Byers v. Cathcart

57 Cal. App. 4th 805, 67 Cal. Rptr. 2d 398, 97 Daily Journal DAR 11840, 97 Cal. Daily Op. Serv. 7357, 1997 Cal. App. LEXIS 722
CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedSeptember 11, 1997
DocketB100260
StatusPublished
Cited by30 cases

This text of 57 Cal. App. 4th 805 (Byers v. Cathcart) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering California Court of Appeal primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Byers v. Cathcart, 57 Cal. App. 4th 805, 67 Cal. Rptr. 2d 398, 97 Daily Journal DAR 11840, 97 Cal. Daily Op. Serv. 7357, 1997 Cal. App. LEXIS 722 (Cal. Ct. App. 1997).

Opinion

Opinion

ZEBROWSKI, J.

This appeal concerns an injunction issued pursuant to Code of Civil Procedure section 527.6 (section 527.6.) Section 527.6 is a specialized statute providing an expedited procedure for issuance of limited-scope and limited-duration injunctions in instances of “harassment.” The term “harassment" is narrowly defined in section 527.6. Among other aspects of the definition, the complained-of conduct must have “no legitimate purpose” in order to constitute “harassment." (§ 527.6, subd. (b).)

The complained-of conduct which generated this appeal was parking a car along the side of a driveway. Although the order appealed from contains many provisions, and the appeal is generally stated as an appeal from the entire order, the only provision attacked in the briefing is the provision enjoining plaintiff from parking along the side of the driveway. We therefore focus on whether, under the facts of this case, plaintiff could properly be enjoined pursuant to section 527.6 from parking along the side of the driveway.

*808 Plaintiff has an easement to use the driveway. The scope of the use authorized by the easement is in dispute. It can hardly be disputed, however, that parking a car is a legitimate necessity. Parking generally is not conduct having “no legitimate purpose.” There is no evidence here that the parking was done for the purpose of annoying defendants as opposed to the purpose of storing a vehicle between periods of use. The no-parking provision of the injunction was therefore beyond the scope of section 527.6.

Although improper use of an easement can be enjoined, potentially complex issues of real estate law such as rights and duties pursuant to an easement cannot properly be resolved pursuant to the summary procedures of section 527.6. That portion of the section 527.6 injunction which bars plaintiff from parking along the side of the driveway must therefore be reversed, without prejudice to review of that issue according to normal injunctive procedures.

I. Background.

The driveway easement crosses a lot owned by one defendant. On that lot sits that defendant’s home. Plaintiff’s home is adjacent. The driveway easement provides plaintiff with access to plaintiff’s home. The second defendant is a cohabitant of the homeowner defendant.

Plaintiff has long had a recorded easement to use the driveway for “road and utilities purposes.” The scope of the uses permitted by a “road and utilities” easement is disputed. Plaintiff contends that a “road and utilities” easement allows parking. Defendants contend that only passage, and not parking, is permitted.

The driveway easement is 30 feet wide. Plaintiff contends that the driveway as built is wide enough to allow parking along the edge closest to her home without blocking passage. Defendants maintain otherwise, and further complain about the aesthetic effect of plaintiff’s parked cars. Plaintiff asserts that she used the driveway easement for parking for many years without dispute. Defendants counter that the scope of her use has recently changed. Plaintiff is a physics professor at the University of California at Los Angeles, and uses a garage on her property as a study for preparing lectures. Defendants contend that plaintiff’s use of her garage as a study prevents its use for parking cars, and that this is why plaintiff parks on the driveway easement. Plaintiff responds that the garage structure has long been used as a study, and that in any event the garage issue is not relevant to the issue of whether plaintiff has committed harassment.

Plaintiff filed an application for a section 527.6 injunction alleging that defendants harassed plaintiff by threatening her, by directing foul language *809 towards her, by parking a pickup truck diagonally across the driveway to block her ingress and egress, and by other annoying or threatening acts. Plaintiff’s application was filed on normal notice with a hearing set for December 6, 1995. In her application, plaintiff explained that the origin of the dispute was her use of the easement. She asked for mainstream antiharassment orders (no threatening, no blocking, no coming within close proximity, no surveillance, etc.). She did not seek adjudication of the parties’ respective rights and duties pursuant to the easement.

On December 5, 1995 (the day before the hearing), defendants filed opposition plus an application for their own section 527.6 injunction against plaintiff. Defendants cited four acts of alleged harassment by plaintiff: 1) that plaintiff caused the Los Angeles Police Department to issue a citation to one of the defendants for “illegal parking” (parking the truck diagonally across the driveway easement so as to completely block it), 2) that plaintiff allowed guests and workers to park on the driveway easement, 3) that plaintiff parked on the driveway easement herself, 4) and that plaintiff used the “legal system (i.e., Police and Courts) to harass, annoy and cause needless expenditure of money and time fighting about her illegal parking.”

All persons have a constitutional right to petition the government for redress of grievances. Such conduct cannot be enjoined. (See, e.g., § 527.6, subd. (b); Smith v. Silvey (1983) 149 Cal.App.3d 400 [197 Cal.Rptr. 15].) Thus the only claims raised by defendants that related to activity that is not plainly constitutionally protected was the parking on the driveway easement.

A hearing was held on December 6 (the day after defendant’s papers were filed). The declarations of the parties filed in support of their respective petitions were received in evidence and plaintiff testified. The court then heard argument. Almost none of the argument related to issues of harassment. Most of it related to the validity and scope of the easement, covering subjects such as prescriptive easements, building permits, the legality of plaintiff’s garage use, adverse possession, dominant and servient tenements, the case law of easements, exclusive versus nonexclusive easements, etc.

At the conclusion of the hearing, the court ordered entry of mutual restraining orders restraining the parties from threatening each other, following each other, blocking each other’s movements, etc., notwithstanding that no evidence had been offered that plaintiff had engaged in any harassing conduct directed against defendants. The court further ordered that defendants could park on the driveway easement, but that plaintiff could not. A formal order was signed and filed later. A capitalized passage in the formal order emphasizes its seriousness: “Violation of This Order Is a Misdemeanor, Punishable by a $1,000 Fine, Six Months in Jail, or Both. *810 This Order Shall Be Enforced by All Law Enforcement Agencies in the State of California .... The Law Enforcement Agency Shall Enforce the Order Immediately Upon Receipt. It Is Enforceable Anywhere in California by Any Law Enforcement Agency That Has Received the Order or Is Shown a Copy of the Order. If Proof of Service on the Restrained Person Has Not Been Received, the Law Enforcement Agency Shall Advise the Restrained Person of the Terms of the Order and Then Shall Enforce It.” The order specified an expiration date of December 5, 1998—three years after the date of the hearing.

II.

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57 Cal. App. 4th 805, 67 Cal. Rptr. 2d 398, 97 Daily Journal DAR 11840, 97 Cal. Daily Op. Serv. 7357, 1997 Cal. App. LEXIS 722, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/byers-v-cathcart-calctapp-1997.