Court Opinion

ID: 9914498
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2024-01-02 15:05:06.334933+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T13:13:21.964330
License: Public Domain

NOT FOR PUBLICATION WITHOUT THE
                               APPROVAL OF THE APPELLATE DIVISION
        This opinion shall not "constitute precedent or be binding upon any court ." Although it is posted on the
     internet, this opinion is binding only on the parties in the case and its use in other cases is limited. R. 1:36-3.

                                                        SUPERIOR COURT OF NEW JERSEY
                                                        APPELLATE DIVISION
                                                        DOCKET NO. A-2866-21

BENJI1 SWAN and
RUSSELL2 SWAN,

          Plaintiffs-Appellants,

v.

STEPHEN LAMANNA and
LILA LAMANNA,

     Defendants-Respondents.
___________________________

                   Argued November 27, 2023 – Decided January 2, 2024

                   Before Judges Sabatino, Mawla, and Chase.

                   On appeal from the Superior Court of New Jersey,
                   Chancery Division, Cape May County, Docket No.
                   C-000054-17.

                   Frank L. Corrado argued the cause for appellants
                   (Barry, Corrado & Grassi, PC, and Gillin Schwartz
                   Law, LLC, attorneys; Frank L. Corrado and Joseph
                   Christopher Gillin-Schwartz, on the brief).

1
     Portions of the record spell this first name "Benjie."
2
     Misstated as "Russel."
            Lila Lamanna, respondent, argued the cause pro se
            (Stephen Lamanna, respondent pro se, and Lila
            Lamanna, on the brief).

PER CURIAM

      The present appeal is the latest chapter in a series of long-running

easement disputes between the owners of neighboring properties in Middle

Township.

      After a bench trial that consumed fifteen intermittent trial days, the Law

Division judge determined that plaintiffs, Benji and Russell Swan, had certain

easement rights with respect to one of two lots they own (Lot 21). The ruling

enables them to make use of most of an unpaved private roadway—known as

Gus's Beach Road—located on the property of defendants, Stephen and Lila

Lamanna. The judge rejected plaintiffs' demand to modify the deeded terms of

the prescriptive easement to allow them to use approximately the last 200 feet

of the roadway, which veers closer to defendants' farmhouse. Instead, the judge

ruled the terms of the easement did not encompass the disputed approximate 200

feet, and instead follows a straight line across a wooded, low-lying area to State

Highway 47 without a driveway or roadway.

      On reconsideration, the court revised its final judgment to require

defendants to cooperate with plaintiffs in pursuing environmental permits to

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                                        2
allow a roadway to extend across the low-lying area. The court specified,

however, that if plaintiffs did not obtain such permits, the entire easement would

be extinguished.

      Plaintiffs now appeal the trial court's denial of the requested modification

and its limitation of their easement rights solely to Lot 21 and not Lot 24, another

nearby parcel they own. Plaintiffs further appeal the court's condition that they

must obtain permits as a condition of retaining their easement rights. Although

their responding brief expresses dissatisfaction with aspects of the amended

final judgment, defendants have not cross-appealed.

      For reasons that follow, we affirm the trial court's rulings concerning the

location and terms of the easement and its denial of plaintiffs' requested

modification. We do so substantially for the sound legal and equitable reasons

expressed in the trial court's February 28, 2022 detailed written opinion. We

reverse and remand in part, solely for the trial court's reconsideration of aspects

of the permit condition.

                                         I.

      The extensive factual record and procedural history of this property

dispute are well known to the parties, and we need not detail it comprehensively

here. The following summary will suffice.

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      Plaintiffs acquired two tracts lying mostly to the south and west of

defendants' property in Middle Township in 1992. Plaintiffs' Lot 24 3 is directly

south of defendants' Lot 20, and these two lots are similarly sized long but

narrow properties that run from the Delaware Bay in the west to State Route 47

to the east. Along their boundary runs an unimproved private road known as

Gus's Beach Road. Gus's Beach Road was impassable from at least 1984 until

approximately 2005. Gus's Beach Road is located on defendants' lot, Lot 20.

      Plaintiffs' second lot is Lot 21, a small bayside lot that had been severed

from Lot 20 in 1950 and sold to East Point Oyster Company ("East Point"). The

1950 deed from the Lucianos to East Point for Lot 21 describes two easements,

a ten-foot-wide easement allowing Lot 21's owners access north to Bay Avenue,

and a thirty-three-foot-wide easement east to State Route 47.

      That same year, the Lucianos and East Point signed a lease that provided

East Point with space to conduct an oyster shucking operation on the bay shore

and allowed it to use a "private road" on the property, Gus's Beach Road.

3
  Over the years, Middle Township has numerically redesignated the lots subject
to this appeal. Lot 20, which is owned by defendants, had been referred to as
Lot 6; Lot 7.02, owned by plaintiffs, is now Lot 24; Lot 9, owned by plaintiffs,
is now designated Lot 21. For the sake of clarity, we refer to all lots by their
current designations.
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Plaintiffs' two lots, Lots 21 and 24, are not strictly contiguous, and Lot 21 does

not afford Lot 24 access to Bay Avenue.

      The deed from Luciano to East Point for Lot 21 contains the following

easement terms:

            BEGINNING at a point set at the high[-]water mark of
            the easterly shore of Delaware Bay, said point being
            five feet from a concrete monument on a course north
            thirty-seven degrees and nine minutes east, said
            monument being the northwest corner of the above
            described land; thence south fifty-two degrees and
            fifty-one minutes east, one hundred forty-three and
            fifty-three hundredths feet to a point in the center line
            of a proposed avenue to be known as Bay Avenue;
            thence along the center of said proposed Bay Avenue,
            south twenty-four degrees and thirty-two minutes west,
            one hundred fifty-five feet to the center of another
            proposed avenue, and there to end. Said courses and
            distances are the center line of said right-of-way, the
            width of which shall be a total of ten feet measured five
            feet at right angles from the above line in either
            direction.

The deed goes on to recite:

            TOGETHER with a further right-of-way from the end
            of the immediately preceding right of way to State
            Highway Route S-4[7] on a course south forty-eight
            and thirty-nine minutes east, running to said State
            Highway Route S-4[7] for a width of thirty-three feet,
            the aforesaid course representing the center line
            thereof.

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      The first paragraph above, concerning the ten-foot easement, grants Lot

21's owners access to Bay Avenue. At trial, defendants' expert, Joseph Grabas,

explained that the thirty-three-foot easement running between the end of Lot

21's ten-foot easement to Bay Avenue and Route 47 describes a "straight line

that runs up along the property line." Grabas acknowledged that the easement

described in the deed and Gus's Beach Road were often "congruent." However,

for the purposes of selling a bay side portion of Lot 20 as Lot 21, as Luciano did

in this transaction, Grabas opined that an express easement was preferable

because "the purchaser of that lot wants to know that forever they'll be able to

access that lot."

      Defendants acquired Lot 20 from the heirs of the Lucianos in 1984. In

1985 or 1986, defendants purchased two gates. The first gate was installed at

the time of purchase at the eastern end of the now-disputed 200-foot travel way

that defendants consider their driveway, controlling access from Route 47 onto

the travel way.

      In 1989 defendants installed another gate blocking access to those

traversing Bay Avenue to points south. Defendants installed the gates at least

in part to prevent illegal dumping, which was common on the property. The

dumping problem was so pervasive, including large appliances and discarded

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construction materials, that portions of Gus's Beach Road were impassible until

approximately 2005 when defendants arranged with a tenant to clear the

roadway.

      As noted above, in 1992, plaintiffs purchased their two tracts, Lots 21 and

24, in a single transaction from the Estate of Ernest Schleusener. When asked

at trial if "the Swans acquired the same package of rights that was transferred in

1963?" plaintiffs' expert, Lewis Conley, answered "Yes."            Accordingly,

plaintiffs possess an express easement for access to Route 47 from Lot 21 .

      Defendants blocked plaintiffs' access to the disputed 200 feet of travel

way between Gus's Beach Road and Route 47 in 2004, and plaintiffs removed

the obstruction in 2006.       Plaintiffs continued to assert their rights to the

easement during this time, and defendants filed trespassing charges against

plaintiffs in 2009 and 2010.

      Meanwhile, in November 2009, plaintiffs successfully sued defendants to

acquire a prescriptive easement across Lot 20 for the benefit of Lot 24. Lamanna

v. Swan, No. A-1280-10 (App. Div. July 20, 2012) (slip op. at 4, 57). We

affirmed that particular easement grant in our unpublished 2012 opinion. Id. at

57. That prescriptive easement for the benefit of Lot 24 allows plaintiffs to

traverse the far western end of defendants' property to access Bay Avenue,

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which, in turn, allows plaintiffs to access Route 47 via Highs Beach Road, a

public street that runs to the north of defendants' property. Id. at 36. Defendants'

petition for certification to the Supreme Court was denied. Lamanna v. Swan,

213 N.J. 568 (2013).

      The central issue in the present case is that Gus's Beach Road deviates

from the path of the express thirty-three-foot-wide easement that runs from the

termination of the ten-foot-wide easement in the west to Route 47 in the east.

Although the easement and Gus's Beach Road are largely contiguous, and run in

a straight line along the border of Lots 20 and 24, the 200 feet of Gus's Beach

Road approaching Route 47 veer off the path described in the easement and cross

Lot 20 to intersect with Route 47 thirty-five feet further north. On cross-

examination at trial, defendants' expert Grabas, agreed that the "vast majority"

of the easement is contiguous with Gus's Beach Road.

      Plaintiffs assert their easement rights can only be protected if the court

uses its equity powers to modify the easement by relocating the easement to

coincide with the disputed 200-foot portion of Gus's Beach Road, thus allowing

plaintiffs to access Route 47 in that more direct manner without using the

easement access to Highs Beach Road. Defendants insist that the disputed 200

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feet of Gus's Beach Road is their private driveway to Route 47, and that plaintiffs

have no right to access it.

      In October 2017, plaintiffs filed this lawsuit in the Law Division, seeking

to enforce an alleged express easement that would allow them direct access from

both of their lots to Route 47 via Gus's Beach Road. Defendants asserted

counterclaims related to a culvert that plaintiffs allegedly blocked, harassment,

and other poor conduct by plaintiffs, which are not the subject of a cross-appeal

and are not before us.

      When the initial easement for Lot 21 was granted, no permitting was

required to traverse wetlands with a roadway or driveway that would connect it

to Route 47. That situation has changed due to the enactment of environmental

laws and regulations.

      Plaintiffs   have   inquired   with    the   New   Jersey   Department     of

Environmental Protection ("DEP") about acquiring permits.               They were

informed that, although the issuance of permits was possible, plaintiffs' existing

alternative access to Route 47 via Bay Avenue would hamper their application.

The DEP's response, read into the transcript at trial, is as follows:

            Dear Ms. Swan,
                  I am writing in response to your letter inquiring
            about what sort of permits would be required for
            construction of a new road to your existing home. It

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                                         9
            would appear the primary permit necessary would be an
            individual permit under the Fresh Water Wetlands
            Protection Act. Individual permits are often difficult to
            receive since for nonwater dependent activities such as
            a road applicants are required to demonstrate there is
            no alternative location for the activity that would not
            impact on a fresh water wetland. Since the activity in
            this case is a new road to access your existing home
            there already exists a nonwetland alternative, the
            existing road, it would be very difficult for you to
            demonstrate a new road is necessary. In addition to
            satisfying the alternative test non water dependent
            activities that impact on threatened and endangered
            species habitat also have to demonstrate the activity as
            a compelling public need greater than the need to
            protect the wetland. Again, since you already have use
            of a viable access road to your property it will be
            difficult to satisfy the compelling public need
            argument. I trust the above addresses your immediate
            concerns. But should you have any further questions
            please do not hesitate to contact me.

            [(Emphasis added).]

      Following the lengthy bench trial, on February 28, 2022, the court issued

an order and accompanying opinion. It found that the express easement did not

include access to an existing travel way that extended from within the bounds

of the easement across defendants' property to Route 47.

      Plaintiffs moved for reconsideration. On April 25, 2022, the court granted

that motion in part, issuing an amended final judgment ordering plaintiffs to

engage in a "good faith" effort to obtain "all applicable permitting to repair or

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                                      10
improve the wooded, low-lying area contained in the right of way at the

intersection of Route 47." The amended final judgment also ordered defendants

to cooperate with any "professional work or inspection necessary for the

same[,]" and detailed procedures by which the parties could petition the court to

resolve any future disputes.

      This appeal by plaintiffs ensued. As clarified at oral argument, they raise

three points: (1) the trial court erred in denying their request to modify the

easement so as to include the approximate 200 feet of roadway; (2) the court

should have extended their easement rights for Lot 21 to their other parcel, Lot

24; and (3) the permit condition imposed by the trial court is inequitable and

should be excised.

                                        II.

      Our standard of review is well known. "Final determinations made by the

trial court sitting in a non-jury case are subject to a limited and well-established

scope of review . . . ." Seidman v. Clifton Sav. Bank, 205 N.J. 150, 169 (2011).

An appellate court shall "not disturb the factual findings and legal conclusions

of the trial judge unless [it is] convinced that they are so manifestly unsupported

by or inconsistent with the competent, relevant and reasonably credible evidence

as to offend the interests of justice[.]" Id. at 169 (second alteration in original)

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                                        11
(quoting In re Trust Created by Agreement Dated December 20, 1961, 194 N.J.

276, 284 (2008)).

      The trial court's findings of fact are "binding on appeal when supported

by adequate, substantial, credible evidence." Cesare v. Cesare, 154 N.J. 394,

411-12 (1998); see also Rova Farms Resort, Inc. v. Investors Ins. Co. of Am.,

65 N.J. 474, 483-84 (1974). However, we owe no comparable deference to the

trial court's interpretation of the law or its application of the law to the facts,

which we review de novo. Manalapan Realty, LP v. Twp. Comm. of Manalapan,

140 N.J. 366, 378 (1995).

      Viewed through this appellate prism, we proceed to consider in turn each

of plaintiffs' arguments.

                                        A.

      Plaintiffs first contend the trial court erred by failing to modify the

easement so that the disputed 200 feet of travel way is considered part of Lot

21's express easement. They argue the easement must include an implied right

to make minor deviations necessary to engender full enjoyment of the easement.

They assert the court erred by declining to modify the easement, comparing this

case to Kline v. Bernardsville Ass'n, 267 N.J. Super. 473, 480 (App. Div. 1993),

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                                       12
in which we allowed modification where it was "minor and the parties' essential

rights are fully preserved."

      The trial court explicitly found that plaintiffs have an easement

appurtenant over the ten-foot-wide and thirty-three-foot-wide easements and the

associated travel ways in order to access Lot 21 from Route 47. However, the

court also made clear that plaintiffs' easement "specifically exclude[s]" the

approximately 200 feet where the travel way deviates from the easement by

crossing a corner of defendants' property and connecting to Route 47.

      In making that finding, the court largely relied on the testimony of Grabas,

who the court found "more persuasive" than plaintiffs' expert because of his

background in title work and his clear descriptions of the competing "deeds,

leases, easements, and other documents in evidence." As the trier of fact, the

court had the prerogative to find an expert witness's testimony more credible

than that of an opposing expert. Angel v. Rand Express Lines, Inc., 66 N.J.

Super. 77, 85-86 (App. Div. 1961) (citations omitted). This principle flows out

of the well-known proposition that jurors, or a judge in a bench trial, have the

best "opportunity to hear and see the witnesses and to get a 'feel' for the case

that the reviewing court [cannot] enjoy." Twp. of W. Windsor v. Nierenberg,

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                                      13
150 N.J. 111, 132 (1997) (quoting State v. Whitaker, 79 N.J. 503, 515-16

(1979)).

      The trial court found there is no "latent ambiguity" in the deeded

easement. The court agreed with defendants' contentions that the 200-foot

deviation between Gus's Beach Road and the path of the express easement is

supported by historical documentation, namely the 1950 lease from Luciano

giving express permission to an oyster cultivation business (i.e., East Point) to

use the "private roadway" (i.e., Gus's Beach Road) that connected Route 47 to

the oyster shelling lots that East Point used.

      The court also found that the disputed 200-foot portion of the travel way

is significantly closer to defendants' residence than the deeded easement, and

that allowing plaintiffs to use the driveway would "affect the peace and quiet

enjoyment of [defendants'] property."

      These findings are well supported by the record. They are also consistent

with the applicable legal principles concerning easement rights.

      "An easement is defined as 'a nonpossessory incorporeal interest in

another's possessory estate in land, entitling the holder . . . to make some use of

the other's property.'" Kline, 267 N.J. Super. at 478 (quoting Leach v. Anderl,

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                                        14
218 N.J. Super. 18, 24 (App. Div. 1987) (omission in original)). There are "[s]ix

factors . . . integral" to an easement:

             (1) the fact that it is an interest in land which is in the
             possession of another; (2) the content of the interest as
             a "limited" use or enjoyment of the land in which the
             interest exists; (3) the availability of protection of the
             interest as against interference by third persons; (4) the
             absence of terminability at the will of the possessor of
             the land; (5) the fact that it is not a normal incident of
             a possessory land interest, and (6) the fact that it is
             capable of creation by conveyance.

             [Leach, 218 N.J. Super. at 24 (quoting Town of Kearny
             v. Mun. Sanitary Landfill Auth., 143 N.J. Super. 449,
             459 (Law Div. 1976)).]

      There are three kinds of easements: easements "by implication; by an

express conveyance; or by prescription." Ibid. (citing Mahoney v. Danis, 95

N.J. 50, 58 (1983) (Schreiber, J., dissenting) (citing John E. Cribbet, Principles

of the L. of Prop. 336 (2d ed. 1975))); accord Mandia v. Applegate, 310 N.J.

Super. 435, 443 (App. Div. 1998). The second category pertains here.

      To expressly convey an easement, a precise description of the easement

must be recorded in a deed or other written instrument. Tide-Water Pipe Co. v.

Blair Holding Co., 42 N.J. 591, 604 (1964). "What the easement holder's rights

are . . . depends first of all on the intent of the parties as expressed in the

language of the grant . . . ." Ibid. "Where the meaning is plain, as derived from

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                                          15
the language read as an entirety and in the light of the surrounding

circumstances, it will control without resort to artificial rules of construction."

Id. at 605 (citing Hammett v. Rosensohn, 26 N.J. 415, 423 (1958)).

      Conversely, where the language of the instrument is not plain, "the

question becomes a mixed one of law and fact to be determined within the

framework of the universally accepted principle of easement law that the

landowner may not . . . unreasonably interfere with the [easement holder's] rights

or . . . make the use thereof significantly more difficult or burdensome." Id. at

604. In such a case, the written instrument "must be read as a whole, without

artificial emphasis on one section, with a consequent disregard for others.

Literalism must give way to context." Borough of Princeton v. Bd. of Chosen

Freeholders of Cnty. of Mercer, 333 N.J. Super. 310, 325 (App. Div. 2000),

aff'd, 169 N.J. 135 (2001).

      "[A]rising out of every easement [is] an implied right to do what is

reasonably necessary for its complete enjoyment . . . ." Tide-Water Pipe, 42

N.J. at 604. However, that implied right can only be exercised in a "reasonable

manner as to avoid unnecessary increases in the burden upon the landowner."

Ibid. (citing Lidgerwood Ests., Inc. v. Pub. Serv. Elec. & Gas Co., 113 N.J. Eq.

403 (Ch. 1933)).

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      On rare occasions "a court may compel relocation of an easement to

advance the interests of justice where the modification is minor and the parties'

essential rights are fully preserved." Kline, 267 N.J. Super. at 480. Where a

court considers such a remedy, it should be mindful that "relocation of an

easement without the mutual consent of the parties is an extraordinary remedy

and should be grounded in a strong showing of necessity." Ibid. (emphasis

added). A relocation meeting these stringent criteria would be an exercise of

the court's "equitable power." Id. at 481.

      In the illustrative case of Tide-Water Pipe, the plaintiff pipeline company

acquired an easement in 1914 to run pipelines under a property and "with free

ingress and egress, to construct, operate, repair, replace, maintain, and from time

to time alter and remove the same in such manner as it may desire." 42 N.J. at

594. The grant also specified that the pipelines "shall be so laid as not to

interfere with the usual cultivation of the premises nor with any buildings

thereon." Ibid. By 1937, a factory and two commercial or industrial buildings

were constructed on the property. Id. at 596-97.

      The defendants in Tide-Water Pipe "acquired the property in 1957 with

actual notice of the easement and the location of the lines." Id. at 596. In 1961

the defendants proposed expanding a building over the lines and encasing the

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                                       17
pipelines. Id. at 597. The plaintiff objected to the encasing, but the defendants

decided to proceed, and the plaintiff sued to enjoin construction. Ibid. The

plaintiff objected to encasement because it interfered with its ability to repair

the pipelines in a timely and cost-efficient manner. Id. at 598-99. The most

timely and cost-efficient manner for repairing leaks is known as "straight-down

digging" and that method cannot be used where a pipeline is encased. Id. at 599.

      The Court in Tide-Water Pipe ruled that the language of the grant of the

easement was "plain enough" and "broad" and did not require the application of

"artificial rules of construction." Id. at 605. Nonetheless, the Court analyzed

whether accessing the pipes by digging straight down was "reasonably necessary

for the full enjoyment of the easement or only for the mere convenience of its

holder." Id. at 607. The Court agreed with the trial court's finding of reasonable

necessity "because of the substantially additional burden in time and money"

that the plaintiff would incur to repair the pipelines if they were encased. Ibid.

Accordingly, the Court upheld the ruling that the defendants were not entitled

to modify the plaintiff's easement by building over it. Id. at 608.

      Here, plaintiffs have a recorded appurtenant easement that stretches from

the Delaware Bay to Route 47. The existence of this easement is not in dispute.

What is in dispute is whether that easement tracks the path of an existing travel

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way.    The court, relying on the expert testimony of Grabas, reasonably

determined that the easement and the travel way, (Gus's Beach Road) are not

identical.

       The court declined to prescribe the "extraordinary remedy" of relocating

that easement. Kline, 267 N.J. Super at 480. That decision is well supported by

our case law. While there is an "implied right to do what is reasonably necessary

for [the] complete enjoyment" of an easement, that implied right can only be

exercised in a "reasonable manner as to avoid unnecessary increases in the

burden upon the landowner." Tide-Water Pipe, 42 N.J. at 604. The trial court's

finding that the disputed travel way is closer to defendants' residence than the

express easement, and the associated conclusion that modification of the

easement would diminish defendants' "quiet enjoyment" of the property, is well -

supported by the record.

       Plaintiffs minimize the proximity of defendants' residence to a modified

easement roadway that plaintiffs and their visitors would use. They stress the

roadway would only be about 165 feet from the residence, and that such a

distance would not significantly diminish defendants' quiet use and enjoyment

of their dwelling. The trial court reasonably found to the contrary. By numerical

comparison, we note that the Municipal Land Use Law ("MLUL") generally

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requires notices of land use applications to be served on all nearby owners whose

properties are within 200 feet of the applicant's property. N.J.S.A. 40:55D-

12(b). Although the MLUL's 200-foot notice requirement does not govern the

present parties' easement rights, the statute reflects a concern that living within

at least 200 feet of a neighbor's property can affect one's quality of life if the

neighbor obtains permission to use the property a certain way. In any event, the

trial court had ample reason to conclude that the roadway's proximity would

detract from defendants' quiet enjoyment of their home.

      We also concur with the trial court that plaintiffs have not demonstrated

"necessity" to modify the easement. As the previous litigation established,

plaintiffs can gain access to Route 47 through their separate easement

connecting to Highs Beach Road. To be sure, that route is indirect and less

convenient. But it is not manifestly vital to plaintiffs to access Route 47 by

driving past defendants' residence.

      In sum, the trial court had sound reasons—grounded in the factual record

and consistent with the law—to reject plaintiffs' request for the "extraordinary

remedy" of modification. Kline, 267 N.J. Super. at 480.

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                                        B.

      Plaintiffs further seek this court to alter the trial court's judgment and

specify that their easement rights attach not only to their Lot 21, but also to Lot

24. We decline to do so.

      This argument rests upon the fact that although the Lucianos conveyed

easement rights to East Point to be used by Lot 21, East Point bought Lot 2 4

from Lucianos' neighbor directly to the south in 1950. Thereafter, in 1963, East

Point conveyed Lots 21 and 24 to a buyer in a single transaction. Ownership of

those two lots was subsequently conveyed to other successors in title until

plaintiffs acquired them in 1992.

      Plaintiff argues that the easement rights originally conveyed solely to Lot

21 in 1950 are now also rights attached to Lot 24, because the lots have had

common ownership and plaintiffs bought the lots in a single transaction. This

argument proves too much. The easement originated in the 1950 deed to Lot 21

only. The grantor did not specify that the easement be attached to other parcels.

The plain language of the conveyance controls. Tide-Water Pipe, 42 N.J. at 605.

      Basic principles of property law undermine plaintiffs' argument.          For

instance, suppose a deed granted the Owner of Blackacre an easement to travel

on the Grantor's property. If the Owner separately acquired Greenacre and

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                                       21
Brownacre, which are also nearby parcels, that does not mean that the easement

is now expanded to those additional parcels and thereby potentially increasing

the usage of the easement. Such an expansion would deviate from the Grantor's

original intent. Id. at 604.

      We therefore decline to alter the judgment to encompass Lot 24 in addition

to Lot 21.

                                       C.

      Plaintiffs argue the trial court erred in imposing permit requirements as a

condition of retaining the easement. In its first final judgment, issued February

28, 2022, the court ruled:

                    Barring [plaintiffs] obtaining a permit or other
             approvals to construct a roadway and constructing said
             roadway over the wooded, low-lying area contained in
             the deeded right of way at the intersection of Route 47,
             plaintiffs are barred from utilizing the right of way
             eastward of its intersection with the eastern boundary
             of the prescriptive easement over Lot 20 granted by
             previous judgment of this court up to its intersection
             with Route 47.

             [(Emphasis added).]

      In its written opinion supporting the first final judgment, the court

elaborated that "the purpose of the 1950 deeded easement/ right of way is

extinguished for the long portion of the right of way starting at Route 47 and

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                                       22
ending at the northern boundary of the prescriptive easement previously granted

by judgment." (emphasis added).

      The trial court partially granted plaintiffs' ensuing motion for

reconsideration. In its written opinion the court explained reconsideration was

warranted "as to its decision concerning the process of plaintiff seeking

appropriate permits/approvals in relation to the roadway plaintiffs may seek

application to build over the low-lying area at the easement's intersection with

R[oute] 47."    The court reaffirmed that plaintiffs, with proper notice to

defendants, would be able to utilize portions of defendants' property in order to

construct a new travel way in line with the easement, but otherwise left intact

its earlier holdings related to the easement.

      The court partially granted plaintiffs' reconsideration motion, upon further

reflection, because:

            [T]he language utilized in its judgment was
            unreasonable and ineffective as [it] failed to adequately
            set forth a fully detailed process concerning any future
            permit applications made by plaintiffs for the low-lying
            area contained in the easement/ right of way including
            clearly setting forth the responsibilities of the parties as
            to such process.

            [(Emphasis added).]

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However, the court maintained that "this term in the judgment" confirming

plaintiffs' right to clear the last 200 feet of the easement served to "extinguish"

their inability to use the easement and therefore the "purpose" of the

modification that plaintiffs were requesting. The court further noted that due to

the previously granted prescriptive easement, plaintiffs "have 'street' access to

Lot 21 and have ingress and egress to Lot 21 over the prescriptive easement to

Bay Ave to Highs Beach Road to R[oute] 47[.]" In the court's assessment, the

amended final judgment "remedied the entire situation which has caused

disputes[,]" and "[p]laintiffs have no less access to Lot 21 and the property

where their home is located on Lot 24 due to the court's judgment herein."

      Litigants may seek reconsideration if the disposition of a relevant issue

was not properly explained by the court. Calcaterra v. Calcaterra, 206 N.J.

Super. 398, 403 (App. Div. 1986) (citing R. 4:50-1).           As the trial court

recognized, the language in its initial final order was insufficient to guide

plaintiffs' actions with respect to permitting. This is an appropriate basis for

reconsideration. Ibid. So was the trial court's pragmatic determination that

defendants must reasonably cooperate with plaintiffs in the permit application

process.

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                                       24
      Even so, the portion of the amended judgment requiring plaintiffs to

pursue a permit is problematic. As the DEP's letter reflects, it appears it will be

difficult and perhaps impossible for plaintiffs to obtain a permit that would

authorize construction of 200 feet of roadway over swampy terrain that may well

be protected wetlands. Given that difficulty, it appears the trial court's condition

of plaintiffs obtaining a permit in order to maintain their easement rights may

be too onerous and inequitable. Plaintiffs assert that they may still want to make

non-vehicular use of the easement through the 200-foot area. The trial court's

decisions did not address such a possibility. The court also did not consider

explicitly whether plaintiffs would make some use of the roadway in traveling

back and forth along the boundary, without exiting onto Route 47.

      Accordingly, we remand this matter to the trial court, for the limited

purpose of reconsidering whether the permit condition of the amended judgment

should be revised in a manner that considers these equitable considerations. We

intimate no views on the appropriate outcome.

      Affirmed in part, and remanded in part. We do not retain jurisdiction.

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