Patrick Henry Estates Homeowners Ass'n v. Miller , 462 F. App'x 339 ( 2012 )


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  •                             UNPUBLISHED
    UNITED STATES COURT OF APPEALS
    FOR THE FOURTH CIRCUIT
    No. 11-1279
    PATRICK HENRY ESTATES HOMEOWNERS ASSOCIATION, INCORPORATED,
    a West Virginia corporation,
    Plaintiff - Appellee,
    v.
    GERALD MILLER, Dr.,
    Defendant - Appellant.
    Appeal from the United States District Court for the Northern
    District of West Virginia, at Martinsburg. John Preston Bailey,
    Chief District Judge. (3:08-cv-00175-JPB)
    Submitted:   December 20, 2011            Decided:   January 20, 2012
    Before NIEMEYER and SHEDD, Circuit Judges, and HAMILTON, Senior
    Circuit Judge.
    Affirmed by unpublished per curiam opinion.
    Richard G. Gay, Nathan P. Cochran, LAW OFFICE OF RICHARD G. GAY,
    LC, Berkeley Springs, West Virginia, for Appellant.     Braun A.
    Hamstead, HAMSTEAD & ASSOCIATES, L.C., Charles Town, West
    Virginia, for Appellee.
    Unpublished opinions are not binding precedent in this circuit.
    PER CURIAM:
    Patrick       Henry    Estates           Homeowners      Association,
    Incorporated          (“Association”)       brought       an    action   against     Dr.
    Gerald Miller, the present owner of certain properties within
    the residential development, Patrick Henry Estates Subdivision
    (“Subdivision”), seeking injunctive and declaratory relief, as
    well       as   compensatory     damages. ∗        Miller      appeals   the   district
    court’s order granting the Association permanent injunctions and
    compensatory damages.             We have thoroughly reviewed the record
    and find no reversible error.               Accordingly, we affirm.
    The Subdivision is accessed from U.S. Route 340 over a
    short public roadway known as Patrick Henry Way, which becomes a
    private road as it enters the Subdivision, running in a northern
    direction and providing access to lateral side streets.                         Miller
    obtained ownership of the Subdivision in 1986 and sold Sections
    C    and    D   to    other   developers,        but    retained   ownership    of   the
    common areas, roadways, and Lot C-1.                       The Declaration of Road
    Maintenance          Covenants   and   Restrictions         (“Declaration”),       which
    governs the real property within the Subdivision, provides that
    it    is    the      responsibility    of   the        developer   “to   maintain    the
    ∗
    The case was originally filed in the Circuit Court of
    Jefferson County, West Virginia, and later removed to the
    District Court for the Northern District of West Virginia by
    Miller, based upon federal diversity jurisdiction.
    2
    streets, and all common properties . . . until such time as
    these amenities are dedicated and deeded to the Association.”
    In addition, the Declaration provides that the developer “shall
    convey the common properties to the Association . . . not later
    than   January     1,   1987.”         Miller       attempted        to    have    the   State
    Highway    Department         take    over     road       maintenance        to    avoid    his
    responsibility      to    maintain           the        streets,     did     not     complete
    construction of the roads by January 1, 1987, and did not convey
    the roadways to the Association once completed.                             The parties do
    not dispute that the roads, as well as the drainage system, were
    in need of repair at the time of trial.                            In addition, Miller
    permitted weeds and grass to grow to an excessive height on Lot
    C-1.
    In July 2008, Miller informed the Association of his
    intent    to    develop       land    located       immediately           adjacent    to   the
    Subdivision into a residential apartment complex, known as Sloan
    Square Apartments (“Sloan Square”).                       Miller planned to utilize
    Lot C-1, which the plat of Patrick Henry Estates describes as a
    residential      lot,    as    a     roadway       to    access    Sloan      Square.        In
    addition, approximately 42 acres of the Subdivision, which lie
    immediately adjacent to the existing residential development to
    the north, were never developed.                        In 2006, Miller annexed the
    42-acre    undeveloped         parcel     into          the   City    of     Ranson,       West
    Virginia, intending to construct a residential and commercial
    3
    development on the parcel, known as the Village of Shenandoah
    Springs (“Village”).          Miller purchased a lot in the adjacent
    existing Shenandoah Springs Development to use as one of two
    access points to the Village.            Prior to this litigation, Miller
    anticipated annexing Patrick Henry Way into the City of Ranson
    as well, to serve as the second access point.                       In order to
    complete this construction, however, Miller needed to reserve
    unrestricted rights of way through the Subdivision streets.
    Upon discovery of Miller’s intended construction, the
    Association filed a complaint against Miller, seeking: (1) a
    permanent injunction requiring Miller to maintain the roads in
    the    Subdivision,     or,    alternatively,        damages   to   conduct    the
    necessary repairs; (2) a permanent injunction requiring Miller
    to dedicate and deed the common elements within the Subdivision
    to    the   Association;      (3)   a   permanent      injunction    prohibiting
    Miller from using Lot C-1 as an access roadway to Sloan Square;
    (4) a permanent injunction requiring Miller to maintain Lot C-1
    in accordance with the Declaration; and (5) compensatory damages
    of    not   less   than    $250,000     for    the    Association’s       previous
    expenditures to maintain the roadways from 1985 to the filing of
    the instant lawsuit.
    Following a bench trial, the district court found that
    the Declaration unequivocally required Miller to maintain the
    roads   and    common   properties      in    the   Subdivision,    and    ordered
    4
    Miller to bring the roads, drainage, and other common elements
    of Patrick Henry Estates up to the condition that would have
    existed     had     they      been    properly      maintained        since       their
    construction.       In the alternative, the court ordered Miller to
    pay the Association an amount equal to the cost provided by the
    Association’s contractor to perform the work.                      The court also
    awarded    the     Association       an    injunction      requiring       Miller    to
    execute a deed conveying the common elements of the Subdivision
    to the Association.
    With respect to the scope of Miller’s easement, the
    court found that Miller may utilize a reserved right of way over
    Patrick Henry Way to access the residue of his property to the
    north     for     limited     commercial       purposes,     but     may    not     use
    Beauregard Boulevard or Greene Avenue, lateral side streets in
    the Subdivision, to access any commercial development, as these
    roadways exist to access single-family homes.                  Additionally, the
    court ruled that Miller may not utilize Patrick Henry Way to
    access property in addition to the residual portion of Patrick
    Henry   Estates,     as     this   would   cause   the     roadway    to    become    a
    “through road,” greatly increasing the traffic and extending the
    easement to other lands owned by Miller.                 The court granted the
    Association an injunction prohibiting Miller from utilizing Lot
    C-1 as a roadway, as it would be impossible to access Sloan
    Square through Lot C-1 without crossing the “Walking and Buffer
    5
    Area” directly behind the lot, which is a common element of the
    Subdivision      owned    by    the     Association.           Further,       the        court
    ordered Miller to maintain Lot C-1 “in such a manner that the
    grass or other vegetation thereupon does not reach a height of
    eight (8) inches.”           Finally, the court awarded the Association
    compensatory     damages       in   the    amount     of      $51,387       for    expenses
    incurred by the Association in maintaining the Subdivision since
    1998, but denied the Association’s request for attorney’s fees.
    We review a district court’s conclusions of law at a
    bench trial de novo and its factual findings for clear error.
    Roanoke Cement Co. v. Falk Corp., 
    413 F.3d 431
    , 433 (4th Cir.
    2005).     On    appeal,       Miller     contends      that    the    district          court
    erroneously prohibited the use of Patrick Henry Way to access
    property in addition to the residual portion of the Subdivision—
    the 42 acres of undeveloped land.                   Miller first contends that
    the   district    court      misinterpreted       the      plain      language      of     the
    Declaration      and   the     Subdivision       deeds.         The    deed       from    the
    original   grantor        (Shendo)        reserving      an     easement          over    the
    Subdivision’s roadways, which appears in the chain of title for
    all of the lots located in Section B and D of the Subdivision,
    states in relevant part: “The Grantees acknowledge that Shendo
    has   reserved     and    retained      the     right    to    provide       within        the
    Patrick    Henry       Estates      Subdivision          areas        for    commercial,
    educational,      civic,       social,      charitable,         medical       and        other
    6
    purposes.”     Based upon this language, Miller argues that he is
    entitled to reserve unrestricted easements and rights of way
    that would allow him to complete the development of the 42-acre
    property.
    Pursuant    to    West    Virginia    law,      which      governs   this
    diversity    lawsuit,        “[t]he     fundamental      rule       in    construing
    covenants and restrictive agreements is that the intention of
    the parties governs.         That intention is gathered from the entire
    instrument by which the restriction is created, the surrounding
    circumstances and the objects which the covenant is designed to
    accomplish.”     G. Corp., Inc. v. MackJo, Inc., 
    466 S.E.2d 820
    ,
    825 (W.Va. 1995) (citing Wallace v. St. Clair, 
    127 S.E.2d 742
    ,
    751 (W.Va. 1962)).        Further, the owner of an easement “cannot
    materially increase the burden of it upon the servient estate,
    nor impose a new or additional burden thereon.”                     Nat’l Lead Co.
    v. Kanawha Block Co., 
    288 F. Supp. 357
    , 365 (S.D.W. Va. 1968).
    “An easement of a right of way over another’s property . . . is
    not   personal   to    the     owner,    authorizing        him   to     use   it   in
    connection   with     other    real     estate   he   may    own.”        Dorsey    v.
    Dorsey, 
    153 S.E. 146
    , 146 (W.Va. 1930); see also Ratcliff v.
    Cyrus, 
    544 S.E.2d 93
    , 97 (W.Va. 2001) (“[A]n easement cannot be
    extended as a matter of right, by the owner of the dominant
    estate, to other lands owned by him.”) (internal quotation marks
    and citation omitted).
    7
    The     district       court     correctly          held     that      Miller’s
    intended     use    of     Patrick     Henry      Way     to     connect      his   planned
    Village,     located       on    the   42-acre         undeveloped        parcel    of     the
    Subdivision,       to      the    adjoining       existing        Shenandoah        Springs
    Development,       would        overburden       the     easement       and    exceed      its
    intended scope.          The deed language reserves an easement over the
    Subdivision roadways for future commercial, educational, civic,
    social, charitable, or medical developments “within the Patrick
    Henry   Estates      Subdivision       areas.”         (emphasis     added).         Miller
    seeks   to   impermissibly          extend       the    reserved     easement       through
    Patrick    Henry     Way    beyond     the    dominant         property—Patrick          Henry
    Estates—into       the     adjacent    Shenandoah         Springs       Development        lot
    owned by Miller, so as to access the City of Ranson.                                 As the
    district     court       correctly     found,          Miller     cannot      utilize      his
    reserved easement to access property he owns outside of Patrick
    Henry   Estates.         Moreover,      we    find      unimpeachable         the    court’s
    finding    that    Miller’s        intended      use     of     Patrick    Henry     Way    to
    connect      his     planned       Village        to      the     Shenandoah         Springs
    Development and the City of Ranson would expose the Subdivision
    to traffic from a major highway, Flowing Springs Road, thereby
    significantly increasing the roadway traffic and overburdening
    the easement.
    Miller next contends that the district court’s failure
    to consider the City of Ranson’s Annexation Order, which annexed
    8
    Miller’s    42-acre        undeveloped       property         into     the     Ranson    city
    limits, “usurp[ed] the plenary power of the City of Ranson.”
    According      to   Miller,        “the    District         Court     ruled    that   Miller
    cannot    connect     his     undeveloped          property         (now    lying     totally
    within Ranson) to the Ranson city streets.”                                However, Miller
    plainly    misconstrues          the    holding        of   the     district    court;    the
    court’s order prohibits Miller from utilizing Patrick Henry Way
    to    access      property       beyond     the        42-acre      undeveloped       parcel,
    namely,     the     existing       Shenandoah          Springs       Development,       which
    connects       to     the        highway          of        Flowing        Springs      Road.
    Notwithstanding the court’s order, Miller may still utilize the
    lot    purchased     in      the       adjacent        existing      Shenandoah       Springs
    Development to access the planned Village, thereby connecting
    the Village to the City of Ranson.
    Miller next argues that the district court erroneously
    found that Miller may not use Lot C-1 as an access point to
    reach Sloan Square.           Miller asserts that the Declaration permits
    him to change the use of Lot C-1 from residential to street
    access.        However,      a     “Walking       and       Buffer    Area”     is    located
    immediately       behind     Lot    C-1,    which        is   a     “common    element”    of
    Patrick Henry Estates subject to the court-ordered conveyance to
    the Association.           Therefore, the district court correctly held
    that Miller may not construct a roadway on Lot C-1 across the
    9
    “Walking and Buffer Area,” now owned by the Association, without
    the Association’s permission.
    Miller next argues that the district court erred in
    awarding       the       Association      permanent        injunctions       prohibiting
    Miller    from       using      Patrick    Henry    Way    to     access    property   in
    addition       to    the    residual      portion    of    Patrick    Henry     Estates,
    prohibiting Miller from using other lateral side streets of the
    Subdivision         to    access    commercial      development,      and    prohibiting
    Miller from using Lot C-1 to access Sloan Square.                           According to
    Miller, the court’s injunctions have the effect of prohibiting
    his intended development on the 42-acre property, as well as
    Sloan    Square,         because    current    subdivision        regulations    require
    two   entrances,          and    the   court-ordered       injunctions       leave   both
    developments with only one entrance.                      Thus, Miller argues, the
    injunctions are more burdensome than necessary and broader in
    scope than necessary.
    The grant of a permanent injunction is reviewed for
    abuse of discretion.               Va. Soc’y for Human Life, Inc. v. Fed.
    Election Comm’n, 
    263 F.3d 379
    , 392 (4th Cir. 2001).                             In doing
    so, we review the district court’s factual findings for clear
    error    and    its      legal     conclusions      de    novo.     
    Id.
          Under   West
    Virginia law, a permanent injunction is appropriate “where the
    right of an applicant seeking relief is clear and the necessity
    for such relief is urgent.”                 Sams v. Goff, 
    540 S.E.2d 532
    , 535
    10
    (W.Va. 1999) (citing State Rd. Comm’n v. Oakes, 
    149 S.E.2d 293
    (W.Va. 1966)).       Further, “[f]or the existence of a legal remedy
    to bar injunctive relief, it must appear that the legal remedy
    is as practical and efficient to secure the ends of justice and
    its prompt administration as injunctive relief.”                            
    Id.
     (citing
    Consumers Gas Util. Co. v. Wright, 
    44 S.E.2d 584
     (W.Va. 1947)).
    In deciding whether to grant a mandatory injunction, a court
    should consider “the nature of the controversy, the object for
    which    the     injunction      is    being      sought,   and      the    comparative
    hardship   or     convenience         to   the    respective   parties       involved.”
    Foster v. Orchard Dev. Co., LLC, 
    705 S.E.2d 816
    , 827 (W.Va.
    2010).     We     find   that    the       district   court    did    not    abuse    its
    discretion in awarding the Association permanent injunctions, as
    a remedy at law would be inadequate.
    Miller next asserts that the district court abused its
    discretion in awarding the Association damages at law for prior
    maintenance provided by the Association, while also awarding the
    Association       permanent       injunctions         prohibiting          Miller    from
    utilizing Lot C-1 to access Sloan Square or Patrick Henry Way to
    access property beyond the 42-acre parcel, as well as ordering
    Miller to bring the roadways up to the condition that would have
    existed    had    the    roads    been      properly    maintained         since    their
    construction.
    11
    We review a district court’s award of damages under a
    clearly erroneous standard.           See Kolkhorst v. Tilghman, 
    897 F.2d 1282
    , 1288 (4th Cir. 1990) (“The trial court, as a fact-finder,
    possesses     considerable    discretion      in   fixing   damages,      and   its
    decision will be upheld absent clear error.”) (citing Little
    Beaver Enter. v. Humphreys Rys., Inc., 
    719 F.2d 75
    , 79 (4th Cir.
    1983)).     We find that the court’s award of damages at law, as
    well as an injunction requiring compliance with the Declaration,
    was within the court’s discretion.
    Based on the foregoing, we affirm the judgment of the
    district    court.     We    dispense    with   oral     argument    because    the
    facts   and    legal   contentions      are   adequately    presented      in   the
    materials     before   the    court    and    argument    would     not   aid   the
    decisional process.
    AFFIRMED
    12