Bridle Trail Association v. O'SHANICK

290 S.W.2d 401, 1956 Mo. App. LEXIS 103
CourtMissouri Court of Appeals
DecidedMarch 20, 1956
Docket29314
StatusPublished
Cited by38 cases

This text of 290 S.W.2d 401 (Bridle Trail Association v. O'SHANICK) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Missouri Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Bridle Trail Association v. O'SHANICK, 290 S.W.2d 401, 1956 Mo. App. LEXIS 103 (Mo. Ct. App. 1956).

Opinion

SAM C. BLAIR, Special Judge.

The plaintiff, Bridle Trail Association, maintains several miles of bridle trails in St. Louis County for the use of its members and their guests. The segment of the trails which concerns us runs from Clayton Road for several hundred feet south until it reaches a point on defendants’ property near its northeast corner. Then it runs diagonally across the northeast corner of their property to its east boundary and enters the property of J. Gates Williams. The terrain the trail occupies in crossing defendants’ property is a strip only 12 feet in width and 14.43 feet in length. In July 1954 they completely blocked all use of the strip by erecting a barricade at the point of its entrance and another at the point of its exit on their property. In the trial court the plaintiff was granted a. mandatory injunction compelling defendants to remove these barricades and to refrain from interfering with plaintiff’s use of the strip. The defendants appeal. Since only injunctive relief is sought by this action, this court has jurisdiction. Smith v. Santarelli, 355 Mo. 1047, 1048, 199 S.W.2d 411, 412; Judge v. Durham, Mo., 274 S.W.2d 247, 250; Burnett v. Sladek, Mo.App., 251 S.W.2d 397, 398.

Plaintiff pleaded a prescriptive right to use the strip, based on the claim, denied by *403 defendants, that it has used it as a part of its bridle trails in a manner that was open, visible, continuous and uninterrupted, adverse and under a claim of right, for more than the statutory 10-year period, V.A. M.S. § 516.010, prior to the erection of the barricades. On this appeal the crucial problem is whether plaintiff’s use of the strip has been merely permissive or whether its use has been adverse and has ripened into a prescriptive right. There are other questions in the case, but a solution of this one will dispose of the appeal.

For the plaintiff, there was the following testimony relevant to the use of the strip. The Bridle Trail Association was organized and began functioning in 1924. Its membership has been held to approximately 25 members. Membership carried the privilege of riding on plaintiff’s bridle trails. From 1924 until 1954, when the barricades were established, plaintiff’s members, and their wives and children if they cared to do so, used the strip on defendants’ property in riding from north to south and from south to north on this segment of the trails. From 1924 until 1940, the property on which the questioned strip lies was a vacant and unimproved lot. In the autumn of 1940, Louis A. and Betty Lou McMahon purchased the lot and built a house on it. In August of 1949, they sold the lot to Mrs. Elizabeth Mueller. In May of 1954, Mrs. Mueller sold the lot to Frank and Nancy O’Shanick, the defendants.-

Louis A. McMahon testified he bought the lot in the fall of 1940 and built a house on it. None of the Association’s officials and none of the riders ever asked permission to use the strip. He merely permitted the use without raising any objection. The plaintiff made no assertion at any time of any right to use the strip. When the lot was sold to Mrs. Mueller in 1949, no reference to an easement was made in the deed and McMahon did not mention the subject to her. McMahon’s wife, Betty Lou, testified that riders used the strip to cross the lot and that she raised no objection and gave no one permission at any time to use the strip.

Mrs. Elizabeth Mueller testified she purchased the lot from the McMahons in August 1949 and lived there until May 1954. She had a conversation with C. Virgil Christian, plaintifPs overseer.of maintenance, about the use of the strip, and if Mr. Christian stated that she said it was all right for the Association to use the strip, “he would be right.” She did not object to the use of the strip because her real estate agent told her when she bought the lot that there was “an easement for the bridle club.” She did not tell Christian that she believed there was an easement and there is no evidence that she told anyone else or that anyone else told her there was an easement. The record does not anywhere disclose who her real estate agent was or why or with what authority he told her there was an easement across the lot. We do not regard his statement or her reliance on it as being of any evidentiary force. She had a conversation with Frank O’Shanick in which she told him she hoped he would, never close the trail. She told both Mr. and Mrs. O’Shanick that she was “glad to- see the horses were going through.” She had another conversation with Mr. O’Shanick after the barricades were put in place. She said, “I see you have barricaded the trail.” “Q. All right, what else did you say? A. He said, yes, he had.” “Q. Anything else said at that time? A. I said it was too bad.”

John F. Krey testified he had been a member of the Association since 1929 and had been one of its vice presidents since 1948. The Association held no written easement across the strip. The Association did hold written easements on other properties, but not this one. The witness had no discussions with prior owners of defendants’ property regarding use of the. strip. He said J. Gates Williams was “permitting” the Association to use his property. This is the property which the trail enters on the east immediately after crossing the strip on defendants’ property.

Louis Werner, another vice president, testified he had been a member of the Association about 20 years and vice president *404 for “a year or two.” He had no conversations with any owners of the property prior to its purchase by the defendants O’Shanick. After the barricades were established, h'e went to the defendants’ home and had a conversation with Frank O’Shan-ick. He told O’Shanick that he was one who used the trail. The purpose of visiting O’Shanick was “I wanted to see if we couldn’t get the' barricade down.” He asked O’Shanick to take it down, and he may have said, “and again give the trail permission to cross your property.”

C. Virgil Christian testified he had been overseer of maintenance for plaintiff since 1947. Fie had no conversation with any owner of the strip prior to its purchase by Mrs. Mueller in 1949. In 1950 he talked with Mrs. Mueller several times. “I talked about horses, and about the trail there; and she seemed very satisfied that we were using it * * * and she did tell me we were welcome to pass over that portion of the trail.” “That was when I became acquainted that that portion of the property belonged to her.”

“Q. And did you ask Mrs. Mueller whether it was all right to go ahead and go over that part of the property? A. I did, yes, sir.
“Q. You asked her permission? A. I asked her if it was all right. * * * She stated that that portion of the property did belong to her and that we were welcome to ride through there.”
“Q.- At that time you didn’t tell her you had a right to go over the property, did you? A. No, sir, I did not.”

After the defendants purchased the property from Mrs. Mueller, the president of the Association told Christian, “Perhaps it would be a good idea if we became acquainted with the man (O’Shanick) and talked with him.” Christian called on O’Shanick.

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Bluebook (online)
290 S.W.2d 401, 1956 Mo. App. LEXIS 103, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/bridle-trail-association-v-oshanick-moctapp-1956.