Cheney v. Mueller

485 P.2d 1218, 259 Or. 108, 1971 Ore. LEXIS 360
CourtOregon Supreme Court
DecidedJune 10, 1971
StatusPublished
Cited by33 cases

This text of 485 P.2d 1218 (Cheney v. Mueller) 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
Cheney v. Mueller, 485 P.2d 1218, 259 Or. 108, 1971 Ore. LEXIS 360 (Or. 1971).

Opinion

TONGUE, J.

Defendants appeal from a judgment granting to plaintiffs an easement by implied reservation across defendants’ property.

Plaintiffs’ complaint, after alleging the facts, asked that the deed from plaintiffs to defendants be reformed to include a reference to “existing rights of way for roads”; that defendants be enjoined from blocking the access road to a house subsequently sold by plaintiffs to a Mr. Hansen and “for such other and further relief as to the court seems just and equitable.” Defendants’ answer, in addition to a general denial, also asked for affirmative relief requiring plaintiffs to deliver a warranty deed subject only to easements of record, and thus excluding the disputed access road.

Since the granting of an easement by implied reservation depends primarily upon a determination of the intent of the parties, as reflected by their conduct and in the light of the particular facts and circumstances, the principal question in this case is one of fact.

In November 1958 plaintiffs sold to defendants the property in question, consisting of a service station and trailer park near Prineville, Oregon. At that time plaintiffs also owned adjacent property on the west of the trailer court. Both tracts fronted to the south on a highway running west to Prineville. Plaintiffs also *112 then owned property to the north of the trailer court and had previously owned property adjacent to it both on the west and the east. In selling the property to the east of the trailer court a road easement eight feet in width was provided, running north and south along the east side of the trailer court property so as to provide access to the purchasers of portions of the property northeast and east of it. The original tract owned by plaintiffs (before these sales) included 33 acres and was purchased by them in 1947.

At the time of the sale to defendants the plaintiffs owned two houses on the property immediately west of the trailer court, one of which also fronted on the highway. The other house (later sold to Mr. Hansen and called the “Hansen house” throughout this case) was built in 1948 by Mr. Cheney, who then lived in it for a time. At the time of the sale of the trailer court to defendants the “Hansen house” was occupied by a Mrs. Baker, who was employed by plaintiffs in operating the trailer court. The access to that house is the problem in this case.

At that time, of course, there was no legal problem of access to the “Hansen house,” since both that house and the adjacent property to the east, as well as to the south, were all owned by plaintiffs. As a practical matter, however, access to the car port on the east side of that house was provided by a roadway extending in a general easterly or southeasterly direction from that car port across the trailer park to the eight foot road easement extending along the east side of the trailer park property. At that time there was also a fence between plaintiffs’ trailer park property and their adjacent property to the west, including the “Hansen house.” However, a wire gate was provided *113 in that fence for the roadway to that honse at a point immediately opposite the entrance to the car port of that house. All previous occupants of the “Hansen house” used that roadway for access.

Prior to the sale to defendants a map had been prepared by a surveyor of the trailer park property and the property immediately north of it. That map also showed four tracts of property to the east of the trader park, as previously sold by plaintiffs, together with a dotted line to show the location of the eight foot road easement extending along the east side of the trailer park property so as to provide access to three of such tracts. The map also included a metes and bounds description of that road easement, after which followed the words: “Subject to all existing easements and rights of way.”

The map also showed a similar dotted line parallel to the north line of the trailer park property so as to indicate a strip of the same width extending along the north side of that tract and between it and the tract immediately north of the trader court property. No metes and bounds description for that strip was shown on the map. The map did not show the location of the “Hansen house” or the gate opposite its car port. The surveyor who prepared that map testified that he added that “dotted line” at the request of Mr. Cheney after completing the remainder of the map and for that reason did not include a metes and bounds description of it. He also testified that the usual way to show an easement on a survey map is by dotted lines. He did not know whether the strip as shown by these dotted lines corresponded to any existing roadway. The evidence showed, however, that the west end of that strip terminated at or about the location of the gate opposite the “Hansen house” car port.

*114 On the evening of Saturday, November 25, 1967, defendants came to look at the trailer park in response to an advertisement placed by plaintiffs and after corresponding with them. That same evening they also drove up to look at the “Hansen house,” which was also for sale, Mr. Mueller having found out how to get to that house. In doing so, defendants drove through the trailer court and through the gate opposite the car port of that house, but said that they did not see the gate, which may have been open at that time.

The next day defendants also walked over the trailer court property. Meanwhile, there had been a light snow. They testified that they saw no ear tracks in the snow leading across the trailer court property to the “Hansen house” (where they had driven the night before).

Defendants admitted that in showing them the trailer court property the next day Mr. Cheney showed them a map “like” the one which showed the “strip” by a dotted line running east and west along the north line of the trailer court property. Defendants also said that they asked if that map had been recorded, but did not rely on it. Defendants testified that there was no discussion of that “strip” or of any roadways or right of way to the “Hansen house.” They also testified that there was no “defined roadway” at that time and that there could have been no roadway along the “strip” shown on the map because of a four foot “bank” at the west end of that “strip.”

Plaintiffs testified, on the contrary, that in showing defendants the property they not only showed defendants the map in going over the property, but informed them of the roadway, although admitting that “nothing in particular” was said about it. Mr. Cheney *115 also testified that the “tracks” on the roadway through the gate to the “Hansen house” were “plain” at that time. He also testified that he had previously put rock on that roadway.

After looking at the trailer court property, defendants decided also to buy the tract immediately north of it (and north of the “strip” as shown on the map along the boundary of that tract). A price was then agreed upon for both tracts and an earnest money contract was then prepared by plaintiffs’ attorney and signed by both parties on November 28, 1967.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
485 P.2d 1218, 259 Or. 108, 1971 Ore. LEXIS 360, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/cheney-v-mueller-or-1971.