Plott v. Justin Enterprises

Decision Date18 June 2007
Docket NumberNo. 4258.,4258.
CourtSouth Carolina Court of Appeals
PartiesPeter C. PLOTT and Demitria C. Votta, Respondents, v. JUSTIN ENTERPRISES, a South Carolina General Partnership, Russ Pye, and Lee Pye, Appellants.

Eugene P. Corrigan, III, and Michael A. Timbes, both of Charleston, for Appellants.

Marvin I. Oberman and Harold A. Oberman, both of Charleston, for Respondents.

GOOLSBY, J.

Justin Enterprises, Russ Pye, and Lee Pye (collectively Appellants) appeal an order holding their actions interfered with the right of Peter C. Plott and Demitria C. Votta (collectively Respondents) to use an easement and directing them to cease these actions. In addition, Appellants contend the trial judge erred in refusing to apply res judicata or collateral estoppel to bar Respondents' suit. We affirm.

FACTS

Encampment Plantation is an 852-acre tract of land in Charleston County. Robert Lawson Horner and Lisa J. Horner owned 64.57 acres of real property known as "Tract 1" in Encampment Plantation. In April 1994, the Horners obtained the approval of the Charleston County Planning Board to subdivide Tract 1. As part of the process, they agreed to dedicate a fifty-foot wide right-of-way easement known as "Encampment Plantation Drive" in between the two new tracts, known as "Tract 1A" and "Tract 1B," respectively.1 On April 20, 1994, they recorded a plat showing Tracts 1A and 1B, as well as Encampment Plantation Drive.

On May 12, 1994, the Horners conveyed Tract 1B to Myrtis M. Jenkins, Lisa Horner's mother. Jenkins immediately sold the tract to Susan Dillard, who eventually deeded it to Respondents. Each deed contains the following pertinent language creating an easement for the benefit of Tract 1B:

TOGETHER with a perpetual, non-exclusive, appendant and appurtenant easement for ingress and egress upon, over and across that certain 2.22 acre 50' right-of-way known as "ENCAMPMENT PLANTATION DRIVE". . . . This easement is for the commercial and economic benefit of [Tract 1B] and is appurtenant to and transferable with the title to said [Tract 1B].

On December 29, 1994, the Horners conveyed both Tract 1A and Encampment Plantation Drive to Appellants, with the following language in the property description:

SAID PROPERTY IS CONVEYED SUBJECT to the ingress and egress easement over and across that certain 2.22 acre 50' right-of-way known as Encampment Plantation Drive granted to Susan P. Dillard by deed of Myrtis M. Jenkins. . . .

Encampment Plantation Drive provides access to Highway 17 from various properties within Encampment Plantation. From Highway 17, a traveler would turn onto Encampment Plantation Drive and proceed north. Several hundred feet from Highway 17, Tract 1A would lie to the west and Tract 1B to the east of Encampment Plantation Drive. Encampment Plantation Drive ends at a cul-de-sac. Tract 1B fronts the eastern side of Encampment Plantation Drive for approximately 451 feet.

In 1997, Appellant Justin Enterprises instituted an action against Respondents, alleging Respondents trespassed on Tract 1A and removed timber. Respondents answered and asserted several counterclaims for trespass and interference with their use of Tract 1B.2 On March 14, 2000, Respondents moved to amend their answer and assert additional counterclaims. Of relevance to this appeal is Respondents' attempt to claim Justin Enterprises placed stakes along the eastern boundary of Encampment Plantation Drive and set a log within the cul-de-sac. Respondents further argued these actions interfered with their use of the easement.

The trial court denied Respondents' motion to amend, emphasizing the motion was made approximately one month before the trial scheduled for April 17, 2000. At trial, Respondents referenced the actions leading to the proposed amendment and referenced the prohibited counterclaim in closing argument. The jury awarded Justin Enterprises $1,300 on the causes of action it raised in its complaint and denied Respondents relief on their counterclaims.3

In September 2002, Appellants began planting large shrubs on the eastern boundary of Encampment Plantation Drive. Eventually, Appellants built a wire fence on the same boundary. These actions prevented Respondents from accessing Tract 1B at any point prior to the cul-de-sac.

Respondents then filed this action for declaratory judgment defining the rights of the parties in and to the easement, as well as an injunction ordering Appellants to tear down the fence and remove the newly-planted shrubs. Appellants answered, asserting the prior action between the parties barred Respondents' suit under the doctrines of res judicata and collateral estoppel. Appellants also denied their actions interfered with Respondents' rights.

After a bench trial, the trial judge granted injunctive relief to Respondents. The trial judge also found "the grant and scope of the easement . . . was not at issue in the previous litigation and . . . neither the doctrine of res judicata nor collateral estoppel bar suit in the present action." Appellants moved for reconsideration or a new trial, both of which the trial judge denied. This appeal followed.

STANDARD OF REVIEW

Although the existence of an easement is a question of fact in a law action,4 the determination of the extent of an easement is an equitable matter.5 Accordingly, an appellate court may review the trial judge's findings de novo.6 "Our broad scope of review, however, does not require this Court to disregard the findings of the trial judge who saw and heard the witnesses and was in a better position to judge their credibility."7

LAW/ANALYSIS

1. Appellants contend the trial judge erred in refusing to apply the doctrine of res judicata. We disagree.

"Res judicata bars subsequent actions by the same parties when the claims arise out of the same transaction or occurrence that was the subject of a prior action between those parties."8 Under res judicata, "[a] litigant is barred from raising any issues which were adjudicated in the former suit and any issues which might have been raised in the former suit."9

"Res judicata requires three elements be met: 1) a final, valid judgment on the merits; 2) identity of parties; and 3) the second action must involve matters properly included in the first suit."10 "The rule as to the conclusiveness of the prior adjudication has a different application where the prior and subsequent causes of action are identical and where the subsequent action is on a different cause of action."11 Although res judicata may apply even though the plaintiff in the first suit proceeded under a different legal theory,12 "where the second suit is upon a different claim, the former judgment is conclusive only as to those issues actually determined."13

According to the amended complaint from the 1997 action, Justin Enterprises alleged Respondents were "continuously trespassing on [its] property, removing marketable timber, destroying landscape and burning evidence of such conduct. . . ." In their answer and counterclaim, Respondents alleged Justin Enterprises "deliberately interfered with the free use and enjoyment . . . of their property by preventing [them] and those hired by them from performing work on [their] property. . . ." They also alleged Justin Enterprises trespassed on their property "by constructing and maintaining an underground power line without permission" and maintaining a pond and ditch system that caused flooding on their property. We have found nothing in the arguments Appellants presented either in their briefs or during oral argument that would explain how resolution of any of the claims or counterclaims would necessarily involve a determination of where Respondents could access their property from the right-of-way.14 Moreover, the trial court's refusal to allow Respondents to proceed on their claim for interference with their use of the right-of-way was not a ruling on the merits of that cause of action.15 We therefore hold there were no circumstances that would support a determination that res judicata barred Respondents' cause of action for interference with their easement.

2. Appellants also contend Respondents were collaterally estopped from relitigating the issue of the scope of the easement. We disagree.

"Collateral estoppel prevents a party from relitigating in a subsequent suit an issue actually and necessarily litigated and determined in a prior action."16 "In order to successfully assert collateral estoppel, the party seeking issue preclusion must show that the issue was actually litigated and directly determined in the prior action, and that the matter or fact directly in issue was necessary to support the first judgment."17

In support of their argument that Respondents were collaterally estopped from relitigating the issue of the scope of the easement, Appellants have quoted extensively from the trial transcript of the 1997 lawsuit. In the previous action, however, Justin Enterprises also advanced the position that Respondents could have removed the stakes placed along the eastern boundary of Encampment Plantation Drive. The verdict for Justin Enterprises in that action, then, could have been based on the jury's determination that the obstructions were not unreasonable rather than on any finding concerning Respondents' right to access their property at any point other than the cul-de-sac. Under these circumstances, we hold Appellants have not shown that resolution of the issue in controversy in the present appeal, namely where Respondents could access Encampment Plantation Drive from Tract 1B, was necessary to support the prior judgment.

3. Appellants argue the trial judge erred in finding their placement of the fence and shrubbery along the eastern boundary of Encampment Plantation Drive improperly interfered with Respondents' use of the easement. We disagree.

"The language of an easement determines its extent."18...

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