This appeal arises from an order holding defendants in contempt for violating a court order. The basis is defendants' obstruction of plaintiff's enjoyment of an easement he purportedly has that runs across defendants' lands. Although the immediate issue on appeal is the contempt order, a resolution of this issue actually requires us to delve nearly two decades into the past and consider the judgment that awarded plaintiffs predecessors-in-title the easement in the first place.
As the map below illustrates, plaintiff and defendants are neighboring landowners in Mitchell County. N.C. State Road 1174 (also known as Rebels Creek Road) runs through defendants' properties. This case involves an unimproved dirt road that turns off of Rebels Creek Road and also runs through defendants' properties. A few hundred feet from Rebels Creek Road, this unimproved road forks off into two directions. The left fork, which we will refer to as the Center Road, runs for a short distance along the southwestern boundary of defendant Michael Welch's land and then enters plaintiff's property at his southern boundary. It dead ends within a few hundred feet. The right fork, herein referred to as the Mountain Road, continues for several hundred feet along the western boundary of both defendants’ properties before entering plaintiff’s property at his northern boundary. The Mountain Road then exits plaintiff’s land, apparently improves in quality, and continues on towards the town of Bandana.
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3. [It] extends from the Rebels Creek Public Road along the western boundary of and through the lands of the Defendants Welch to the lands of the plaintiffs ....
4. [It] has provided the sole means of ingress and egress to plaintiffs’ lands and has been used in connection with mining and timbering operations conducted on plaintiffs’ lands ....
In 1995, plaintiff purchased his property, along with the easement, from those who were plaintiffs in the 1983 judgment. Shortly thereafter, he and his family began using the Mountain Road. Defendants responded by constructing a roadblock to prevent plaintiff’s use; they left the Center road unobstructed. Plaintiff then instituted this action, asserting defendants’ contempt of the 1983 judgment. At a contempt hearing before the same judge who decided the 1983 case, defendants argued that the “road” described in the 1983 judgment was the Center Road only. Plaintiff, on the other hand, maintained that the judgment included both the Center and Mountain roads. The trial court concluded that the 1983 judgment included both the Mountain and Center roads. The trial court then concluded that, by obstructing plaintiff’s use of the Mountain Road,
In their first argument, defendants contend the trial court impermissibly transformed the contempt action that was before it into a declaratory judgment action by considering whether the easement awarded in the 1983 judgment included both the Mountain and Center roads. We find this argument to be without merit. A contempt proceeding requires willful violation of a prior court order or judgment.
Hancock v. Hancock,
Next, defendants argue that the trial court incorrectly interpreted the 1983 judgment to apply to both the Mountain and Center roads. Generally, the interpretation of judgments presents a question of law that is fully reviewable on appeal.
Reavis v. Reavis,
Based upon our review of the record before us, we conclude that the 1983 judgment was ambiguous as a matter of law. Specifically, we conclude that the judgment was reasonably susceptible to three differing interpretations. First, the judgment can reasonably be construed to include both the Mountain and Center roads. After all, both roads do in fact “extend[] from the Rebels Creek Public Road along the western boundary of and through the lands of the Defendants Welch to the lands of the plaintiffs.” Second, the judgment can be interpreted to only include the Mountain Road, since the Mountain Road extends along much more of the western boundary than does the Center Road. Furthermore, the judgment throughout only refers to “a road,” refuting the notion that more than one road was intended to be included. Third, the judgment is reasonably susceptible to the interpretation that only the Center Road was included. The Center Road provides the “sole means of ingress and egress” to the majority of plaintiffs property. The Mountain Road, on the other hand, is not a sole means of ingress and egress; plaintiff can access the northeastern tip of his property by traveling south from Bandana, in which case he would never have to cross into defendants’ properties. Adding to all of this uncertainty is the fact that plaintiff’s and defendants’ lands had not even been surveyed at the time of the 1983 action. Thus, any description of the easement was inherently imprecise. Accordingly, we conclude that the 1983 judgment was ambiguous. Our next step, then, is to resolve this ambiguity.
Unfortunately, the law with respect to ambiguous judgments is not very well-developed in our State. What little law there is can be
summarized as follows: Where a judgment is ambiguous, and thus susceptible to two or more interpretations, our courts should adopt the interpretation that is in harmony with the law applicable to the case.
See Alexander v. Brown,
Prescriptive easements require the showing of four elements: (1) an adverse or hostile use; (2) the use has been open and notorious; (3) the use has been continuous and uninterrupted for at least twenty years; and (4) substantial identity of the way claimed to be an easement.
Potts v. Burnette,
Although no unanimity seems to exist, several courts, in the context of ambiguous judgments, have given deference to the trial court’s interpretation of the prior judgment. Exactly how much deference varies.
See, e.g., County of Suffolk v. Stone & Webster Eng’g Corp.,
Having resolved the ambiguity in the 1983 judgment, we must next determine whether, by blockading plaintiffs access to the Mountain Road, defendants were in contempt of this judgment. As previously stated, in order to be held in contempt, a party must have willfully violated a court order.
Hancock,
With respect to contempt, willfulness connotes knowledge of, and stubborn resistance to, a court order.
Mauney v. Mauney,
Finally, we address the trial court’s award of attorney’s fees. Generally speaking, “[a] North Carolina court has no authority to award damages to a private party in a contempt proceeding. Contempt is a wrong against the state, and moneys collected for contempt go to the state alone.”
Glesner v. Dembrosky,
Affirmed in part, reversed in part.
