Virginia Court of Appeals

Lessons from Litigation: Draft for Longevity so You Don’t “Barr” Your Rights

by Jonathan A. Nelson

The Virginia Court of Appeals recently issued an unpublished opinion regarding a 1914 right of way easement used for logging, in Barr v. Garten Development, LLC.  An unpublished opinion is not precedent, but does yield practical advice.  Here are two lessons for drafting documents we can gain from the 100 years of history in this case.

First, keep the certainty of change in mind.  In Barr, the 1914 Deed establishing the right of way reserved the right to place across the land “a broad gauge railroad, and for narrow gauge railroad tracks to and from any mines… [and] wagon roads.”  Had the deed stopped there, the subsequent changes in transportation (coupled with the economic realities which led to releasing the mineral rights in 1979) might have decided this case before it started. 

Fortunately for the owner of the easement, the attorney in 1914 included a catch-all phrase reserving “all necessary rights of way… and more particularly for the proper ingress and egress….”  These were enough for the Court of Appeals to find the right of way included improving an unpaved road to the standards of the Department of Forestry for use by logging trucks.

I can see the benefit of applying this principle in a number of contexts. If I am writing a medical directive and someone has a strong preference regarding, say, being put on a ventilator, am I leaving enough flexibility and authority for the agent if the technology is radically different in ten years?  If I am creating a trust making sure minor children are taken care of, do I also write it so that if it doesn’t kick in until they are 50 they aren’t treated like children?  When crafting a transition plan for a family business, have I adequately provided for what happens if someone dies before the transition is completed?  Not everything can be anticipated, but attorneys should balance details and principles so we don’t build any time bombs into the documents.

Second, keep the terminology of previous documents as they were used, even if the language seems antiquated or just different from your usual wording.  A 1979 deed included a release of some rights; the landowner, who didn’t want logging trucks driving on a new and improved road over their land, argued that the release included the 1914 right of way.  The Court found, however, that the release of “all restrictions, easements and mineral rights” did not include the right of way because “on the face of the 1914 Deed, the terms ‘easement’ and ‘rights of way’ are not used interchangeably.”  Regardless of what the 1979 landowner thought he was getting, since abandonment of a right of way has to be “clear and unequivocal” on the face of the deed, he didn’t get it, and it may have been because the attorney drafting the deed didn’t preserve the original word usage.  If necessary, provide explanations of how the terms are used going forward, but don’t omit it; tell the story.

Sometimes attorneys need more time or documentation than a client expects, but this lost continuity is exactly the kind of issue we want to avoid – if we put land into a trust in a way that a divorce decree or premarital agreement prohibited, or try to transfer ownership of an LLC in a way that triggers a buyback with tax consequences, we aren’t doing the client any favors.  It is also a caution to those drafting their own documents, using online forms, or working outside their expertise: if you miss a term of art or don’t understand that in 1914 attorneys used a word differently, you may inadvertently create a big problem that we will read about in a Court of Appeals opinion.

Next in the Lessons From Litigation series: No-Contest Confusion Helps a Church

Virginia attorney Jonathan A. Nelson uses his extensive legal knowledge and trial experience to resolve conflicts, negotiate settlements, navigate compliance matters, and vigorously advocate in the courtroom in order to achieve the best possible outcomes for his clients. He practices in estate planning, probate, trust and estate administration, corporate law, and civil litigation related to these fields.

The attorneys of Smith Pugh & Nelson, PLC, offer the experienced counsel, personal attention, and customized legal services needed to address the many complex issues surrounding estate planning, probate, and trust administration. Contact us at (703) 777-6084 to schedule a consultation.

LAW UPDATE: Virginia Court of Appeals Underscores the Importance of Estate Planning ‘Boilerplate’

Fiduciary litigation can get very tangled.  In Kosmann v. Brown, decided July 23, 2024, the Virginia Court of Appeals addressed a case where a principal (“Brown”) signed on the same day a power of attorney and a revocable trust which gave certain authority over the trust to the holder agent under the power of attorney (“Monroe”).  After Brown became incapacitated, Monroe signed an amendment to the trust under the putative authority of the power of attorney cutting out the other beneficiaries in favor of herself, changing the successor trustees, and making the trust irrevocable so the changes would be permanent.

The Loudoun County Circuit Court resolved the matter before trial on purely legal grounds, determining that the action taken was outside the authority granted by the trust to an attorney-in-fact, and the Virginia Court of Appeals has now affirmed this finding.  To reach this conclusion, the Court looked in detail at the exact language of the trust and of the power of attorney and took a deep dive into the definitions built into Virginia’s versions of the Uniform Trust Code, the Uniform Powers of Appointment Act, and the Uniform Power of Attorney Act.  

The Court pointed to a few general things: (1) the trust instrument controls over a power of attorney as to whether the power of attorney can be used to change the trust, (2) an attorney-in-fact is limited to the grant of authority in the power of attorney even if the trust would otherwise allow an action, and (3) a court will look to who the ‘powerholder’ is in determining whether a power of appointment has been exercised.  

The Court also included a veiled warning to the parties - if this matter were to go back for trial, the validity of the trust amendment would still hinge on the factual question of whether the attorney-in-fact acted within the expectations of the principal, in the best interests of the principal, and in good faith.

All of those are important points for fiduciary administration and litigation.  For estate planning, this decision underscores the importance of the administrative ‘boilerplate’ language in your documents.  The Court’s result hinged on the trust’s prohibition on an attorney-in-fact exercising a power of appointment, but the finding could have been very different if the language was broader or more narrow. 

Your estate planning attorney can assess what is important or helpful for your circumstances and draft or make changes to your documents as appropriate. In my practice, I frequently customize documents for a client’s specific situation. It might be to avoid a foreseeable conflict; add extra instructions particular to a complicated asset; or give a fiduciary flexibility for changes in circumstances which may arise far in the future.  You should regularly review the terms of your documents, and whether they make sense with the people in your life, because you know them better than your attorney does. Talking through your questions with an experienced estate planning attorney will help make sure the documents you have in place work out the way you intend.

Virginia attorney Jonathan A. Nelson uses his extensive legal knowledge and trial experience to resolve conflicts, negotiate settlements, navigate compliance matters, and vigorously advocate in the courtroom in order to achieve the best possible outcomes for his clients. He practices in estate planning, probate, trust and estate administration, corporate law, and civil litigation related to these fields.

The attorneys of Smith Pugh & Nelson, PLC, offer the experienced counsel, personal attention, and customized legal services needed to address the many complex issues surrounding estate planning, probate, and trust administration. Contact us at (703) 777-6084 to schedule a consultation.