Brown v. Eoff

530 P.2d 49, 271 Or. 7, 1975 Ore. LEXIS 476
CourtOregon Supreme Court
DecidedJanuary 7, 1975
StatusPublished
Cited by15 cases

This text of 530 P.2d 49 (Brown v. Eoff) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Oregon Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Brown v. Eoff, 530 P.2d 49, 271 Or. 7, 1975 Ore. LEXIS 476 (Or. 1975).

Opinion

O’CONNELL, C. J.

This is a suit in equity to establish plaintiffs’ right to use a roadway across defendants’ land for access to plaintiffs’ warehouse. The trial court found that plaintiffs possess an irrevocable license and awarded damages for payments made by plaintiffs to defendants to prevent interference with access. The defendants appeal, seeking- to have the matter tried anew on the record.

The record reveals that during the latter part of 1967, plaintiff and defendant began negotiating for the purchase by plaintiffs from defendants of approximately two acres situated at the corner of Madison and Taft Streets in the northeast part of Salem, Oregon. Plaintiff’s express purpose for the purchase was the construction of a commercial warehouse for lease to tenants who would require access by their trucks. Until sometime before final closing of the sale, both parties contemplated that this access would be available by way of Taft Street N.E. They discovered just be *9 fore closing, however, that Taft Street was closed to truck traffic by virtue of a zoning ordinance of the city of Salem. After this discovery and probably before closing, plaintiff and defendant met on the property to discuss the situation. According to plaintiff, defendant pointed out a pre-existing roadway over his remaining property which could serve as access to and from an unrestricted portion of Madison Street N.E. Defendant does not question that several such conversations took place, but denied that he granted to plaintiff a permanent license to cross his property. Defendant contends that about the time of the closing plaintiff began inquiry as to the purchase of portions of defendant’s contiguous land for a trucking terminal in addition to the warehouse site and requested the right to cross the prospective purchase pending sale. Defendant states that he granted temporary permission only to use the road on this basis.

It is undisputed that for a period of more than a year the parties did negotiate for the purchase by plaintiff of an additional parcel of defendant’s land. The testimony and exhibits also reveal that after the initial sale both parties made numerous attempts to provide other means of access by application to the Planning Commission for conditional use permits on Taft Street, by the dedication of another street or by the establishment of a corridor through neighboring property to the road to the north.

In the spring and summer of 1970, defendant requested plaintiff to either complete the additional pur *10 chase, cease using the roadway, or begin paying rent for the roadway. In response, plaintiff wrote to defendant on July 21, 1970, reaffirming his plans to complete the. purchase and requested the defendant to “bear with me just a little longer until such time as I can give you a definite time table as to my intentions.”

In August of 1970, defendant made a demand for payment of $510 per month rental effective that month. In September, the roadway was blocked for a few hours because of non-payment. Plaintiff met defendant’s demands and the road was re-opened. On September 9, plaintiff wrote to defendant complaining of a lack of precision in their arrangement as to the road and requesting clarification and reduction of rent. He made no claim of right to cross defendant’s land and did not dispute his duty to pay an appropriate rent. The letter concluded with the request that a formal lease be executed and enclosed a check for $510 “on the condition that the terms as outlined be clarified for our mutual benefit.”

No lease was executed and payments ceased after several months. Defendant renewed his demands at an increased rental in August of 1972. Some six months later the road was closed again and payment was made under protest at the rate demanded. This suit was filed shortly thereafter.

Defendant’s basis of appeal is that the court erred in finding that plaintiff had proved a promise to allow plaintiff to use the land, which promise was rendered irrevocable by virtue of equitable estoppel.

Oregon is one of a minority of jurisdictions which *11 recognize the possibility of an irrevocable license. We have held that one who induces another to make significant expenditures for permanent improvements in reasonable reliance upon one’s promise to allow a permanent use of land is subsequently estopped from revoking the license.

The crucial question in the present case is whether plaintiff met his burden of proving by clear evidence that a promise was made to permit his use of defendant’s land for an unlimited time. Defendant admits there was oral permission to cross his land, but that it was to be good only until the second purchase was effected. There were no witnesses to any conversations on this matter. Thus, we have to decide between directly contradicting testimony. In the essentially similar case of Shepard v. Purvine, plaintiffs and defendants likewise disagreed on the duration of the license that admittedly had been given. The court formulated the following guide for resolution of the problem:

“* * * "Where there is a direct dispute between two persons in their oral testimony upon a vital *12 issue, the truth must he determined, if possible, from the proved circumstances of the case.” (196 Or at 365.)

The principal circumstance supporting plaintiff’s contention that he relied upon a promise made by defendant is that plaintiff built a warehouse upon the land when truck access by other methods was in doubt. The strength of this fact is lessened, however, by the fact, apparent in the record, that he continued to seek other modes of access after construction. It is also apparent that he had a permit to construct a driveway at the southwest corner of his property to an unrestricted portion of Madison Street N.E. in 1968, before the sale was closed. Thus, these facts are as consistent with a temporary license as one of unlimited duration.

Plaintiff also points to his expenditure in reliance on the license. The problem here is that the only expenditures with respect to the roadway itself were for grading, graveling and oiling, none of which are essentially permanent or particularly expensive. The expenditures are thus as referable to a revocable license as to an irrevocable license.

*13 In any case of disputed construction of an oral agreement, the practical construction given it by the parties is extremely persuasive. In this connection, as we have already noted, plaintiff did not assert a right to traverse defendant’s land during any of the difficulties following the gradual disintegration of his plans to purchase land from defendant.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
530 P.2d 49, 271 Or. 7, 1975 Ore. LEXIS 476, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/brown-v-eoff-or-1975.