Brannock v. The Lotus Fund

2016 NMCA 30
CourtNew Mexico Court of Appeals
DecidedDecember 29, 2015
Docket33,950
StatusPublished

This text of 2016 NMCA 30 (Brannock v. The Lotus Fund) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering New Mexico Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Brannock v. The Lotus Fund, 2016 NMCA 30 (N.M. Ct. App. 2015).

Opinion

I attest to the accuracy and integrity of this document New Mexico Compilation Commission, Santa Fe, NM '00'04- 13:58:01 2016.03.30

Certiorari Denied, February 19, 2016, No. S-1-SC-35728

IN THE COURT OF APPEALS OF THE STATE OF NEW MEXICO

Opinion Number: 2016-NMCA-030

Filing Date: December 29, 2015

Docket No. 33,950

ANN BRANNOCK, DANIEL M. MOWERY and MARSHA J. MOWERY,

Plaintiffs-Appellees,

v.

THE LOTUS FUND, CHRISTINE HOUGH SMITH, and CHRISTOPHER SMITH,

Defendants-Appellants,

and

DOUGLAS COOMBS and COLLEEN COOMBS and EUGENE HANDS and MARIA HANDS,

Voluntary Defendants.

APPEAL FROM THE DISTRICT COURT OF BERNALILLO COUNTY Alan M. Malott, District Judge

Ronald T. Taylor Albuquerque, NM

for Appellees

Michael L. Danoff & Associates, P.C. Michael L. Danoff Ryan P. Danoff Albuquerque, NM

for Appellants

1 OPINION

BUSTAMANTE, Judge.

{1} Defendants The Lotus Fund (LF), Christine Hough Smith, and Christopher Smith appeal from the district court’s findings of facts and conclusions of law entering judgment1 on behalf of Plaintiffs Ann Brannock, Daniel M. Mowery, and Marsha J. Mowery. On appeal, Defendants raise both issue and claim preclusion arguments and contend that, in any event, the district court erred in concluding that Plaintiffs proved the elements of prescriptive easement and easement by necessity. Concluding that the prior case does not have preclusive effect over the present case and that substantial evidence supports the district court’s findings and conclusions that Plaintiffs proved the elements for prescriptive easement, we affirm.

I. BACKGROUND

{2} This appeal involves litigation over a disputed access to property. In order to best understand the facts and legal issues in the present case, we will first explain the legal posture that led to the present case. Prior to the present case, a separate case (the Coombs case) was initiated by Douglas M. Coombs and Colleen E. Coombs (together, the Coombses) against The Lotus Fund Limited Partnership (LFLP), an affiliate or otherwise related company to one of the present Defendants, The Lotus Fund. The Coombses and

1 We initially note that we do not typically consider the district court’s findings of fact and conclusions of law a “final order” for purposes of filing an appeal. See Curbello v. Vaughn, 1966-NMSC-179, ¶¶ 1-3, 76 N.M. 687, 417 P.2d 881 (stating that, when the district court had entered findings and conclusions, but had not entered an order or judgment carrying out the findings and conclusions, no final order had been entered in the case for purposes of appeal). Here, however, the district court’s findings and conclusions serve as the final order or judgment because they resolve all matters to the fullest extent possible and because they contain decretal language that carries the findings and conclusions into effect. See Floyd v. Towndrow, 1944-NMSC-052, ¶ 4, 48 N.M. 444, 152 P.2d 391 (stating that “[t]he general rule recognized by the courts of the United States and by the courts of most, if not all, of the states, is that no judgment or decree will be regarded as final, within the meaning of the statutes in reference to appeals, unless all the issues of law and of fact necessary to be determined were determined, and the case completely disposed of, so far as the court had power to dispose of it” (internal quotation marks and citation omitted)); see also Khalsa v. Levinson, 1998-NMCA-110, ¶ 13, 125 N.M. 680, 964 P.2d 844 (providing that an order is final if it includes decretal language that carries the decision into effect). In satisfaction of the required decretal language, the final paragraph of the district court’s subsequent findings and conclusions states that “[i]t is therefore Ordered that Judgment shall issue in favor of Plaintiffs consistent with these Findings and Conclusions.” Therefore, we view the district court’s findings and conclusions as the final order of the court.

2 Defendants/LFLP own property adjacent to one another, which properties are separated by a twenty-five-foot dedicated easement (the dedicated easement) that is entirely on the Coombses’ property. Notwithstanding this dedicated easement, the Coombses alleged that they and others used a path to access properties owned by the Coombses, Eugene and Maria Hands (the Hands), and present Plaintiffs, which path was partially on the dedicated easement on the Coombses’ property and partially on Defendants’/LFLP’s property. After a dispute arose between Defendants/LFLP and the Coombses regarding use of the disputed access, the Coombses filed a complaint for declaratory judgment and injunction against LFLP.

{3} In the Coombs case, Judge Brickhouse concluded that

[a]s a matter of law there [are] no prescriptive easement rights for [the Coombses] because the required elements, which are usage by the general public continued for the length of time necessary to create a right of prescription if the use had been by an individual, provided that such usage is open, uninterrupted, peaceable, notorious, adverse, under a claim of right, and continued for a period of ten years with the knowledge, or imputed knowledge of the owner, were not proven at trial.

By this, Judge Brickhouse meant either that insufficient evidence was presented on this claim—perhaps because the Coombses instead elected to pursue an ownership argument—or that the Coombses failed to prove their prescriptive easement rights or public prescriptive easement rights despite their efforts to do so. In any event, the conclusion of law, in significant part, states that there are no prescriptive easement rights for the plaintiffs in the Coombs case, as opposed to stating that prescriptive easement rights on the disputed access could never be proven by any other party against Defendants/LFLP.

{4} Plaintiffs in the present case, who own/have owned property to the south of the Coombses (non-adjacent) and the Hands (adjacent), thereafter brought a case against present Defendants for prescriptive easement, easement by necessity, and permanent restraining order, seeking court verification of their easement over the same disputed roadway that was litigated in the Coombs case. The Coombses and the Hands were additionally named as “voluntary defendants” in the present case. Both parties filed motions for summary judgment, and the district court denied both motions. In the order denying summary judgment, the district court took judicial notice of the Coombs case; noted that the plaintiffs in the Coombs case are not the same as Plaintiffs in the present case or in privity with them; and found that the Coombs case determined legal ownership of land, whereas the present case deals with the right to use that land. The case therefore proceeded to trial.

{5} After a trial on the merits, the district court filed findings of fact and conclusions of law, granting judgment in favor of Plaintiffs. The district court reiterated that the ownership rights determined in the Coombs case did not have preclusive effect on the usage rights as asserted by Plaintiffs in the present matter and concluded that Plaintiffs had proved the

3 elements of prescriptive easement and easement by necessity. Defendants appeal.

II. DISCUSSION

{6} On appeal, Defendants raise both issue and claim preclusion arguments and additionally contend that, in any event, the district court erred in concluding that Plaintiffs proved the elements of prescriptive easement and easement by necessity. We first address Defendants’ preclusion arguments and, concluding that the present case is not precluded by the Coombs case, then proceed to the merits of the easement issues.

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Bluebook (online)
2016 NMCA 30, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/brannock-v-the-lotus-fund-nmctapp-2015.