Beaver v. Williams, Unpublished Decision (2-21-2001)

CourtOhio Court of Appeals
DecidedFebruary 21, 2001
DocketC.A. No. 20050.
StatusUnpublished

This text of Beaver v. Williams, Unpublished Decision (2-21-2001) (Beaver v. Williams, Unpublished Decision (2-21-2001)) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Ohio Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Beaver v. Williams, Unpublished Decision (2-21-2001), (Ohio Ct. App. 2001).

Opinion

DECISION AND JOURNAL ENTRY
This cause was heard upon the record in the trial court. Each error assigned has been reviewed and the following disposition is made: Terry and Barbara Beaver (hereinafter "the Beavers") appeal the decision of the Summit County Court of Common Pleas in the Beavers' action to quiet title to their real property.

I.
Jerry Williams owns real property at 500 Aqua Dale Drive, Uniontown, which he purchased in 1958.1 Included in Williams' property is the private lane known as Aqua Dale Drive. This private lane connects Williams' residence to the public road Cottage Grove Road, which is approximately thirteen hundred feet west of Williams' residence. Williams' purchase agreement included Aqua Dale Drive and the eighty acres that included his residence. Without the lane, Williams' land would be landlocked. Upon discovering that the deed did not include a description of the lane, Williams obtained a second deed from his grantor for the lane itself. The deed for the lane was filed in 1963.

Adjacent to Williams' property on the west is property that the Beavers purchased in 1985. This property has no access to the main road, Cottage Grove Road. At the time the Beavers purchased the property, the owner Goodman Mash used Aqua Dale Drive with the permission of Williams in order to access the main road. Mash did not advise the Beavers that the lane belonged to Williams and that there was no easement of record allowing Mash or his successors in interest to use Aqua Dale Drive.

There is some dispute about just when the Beavers first learned that their property was landlocked. Williams testified that he told the Beavers about this fact just shortly before the closing on the Beavers' property in the summer of 1985. Terry Beaver testified that Williams advised him of the fact about one month after the closing. At any rate, Williams told the Beavers that in the past Williams had permitted the owners of the Beaver property to use his lane, and they had helped Williams pay for the maintenance of Aqua Dale Drive. The Beavers refused to pay Williams for the upkeep of the lane but Williams told the Beavers that he would not stop them from using the private lane.

In 1992, the Beavers attempted to refinance their property, but the mortgage company said it would not issue a loan because there was no record of any means of ingress or egress to the landlocked property. In order to secure the refinancing, Terry Beaver sought and obtained a written agreement from Williams for the use of the lane. On February 23, 1992, Terry Beaver and Williams signed a contract which provided that from year to year Williams would permit the use of Aqua Dale Drive in exchange for the Beavers' payment of $50 per month, payable in advance in half-yearly installments. The contract provided that the contract could be renegotiated each year, and that if payments were more than fifteen days late, Williams could terminate the contract.

The Beavers paid the contract amount for four and one-half years.2 In October 1996, the Beavers stopped paying on the contract, but Williams still permitted them to use the lane. In 1998, the Beavers filed an action to quiet title, seeking a declaratory judgment that the Beavers had an easement by prescription for the use of Aqua Dale Drive. Williams filed a counterclaim for $300 to compensate him for the payment owed under the contract for one-half of the last year, and for a permanent injunction prohibiting the Beavers from using Aqua Dale Drive.

After a bench trial, the trial court determined that the Beavers had not secured an implied easement by prescription as originally claimed, or an easement by necessity, estoppel, or adverse possession, as the Beavers argued at trial. The trial court ordered the Beavers to pay Williams $2,400 pursuant to the contract for the ensuing months that the Beavers used Aqua Dale Drive without paying Williams. The court also ordered the Beavers to pay Williams $50 per month for every month the Beavers use the lane in the future, which "obligation shall become a continuing lien against the [Beavers'] property." Finally, the trial court granted Williams' request for injunctive relief in part, to the extent that the Beavers were prohibited from interfering with Williams' use of Aqua Dale Drive. The trial court also provided that if Williams gives written notice to the Beavers that they are not allowed to use Aqua Dale Drive, they shall be enjoined from further use of the lane. The Beavers filed a timely appeal, and they now assign eight errors for our review.

II.
We first note that the Beavers' appellate brief does not comply with the requirements of the appellate rules. Their statement of the case is a chronological list of actions in the trial court, and it does not "briefly describ[e] the nature of the case, the course of proceedings, and the disposition of the court below," as required by App.R. 16(A)(5). The brief contains no reference to the record in support of the facts cited as relevant to the assigned errors, as required by App.R. 16(A)(6). Finally, the assigned errors are not separately argued, as required by App.R. 16(A)(7). Notwithstanding the Beavers' failure to file a complying brief, we will consider the merits of their argument in the interest of justice.

All of the assigned errors essentially challenge the weight of the evidence accorded by the trial court. When an appellate court reviews the weight of the evidence

[t]he court, reviewing the entire record, weighs the evidence and all reasonable inferences, considers the credibility of the witnesses and determines whether in resolving conflicts in the evidence, the [trier of fact] clearly lost its way and created such a manifest miscarriage of justice that the [judgment] must be reversed and a new trial ordered.

State v. Martin (1983), 20 Ohio App.3d 172, 175. Only in the exceptional case, where the evidence presented weighs heavily against the judgment, will the appellate court reverse and order a new trial. Id.

With this standard in mind, we turn to the substance of the Beavers' arguments.

EASEMENT BY PRESCRIPTION
The Beavers' property became landlocked in 1942, when John Wenhart subdivided his twenty acres, whose western boundary fronted onto Cottage Grove Road. Wenhart's division of his property left the eastern portion of the property landlocked, except for access on Aqua Dale Drive to the north, and the western portion still fronting onto Cottage Grove Road. The Beavers argue that beginning in 1942 the owners of their property used Aqua Dale Drive to access Cottage Grove Road, and that this ongoing usage amounted to a prescriptive easement. The Beavers never offered any evidence of this, except for aerial photographs that show that Aqua Dale Drive was in existence as of 1938. Williams testified that since he first purchased the property in 1958, he gave permission to the prior owners of the Beavers' property to use Aqua Dale Drive.

In order to prevail on a claim of prescriptive easement, a plaintiff must establish

that the plaintiff used the property at issue (1) openly, (2) notoriously, (3) adversely to his neighbor's property rights, (4) continuously, and (5) for at least twenty-one years. The plaintiff must prove these elements by clear and convincing evidence. The owner of the servient property must dispel the claimant's proof that the usage was adverse to the servient owner's rights.

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Bluebook (online)
Beaver v. Williams, Unpublished Decision (2-21-2001), Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/beaver-v-williams-unpublished-decision-2-21-2001-ohioctapp-2001.