Present: Carrico, C.J., Compton, Stephenson, Lacy, Hassell,
and Keenan, JJ., and Poff, Senior Justice
JIMMY R. COLLINS, ET AL.
v. Record No. 950648 OPINION BY JUSTICE ELIZABETH B. LACY
January 12, 1996
BILLY FULLER, ET AL.
FROM THE CIRCUIT COURT OF SCOTT COUNTY
James C. Roberson, Judge
In this appeal, we consider whether the trial court
erroneously restricted the method of using an express right of
way.
This case involves the interpretation and location of an
express right of way contained in a deed for land purchased by
Jimmy R. and Maggie S. Collins (collectively, Collins).
Collins' property was part of a tract partitioned in 1883 into
two lots, Lot 4 and Lot 5. The partition order granted Lot 4
to Bettie V. Edwards. The grant included an express right of
way described as follows: "with right of way to the spring."
The spring was located on Lot 5.
Collins purchased approximately 10 acres of Lot 4 in 1983.
The deed recited that the purchase also included "all water
rights and privileges and right of way which was assigned to
Bettie V. Edwards in connection with the said tract of land in
the division of the real estate of her father, James S.
Edwards." The portion of Lot 4 purchased by Collins was
adjacent to Lot 5. At that time, Lot 5 was owned by J.C. and
Bonnie Fuller.
In 1992, J.C. and Bonnie Fuller conveyed a .75 acre
portion of Lot 5 adjacent to Collins' property to their son
Billy. The portion conveyed did not include the spring but did
include a house. Billy and his wife, Gina, began renovating
the house by extending the back of it. At the same time,
Collins sought to utilize the right of way, crossing Billy's
land just behind his house to get to the spring located on J.C.
and Bonnie Fuller's land.
Billy and Gina Fuller filed a bill of complaint alleging
that Collins was engaged in a continuing trespass. The Fullers
sought an injunction prohibiting Collins from traveling across
the property and requiring Collins to lay a pipeline across
land owned by J.C. and Bonnie Fuller to access the spring.
After viewing the property and considering the evidence and
arguments of counsel, the trial court entered a final decree
holding that Collins had a right of way to the spring "no
greater than (20) feet north of the J.C. Fuller and Billy
Fuller boundary line then in a straight line to the spring."
The trial court also limited the use of the right of way to
"laying and maintaining a water line to the spring with a
right-of-way of 10 feet to make the necessary repairs on said
water line." Collins' motion for reconsideration was denied.
We awarded Collins an appeal.
The parties agree that Collins' 1983 deed expressly
granted the right to use the water from the spring and a right
of way to access the spring. The issue here is whether the
trial court could limit the method of using the right of way to
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laying and maintaining a water pipe to transport water from the
spring to Collins' property. We conclude that the limitation
imposed by the trial court was error.
The applicable legal principle was stated in Cushman Corp.
v. Barnes, 204 Va. 245, 253, 129 S.E.2d 633, 639-40 (1963):
When 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. This rule is
subject to the qualification that no use may be made
of the right of way, different from that established
at the time of its creation, which imposes an
additional burden upon the servient estate.
In this case, the only limitation on the right of way contained
in the granting language is that the right of way be used to
access the spring. There is no evidence of prior use of the
right of way. Therefore, we find no basis to impose a
limitation on the method which may be used in accessing the
spring. *
Accordingly, we will reverse that portion of the trial
court's decree restricting the use of the right of way to the
laying and maintaining of a water line and remand the case for
*
Collins also assigned error to the location of the right
of way because it "is extremely rocky terrain, and will require
the defendants to spend approximately $10,000.00 to install" a
water line. At oral argument, however, counsel for Collins
clarified this issue, stating that the trial court "has
discretion as to the location of the easement" and "[t]he error
in the location is only an error if it's tied into the water
line." In light of this clarification, we will not address the
location of the easement.
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any further proceedings that may be required consistent with
this opinion.
Affirmed in part,
reversed in part,
and remanded.
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