff, John S. Veach, has a prescriptive
    easement across said 17-acre tract of real estate owned by
    Defendant, Philip D. Tice, the centerline of said prescriptive
    easement being as surveyed and platted by Donald L. Teter and as
    specifically described in the preceding paragraph of this Judgment
    Order.
    Mr. Tice filed a motion to set aside the jury’s verdicts and for a new trial on September 9,
    2019. He argued that the verdict form was very confusing and that the court should have presented
    the jury with only one verdict, plus the forms were drafted in a manner that led the jury to confuse
    the standards of proof applicable to Mr. Veach’s claims. The court denied Mr. Tice’s motion by
    summary order. 10 This appeal followed. Mr. Tice now seeks reversal of the Judgment Order and
    remand for determination of the location of Mr. Veach’s express, deeded right-of-way.
    II. STANDARD OF REVIEW
    Generally, we review a circuit court’s ruling on a motion for a new trial for abuse of
    discretion. 11 However, Mr. Tice did not challenge the sufficiency of the evidence of the location
    of the express, deeded right-of-way before the trial court in a motion for judgment as a matter of
    law under West Virginia Rule of Civil Procedure 50(a) or (b). We have explained that,
    “[i]t is well established that the sufficiency of the evidence is not
    reviewable on appeal unless a motion for a directed verdict was
    made in the trial court. . . . The appellate court, therefore, is
    powerless to review the sufficiency of the evidence to support the
    verdict if the appellant made no motion for a directed verdict. The
    only exception is where the insufficiency of the evidence constitutes
    plain error apparent on the face of the record which if not noticed
    would result in a manifest miscarriage of justice. . . .”[12]
    Nor did Mr. Tice challenge any incongruity in the jury’s verdicts before the circuit court
    dismissed the jury. “Absent extenuating circumstances, the failure to timely object to a defect or
    10
    Mr. Tice also objected to the introduction of aerial photographs of his property. He does
    not raise this argument on appeal. Apparently, the circuit court explained its denial of this motion
    during an October 2019 hearing. The appendix record does not contain a transcript of that hearing.
    11
    MacDonald v. City Hosp., Inc., 
    227 W. Va. 707
    , 715, 
    715 S.E.2d 405
    , 413 (2011).
    12
    Montgomery v. Callison, 
    226 W. Va. 296
    , 302, 
    700 S.E.2d 507
    , 513 (2010) (quoting
    Chambers v. Smith, 
    157 W. Va. 77
    , 81, 
    198 S.E.2d 806
    , 809 (1973) (superseded by rule) (emphasis
    in original)).
    7
    irregularity in the verdict form when the jury returns the verdict and prior to the jury’s discharge,
    constitutes a waiver of the defect or irregularity in the verdict form.” 13 So, we review the
    proceedings below for plain error.
    We may act to correct to an error that was not raised before the trial court when there is
    “(1) an error; (2) that is plain; (3) that affects substantial rights; and (4) seriously affects the
    fairness, integrity, or public reputation of the judicial proceedings.” 14 As to the first and second
    prerequisites to the application of the plain error doctrine, we have explained that,
    “[A]n error may be plain under existing law, which means
    that the plainness of the error is predicated upon legal principles that
    the litigants and trial court knew or should have known at the time
    of the prosecution [of the case]....” Syl. Pt. 6, in part, State v.
    Myers, 
    204 W.Va. 449
    , 
    513 S.E.2d 676
     (1998).[15]
    We now apply this exacting standard to Mr. Tice’s arguments.
    III. ANALYSIS
    Mr. Tice’s three assignments of error share a central theme: the jury’s verdicts were tainted
    by the innate inconsistency between Mr. Veach’s claims to both an express, deeded right-of-way
    and a prescriptive easement in the same location. Mr. Tice contends, broadly, that the circuit court
    committed plain error when it entered a judgment order locating Mr. Veach’s fourteen-foot wide
    express, deeded right-of-way along the roadway marked on the 1992 survey and ordering that Mr.
    Veach held a prescriptive easement in the same location and of the same width. Mr. Tice also
    contends that during trial, the circuit court erroneously permitted Mr. Veach to “mix and match”
    his evidence. According to Mr. Tice, the court stood by while Mr. Veach hoodwinked the jury
    into locating the right-of-way along the roadway in the 1992 survey with evidence that was
    relevant only to Mr. Veach’s prescriptive easement theory. That inaction, Mr. Tice asserts, led the
    jury to locate the right-of-way in a manner that is plainly contrary to the description in the 1960
    agreement. And, Mr. Tice argues that even if Mr. Veach’s prescriptive easement theory was
    properly before the jury, Mr. Veach did not offer clear and convincing evidence of a prescriptive
    13
    Syl. Pt. 2, Combs v. Hahn, 
    205 W. Va. 102
    , 
    516 S.E.2d 506
     (1999). “The rationale for
    the rule is, that it is required in order to give the trial court the opportunity to correct any infirmity
    in the verdict while correction is still possible.” 
    Id.
     at 105–06, 
    516 S.E.2d at
    510–11 (internal
    quotation omitted). See also id. at 105, 
    516 S.E.2d at 509
     (quoting in a parenthetical North Am.
    Catamaran Racing Ass’n, Inc. v. McCollister, 
    480 So.2d 669
    , 671 (Fla.Dist.Ct.App.5. 1985)
    (“‘[A] party must object to defective verdict forms or inconsistent verdicts before the jury is
    discharged to preserve the claim’ (citations omitted))”).
    14
    Syl. Pt. 7, in part, State v. Miller, 
    194 W. Va. 3
    , 
    459 S.E.2d 114
     (1995).
    15
    Syl. Pt. 3, Cartwright v. McComas, 
    223 W. Va. 161
    , 
    672 S.E.2d 297
     (2008).
    8
    easement. We consider Mr. Tice’s second assignment of error, regarding the location of the
    express, deeded right-of-way, before turning to his first. 16
    A. Sufficiency of the Evidence Supporting the Jury’s Location of the Right-of-Way
    Mr. Tice’s second assignment of error boils down to an attack on the sufficiency of Mr.
    Veach’s evidence supporting the jury’s verdict locating the express right-of-way on the roadway
    marked on the 1992 survey. As noted above, our review is for plain error that amounts to a
    manifest miscarriage of justice. After a thorough review of the record in this case, we disagree
    with Mr. Tice that the jury’s location of the express, deeded right-of-way amounts to such error.
    Mr. Tice’s primary objection to the jury’s location of the right-of-way is that he believes it
    contradicts the description in the 1960 agreement. That description, he contends, includes only
    three bearings, not four bearings as appear on the roadway on the 1992 survey, the location selected
    by the jury. He argues that the 1960 agreement calls for the right-of-way to depart immediately
    from the driveway at the crest of the small hill, and then to the left in a southerly direction toward
    the orchard and Mr. Brown’s property line to avoid the former location of his family’s tool shed.
    According to Mr. Tice, the express right-of-way described in the 1960 agreement cannot match
    the location of the roadway on the 1992 survey because, if located there, then the right-of-way
    would have run through his family’s tool shed, and not around it. Moreover, he contends that Mr.
    Teter surveyed the right-of-way based on the route Mr. Veach wanted to take across Mr. Tice’s
    property, and not on the description in the 1960 agreement.
    Mr. Veach counters that the 1960 agreement does not say that the express right-of-way
    departs from the driveway and heads south; instead, the right-of-way goes “around” a tool shed,
    and then in a “straight line” to what is now his property. Mr. Veach asserts that Mr. Teter surveyed
    what he saw on the ground in 1992 and that when he later compared the description in the 1960
    agreement to that survey, he saw nothing clearly inconsistent between the two. He emphasizes
    Mr. Teter’s testimony that the 1965 aerial photograph of Mr. Tice’s property does not clearly
    depict a tool shed and that he did not recall seeing a tool shed building on Mr. Tice’s property
    when he conducted the survey in 1992.
    Mr. Tice’s argument that the roadway shown on the 1992 survey contradicts the description
    in the 1960 agreement does not establish plain error sufficient to set aside the jury’s verdict.
    Significantly, Mr. Veach testified that Mr. Lutz, his grantor and a party to the 1960 agreement,
    showed him the right-of-way shortly after Mr. Veach purchased his property. According to Mr.
    Veach, the right-of-way shown to him by Mr. Lutz matched the roadway on the 1992 survey.
    Further, Mr. Teter testified that Fred Tice, a former owner of Mr. Tice’s property and resident of
    the old farmhouse, told him that, “so far as he knew,” the express, deeded right-of-way followed
    the driveway and then the roadway that Mr. Teter had observed and marked on the plat as “R/W.”
    Mr. Tice takes issue with the fact that Mr. Teter did not review the 1960 agreement when
    he completed his survey in 1992. But, Mr. Teter later reviewed the agreement, compared it to the
    1992 survey, and then testified that he saw no significant inconsistencies between the two. Mr.
    16
    Our resolution of Mr. Tice’s first assignment of error moots his third, so we do not
    address it.
    9
    Teter also testified regarding the alleged incongruity in the description of the right-of-way in the
    1960 agreement and the calls forming the right-of-way in the 1992 survey. In a colloquy with Mr.
    Veach’s counsel, Mr. Teter explained:
    Mr. Veach’s counsel: Are any of those dimensions
    mentioned in that right-of-way agreement inconsistent with your
    platting back in 1992?
    Mr. Teter:     I don’t see that the language is in any
    significant way – or inconsistent with where I observed the right-of-
    way to apparently to be in 1992.
    Mr. Veach’s counsel: And the directions that are shown on
    this right-of-way are what?
    Mr. Teter:     Those directions are general directions. They
    are not specific angular directions. They are based upon – simply
    as general westerly direction, which the driveway – when it says
    “westerly,” it’s actually running north of westerly. And the
    northwest direction is only specific as to which quadrant of 90
    degrees it is in. There are 360 degrees in a full circle. . . . So those
    directions are not specific to any closer than perhaps 45 degrees, if
    that.
    Finally, Mr. Tice’s argument about the location of his family’s tool shed does not persuade
    us that the jury’s verdict amounts to a miscarriage of justice. Clearly, the 1960 agreement
    references a tool shed. Mr. Tice contends that the “tool shed” mentioned in the agreement must
    have been the white wooden structure that his family called a tool shed and which stood near the
    footprint of his garage. But, Mr. Teter testified that he could not clearly discern a tool shed in the
    1965 aerial photograph of Mr. Tice’s property. And, Mr. Tice’s father owned the property in the
    1970s, years after the formation of the agreement and the date the aerial photograph was taken.
    As Mr. Veach’s counsel pointed out at trial, Mr. Tice was only two years old when Mr. Lutz and
    Ms. McLaughlin made the 1960 agreement. So, even if the Tice family tool shed was located as
    Mr. Tice and Denzil Tice testified, that testimony does not make plain the location of a tool shed
    existing on the property in 1960, such that the jury’s verdict becomes a miscarriage of justice. For
    all of the reasons discussed above, we affirm that portion of the Judgment Order pertaining to the
    location of Mr. Veach’s express, deeded right-of-way.
    B. The Prescriptive Easement
    We briefly address Mr. Tice’s remaining assignment of error: that the circuit court erred
    in finding in the Judgment Order that Mr. Veach held a prescriptive easement in the same location,
    and of the same width, as the express, deeded right-of-way as determined by the jury. Mr. Tice
    did not object to the form of the jury’s verdicts before the circuit court discharged the jury, so we
    again review for plain error.
    10
    Our law on prescriptive easements is clear that “[a] person claiming a prescriptive easement
    must prove . . . the adverse use of another’s land . . . .” 17 More specifically, we have held
    [i]n the context of prescriptive easements, an “adverse use”
    of land is a wrongful use, made without the express or implied
    permission of the owner of the land. An “adverse use” is one that
    creates a cause of action by the owner against the person claiming
    the prescriptive easement; no prescriptive easement may be created
    unless the person claiming the easement proves that the owner could
    have prevented the wrongful use by resorting to the law.[18]
    Quoting the Restatement (Third) of Property, we then elaborated on when the use of
    another’s property is adverse:
    “To be adverse ... a use must create a cause of action for
    interference with an interest in property like trespass, nuisance, or
    interference with a servitude benefit. To be adverse, the use must be
    made without authority and without permission of the property
    owner. Thus, uses made pursuant to licenses are not adverse, nor are
    uses made pursuant to servitudes created expressly, by implication,
    or by necessity.”[19]
    That explanation makes plain the error in the Judgment Order. The jury found that Mr.
    Veach has authority under the express right-of-way to cross Mr. Tice’s property along the roadway
    shown on the 1992 plat. So, his passage across Mr. Tice’s property along that roadway cannot be
    adverse to Mr. Tice’s interest in his property because “uses made pursuant to licenses are not
    adverse, nor are uses made pursuant to servitudes created expressly, by implication, or by
    necessity.” 20
    Mr. Veach acknowledges that the prescriptive easement may be superfluous in light of the
    jury’s location of the express, deeded right-of-way. 21 That concession, however, does not remedy
    17
    Syl. Pt. 1, in part, O’Dell v. Stegall, 
    226 W. Va. 590
    , 
    703 S.E.2d 561
     (2010).
    18
    Syl. Pt. 5, 
    id.
     (emphasis added).
    19
    
    Id. at 612
    , 
    703 S.E.2d at 583
     (quoting Rst. (3d) of Property (Servitudes), § 2.16, cmt. f.).
    20
    Id.
    21
    We acknowledge Mr. Veach’s argument that, under West Virginia Rule of Civil
    Procedure 8(e)(2), he is entitled to plead alternative theories of relief. While we agree with Mr.
    Veach as a general proposition, we note one court’s observation that “[w]hen a party prevails on
    one claim, the claims that are brought in the alternative are foreclosed.” Hagan v. Baird, 
    288 F. Supp. 3d 803
    , 804 (W.D. Mich. 2018), aff’d sub nom. In re: B & P Baird Holdings, Inc., 759 F.
    App’x 468 (6th Cir. 2019). See, e.g., Indus. Specialty Chemicals v. Cummins Engine Co., Inc.,
    11
    any confusion or cloud upon Mr. Tice’s title that may be caused by the inconsistent findings in the
    Judgment Order. Without correction, the plainness of the legal error on the face of the Judgment
    Order may also seriously affect the public reputation of the proceedings, below. Consequently,
    we reverse the Judgement Order as it pertains to the prescriptive easement. 22
    IV. CONCLUSION
    For the reasons explained above, the circuit court’s Judgment Order of August 30, 2019 is
    affirmed as it pertains to Mr. Veach’s express, deeded right-of-way, and reversed as it pertains to
    the prescriptive easement, and the matter is remanded for entry of an order consistent with this
    decision.
    Affirmed-in-part, reversed-in-part, and remanded.
    ISSUED: March 3, 2021
    CONCURRED IN BY:
    Chief Justice Evan H. Jenkins
    Justice Elizabeth D. Walker
    Justice Tim Armstead
    Justice John A. Hutchison
    Justice William R. Wooton
    
    918 F. Supp. 1173
    , 1180 (N.D. Ill. 1996) (“While it is true that a plaintiff cannot prevail on both a
    breach of contract claim and a quasi-contract claim dealing with the same subject matter, there is
    no rule against pleading both causes of action in the alternative.”) (internal citations omitted).
    22
    Mr. Veach did not cross-appeal the Judgment Order. Consequently, he has waived his
    right to challenge the circuit court’s finding that the prescriptive easement was located as shown
    on the 1992 survey, and of the same width as his express, deeded right-of-way.
    12