COURT OF APPEALS OF VIRGINIA
PUBLISHED
Present: Judges Fulton, Ortiz and Senior Judge Petty
Argued at Lexington, Virginia
WINTERGREEN HOMESTEAD, LLC, PHILIP E. WINE,
BARBARA HUDSON, GENE HUGHES AND
LUCY EWING MARTIN
OPINION BY
v. Record No. 0136-22-3 JUDGE JUNIUS P. FULTON, III
NOVEMBER 29, 2022
BETTIE W. PENNINGTON, RAY M. PENNINGTON,
LIZELLE JACOBS, MARIA MAGDALENA BRINK AND
BETTIE’S WINTERGREEN, LLC
FROM THE CIRCUIT COURT OF NELSON COUNTY
J. Frederick Watson, Judge
Nancy R. Schlichting (Shannon A. Delano; Flora Pettit PC, on
briefs), for appellants.
Heather H. Goodwin (Goodwin Law of Virginia, PLLC, on brief),
for appellees.
For over two centuries, members of the Harris and Coleman families were laid to rest in
what became known as the Wintergreen Family Cemetery. When established, the cemetery
occupied a portion of a 59-acre tract of land. The family home also occupied the same parcel,
albeit some distance away. Historically, visitors would access the cemetery via the ancestral
home’s driveway and along the rear of the home—this “traditional access route” is the “path” at
issue in this case. The 59-acre tract has been partitioned and now subdivided into three separate
parcels. The cemetery is located on a 47-acre parcel, and two small adjacent parcels have been
conveyed outside the family. Appellants are descendants of persons interred in the cemetery and
the current owner of the 47-acre tract. Appellees are the former and current owners of the two
smaller parcels. Wintergreen Homestead, LLC, Philip E. Wine (Philip), Barbara Hudson, Gene
Hughes, and Lucy Ewing Martin (collectively “appellants”) filed an action in the Circuit Court
of Nelson County seeking declaratory and injunctive relief confirming the path as a “traditional
access route” pursuant to Code § 57-27.1 and allowing appellants to utilize that path when
visiting the cemetery. Following a bench trial, the trial court issued its ruling in a letter opinion
dated October 12, 2021, finding that the path was a traditional access route within the meaning of
Code § 57-27.1, but declining to grant the relief requested by appellants. The trial court found
that Code § 57-27.1 applied only to owners of land on which the cemetery was located.
Appellants timely appealed. For the following reasons, we affirm.
I. BACKGROUND
At the center of this dispute is a cemetery located entirely on a 47-acre tract of land
owned by Wintergreen Homestead, LLC (Wintergreen Homestead). Until 1993, the 47-acre
tract was part of a larger 59-acre tract owned by Mary Harris Wine (Mrs. Wine). Mrs. Wine
passed away in 1992, and her will devised the 59-acre tract to her four adult children, including
Philip and Bettie W. Pennington (Bettie). Her will references the “Wintergreen Family
Cemetery” and her intention that the Coleman family always have access to it.
In 1993, Mrs. Wine’s children partitioned the property. The deed of partition allotted 12
of the 59 acres to Bettie. Philip received, along with the two other siblings, an interest in the
remaining 47-acre tract, and later acquired sole ownership of that tract. Wintergreen Homestead,
LLC is the successor to Philip’s interest in the 47-acre tract, and it is on this tract that the family
cemetery is located.
The 12-acre tract allotted to Bettie in 1993 has since been subdivided into two smaller
parcels, both of which are now jointly owned by appellees Lizelle Jacobs (Jacobs) and Maria
Magdalena Brink (Brink). Jacobs and Brink are unrelated to the Harris and Coleman families.
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The ancestral home is located on the smaller of these two parcels now owned by Jacobs and
Brink.
Over the years, various family members and descendants of deceased persons buried
there have visited the cemetery. Until 2013 or 2014, visitors accessed the cemetery via the
ancestral home’s driveway and along the rear of the home. Accessing the cemetery via this route
required visitors to enter onto and cross the two parcels of land now owned by Jacobs and Brink
before reaching the 47-acre tract on which the cemetery is located. Around 2013 or 2014, Jacobs
and Brink, who were then leasing one of the two smaller tracts, began refusing access over their
property to those wishing to visit the cemetery. Thereafter, certain descendants wishing to
access the cemetery began using another route to access the site, passing through the 47-acre
tract from the east. This “east gate route” does not cross over either of the two smaller parcels of
land owned by Jacobs and Brink, only the 47-acre tract on which the cemetery is located.
The trial court found that the original path through the ancestral home’s driveway is a
traditional access route pursuant to Code § 57-27.1. Nevertheless, it declined to grant appellants
the declaratory and injunctive relief they sought, holding that:
The cemetery access statute, given its plain meaning, obligates
only “[o]wners of private property on which a cemetery or graves
are located” to allow ingress and egress to the cemetery. There is
nothing in the statute that would provide a similar obligation to
owners of adjoining properties on which the cemetery or graves are
not located. . . . Code § 57-27.1 does not give the family members
and descendants of deceased persons buried in the cemetery the
right to cross the two tracts of land owned by Jacobs and Brink.
The trial court’s factual findings have not been contested and are not at issue in this
appeal. Appellants appeal only the trial court’s interpretation of Code § 57-27.1, arguing that the
duties and prohibitions placed on landowners by the statute extend to “all landowners of property
containing a traditional access route to a cemetery,” without limitation or regard to whether the
cemetery or gravesite is actually located on the landowner’s property.
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II. STANDARD OF REVIEW
Appellants’ assignment of error hinges on the interpretation of Code § 57-27.1, “a pure
question of law subject to de novo review by this Court.” Renkey v. Cnty. Bd. of Arlington, 272
Va. 369, 373 (2006) (quoting Va. Polytechnic Inst. v. Interactive Return Serv., 271 Va. 304, 309
(2006)).
III. ANALYSIS
The General Assembly enacted Code § 57-27.1 in 1993. The initial version of
Code § 57-27.1 allowed “representatives of local historical commissions” to “enter upon the land
of a private or family cemetery for the purpose of conducting official business, unless the
property owner object[ed].” Code § 57-27.1 was subsequently amended in 2004, 2008, and
2011. The 2004 amendment was the most comprehensive; the General Assembly rewrote the
entire statute, broadening the scope of persons whose access rights were protected by the statute.
The present version of Code § 57-27.1(A) states:
Owners of private property on which a cemetery or graves are
located shall have a duty to allow ingress and egress to the
cemetery or graves by (i) family members and descendants of
deceased persons buried there; (ii) any cemetery plot owner; and
(iii) any person engaging in genealogy research, who has given
reasonable notice to the owner of record or to the occupant of the
property or both. No landowner shall erect a wall, fence or other
structure or device that prevents ingress and egress to the cemetery
or grave, unless the wall, fence or other structure or device has a
gate or other means by which ingress and egress can be
accomplished by persons specified in this subsection. The
landowner may designate the frequency of access, hours and
duration of the access and the access route if no traditional access
route is obviously visible by a view of the property.
Appellants argue that the trial court erred in concluding that this statute does not require
Jacobs and Brink to allow appellants reasonable use of the traditional access route that runs
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through the two smaller tracts of land.1 Specifically, appellants argue: (1) when read in its
entirety, the plain meaning of the statute applies to all owners of property containing a traditional
access route; (2) Code § 57-27.1 was enacted to protect the right of access via traditional access
routes for family members and descendants of deceased persons buried in a cemetery, and
appellants’ interpretation accomplishes that legislative purpose; and (3) adopting the narrow
interpretation of the trial court would lead to an absurd result.
Appellees argue in response that: (1) the plain meaning of the words used by the
legislature illustrates the intention of the General Assembly to protect only the ability of the
descendants of persons buried in cemeteries or graveyards to access those sites, not the means by
which those sites may be accessed and (2) to hold otherwise would lead to an absurd result.
We agree with the trial court’s interpretation of Code § 57-27.1. Given the plain meaning
of the words of the statute, Code § 57-27.1 applies only to landowners on whose land a cemetery
or graves are located.
Appellants argue that the trial court placed undue focus on the first words of the statute,
“[o]wners of private property on which a cemetery or graves are located,” while overlooking the
second and third sentences, which state:
No landowner shall erect a wall, fence or other structure or device
that prevents ingress and egress to the cemetery or grave . . . . The
landowner may designate the frequency of access, hours and
1
At trial, appellants sought to establish their right to use the traditional access route
pursuant to Code § 57-27.1, or alternatively, that a prescriptive easement had been established
through the traditional access route on the two smaller parcels now owned by Jacobs and Brink.
Appellants did not pursue theories of implied easement by prior use or necessity. See, e.g.,
Davis v. Henning, 250 Va. 271 (1995) (necessity); Russakoff v. Scruggs, 241 Va. 135 (1991)
(implication, prior use, or “quasi-easement”). In certain cases, other states have applied these
related common law doctrines of implied easement by prior use or necessity to the issue of
cemetery access. See, e.g., McCoy v. Barr, 275 P.3d 914 (Kan. App. 2012) (affirming the
finding of an implied easement by necessity where cemetery was completely landlocked by a
separate parcel of land). Those two theories are not before the Court today, however. Further,
appellants have not appealed the trial court’s denial of their prescriptive easement claim. We are
concerned only with the proper interpretation of Code § 57-27.1.
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duration of the access and the access route if no traditional access
route is obviously visible by a view of the property.
It is axiomatic that in attempting to glean the legislative intent of a statutory enactment, we must
consider the statute as a whole, “giving to every word and every part of the statute, if possible, its
due effect and meaning.” Chesapeake & Ohio R.R. v. Hewin, 152 Va. 649, 653 (1929). And
further, to ascertain its plain meaning, courts have a “duty to interpret the several parts of a
statute as a consistent and harmonious whole so as to effectuate the legislative goal.” Va. Elec.
and Power Co. v. Bd. of Cnty. Supervisors of Prince William Cnty., 226 Va. 382, 387-88 (1983).
Appellants argue that, in viewing the statutory language as a whole, the second and third
sentences clarify the meaning of the statute and establish that the duty to allow ingress and egress
applies not only to owners of land on which a cemetery or graves are located, but also to
landowners whose property contains a traditional access route to any such burying places.
However, as appellees point out, the first sentence of Code § 57-27.1, “[o]wners of
private property on which a cemetery or graves are located shall have a duty . . .” clearly
illustrates that the statute only applies to landowners of property on which a cemetery or graves
are actually located. The plain meaning of the statute favors appellees’ interpretation. Because
the two smaller parcels here do not have a cemetery or graves located on them, Jacobs and Brink
are not “landowners” within the meaning of the statute and thus are not subject to the duty to
allow ingress and egress that the statute imposes. To hold otherwise would require us to rewrite
the statute. The trial court’s construction gives effect to the General Assembly’s intent without
causing the Court to usurp the legislature’s authority to enact statutes. Whenever interpreting
and construing a statute, we are mindful that “[c]ourts are not permitted to rewrite statutes.”
Boynton v. Kilgore, 271 Va. 220, 230 (2006) (alteration in original) (quoting Anderson v.
Commonwealth, 182 Va. 560, 566 (1944)). Further, “[w]hen interpreting statutes, courts
‘ascertain and give effect to the intention of the legislature.’ That intent is usually self-evident
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from the words used in the statute.” Id. at 227 (quoting Chase v. DaimlerChrysler Corp., 266
Va. 544, 547 (2003)). The General Assembly could have broadened the scope of Code § 57-27.1
by stating “owners of private property on which a cemetery or graves, or a traditional access
route thereto, are located,” yet it chose not to.2 We decline to alter the words of Code § 57-27.1
at appellants’ request.
Further, as appellees correctly point out, this interpretation can easily be harmonized with
the later language upon which appellants seize, that “[t]he landowner may designate the
frequency of access, hours and duration of the access and the access route if no traditional access
route is obviously visible by a view of the property.” The purpose of this subsequent sentence is
not to extend the scope of the statute to include landowners of adjoining parcels that contain a
traditional access route, but instead to clarify exactly how a landowner, referred to earlier in the
text of the statute, may restrict and constrain access to the cemetery or graveyard. In other
words, this language is meant only to clarify what route a descendant may utilize to access the
cemetery or graveyard. If an obviously visible traditional access route already exists on the
2
Other states have explicitly codified the right to cross over property on which no
cemetery is located when no other means are available. See, e.g., N.C. Gen. Stat. Ann. § 65-102
(West 2022) (an individual may seek an order allowing the individual to enter private property
when “[t]here are reasonable grounds to believe that [a] grave or abandoned public cemetery is
located on the property or it is reasonably necessary to enter or cross the landowner’s property to
reach the grave or abandoned public cemetery”); Vt. Stat. Ann. Tit. 18 § 5322 (West 2022)
(“Any person wishing to have a temporary right of entry over private land in order to enter a
graveyard enclosure to which there is no public right-of-way may apply in writing to the
selectboard or cemetery commissioners . . . . The owner or occupier of the land may recommend
a place of crossing which, if reasonable, shall be the place designated by the selectboard or
cemetery commissioners.”); Mo. Ann. Stat. § 214.132 (West 2020) (“Any person who wishes to
visit an abandoned family cemetery or private burying ground which is completely surrounded
by privately owned land, for which no public ingress or egress is available, shall have the right to
reasonable ingress or egress for the purpose of visiting such cemetery. This right of access to
such cemeteries extends only to visitation during reasonable hours and only for purposes usually
associated with cemetery visits.”). While the General Assembly could have enacted a statute
similar to these, it chose not to do so.
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parcel, then that is the route that the landowner must allow descendants to utilize; but if not, then
the landowner may designate a route which descendants must use.
This interpretation is consistent with the legislative purpose of Code § 57-27.1.
Appellants argue that Virginia has long recognized the right of access of family members and
descendants of persons buried in private cemeteries. This is true; however, though the enactment
of this statute clearly illustrates the General Assembly’s intent to protect the right of access of
family members and descendants of deceased persons buried in cemeteries and graveyards, we
do not agree that the statute, in all cases, protects the means by which those family members or
descendants may access the cemetery or graveyard without limitation. Here, the appellants may
access the cemetery via the east gate route. This interpretation strikes the appropriate balance
between protecting family members and descendants’ rights to access burial sites and a
landowner’s property rights in Virginia.
Finally, the narrow interpretation advanced by the appellees neither offends logic, nor
renders any part of the statute meaningless. Contrary to appellants’ contention, our ruling today
will not “render[] the statute ‘otherwise incapable of operation.’” See Tvardek v. Powhatan
Village Homeowners Ass’n, Inc., 291 Va. 269, 280 (2016) (quoting Butler v. Fairfax Cnty. Sch.
Bd., 291 Va. 32, 37 (2015)). “A classic example would be a literal, but entirely dysfunctional,
interpretation ‘validating’ an act while simultaneously ‘nullifying’ it.” Id. (quoting Frey v.
Jefferson Homebuilders, Inc., 251 Va. 375, 378 (1996)). Appellants contend that, in adopting
appellees’ narrow interpretation of the statute today, we “open[] the door to allow people to
convey property to avoid the obligations imposed by the statute.” Appellants are partially
correct; our ruling today may open the door for landowners to convey a portion of their property
containing a traditional access route to a third party, thereby removing the property conveyed
from the scope of the statute. However, a landowner of property upon which a cemetery or
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graves are located still has the duty to provide reasonable ingress and egress. And further, the
common law doctrines of easement by prescription, prior use, or necessity remain unaffected by
our interpretation of Code § 57-27.1.
This balance between a landowner’s property rights and the right of family members and
descendants to access cemeteries or graveyards where their ancestors are buried was clearly
expressed by the General Assembly through Code § 57-27.1. Our interpretation does not offend
logic, as those same family members and descendants will still be able to access cemeteries and
graveyards; they may just have to access those sites via a different route, subject to the
reasonable restraints put in place by the landowner.
IV. CONCLUSION
Accordingly, we hold that the obligations imposed on landowners by Code § 57-27.1
apply only to landowners of property on which cemeteries or graveyards are located; landowners
of adjoining property on which only traditional access routes exist, but no cemetery or
graveyards are present, are not subject to the obligations imposed by the statute. Consequently,
the trial court did not err in declining to grant the declaratory and injunctive relief sought by
appellants. We therefore affirm the trial court’s judgment.
Affirmed.
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