PER CURIAM.
In the latest phase of this protracted litigation concerning an access easement, defendants Frank Craig and Lori Craig, the owners of Lot 1.10 in West Wildwood, appeal from orders entered by Judge William C. Todd, III, on April 5, 2012 and June 14, 2012 denying them relief from their court-ordered obligations concerning the easement. We affirm.
The pertinent background is described at length in this court's comprehensive opinion of May 17, 2011 adjudicating defendants' prior appeal, and does not need to be repeated here.
Following the Supreme Court's denial of review, plaintiffs filed a motion for enforcement of litigant's rights with the Chancery Division. Defendants filed a cross-motion for injunctive relief, primarily seeking, in essence, an order relocating the easement to "North Drive," an unimproved road. In the meantime, defendants' property became the subject of a lender's foreclosure action.
In their present appeal, defendants urge reversal of Judge Todd's orders. They note, among other things, that the trial court has allowed North Drive to be utilized for the ingress and egress of construction vehicles involved in the reconstruction of a home on Lot 1.11, owned by plaintiffs Gerald and Karen Troutner. In that regard, defendants include, in an appendix to their reply brief, an order issued by Judge Christopher Gibson on December 20, 2012. However, Judge Gibson's order notably prohibited defendants from interfering with access to Lot 1.11 across Lot 1.10, as per prior orders of the trial court. The order also directed defendants "to specifically authorize access across Lot 1.10 for the purpose of reconstructing a home at Lot 1.11." Although plaintiffs' counsel acknowledged at oral argument before us that the "North Drive" route was being utilized by the construction vehicles, that use was only out of necessity because defendants have yet to create the passageway specifically prescribed in the Chancery Division's decision following the 2009 trial.
Defendants further argue that the construction of the passageway, which has been estimated to cost approximately $85,000, is an unnecessary and wasteful expense. The propriety of that expenditure has already been conclusively determined.
We have fully considered the balance of defendants' arguments and conclude they lack sufficient merit to warrant comment.
Affirmed.