Bates v. Terry

194 Cal. App. 2d 137, 14 Cal. Rptr. 829, 1961 Cal. App. LEXIS 1798
CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedJuly 24, 1961
DocketCiv. 24615
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 194 Cal. App. 2d 137 (Bates v. Terry) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering California Court of Appeal primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Bates v. Terry, 194 Cal. App. 2d 137, 14 Cal. Rptr. 829, 1961 Cal. App. LEXIS 1798 (Cal. Ct. App. 1961).

Opinion

FOURT, J.

In an action filed by Mildred E. Bates in Los Angeles County against Ernest Terry, Ceeille Terry, Gordon Yarber and Mildred Yarber, she sought by an amended complaint to enjoin the defendants from “trespassing on plaintiff’s property, without consent”; to enjoin the “defendants from placing rocks and gravel on property of plaintiff, without consent”; to require the defendants “to keep their dogs off the property of plaintiff, and from molesting plaintiff’s burros” and that she be awarded damages for the trouble caused to her. The defendants in that action sought to file a supplemental answer and cross-complaint against Mildred E. Bates. The court granted the motion to file the supplemental answer (and such was filed) and denied the motion to file a cross-complaint.

Pacific Hebrew Seminary, a corporation, and the defendants in the action hereinabove mentioned, namely, Ernest and Ceeille Terry and Gordon and Mildred Yarber, filed an action in the San Fernando branch of the Superior Court for declaratory relief, damages and an injunction against Mildred E. Bates. In this action the plaintiffs sought to have Mildred E. Bates enjoined from maintaining or closing a gate over a right of way known as “ Waring’s Road Reservation” and for plaintiffs Terry certain damages to their business and loss of rentals and for plaintiffs Yarber certain damages for pain and suffering and loss of rentals.

Mildred E. Bates filed a cross-complaint to the San Fernando branch court action wherein she set forth in effect that the plaintiffs therein had no interest in the property in question and were trespassers and prayed for substantial damages. An answer was filed to the cross-complaint.

The cases were consolidated for trial. Hereinafter Pacific Hebrew Seminary, the Terrys and Yarbers will be referred to as plaintiffs or respondents and Mildred E. Bates will be referred to as defendant or appellant.

The basic argument between the parties was whether the plaintiffs had a right to use a 20-foot right of way known *139 as “Waring’s Road Reservation” over the property of the defendant near Cornell, California and whether the defendant had a right to maintain a gate on her property over said “Waring’s Road Reservation,” sometimes hereinafter referred to as the Reservation Road, together with claims for damages for straying animals, the shutting of the gate by defendant and related items of damages.

The following map or diagram is a part of one of the exhibits in the case.

The map indicates generally the position of the properties with reference to each other. Bach of the lots numbered 21, 22 and 23 contained in excess of 16 acres. The general area in which such lots are located is mountainous and the ground is covered with sage brush and hillside growth.

Prior to 1922 Bruce Waring was the owner of a tract of land consisting of several thousand acres. He did, prior to 1922, transfer the entire property to Security Trust and Savings Bank as trustee. A separate trust was thereafter created with Waring, with the bank as trustee, for about 1,000 acres of the property, which was generally located along a 5-mile strip along the southwesterly boundary of the *140 Waring property and divided into 42 parcels of which the properties here in question were a part. That part of Waring ’s property marked © on the map and consisting of a large acreage was not a part of the subdivision. Waring retained a beneficial interest in such property in the trust.

. The chain of title as represented by the record is undisputed by the parties. The first deed by the trust company was dated December 15, 1922, and conveyed Lot 23 (the property of defendant) to Mattie Duval. That deed contained an express reservation by metes and bounds description of the Reservation Road as follows:

“Subject to Right of Way for Roadway purposes for Los Angeles County Cornell Road; also subject to Waring’s Twenty Foot Road Reservation the course of said road from its intersection with the said Los Angeles County Road being described as follows:
“A strip of land ten feet wide on either side of a center line having the following course: . . .” Then followed the courses of the line as indicated generally on the map (traversing Lots 21, 22 and 23). The legal description of the Reservation Road was later surveyed by Dr. Walter Boyd and laid out by him. Dr. Boyd was the defendant’s immediate grantor in 1954.

The Terry-Yarber parcel (Lot 22) was conveyed by the bank in 1926 to C. R. Blankenship and wife and F. W. Crandall and wife with the same Reservation Road as set forth in the deed to Mattie Duval from the bank. In 1947 Carrie Duffy, the then record owner of Lot 22, conveyed the same by deed to respondents Terrys and Charles A. Johnson and Pearl M. Johnson. In January of 1952 the grantees named conveyed to respondents Terrys the easterly one-half of Lot 22 and they have been since and now are the owners thereof. In July of 1954 the Terrys and Johnsons conveyed to respondents Yarbers the westerly one-half of Lot 22 and they are now the owners thereof. The Reservation Road traverses the entire width of Lot 22 as indicated on the map or diagram.

With reference to Lot 21 the bank continued to own the lot in trust until November of 1925 when it was conveyed to Homer C. Buckner and wife. That deed was subject to all easements of record which included the Reservation Road. Buckners were predecessors in title to Pacific Hebrew Seminary, a corporation, which acquired the property by grant deed in August 1945. The description of the Reservation *141 Boad indicates that it traverses Lot 21. As heretofore set forth the present owners of Lots 21, 22 and 23 all trace their chain of title to the common grantor wherein the Reservation Road description was specifically set forth in detail.

In March 1958 the Security First National Bank (successor to the named trust company and bank), executed a quitclaim deed to all parties in interest, wherein the Reservation Road was described as traversing Lots 21, 22 and 23. That deed further, with reference to the Reservation Road, referred to it as “being an easement for roadway purposes located in the County of Los Angeles, State of California ...” Then followed the exact description of the reservation as contained in the previously mentioned deeds. The quitclaim deed also set forth that “the intention of the transferor is to make said easement known as Waring’s Road Reservation an easement appurtenant to each of said tracts.”

The trial judge, pursuant to stipulation, viewed the premises and saw at firsthand the actual situation upon the ground. Full findings of fact and conclusions of law were made and a consolidated judgment was entered.

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Bluebook (online)
194 Cal. App. 2d 137, 14 Cal. Rptr. 829, 1961 Cal. App. LEXIS 1798, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/bates-v-terry-calctapp-1961.