Robert DiMucci filed a petition to enforce a portion of a settlement agreement to which he had agreed in 1992. Following a hearing, the district court
1.
Three brothers, Robert, Salvatore and Anthony DiMucci, owned and managed various commercial properties and businesses. Robert filed a lawsuit against Salvatore and Anthony; he alleged that his brothers had defrauded him. To settle that dispute, the parties signed, on September 15, 1992, a complex agreement that effected the exchange of several properties. On October 23, 1992, the district court entered a consent judgment that incorporated each of the provisions of the settlement agreement and stated that: “[tjhe Court shall retain jurisdiction over the parties and the subject matter of this action for the purpose of enforcing this Consent Judgment and for no other purpose.” R.37 at 4.
On May 2, 1995, Robert filed a motion to enforce paragraph eight of the settlement agreement. That paragraph provides that:
[e]ach of the parties hereto agrees, following the execution hereof, to execute such further documents, from time to time, as may be reasonably necessary in order to effectuate the purposes hereof.
R.37, Ex. A at ¶ 8. Robert claimed that a parcel of property which he had received through the settlement agreement was left without proper egress and ingress. He
Following unsuccessful attempts to settle the issue, the district court conducted a hearing in which it considered an easement that had been proposed by Salvatore and Anthony. It held that the proposed easement was reasonable and, thus, that the two brothers had discharged their obligation under the agreement to propose an easement with reasonable terms. Because Robert did not wish to sign the easement, his petition was dismissed with prejudice.
2.
In his appeal, Robert does not challenge the district court’s exercise of ancillary jurisdiction over the settlement agreement. Indeed, such a claim could not possibly prevail. The Supreme Court, in Kokkonen v. Guardian Life Ins. Co.,
Rather, Robert claims that the district court exceeded its jurisdiction when it examined the terms of the proposed easement and declared them to be reasonable. In his view, the district court had jurisdiction only to decide whether an easement was “reasonably necessary,” as contemplated by paragraph eight of the settlement agreement, and to order Salvatore and Anthony to execute the proposed easement Robert submitted with his petition. During the hearing, counsel for Robert repeatedly asserted that only his proposed easement was before the court, not that of Salvatore and Anthony.
Clearly, the district court had ancillary jurisdiction to “interpret and enforce” its earlier consent judgment. This jurisdiction obligated the court to examine the terms of the settlement agreement and make the determinations that an easement was “reasonably necessary” and that the one submitted by the grantors was a reasonable one. This course of action was not improper, and the court did not exceed its jurisdiction. Accordingly, the judgment of the district court is affirmed.
AFFIRMED.
Notes
. The parties agreed to have their disputes under the settlement agreement ruled upon by a United States Magistrate Judge, sitting as the district court, 28 U.S.C. § 636(c)(1), and appeal directly from that judgment. 28 U.S.C. § 636(c)(3).
. The transcript of the November 22, 1995 hearing reveals several instances of this assertion:
Counsel for Robert: I just would like to also object to the fact that all of these provisions that we’re going over right now are ancillary provisions, matters for the parties to dispute elsewhere. We came into this court for one reason, and it’s attached to our petition, and that was an agreement to have an easement agreement signed by the respondents/defendants ....
All of this other material, who is going to pay what, how is it going to be set up, is a state law issue, quite frankly, and that's our position. We don’t think that any of these other issues should be ruled upon. Either our petition is sufficient or it's not. And these other issues are ancillary issues and they’re not before the court in our petition, and that is the only pleading before the court.
R.93 at 27-28.
Court: What you’re asking me to do is rule that the brothers merely ... grant an easement, and nothing more; just provide for an easement on the property. That's what you're saying, right?
Counsel for Robert: Quite frankly, yes. And if you disagree with that, then you should deny our petition. Because anything else is cutting it down the middle, and that’s not our petition.
Id. at 34.
Counsel for Robert: We asked for this one [our easement], and if we can’t have this one, then I ask you to rule accordingly.
Court: Essentially, you're saying that what I should do is to order the respondents to sign on the document which you created with all its terms and conditions.
Counsel for Robert: Right.
Court: Is that correct?
Counsel for Robert: And if you disagree with that, then you should get rid of our petition.
Id. at 36.
. Counsel for Robert did not present any evidence at the hearing as to the reasonableness or unreasonableness of the terms of the proposed easement. Notably, he stated that, in his opinion, the matter was “really a legal issue.” R.93 at 2.
