delivered the opinion of the court.
The fundamental question before us is whether Old Dominion Iron & Steel Corporation (Old Dominion) stated a cause of action in its motion for judgment against Virginia Electric and Power Company (Vepco) and City of Richmond, Virginia (the City).
A preliminary question is what properly constitutes the record before us. The final order sustaining the City’s demurrer and Vepco’s motion for summary judgment, in which the trial court incorporated its letter opinion dated December 13, 1973, was entered on January 25, 1974. On February 15, 1974, Old Dominion filed its notice of appeal and assignments of error, stating expressly that “it does not intend to hereafter file any transcript, statement of facts, testimony or other incidents of the case.” The clerk of the trial court transmitted the record to this Court on March 11, 1974. Old Dominion filed its petition for a writ of error on May 24, 1974. The City and Vepco filed their briefs in opposition on June 5, 1974, and June 7, 1974, respectively. We awarded a writ on July 26, 1974. On August 2, 1974, Old Dominion designated for printing in the Appendix the following parts of the record transmitted by the Clerk: the motion for judgment; the demurrer; the motion for summary judgment; the letter opinion; the final order; and the notice of appeal and assignments of error. Upon Vepco’s motion, the trial court entered an order on August 22, 1974, enlarging the record to include all papers, pleadings, memoranda, and exhibits in support of motions, filed as part of a suit in equity antecedent to the motion for judgment; the final decree in that suit dismissing
Old Dominion requests that the order enlarging the record be reversed and that this appeal be determined upon the record as originally transmitted.
The transcript of the hearing on the motion for summary judgment and demurrer to the motion for judgment was not incorporated in the record as provided in Rule 5:9. Since the original suit in equity was dismissed with prejudice and never appealed, and since none of its pleadings, motions, memoranda, exhibits, transcripts, or orders was introduced as exhibits in the proceedings on the motion for judgment, none is part of the record on appeal as defined by Rule 5:8. While the trial court is empowered by Rule 5:10 to decide disagreements among counsel or between counsel and the clerk, the trial court has no power by Rule or statute to add to the contents of the record on appeal anything not designated in Rule 5:8. When the record has been transmitted in compliance with Rule 5:15 by the clerk of the trial court to the clerk of this Court and a writ of error or appeal has been granted, the record on appeal cannot be enlarged except upon our award of a writ of certiorari as provided in Code § 8-473 (Repl. Vol. 1957). The trial court erred in entering the August 22,1974, order.
The order is reversed, and we will proceed to the consideration of the fundamental issue on the record as originally transmitted. Confining ourselves to that record, we will not notice arguments of the parties based upon facts not stated expressly or by necessary implication.
We look to the motion for judgment for facts and reasonable inferences of facts, for they are taken as confessed when well pleaded.
Chippenham Manor
v.
Dervishian,
By deed dated January 29, 1926, Old Dominion’s corporate grandfather conveyed to Old Dominion’s corporate father 12 acres of land on Belle Isle, an island in the James River in Richmond. By the same deed, the grantor conveyed to Vepco all
Vepco and Old Dominion, the two grantees in the deed, executed a separate agreement of even date and later recorded both documents on the same date. The agreement acknowledged as binding the provisions of the deed quoted above.
On May 13, 1933, Old Dominion and Vepco entered into another agreement under which Vepco released Old Dominion from its liability respecting the bridge and assumed sole responsibility for the maintenance, repair, and replacement thereof so long as no other adequate roadway connection with the north shore of the river was available.
The 1926 agreement, as amended in 1933, was made for Old Dominion’s use, enjoyment, and benefit.
By order entered in condemnation proceedings on September 12, 1968, the trial court vested title in the City to a portion of the 12-acre tract, but, with the City’s consent, Old Dominion continued to occupy the condemned land, conduct its business on the 12-acre tract, and use the bridge in connection with its business operation.
About January 15, 1970, the remaining portion of the 12-acre tract, previously acquired by the City, was leased by the City to Old Dominion, and Old Dominion continued to occupy and use the entire tract.
Under an agreement dated March 27, 1972, Vepco agreed to sell and the City agreed to buy certain Vepco holdings on Belle Isle, including the steel bridge. The agreement further provided that Vepco would continue to maintain the bridge as long as Old Dominion continued to occupy the 12-acre tract, with the understanding that the City would consummate acquisition and occupancy of that property as soon as possible. This agreement
On June 23, 1972, the bridge was destroyed by the flood waters of tropical storm “Agnes” and has not been replaced.
Having recited these allegations of fact in its motion for judgment, Old Dominion alleged that “[a]s a result of the failure of either Vepco or the City to properly maintain, keep up and repair the bridge by reason of which failure the bridge was destroyed as aforesaid and as a result of the failure of either Vepco or the City to replace the bridge, all in violation of the duties and obligations of Vepco and the City pursuant to agreements made as aforesaid for Plaintiff’s use, enjoyment and benefit, Plaintiff has sustained and will continue to sustain” certain specifically enumerated damages, including the costs of providing alternate methods of access and transportation to and from its plant.
Old Dominion argues that it has alleged standing in three capacities to sue for damages for breach of the covenant to maintain and replace the bridge, viz., in its capacity as lessee of a portion of the land benefited by the covenants in the deed, in its capacity as condemnee and permissive occupant of another portion of that land, and in its capacity as original promisee in the contract arising from the 1926 agreement, as amended in 1933. Old Dominion argues further that, in its capacity as third party beneficiary of the March 27, 1972, contract between Vepco and the City, it has standing to sue for damages for breach of the contract commitment to maintain the bridge. Finally, Old Dominion contends that, with respect to its standing in each of these capacities, it has alleged a breach of obligation and causally related damages and, thus, has properly pleaded a cause of action against Vepco and the City.
I. Old Dominion As Lessee
The deed contained two covenants, one covenant granting Old Dominion the right to use the bridge (a use in the nature of and easement) and the other covenant requiring Old Dominion and Vepco to maintain and replace the bridge. The parties do not disagree that these covenants run with the land. The bridge is the burdened estate. The 12-acre tract is the benefited estate.
Old Dominion alleged that it leased a parcel of land from the
We consider only whether a leasehold interest acquired from an original covenantee or its successor in title is sufficient to give a lessee standing to enforce the covenants. 1 Vepco argues that, under the express language of the covenants, only “successors in title”, i.e., subsequent owners of fee simple title, have such standing. Such an argument overlooks the distinction the law makes between the burden of a covenant running with the land and the benefit of such a covenant.
That distinction and the rules attendant upon it are stated in Restatement of Property § 547 at 3266-69 (1944):
“§ 547. PRIVITY BETWEEN BENEFICIARY AND SUCCESSOR.
“The benefit of a promise respecting the use of land of the beneficiary of the promise can run with the land only to one who succeeds to some interest of the beneficiary in the land respecting the use of which the promise was made.
“Comment:
a. Rationale. . . . The running of the benefit, like the running of the burden, was once based upon a concept of identification of the successor with his predecessor. This concept required for its application that the successor succeed to the estate held by the original promisee. But other concepts have joined to modify the historical concept as applied to the running of benefits. The succession to benefits is never as objectionable, at least from the point of view of the successor,as the succession to burdens. It is not unnatural that greater liberality has been displayed with respect to the former kind of succession than the latter. The result has been so to modify the concept of identification with respect to the running of the benefit of a promise respecting the use of land as to require only that an interest of the predecessor pass to the successor.
c. Succession to interest. The concept of identification, upon which the running of both the burden and the benefit of promises respecting the use of land is based, presupposes a succession to an interest in the land with which the promises run. Historically, such a succession meant a succession to the interest of the predecessor in that land. This historical rule is still applicable in the case of the running of the burden (see § 535). It is no longer true with respect to the running of the benefit. The benefit will run with any part of the interest of the beneficiary of the promise if the part succeeded to is of such a character that performance of the promise will be of benefit to the owner of it.
“Illustration:
1. A and B are the owners of neighboring lands. A has a dwelling house located on his land. B covenants with A and his assigns that he, B, will not use his land as the site of a manufacturing establishment. A leases his house to C for ten years. B begins to operate a glue factory upon his land. C is sufficiently the successor to the benefit of the promise to enable him to sue upon it.” [Emphasis in text supplied].
The rule is further explicated in 2 American Law of Property § 9.20 (392) (1952):
. . But in the case of the benefit as distinguished from the burden, the courts permit the life tenant or lessee of the covenantee to enforce the benefit. In these cases the courts proceed on the theory that the benefit of a covenant is primarily attached to the possession of the covenantee’s estate, and that when he has transferred this possession by creating a lesser possessory estate, the benefit should be treated as temporarily passing with the possessory interest to the life tenant or lessee.”
To accept Vepco’s argument, we must assume that the original parties to the covenants intended that the benefit run only to the
We hold that Old Dominion, as lessee of a portion of the benefited estate,
2
had standing to sue for damages resulting from a breach of the covenant to maintain and replace the bridge and properly pleaded a cause of action against the legal owner of the burdened estate. During the time the alleged damages were sustained the legal owner was Vepco. As vendee in the March 27, 1972, contract, the City was equitable owner. Unlike an owner of a lesser proprietary interest in the benefited estate who inherits the
benefit
of the covenant, an owner of a lesser proprietary interest in the burdened estate does not inherit the
burden.
In
Accordingly, we hold that Old Dominion, in its capacity as lessee, has failed to state a cause of action against the City. 4
II. Old Dominion as Condemnee and Permissive Occupant
Old Dominion alleged that, at the time its damages were sustained, it was a permissive occupant of the condemned parcel of the benefited estate. On appeal, it argues that, as condemnee, it had a potential reversionary interest sufficient to give it standing to sue for damages resulting from a breach of the covenant to maintain and replace the bridge.
But Old Dominion made no allegation in its motion for judgment that the condemnation proceeding was still pending and that it owned such an interest at the time its damages were sustained. While we cannot look to the enlarged record, we take judicial notice of our opinion in
Richmond
v.
Old Dominion Iron and Steel Corporation,
We hold that Old Dominion failed to allege standing as a condemnee to enforce the covenant, that it had no such standing in fact, and that as condemnee and permissive occupant, it failed to state a cause of action against Vepco and the City.
Old Dominion says that, apart from its standing as lessee to enforce the covenants in the deed, it has standing as original promisee in the separate contract arising from the 1926 and 1933 agreements to sue for damages for breach of the promise Vepco made in that contract.
Vepco argues that the promise to maintain and replace the bridge raises a duty the benefit of which attaches to ownership of the benefited property; that the breach of that duty “injures a party by damaging his property interest”; and that “any cause of action arises from this property interest.” Vepco concludes that Old Dominion had no “substantial estate in the benefited property” and therefore “does not have such a property interest on which to sue and recover damages.”
Vepco’s contractual liability, as distinguished from its liability on the covenants, is founded upon privity of contract with Old Dominion and does not depend upon Old Dominion’s ownership of a substantial interest in the benefited estate. 5 The nature and extent of Vepco’s contractual liability turns upon the intention of the parties, as evidenced by the two contract documents and the circumstances surrounding their execution. The facts alleged in the motion for judgment do not manifest an intent that Vepco’s liability terminate when Old Dominion ceased to own a “substantial estate” in the benefited property. The contractual commitment to maintain and replace, like the covenants, was attached to the use of the benefited property (See Part I, supra). This circumstance supports the conclusion that the parties intended Vepco’s contractual obligations to continue as long as Old Dominion had the right to use the bridge in connection with its manufacturing operation on the island.
Old Dominion alleged that it had such a right, that Vepco
IV. Old Dominion as Third-Party Beneficiary
Old Dominion alleged that the March 27, 1972, contract under which Vepco agreed to sell the bridge to the City provided “that Vepco would continue to maintain the bridge so long as Plaintiffs occupancy of property on Belle Isle continued, with the understanding that the City would as soon as possible consummate acquisition and occupancy of the said property” and that this provision “was made for Plaintiffs use, enjoyment and benefit.”
This allegation was fully sufficient to give Old Dominion standing under Code § 55-22 (Repl. Vol. 1974) to sue for damages for breach of the commitment to maintain the bridge.
See Kempsville Utilities
v.
Wills,
Vepco argues that Old Dominion alleged only a commitment to maintain the bridge and that such a commitment does not include a duty to replace the bridge.
Ordinarily, a duty to replace is not to be inferred from a naked promise to “maintain”. Absent factors denoting a broader obligation, such a promise imports only an undertaking to conserve the status quo, i.e., to make such repairs as become necessary to sustain normal operability.
But this is not an ordinary case, and we must determine whether the record before us indicates that the parties intended the commitment to “maintain” to include the duty to replace. The use of the word “maintain” is only one of the facts alleged and, standing alone, that fact does not resolve the question. Old Dominion further alleged that Vepco’s commitment “was in
We hold that the trial court was correct in sustaining the City’s demurrer but erred in granting Vepco’s motion for summary judgment. The judgment is affirmed in part and reversed in part, the motion for judgment as to Vepco is reinstated on the docket, and the case is remanded for further proceedings not inconsistent with this opinion.
Affirmed in part, reversed in part, and remanded.
Notes
In
Jones
v.
Richmond,
A covenant is not destroyed by division of the benefited estate, and its benefit runs to an assignee of a parcel of the benefited estate, provided the enjoyment of the benefit does not place an additional charge upon the burdened estate.
Restatement of Property, supra
at § 551 (3276-77).
See also Linkenhoker
v.
Graybill,
The covenant to maintain and replace the bridge is an affirmative covenant. We do not decide what rule would apply to a negative covenant running with the land.
There is respectable authority for the rule urged by Vepco that when the benefited estate and the burdened estate become merged in the same owner, a covenant running with the land is extinguished. See, e.g., 21 C.J.S., Covenants § 78 (936) (1940). But there was no such merger here. While the City owned fee simple title to the benefited estate in its entirety, the City as we have said, owned only an equitable title to the burdened estate.
“. . . [A] . .. covenant [running with the land] creates two different bases of liability in the covenantor. Firstly, he is in privity of contract with the covenantee, and this relationship creates in the covenantor a contract duty which is unassignable. Secondly, he is in privity of estate with the covenantee, and this relationship is the basis upon which the courts treat a contractual burden as attaching to the covenantor’s land and running to a subsequent assignee. Thus, when the covenantor assigns his entire estate in the land, he ceases to be liable as to the future upon this contractual burden because he is no longer in privity of estate with the covenantee; but his liability upon the nonassignable contract duty under privity of contract remains in him.” 2 American Law of Property, supra at § 9.18 (388).
