C-LAZY-K RANCH, INC. v. Alexanderson

259 P.3d 53, 243 Or. App. 168, 2011 Ore. App. LEXIS 700
CourtCourt of Appeals of Oregon
DecidedMay 25, 2011
DocketCV040202; A138409
StatusPublished

This text of 259 P.3d 53 (C-LAZY-K RANCH, INC. v. Alexanderson) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Oregon primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
C-LAZY-K RANCH, INC. v. Alexanderson, 259 P.3d 53, 243 Or. App. 168, 2011 Ore. App. LEXIS 700 (Or. Ct. App. 2011).

Opinion

*170 SERCOMBE, J.

This case involves a dispute among neighbors in rural Jefferson County over defendants’ use of a road across plaintiffs’ property. Plaintiffs C-Lazy-K Ranch, Inc. (C-Lazy-K) and the trustees of the Monroe Revocable Living Trust (the Monroes) own separate pieces of property over which defendants seek access. Defendants assert that the disputed road is public or, alternatively, that they have a private interest in the use of the road. Plaintiffs, on the other hand, contend that, by separate orders issued in 1921 and 1941, the Jefferson County Board of Commissioners (the board) vacated two sections of a Jefferson County road that make up the disputed road. On de novo review, we conclude that, although a portion of the disputed road remains public because it was not vacated by order in 1921, the public road does not extend to defendants’ property line because of the 1941 order, and thus defendants may not access their property over the disputed road.

Plaintiffs filed an action seeking a declaratory judgment that a portion of the disputed road was vacated by Jefferson County by order in 1941, and that defendants have no public or private right to enter plaintiffs’ property via the road. 1 Defendants filed an answer and counterclaims, requesting a declaration that neither the 1921 nor the 1941 order vacated the disputed road. Defendants also asserted several other theories seeking an alternative declaration that plaintiffs or their predecessors dedicated the road to public use after it was vacated; that the public later acquired a prescriptive easement to the road; or that they held an easement by some other operation of law. After a bench trial, the trial court ruled that the full length of the disputed road was vacated by the separate orders in 1921 and 1941, and that defendants did not possess any right to use the disputed road.

After trial, plaintiffs moved for an award of attorney fees under ORS 20.105 and sanctions pursuant to ORCP 17 and ORCP 46. The court granted plaintiffs’ motion for ORCP 17 sanctions, and ruled that the appropriate sanction was the *171 total amount of attorney fees incurred by plaintiffs during the litigation. Accordingly, the court entered a supplemental judgment awarding plaintiffs $120,818.50 in sanctions and $1,063.43 in costs. Defendants appeal from the general judgment and the supplemental judgment. 2

The crux of this case is the legal effect of two separate orders entered by the board that vacated portions of C.C. Maling Road. This case is complicated by ambiguities in the language of the orders, and the fact that the rural nature of the area and the age of the orders imparts an uncertainty to the established names and location of the roads in the disputed area. Nevertheless, based on the text of the orders, the surrounding circumstances at the time the orders were entered, and other extrinsic evidence, we vacate and remand the general judgment with instructions to enter a modified judgment that the 1921 order did not vacate the portion of C.C. Maling Road that travels north from point X to point Y, as those points are described below. We also reverse the supplemental judgment.

Before examining the language of the orders, we explain the relevant topography of the area. The following map, taken from a map in the briefing and enhanced with identifying markers, illustrates the area as described below:

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*172 C-Lazy-K owns a parcel of land in rural Jefferson County. That property is bordered on the south by a road that travels generally in a west to east direction and intersects with the disputed road in this case at point X. The road along C-Lazy-K’s southern boundary is known to the west of point X as Willow Creek Road. 3 To the east of point X, the road’s name is debated, but it is undisputed that the road continues to the county line between Jefferson County and Crook County. The disputed road in this case travels north from point X through a portion of C-Lazy-K’s property before reaching a fork in the road. The fork in the road is identified as point Y in the above map. The “left fork” turns northwest and traverses a corner of the Monroes’ property before crossing defendants’ eastern property line. This is the disputed route that defendants seek to use to access their property from Willow Creek Road. The “right fork” travels from point Y in a northeasterly direction and is identified on several maps as the road “to Coon Creek Mill.” That road roughly follows Coon Creek for at least a portion of its distance, although where it ultimately goes is also a matter of dispute.

Other than the disputed road, defendants’ only road access to their property is from the west over Hay Creek Road and an easement that was negotiated during defendants’ purchase of their property. However, defendants claim that Hay Creek Road becomes impassable in the winter, thus limiting their year-round access.

Having described the lay of the land, we address our standard of review. Declaratory judgment actions, such as this one, are treated as legal or equitable depending on the nature of the underlying claim and the relief sought. Ken Leahy Construction, Inc. v. Cascade General, Inc., 329 Or 566, 571, 994 P2d 112 (1999). Plaintiffs’ complaint alleged that they had no plain or adequate remedy at law and asked the court to declare that the disputed road was vacated by the 1941 order and that defendants have no other public or private right to enter plaintiffs’ property. The parties pleaded this case in equity and the parties and the court proceeded at *173 trial on the assumption that the case was in equity. Our review is de novo. 4 Poe v. Department of Transportation, 42 Or App 493, 495-96, 600 P2d 939, rev den, 288 Or 173 (1979) (deciding that a suit to declare a piece of property as a public road was in equity where complaint and cross-complaint sought injunctive and declaratory relief, and the parties and court proceeded at trial on “the assumption that the case was in equity”); see also RealVest Corp. v. Lane County, 196 Or App 109, 112, 100 P3d 1109 (2004) (where the defendants’ counterclaims were filed to prevent the plaintiffs, through a declaratory judgment, from using a portion of the defendants’ lands as a driveway, the core relief sought was equitable in nature).

Initially, this case requires us to examine the language of the 1921 and 1941 orders to determine which roads or portions of roads the orders vacated. Our role when interpreting a county order such as the ones in this case is to determine the enacting body’s intent through examination of the order’s text and context. See Wilkins v. Lane County, 65 Or App 494, 498, 671 P2d 1178 (1983), rev den, 296 Or 253 (1984) (indicating that an order vacating a county road pursuant to statute is á legislative enactment); see also PGE v.

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Bluebook (online)
259 P.3d 53, 243 Or. App. 168, 2011 Ore. App. LEXIS 700, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/c-lazy-k-ranch-inc-v-alexanderson-orctapp-2011.