IN THE COURT OF APPEALS OF NORTH CAROLINA
No. COA18-864
Filed: 4 June 2019
Alamance County, No. 17-CVS-1429
BRUCE TAYLOR and SUSAN A. TAYLOR, Plaintiffs,
vs.
THOMAS HIATT, THOMAS R. HIATT and JEWEL HOLLARS, Defendants.
Appeal by Plaintiff from order entered 8 March 2018 by Judge James K.
Roberson in Alamance County Superior Court. Heard in the Court of Appeals 13
February 2019.
Oertel, Koonts & Oertel, PLLC, by Geoffrey K. Oertel, for the Plaintiffs-
Appellants.
Pittman & Steele, PLLC, by Timothy W. Gray, for the Defendants-Appellees.
DILLON, Judge.
Plaintiffs brought this action seeking a declaration and other relief concerning
an easement extending across Plaintiffs’ property to Defendants’ property. Plaintiffs
appeal the trial court’s order granting summary judgment to Defendants. After
review of the materials before the trial court, we reverse and remand.
I. Background
Plaintiffs and Defendants own adjacent tracts of land in rural Alamance
County. Defendants access a nearby State road via easements (private roads) which
TAYLOR V. HIATT
Opinion of the Court
span across Plaintiffs’ land. Plaintiffs built two gates and fencing somewhere along
these private roads to fence in their horses. These gates do not prevent Defendants
from being able to access the public road, as Plaintiffs have provided Defendants with
the access code for the gates. However, Defendants contend that, based on language
in the chain of title concerning the easements, Plaintiffs are not allowed to construct
the gates on the easement. Plaintiffs commenced this action, seeking a declaration
of their right to construct and maintain the gates in question. Defendant
counterclaimed, seeking a declaration that Plaintiffs have no right to erect and
maintain the gates and an order directing Plaintiffs to remove the gates.
A. Title History and Creation of the Easements
The chain of title at issue is described herein. The map below is included for
clarity. The map depicts six tracts of land, referenced in this opinion as Tracts 1-6.
Plaintiffs own Tracts 1 and 3. Defendants own Tract 4. The other tracts, Tracts 2, 5,
and 6, are not subject to this present dispute. Defendants access Roney Lineberry
Road (a public road shown at the top of the map just above Tract 2) via two private
roads. These private roads are depicted on the map below as a dotted line and a thick
line, respectively. The location of these roads, as shown on the map, is approximate.
The record before us is not clear as to the precise location of these roads.
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Opinion of the Court
The history of these tracts, including Plaintiffs’ and Defendants’ tracts, is as
follows:
As of 1989, Tracts 1-6 were all part of a single tract (approximately one
hundred nine (109) acres in area) and were owned by the Estate of C.R. Roney (the
“Estate”). Over the years, there have been four maps filed to subdivide this large
tract, ultimately into six tracts. And over the years, two easement roads have been
created to provide access to these tracts as they were being created: the dotted-line
road depicted above was created by a map recorded in 1989, and the solid line road
depicted above was created by a map that was recorded in 2000.
1. 1989: Division of Large Tract into Two Tracts; Creation of First Easement
In 1989, the Estate recorded a map (the “1989 Map”) that divided the one
hundred nine (109) acre tract into two separate tracts: one tract consisting of
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approximately sixty-six (66) acres, which today comprises Tracts 1 and 2; and another
tract consisting of approximately forty-three (43) acres, which today comprises Tracts
3-6.
Through the filing of this 1989 Map, an easement was created (the “1989
Easement”), depicted above as the dotted-line road, to provide access points of egress
and ingress to various parts of both large tracts. That is, the 1989 Easement provides
more than one access point to each of the two large tracts, as it meanders at or near
the border dividing the two tracts.
Of significance to this present dispute, the 1989 Map indicates that this 1989
Easement is to remain “open for egress and regress” for the benefit of the owner of
the newly formed sixty-six (66) acre and forty-three (43) acre tracts created by the
division, stating as follows:
Note: The existing private road shall remain open for
egress and regress to [the sixty-six (66) acre and forty-three
(43) acre tracts formed by the 1989 Map]. Road shall be
maintained by the “owner” or “owners” of [the two tracts].
2. 1996: Division of 66-Acre Tract into Two Tracts
In 1996, the owner of the sixty-six (66) acre tract filed a map (the “1996 Map”)
subdividing that tract into two tracts, depicted above as Tract 1 (nine acres) and Tract
2 (fifty-seven (57) acres). The 1996 Map depicts the 1989 Easement, the dotted-line
road depicted above, in essentially the same location as depicted on the 1989 Map,
reiterating that the easement is to remain open for the benefit of the adjacent forty-
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Opinion of the Court
three (43) acre tract as well as the newly formed Tracts 1 and 2, which had made up
the sixty-six (66) acre tract.
3. 2000: Division of 43-Acre Tract into Three Tracts
In 2000, the owner of the forty-three (43) acre tract filed a map (the “2000
Map”) subdividing that tract into three tracts, depicted above as Tract 3, Tract 4, and
a tract now comprised of Tracts 5 and 6.1 The 2000 Map depicts the top portion of
the 1989 Easement, but also depicts a new private road (the “2000 Easement”), shown
in the above map as the solid line, to provide access from the 1989 Easement to the
three newly formed tracts, Tracts 3, 4 and what are now 5 and 6.
The 2000 Easement is described on the 2000 Map as a “30’ R/W [right-of-way]
EASEMENT.” The 2000 Map, however, does not contain any other language
concerning this new 2000 Easement. That is, unlike the 1989 Map’s description of
the 1989 Easement, there is no language in the 2000 Map indicating that the 2000
Easement is to remain “open.”
B. Plaintiffs’ Construction of the Gates
In 2017, Plaintiffs, who own Tracts 1 and 3, erected two access gates to keep
their horses secured on their tracts. There is nothing in the record indicating exactly
where on Plaintiffs’ tracts the gates were installed. In other words, there is nothing
1The 2000 Map did not create Tracts 5 and 6 as two separate tracts, but as one tract. The
subdivision of Tracts 5 and 6 occurred later, but that subdivision is not relevant to this present matter.
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Opinion of the Court
in the record to indicate whether the gates were installed on the 1989 Easement or
the 2000 Easement, as some portion of both easements are on Plaintiffs’ land.
Plaintiffs provided Defendants with the access code to the gates so that
Defendants could still access Roney Lineberry Road by way of the easements. But,
over the course of time, a number of disputes between the parties arose concerning
the gates.
C. Procedural History
In July 2017, Plaintiffs commenced this action requesting a declaratory
judgment regarding their right to construct and maintain the gates. Defendants
answered and counterclaimed, requesting removal of the access gates.
In March 2018, after a hearing on the matter, the trial court entered an
amended judgment declaring that Plaintiffs were prohibited “from having gates, bars,
fences and the like on the Private Road” and directing Plaintiffs to “remove the gates
erected upon the Private Road[.]” The trial court certified its order for immediate
appellate review. Plaintiffs timely appealed.
In April 2018, while their appeal was pending with our Court, Plaintiffs filed
a motion for relief with the trial court, requesting that they be allowed to offer into
evidence a new survey which purported to show where the gates were in fact located.
Plaintiff contended that this survey constituted new evidence on which the trial court
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Opinion of the Court
should reverse its prior order. The trial court indicated that it would likely deny the
motion, but did not have jurisdiction to do so in light of Plaintiffs’ pending appeal.
II. Analysis
Plaintiffs appeal an order granting Defendants summary judgment against
Plaintiffs’ claims. We review a grant of summary judgment de novo, to determine
whether the record shows, in the light most favorable to the nonmoving party, that
there was no genuine issue of material fact remaining for the trial court to resolve.
Forbis v. Neal, 361 N.C. 519, 523-24, 649 S.E.2d 382, 385 (2007). In our review, we
may only consider the record on appeal, composed of the materials before the trial
court at the time of the hearing. Waste Mgmt. of Carolinas, Inc., v. Peerless Ins.
Co., 315 N.C. 688, 690, 340 S.E.2d 374, 377 (1986).
Typically, the owner of a servient estate “may erect gates across [an easement]
when necessary to the reasonable enjoyment of his estate, provided they are not of
such nature as to materially impair or unreasonably interfere” with the purpose of
the easement to the dominant estate. Chesson v. Jordan, 224 N.C. 289, 293, 29 S.E.2d
906, 909 (1944); accord Merrell v. Jenkins, 242 N.C. 636, 637-38, 89 S.E.2d 242, 243-
44 (1955). However, our Supreme Court has held that the owner of a servient estate
generally may not erect gates on an easement where the instrument granting the
easement provides that the easement is to remain “open,” stating as follows:
Generally, the grant of a way without reservation of the
right to maintain gates does not necessarily preclude the
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Opinion of the Court
owner of the land from having them; unless it is expressly
stipulated that the way shall be an open one or it appears
from the terms of the grant or the circumstances that such
was the intention, the owner of the servient estate may
erect gates across the way if they are constructed so as not
to interfere unreasonably with the right of passage.
Setzer v. Annas, 286 N.C. 534, 539, 212 S.E.2d 154, 157 (1975) (emphasis added).
Indeed, our Supreme Court has interpreted express language suggesting that an
easement remain “open” to mean that it must be free of obstructions, such as fences
or gates. See Patton v. W. Carolina Educ. Co., 101 N.C. 408, 409-11, 8 S.E. 140, 141-
42 (1888) (holding that “[a] street, with gates or fences across it, is not what was
reserved” by a deed stating “that the street now opened up through to the college
land . . . shall be kept open” (emphasis added)).
It is unquestioned that the 2000 Map creating the 2000 Easement and the 1989
Map creating the 1989 Easement are in Defendants’ chain of title. Defendants
acquired their property, Tract 4, in 2007 in fee simple via a general warranty deed.
The deed expressly conveyed “a permanent access easement for ingress, egress, and
regress over and upon the 30 ft right of way as shown on said plat of survey” recorded
in “Plat Book 65 at Page 118,” the location of the 2000 Map. It is true that the 2000
Map contains no language requiring the easement to remain open, but it does refer
to the “[r]ight of way along Existing Private Road as per Deed Book 1056, Page 56.”
Deed Book 1056, Page 56, contains the deed conveying all of Tracts 1 and 2 from the
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Opinion of the Court
Roney family, “subject to the right of way of the private road shown on [Plat Book No.
39 at Page 160,]” which is the 1989 Map.
The trial court granted Defendants’ summary judgment motion, determining
that Defendants are entitled to have that portion of the private road upon which
Plaintiffs constructed their gates to remain open and to require Plaintiffs to remove
the gates. We conclude that Defendants were not entitled to summary judgment for
the reasons stated below.
There is nothing on the 2000 Map or other documents in the chain of title which
suggests that the parties intended that the private road comprising the 2000
Easement had to remain “open.” Therefore, we conclude that Plaintiffs “may erect
gates across [the 2000 Easement] when necessary to the reasonable enjoyment of
[their] estate, provided they are not of such nature as to materially impair or
unreasonably interfere” with the purpose of the easement to Defendants’ tract.
Chesson, 224 N.C. at 293, 29 S.E.2d at 909; see Runyon v. Paley, 331 N.C. 293, 305,
416 S.E.2d 177, 186 (1992) (holding that the meaning of unambiguous language
contained in an easement is a question of law). Whether the gates, if erected on the
2000 Easement, would actually materially impair or unreasonably interfere with
Defendants’ right of egress and ingress is not an issue before us.
We conclude further that Plaintiffs are, nonetheless, bound by the language
contained in the 1989 Map with respect to the private road constituting the 1989
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Opinion of the Court
Easement: Plaintiffs must keep this easement “open.” See Setzer, 286 N.C. at 539,
212 S.E.2d at 157. As such, we conclude that Plaintiffs are not allowed to install
gates along the 1989 Easement. We further conclude that Defendants, as the owners
of Tract 4, have the right to enforce this restriction.
We note that there is some discrepancy as to exactly whether some part of the
2000 Easement is actually part of the 1989 Easement as well. If so, that portion
would be bound by the “open” requirement. Indeed, there is some discrepancy
between the 1989 Map and the 1996 Map as to the exact location of the 1989
Easement.
In any event, the record shows that Plaintiffs’ tracts, Tracts 1 and 3, contain
portions of both the 1989 Easement and the 2000 Easement over which Defendants
are allowed to travel to access Roney Lineberry Road from Tract 4. And though
Plaintiffs assert in their brief on appeal that the gates are on the 2000 Easement (and
not the 1989 Easement), there is nothing in the record before us that either party
points to which indicates upon which easement the gates are actually located. To be
entitled to summary judgment, it was Defendants’ burden to establish conclusively
that the gates were on the 1989 Easement. Since Defendants have failed in meeting
this burden, Defendants were not entitled to summary judgment.
Similarly, Plaintiffs are not entitled to summary judgment, as they failed to
meet their burden of proving as a matter of law that their gates are on the 2000
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Opinion of the Court
Easement, and not on the 1989 Easement, and that the gates do not actually impair
or otherwise unreasonably interfere with Defendants’ use of that easement.
We, therefore, reverse the trial court’s grant of summary judgment and remand
this matter for further proceedings not inconsistent with this opinion.
REVERSED.
Judges INMAN and COLLINS concur.
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