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Amar v. Jefferson Green Unit Owners Ass'n

NINETEENTH JUDICIAL CIRCUIT OF VIRGINIA COUNTY OF FAIRFAX CITY OF FAIRFAX
Feb 24, 2020
CL 2019-16178 (Va. Cir. Ct. Feb. 24, 2020)

Opinion

CL 2019-16178

02-24-2020

Re: Amar v. Jefferson Green Unit Owners Association, Inc. et al.


OPINION LETTER

BRUCE D. WHITE, CHIEF JUDGE RANDY I. BELLOWS ROBERT J. SMITH BRETT A. KASSABIAN MICHAEL F. DEVINE JOHN M. TRAN GRACE BURKE CARROLL DANIEL E. ORTIZ PENNEY S. AZCARATE STEPHEN C. SHANNON THOMAS P. MANN RICHARD E. GARDINER DAVID BERNHARD DAVID A. OBLON DONTAÈ L. BUGG JUDGES THOMAS A. FORTKORT J. HOWE BROWN F. BRUCE BACH M. LANGHORNE KEITH ARTHUR B. VIEREGG KATHLEEN H. MACKAY ROBERT W. WOOLDRIDGE, JR. MICHAEL P. McWEENY GAYLOHD L. FINCH, JR. STANLEY P. KLEIN LESLIE M. ALDEN MARCUS D. WILLIAMS JONATHAN C. THACHER CHARLES J. MAXFIELD DENNIS J. SMITH LORRAINE NORDLUND DAVID S. SCHELL JAN L. BRODIE RETIRED JUDGES Nicholas J. Lawrence
Bancroft, McGavin, Horvath & Judkins, P.C.
9990 Fairfax Blvd., Suite 400
Fairfax, VA 22030 Gobind S. Sethi
Hall & Sethi, PLC
11260 Roger Bacon Drive, Suite 400
Reston, VA 20190 Dear Counsel:

This matter came before the Court on February 14, 2020 upon Defendant PLM, Inc.'s motion craving oyer of a contract referred to in the complaint ("PLM contracted . . . to provide maintenance services to Jefferson Green (Unit Owners Association, Inc.]") (Complaint ¶ 31). PLM argues that it is entitled to crave oyer of the contract; Amar disagrees.

It is not clear from the Complaint whether the use of the word "contracted" means that there was a written contract, or just an oral agreement. For purposes of this motion, the court will assume that the contract is a written contract.

To understand the current status of the rather antiquated procedural tool of craving oyer, resort must be had to the development of the doctrine by the Virginia Supreme Court to determine its most recent expression.

While this court has not found any case that explicitly holds that trial courts are bound by the most recent expression of the law by the Supreme Court, the Court has made that requirement implicit in a numerous cases. For instance, in Edmonds v. Edmonds, 290 Va. 10 (2015), the Court stated that "the law controlling this case is well-established" and then referred to the "most recent case this Court decided involving this issue . . . ." 290 Va. at 18. Similarly, in Newman v. Erie Insurance Exchange, 256 Va. 501 (1998), the Court rejected an argument because it was contrary to "our most recent case addressing" that issue. Indeed, the Court held that the holding of the most recent case compelled the Court to overrule a prior decision. 256 Va. at 509. And in Allaun v. First, Etc. Nat. Bank, 190 Va. 104 (1949), the Court held that the "most recent case" is "controlling of the case at bar." 190 Va. at 109, 110.

The earliest reported case which expressly describes the office of oyer is Langhorne v. Richmond R. Co. & Another, 91 Va. 369 (1895), which stated:

The right to crave oyer of papers mentioned in a pleading applies, as a general rule, only to deeds and letters of probate and administration, not to other writings, and only applies to a deed when the party pleading relies upon the direct and intrinsic operation of the deed.
91 Va. at 372.

There were numerous cases from the Virginia Supreme Court prior to Langhorne in which oyer was used to have a document included with a complaint, but Langhorne appears to be the first case in which the office of oyer was described. One of the prior cases was Welch and al. v. McDonald, 85 Va. 500 (1888), which noted that the "defendants did not crave oyer of the contract, but demurred to the declaration and to each count thereof" but, had they done so, "and the true contract made known to the court, the demurrer to these counts ought to have been, and, doubtless, would have been sustained." 85 Va. at 504. It appears that the Court would have permitted oyer of a contract in 1888, but, in 1895, when the Court actually addressed the limits of oyer, it narrowed the application of oyer.

Two years later, Grubbs v. National Life, &c. Co., 94 Va. 589 (1897), held:

As a general rule, the right to crave oyer of papers mentioned in a pleading, applies only to specialties and letters of probate and administration, not to other writings, and only applies to a deed when the party pleading relies upon the direct and intrinsic operation of the deed. Langhorne v. Richmond R. Co., &c., 91 Va. 369. But if it be conceded that the defendants had the right to crave oyer of the policy sued on, the question whether or not it is a sealed instrument, intended and issued by the company as such, since it is not averred in the declaration that it is a sealed instrument, is one of fact to be presented at the hearing by proper motion or plea, but not by a demurrer to the declaration.
94 Va. at 591.

In Grubbs, the plaintiffs brought an action in assumpsit (which only lies for an action on a contract not under seal). The circuit court sustained the demurrer because it concluded that the contracts were under seal and an action in assumpsit thus did not lie. In reversing the circuit court, the Supreme Court noted that nothing in the insurance policies indicated that the policies were under seal and noted that the plaintiff's declarations did not allege that the policies were under seal. 94 Va. at 590. The holding of the Court, therefore, was only that the demurrer should not have been sustained because the question of whether a contract was, or was not, under seal was "one of fact to be presented at the hearing by proper motion or plea, but not by a demurrer to the declaration." 94 Va. at 591. Thus, the Court stated: "We are therefore of opinion that the demurrer in each of the cases before us should have been overruled, and the cases proceeded in to a trial upon their merits." 94 Va. at 592.

An action on a contract under seal was an "action in covenant."

In light of the fact that the Court held that the question of whether a contract was, or was not, under seal was "one of fact to be presented at the hearing," the Court did not express a view on whether oyer extended to contracts not under seal since there was no need to do so.

In short, other than referring to "specialties" (contracts under seal) rather than "deeds," Grubbs adhered to Langhorne.

Grubbs adopted the decision in Weeks v. Esler, 68 Hun. 518 (Supreme Court of New York):

Before an instrument in the form of a promissory note, made by a corporation, with what purports to be the seal of the corporation impressed thereon, but containing no words indicating an intention to execute it as an instrument under seal, can be held to be a specialty and not a negotiable promissory note, it must be shown that the seal is the seal of the corporation and was affixed by its authority, and that it was the intention of the parties to the instrument that it should be an instrument under seal, and not negotiable.
94 Va. at 591.

See also Taylor v. Forbes, 101 Va. 658, 663 (1903) (document was a "covenant under seal, and consequently a specialty").

In 1916, the Court again adhered to Langhorne, but allowed the parties to agree to the use of oyer, even where oyer would not be permitted under Langhorne. In Smith v. Wolsiefer, 119 Va. 247 (1916), the Court wrote:

The proceeding in this case by which the defendant craved oyer of the lease is unusual. "As a general rule, the right to crave oyer of papers mentioned in a pleading, applies only to specialties and letters of probate and administration, not to other writings, and only applies to a deed when the party pleading relies upon the direct and intrinsic operation of the deed. Langhorne v. Richmond R. Co., 91 Va. 369 ." Grubbs v. National Life, &c. Co., 94 Va. 589, 27 S.E. 464.

But this case has peculiar features. All the parties are sui juris and appear to have consented for the trial court to consider the deed of lease of the 18th of May, 1914, as a part of the declaration.
119 Va. at 250.

Twenty-one years later, the Court allowed the use of oyer to ensure that it had a complete record before it, where a plaintiff had attached to the complaint only a small part of the record of a former suit:

The first assignment of error is to the ruling of the trial court granting respondents oyer of the entire record of the former suit. It appears from the bill in this cause that appellant undertook to describe the proceedings in the other suit, the purpose for which it was brought, the evidence introduced, the issues submitted, the verdict of the jury, the motion to set aside the verdict, and the order of the court admitting the will to probate, but filed as exhibits with its bill only a small part of the record, and then asked the court to accept its construction of the whole record by an inspection of only such parts as complainant saw fit to introduce. No intelligent construction of any writing or record can be made unless all of the essential parts of such paper or record are produced. A litigant has no right to put blinkers on the court and attempt to restrict its vision to only such parts of the record as the litigant thinks tend to support his view. When a court is asked to make a ruling upon any paper or record, it is its duty to require the pleader to produce all material parts.
Culpeper Nat'l Bank v. Morris, 168 Va. 379, 382-383 (1937).

Culpeper Nat'l Bank v. Morris does not extend so far as to allow oyer of any document that forms the basis of a complaint. By its plain language, oyer is limited to the "entire record of the former suit" where "only a small part of the record" was attached to the complaint.

The next oyer case was not until 1985, when the Court, following the decision in Smith v. Wolsiefer, supra, approved the use of oyer where the parties agreed. Hechler Chevrolet v. General Motors Corp., 230 Va. 396, 398 (1985) ("General Motors filed a motion craving oyer of the agreements on which the action was based. Hechler had no objection, the motion was granted, and the agreements were filed."). Similarly, in 1997, the Court again approved the use of oyer where the parties agreed. Ward's Equipment v. New Holland North America, 254 Va. 379, 382 (1997) ("motion craving oyer "was unopposed"). Again, in 2008, the Court approved the use of oyer where the parties agreed. Dodge v. Randolph-Macon Woman's College, 276 Va. 1, 4 (2008) (when College filed motion for a "bill of particulars and craving oyer," "litigants agreed upon an order requiring the plaintiffs to file a bill of particulars and the documents that the plaintiffs claim comprise their contracts with the College."). See also EMAC v. County of Hanover, 291 Va. 13, 19 (2016) ("the documents made exhibits pursuant to the joint consent order on defendants' motion craving oyer") and Sweely Holdings v. Sun Trust Bank, 296 Va. 367, 385, n.2 (2018) ("Sweely consented to [various documents that were the subject of a motion craving oyer] being made part of the record").

In Murayama 1997 Trust v. NISC Holdings, 284 Va. 234 (2012), it appears that the parties agreed to the use of oyer because Ward's Equip. was cited as authority for the defendants "properly submitt[ing] the agreement for the circuit court's consideration through its motion craving oyer." 284 Va. at 233.

In Hensel Phelps Constr. v. Thompson Masonry, 292 Va. 695 (2016),it appears that the parties agreed to the use of oyer because EMAC was cited as authority for the Court's consideration of "the contract documents produced by Hensel Phelps in response to a motion craving oyer." 292 Va. at 700.

In sum, in its most recent expression of the law, the Supreme Court has approved the use of oyer: for deeds (when the party pleading relies upon the direct and intrinsic operation of the deed); for "specialties" (contracts under seal); letters of probate and administration; where the parties agreed to the use of oyer; and for a complete record where the plaintiff had attached to the complaint only a small part of the record of a former suit.

The document sought in the case at bar (a contract to provide maintenance services) is not any of the types of documents for which the Supreme Court has approved the use of oyer. The court thus DENIES Defendant's motion.

An appropriate order will enter.

Sincerely yours

[Redacted]

Richard E. Gardiner

Judge

VIRGINIA:

IN THE CIRCUIT COURT OF FAIRFAX COUNTY

FREDA S. AMAR Plaintiff v. JEFFERSON GREEN UNIT OWNERS ASSOCIATION, INC., et al. Defendants

ORDER

THIS MATTER came before the court upon Defendant PLM, Inc.'s motion craving oyer of a contract referred to in the complaint.

THE COURT, having considered the arguments of the parties and for the reasons set forth in the court's letter opinion of today's date, hereby DENIES Defendant PLM, Inc.'s motion craving oyer.

ENTERED this 24th day of February, 2020.

[Redacted]

Richard E. Gardiner

Judge Copies to: Nicholas J. Lawrence
Counsel for Defendant PLM, Inc. Gobind S. Sethi
Counsel for Plaintiff


Summaries of

Amar v. Jefferson Green Unit Owners Ass'n

NINETEENTH JUDICIAL CIRCUIT OF VIRGINIA COUNTY OF FAIRFAX CITY OF FAIRFAX
Feb 24, 2020
CL 2019-16178 (Va. Cir. Ct. Feb. 24, 2020)
Case details for

Amar v. Jefferson Green Unit Owners Ass'n

Case Details

Full title:Re: Amar v. Jefferson Green Unit Owners Association, Inc. et al.

Court:NINETEENTH JUDICIAL CIRCUIT OF VIRGINIA COUNTY OF FAIRFAX CITY OF FAIRFAX

Date published: Feb 24, 2020

Citations

CL 2019-16178 (Va. Cir. Ct. Feb. 24, 2020)