Brandhorst v. Johnson

2014 IL App (4th) 130293
CourtAppellate Court of Illinois
DecidedJune 11, 2014
Docket4-13-0293
StatusUnpublished

This text of 2014 IL App (4th) 130293 (Brandhorst v. Johnson) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Appellate Court of Illinois primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Brandhorst v. Johnson, 2014 IL App (4th) 130293 (Ill. Ct. App. 2014).

Opinion

FILED 2014 IL App (4th) 130923 June 11, 2014 Carla Bender No. 4-13-0923 4th District Appellate Court, IL IN THE APPELLATE COURT

OF ILLINOIS

FOURTH DISTRICT

LAWERANCE R. BRANDHORST, ) Appeal from Plaintiff-Appellee, ) Circuit Court of v. ) Adams County GEORGE R. JOHNSON, CYNTHIA J. JOHNSON, ) No. 10CH23 and UNKNOWN OWNERS AND NONRECORD CLAIMANTS, ) Defendants-Appellants. ) Honorable ) Robert K. Adrian, ) Judge Presiding.

JUSTICE STEIGMANN delivered the judgment of the court, with opinion. Justices Pope and Holder White concurred in the judgment and opinion.

OPINION

¶1 In November 2011, plaintiff, Lawerance Brandhorst, filed a third amended com-

plaint against defendants, George and Cynthia Johnson, alleging that he (1) acquired ownership

of a strip of defendants' land pursuant to the doctrine of adverse possession, (2) acquired a pre-

scriptive easement over portions of a private roadway owned by defendants, and (3) was entitled

to an injunction enjoining defendants from wrongfully diverting surface water onto his property.

¶2 In September 2013, following a bench trial that took place over six days between

January and May 2013, the trial court entered a written order that (1) granted plaintiff ownership

over the disputed strip of land, (2) granted plaintiff a prescriptive easement over portions of the

roadway owned by defendants, and (3) denied plaintiff's request for injunctive relief relating to

defendants' diversion of surface water. As part of the relief granted, the court ordered defendants

to restore a portion of the roadway to the condition it was in prior to April 2009, when the de- fendants made significant modifications to the roadway that affected plaintiff and his property. ffected

¶3 Defendants appeal, arguing that (1) plaintiff failed to prove his ownership of the

disputed strip of land by adverse possession, (2) plaintiff failed to prove that he acquired a pre- pr

scriptive easement over portions of the roadway, and (3) even if plaintiff did prove his rights to

ownership by adverse possession and a prescriptive easement, the trial court's remedies went be- court

yond the scope of the proof. We disagree and affirm.

¶4 I. BACKGROUND

¶5 The following background was gleaned from evidence presented at trial. Because

the legal issues presented in this appeal require several distinct inquiries into historical facts, we

review much of the evidence presented at trial in our analysis section.

¶6 A. The Ridgewood Properties

¶7 The rough diagram appearing below, which was prepared by this court and is not

to scale, is intended only to assist in an understanding of the facts It depicts the properties at facts.

issue as they existed prior to April 2009.

-2- ¶8 In the 1950s, Arthur Stipp, the father of defendant Cynthia Johnson, developed a

small residential subdivision along the east side of Ridgewood Drive in Quincy, Illinois. At is-

sue in this case are two lots in that subdivision: 821 Ridgewood Drive and 815 Ridgewood

Drive.

¶9 Defendants own 821 Ridgewood Drive, a narrow, rectangular strip running 237

feet east to west and 50 feet north to south, which the original plat mat designated "Future

Roadway—Not Dedicated." The western boundary of 821 Ridgewood Drive lies along Ridge-

wood Drive, a city street that runs north and south. The entire eastern boundary of 821 Ridge-

wood Drive borders 825 Ridgewood Drive, a residential lot where defendants live. The dimen-

sions of 825 Ridgewood Drive are not relevant to this appeal. A private roadway runs the length

of 821 Ridgewood Drive, connecting Ridgewood Drive to a circle driveway in front of defend-

ants' residence on 825 Ridgewood Drive. Plaintiff and defendants—as well as their predecessors

in title—have always used the private roadway on 821 Ridgewood Drive for ingress and egress

to their properties. No other structures or improvements exist on 821 Ridgewood Drive.

¶ 10 Plaintiff owns 815 Ridgewood Drive, a rectangular lot that lies immediately north

of 821 Ridgewood Drive and immediately east of Ridgewood Drive. The western boundary of

815 Ridgewood Drive runs 116 feet along Ridgewood Drive. The southern boundary of 815

Ridgewood Drive runs 101 feet along the northern boundary of 821 Ridgewood Drive. The re-

maining northern boundary of 821 Ridgewood Drive—the portion east of plaintiff's property—

borders the backyards of properties in another subdivision, which are not at issue in this appeal.

At issue in this appeal is the portion of 821 Ridgewood Drive directly south of 815 Ridgewood

¶ 11 B. The Private Roadway Over 821 Ridgewood Drive

-3- ¶ 12 When Stipp first developed the subdivision, he built the beginnings of a 35-foot-

wide, east-west running, asphalt road on 821 Ridgewood Drive. The asphalt road was apparently

never fully completed, however, and it extended eastward only about 101 feet, to a point roughly

as far east as the eastern boundary of 815 Ridgewood Drive. From that point eastward, a much

narrower gravel road provided access from Ridgewood Drive to the residence at 825 Ridgewood

¶ 13 The asphalt roadway's 35 feet of width included concrete gutters on both sides,

each measuring approximately 2.5 feet in width. Traveling from east to west, the gutters ran

parallel toward Ridgewood Drive, eventually fanning out, with the southern gutter curving south

toward Ridgewood Drive and the northern gutter curving north toward Ridgewood Drive. Be-

cause 821 Ridgewood Drive was 50-feet wide, and the asphalt road was only 35 feet wide, no

conspicuous monument marked where the northern boundary of 821 Ridgewood Drive met the

southern boundary of 815 Ridgewood Drive. Instead, grass extended from the lawn of 815

Ridgewood Drive—plaintiff's property—all the way south to the gutters of the asphalt road on

821 Ridgewood Drive. This created the appearance that the southern boundary of 815 Ridge-

wood Drive was at the gutter of the asphalt road.

¶ 14 Although the gutter was actually 7.5 feet south of the boundary line of 815

Ridgewood Drive, plaintiff and his predecessors in title used and maintained the land all the way

south to the gutter as their own. Each of them thought that the roadway was city property.

Plaintiff's adverse possession claim concerns the 7.5 feet of 821 Ridgewood Drive north of the

gutter and south of his property line. Plaintiff's prescriptive easement claim concerns his right to

use the roadway portion of 821 Ridgewood Drive south of his property.

¶ 15 C. Pertinent Ownership History of the Properties

-4- ¶ 16 1. 815 Ridgewood Drive

¶ 17 In July 1986, Joseph and Anneliese Arnoldi deeded 815 Ridgewood Drive to Ter-

ry and Gina Miller. In July 1994, the Millers deeded 815 Ridgewood Drive to Deborah Holman

(then Deborah McCormick). In July 1997, Holman deeded 815 Ridgewood Drive to plaintiff,

who owned and lived at the property thereafter.

¶ 18 2. 821 Ridgewood Drive

¶ 19 Arthur Stipp and his wife, Doris, owned 821 Ridgewood Drive until May 2007,

when Doris, then Arthur's widow, deeded 821 Ridgewood Drive to defendants.

¶ 20 3. 825 Ridgewood Drive

¶ 21 Although 825 Ridgewood Drive is not at issue in this appeal, we briefly review

the ownership history of that property to provide context for the parties' present dispute. The

Stipps lived at 825 Ridgewood Drive until some time prior to 1979. (Although the record con-

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2014 IL App (4th) 130293, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/brandhorst-v-johnson-illappct-2014.