Maryland law has traditionally categorized grants of easements as either general or specific. The difference between the two is that the granting deed of a general easement does not describe the precise location of the easement whereas the granting deed of a specific easement does. In this case, we are asked to decide on the existence and possible means of locating a general easement that provides a right-of-way from a major road. The easement in question crosses the property of USA Cartage Leasing, LLC, (“Cartage”) as an access route for neighboring property owned by Todd A. Baer (“Baer”).
Maryland’s recording statute for deeds requires that a deed contain “a description of the property sufficient to identify it with reasonable certainty.”
Background
Creation of the Easement
In 1984, Edwin and Rebecca Glesner (the “Glesners”) acquired a 5.26-acre lot in Washington County, Maryland.
In 1995, the Glesners conveyed the Cartage parcel to Cartage, which continues to own it. The deed to Cartage did not mention the easement previously granted to the adjacent tract. The Baer parcel came into the possession of its current owner, Todd Baer, in 2008. Intervening deeds had not mentioned the right-of-way over the Cartage parcel.
The Cartage parcel has been developed for commercial use, includes at least one building, and has a gravel parking lot for trucks and other vehicles immediately adjacent to the Baer parcel. The Baer parcel remains undeveloped.
Circuit Court Judgment Fixing Location of Easement
On August 4, 2008, Baer filed a Complaint for Declaratory Judgment and Other Relief against Cartage in the Circuit Court for Washington County. The complaint contained two counts. First, Baer sought a declaratory judgment that he “holds a legally valid and effective right-of-way over [Cartage’s] Property.” In his complaint, Baer acknowledged that the location of the right-of-way “is not specified in the language of the deeds in the chain of title from the Glesners” to himself and that it had never been determined by custom or usage by himself or his predecessors in title. As an exhibit to his complaint, Baer attached a plat showing a proposed location for the easement that he described as the “least burdensome location for a 25-foot right-of-way capable of providing reasonable commercial ingress and egress from the ‘existing entrance’ shown on the
On July 13, 2009, Baer filed a motion for summary judgment. In response, Cartage argued that the easement described in the original 1985 deed was ineffective as a matter of law because the easement could not be precisely located by either its original terms or by subsequent conduct and circumstances. A hearing on the motion was held on August 11, 2009, at which time the Circuit Court granted Baer’s motion.
In its oral ruling on summary judgment, the Circuit Court found that the language in the 1985 deed “does not create a specific easement of right-of-way but a general easement of right-of-way[.] ... The general right-of-way isn’t extinguished ... simply because it isn’t specifically described where it exists or there’s not other evidence like an existing trail[.]” The court decided that the easement should be located such that it would cause “very minimal intrusion to the USA Cartage Parcel[.] It should go somehow in a direct and convenient way from the existing entrance to ... the Baer property.”
In the order granting summary judgment, the court did not decide where the right-of-way should be located. Instead, the court invited both sides to offer evidence and argument — an invitation that both parties accepted. After the parties had submitted their respective proposals, the court entered two orders on September 10, 2009. The first order rejected Cartage’s proposed location for the right-of-way. The second order adopted Baer’s proposed location for the right-of-way and enjoined Cartage from interfering with Baer’s use of the right-of-way.
On September 21, 2009, Cartage filed a motion to make final the court’s orders for purposes of appeal pursuant to Maryland Rule 2-602(b),
Court of Special Appeals: Standard for Locating an Express Easement
The Court of Special Appeals affirmed the Circuit Court’s ruling that the easement was not void as a matter of law. It vacated the judgment and remanded the case on other grounds unrelated to the present appeal, however.
[Wjhere ... an express easement has been established without fixing its location, and the location of the easementcannot be established either (a) by reference to a road or way in existence at the time of the deed; (b) by a subsequent, unopposed long-term use by the dominant tenant; or (c) by a subsequent agreement of the parties, the court may establish the easement’s location so as to be the least onerous to the owner of the servient estate while, at the same time, being of reasonable convenience to the owner of the dominant estate ... in light of the purposes of the easement.
On remand, if the circuit court determines that Cartage’s defenses to the easement do not succeed, the circuit court should conform to the procedure specified in the Third Restatement to locate the easement.
Id. at 205,
Cartage sought further review in this Court arguing, among other things, that the decision of the intermediate appellate court was contrary to the Maryland Code, Real Property Article (“RP”), § 4-101, the statute governing the recording of deeds. We granted certiorari to consider the proper application of the recording statute and, if necessary, the appropriate standard of locating such an easement.
Discussion
This case requires that we harmonize two independent — and not always congruent — lines of authority that govern easements. One concerns the requisites for an express grant of an interest in real property, including easements. The other concerns the validity and means of locating a particular type of express easement known as a general easement.
Easements
At the basic level, an easement is a “nonpossessory interest in the real property of another.” Rogers v. P-M Hunter’s Ridge, LLC,
An easement may be created by express grant, by reservation in a conveyance of land, or by implication. Kobrine v. Metzger,
An express easement may be categorized as either general or specific. Rogers,
The Recording Statute and Cases Requiring Specificity in Grants of Land
An express easement granted or reserved by deed may be created only in the mode and manner prescribed by the applicable recording statute. Kobrine,
Any deed containing the names of the grantor and grantee, a description of the property sufficient to identify it with reasonable certainty, and the interest or estate intended to be granted, is sufficient, if executed, acknowledged, and, where required, recorded.
RP § 4 — 101(a)(1). Apart from recodifications and some modernization of the language, this statute has been in continuous effect since at least the mid-19th century. See Chapter 154, § 24, Laws of Maryland 1856 at 255.
As is evident, this statute incorporates four requirements:
(1) The deed must name the grantor and grantee;
(2) The deed must describe the property sufficiently to identify it with reasonable certainty;
(3) the deed must state the interest or estate to be granted; and
(4) the deed must be executed, acknowledged, and, where required, recorded.
The second element of the recording statute is also reflected in a number of older cases involving grants of land, although those cases did not purport to be construing the statute. For example, in an 1874 decision, this Court observed: “There is no doubt of the rule that every conveyance must either on its face or by words of reference give to the subject intended to be conveyed, such a description as to identify it, and if it be land, it must be such as to afford the means of locating it.” Carmody v. Brooks,
There was an associated easement at issue in McDonough— an easement for the purpose of accessing the reserved parcel in question.
Cases Concerning Grants of General Easements
In contrast to cases concerning the requisites for deeds that grant interests in land are cases concerning the validity and location of general easements. This Court has noted that “[i]f ... the easement is reserved in general terms only, an ambiguity regarding the location of the easement exists, and we look to the surrounding circumstances, including subsequent agreements and conduct of parties[.]” Rogers,
Whether the General Easement over the Cartage Parcel is Valid
Cartage argues that the second element set forth in the recording statute and the cases concerning grants of land — that a deed describe the property sufficiently to identify it with reasonable certainty — mandates that a deed spell out the exact location of the ground to which an easement applies in a manner sufficient to identify the location of the easement with reasonable certainty.
If one interprets the recording statute and the holdings in Carmody and McDonough as requiring that the information necessary to locate an easement be contained within the four corners of the deed, as suggested by Cartage, it would follow as a matter of simple logic that a general easement granted by deed would be void from the outset. Yet the fine of cases concerning general easements has co-existed for many years with the recording statute and the line of cases that requires specificity in conveyances of property.
The two lines of authority can be reconciled if the specificity requirement incorporated in the recording statute applies
In this case, there appears to be no question that the servient estate — the Cartage parcel — was adequately described in the deed that established the easement in favor of the Baer parcel. Moreover, the easement was clearly described as a right of way 25 feet in width connecting the Baer parcel to the existing entrance to the Cartage’s parcel— presumably the roadway entrance onto Governor Lane Boulevard as this is the only marked entrance on the 1984 plat and as both the plat and the deed refer to an “existing entrance.” Of course, this does not precisely describe the right-of-way from the Baer parcel to the “existing entrance.” Though adequately described for purposes of the recording statute and validly granted, the easement must still be located.
How to Locate the Easement
Having determined that the easement was validly granted, we turn to the question of how to locate it. As noted above, the Court of Special Appeals, in its analysis, looked to the Restatement 3d of Property: Servitudes, § 4.8 and our case law on locating implied easements of necessity, which express similar principles. The Restatement provides, in pertinent part
§ 4.8 Location, Relocation, and Dimensions of a Servitude Except where the location and dimensions are determined by the instrument or circumstances surrounding creation of a servitude, they are determined as follows:
(1) The owner of the servient estate has the right within a reasonable time to specify a location that is reasonably suited to carry out the purpose of the servitude.
(2) The dimensions are those reasonably necessary for enjoyment of the servitude.
The commentary to § 4.8 indicates that, procedurally, the owner of the servient estate should be given the initial opportunity to locate the easement while the owner of the easement is protected by the requirement that the location “be reasonably suited for the purpose [of the easement].” Id., comment b. If the parties fail to agree and a court is ultimately called upon to locate the easement, it should select a location that “minimiz[es] the damage to the servient estate and maximiz[es] the utility to the owner of the servitude.” Id.
A survey of the case law in other states finds that, although a few courts may have located such easements in other ways,
This Court’s case law concerning the location of easements that are not defined by specific grant or by traditional definitions of surrounding circumstances — neither of which serves as a guide here — is limited to cases involving easements of necessity. As noted above, easements of necessity are conceptually distinct from easements by express grant. Nevertheless, on several occasions this Court has indicated in dicta that the principles involved in locating an easement of necessity may be applied to general easements. See Dixon v. Frantz,
When locating a right-of-way of necessity, a court balances the interests of the owner of the servient estate with those of the owner of the dominant estate. Hancock v. Henderson,
We agree with the intermediate appellate court that the balancing approach of § 4.8(1), (2) of the Restatement and our case law concerning the location of implied easements of necessity provides a fair procedure for locating a general easement that can be harmonized with Maryland law concerning the specificity required in deeds.
Conclusion
We are cognizant of the impact that a poorly located easement can have on the owner of a servient estate. It is the longstanding rule in Maryland that a purchaser of real property is subject to every encumbrance of record that appears in the land records, whether or not the purchaser has actual knowledge of it.
Judgment of the Court of Special Appeals Affirmed. Costs to Be Paid by Petitioner.
Notes
. Maryland Code, Real Property Article, § 4 — 101 (a)(1).
. For purposes of clarity, we recite here only those facts relevant to the particular questions before this Court. A more complete history can be found in the opinion of the Court of Special Appeals, which decided several other issues not before this Court. USA Cartage Leasing, LLC v. Baer, 202 Md.App. 138,
. The property was located at the southeastern intersection of Maryland Route 68 and Governor Lane Boulevard. The northern boundary of the parcel abutted Governor Lane Boulevard, and the southern boundary backed up to railroad tracks. The property was bounded on the west by Maryland Route 68 and on the east by another property.
. A copy of the plat may be viewed at
. Maryland Rule 2-602(b) authorizes a court to enter a final judgment "as to one or more but fewer than all of the claims or parties” if it determines in a written order that "there is no just reason for delay,” thereby allowing an immediate appeal of what would otherwise be an interlocutory order. Baer does not contest the appealability of the order and, for the reasons explained in the opinion of the Court of Special Appeals, there is appellate jurisdiction of this matter under both that rule and Maryland Code, Courts & Judicial Proceedings Article, § 12 — 303(3)(i). See
. The Court of Special Appeals remanded the case for further consideration of Cartage’s contention that it had extinguished the easement through adverse possession — an affirmative defense to the easement claim.
. At oral argument, counsel for Baer conceded that the record in this case would not support an implied easement of necessity.
. Given its ancient lineage, there is no contemporary legislative history that, aids in the interpretation of this statute.
. At least one state has adopted that view. See Germany v. Murdock,
. The Restatement commentary supports this rationale:
Although the burdened estate must be described, it is not necessary to describe the location of the servitude within the burdened estate. If the location is not described, the servitude is located under the rules stated in [Restatement 3d of Property: Servitudes, § 4.8].
Restatement 3d of Property: Servitudes, § 2.7, comment f.
. The third paragraph of § 4.8 of the Restatement concerns potential changes to an existing easement made by the owner of a servient estate — an issue not currently before us. We express no opinion as to that issue under Maryland law.
. See Smith v. Tolar,
. Arkansas Valley Electric Co-op. Corp. v. Brinks,
. Steuart Transportation Co. v. Ashe,
