Chinn v. Strait

250 P.2d 806, 173 Kan. 625, 1952 Kan. LEXIS 241
CourtSupreme Court of Kansas
DecidedDecember 6, 1952
Docket38,729
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 250 P.2d 806 (Chinn v. Strait) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Kansas primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Chinn v. Strait, 250 P.2d 806, 173 Kan. 625, 1952 Kan. LEXIS 241 (kan 1952).

Opinion

The opinion of the court was delivered by

Thiele, J.:

This was an action to enjoin obstruction of a claimed easement.

In his petition, filed September 4, 1951, the plaintiff alleged that the defendants were the owners of the west half of the west half of sec. 30, twp. 29, s. of rg. 14 w., and that plaintiff and his predecessors were and are the owners of the southeast quarter of sec. 25, twp. 29 s. of rg. 15 w. (which is immediately to the west of the south half of defendants’ land) and by the continuous, exclusive, uninterrupted and adverse use for more than forty years had acquired an easement and right of way therefrom over the adjoining land of the defendants to the county road to pass and repass on foot, with horses, wagons, machinery and motor vehicles freely at all times, and that *626 defendants, with knowledge and notice of his right, about August 15, 1951, wrongfully obstructed the right of way by tearing down fences, tearing up land and trees and by building fences across the right of way, to his damage in the sum of $1,000; that the acts complained of were maliciously done and he asked punitive damages of $5,000 and he prayed for an order compelling the defendants to remove the obstructions, to restore the right of way, for a permanent injunction against obstruction of the right of way and for money damages.

The answer of the defendants contained a general demurrer, an admission they owned the real estate and a general denial. The z-ecord, as abstracted, does not disclose any ruling on the demurrer.

A trial was had by the court. At the conclusion of the plaintiff’s evidence, defendants’ demurrer thereto was overruled. At the conclusion of the defendants’ evidence, the court found that plaintiff had an easement over defendants’ lands for ingress and egress from his land and that he was entitled to damages in the sum of $10, and it rendered judgment that plaintiff was entitled to hold and use an easement or right of way across the north twenty feet of the west half of the southwest quarter of section 30 aforesaid, for the purpose of providing a way of ingress and egress from the southeast quarter of section 25 aforesaid to the county road on the east side of the west half of the southwest quarter of section 30; that plaintiff have judgment against defendants for $10 and that defendants be permanently enjoined from obstructing the right of way or in any manner hindering plaintiff from free and lawful use of it. Defendants’ motion for a new trial was denied and in due time they appealed from the judgment and all rulings.

Appellee has filed a motion that the appeal be dismissed, alleging that defendants acquiesced in the judgment by removing the fences and obstructions and opening the easement and right of way to appellee’s use. The motion is supported by the affidavit of appellee, Chinn. In opposition two affidavits have been filed. One is by appellant, Sylvia Strait, asserting that she is the sole and absolute owner of the real estate over which the claimed easement passes and that she at no time authorized or directed anyone to remove any obstructions from the claimed right of way or to open the purported right of way so as to give free ingress and egress. The other affidavit is by Marvin Strait, who states he is a tenant on the land, and that he at no time removed any obstruction in order to give Chinn a free right of way and that the only removal was that *627 he might cultivate the land, to accommodate terracing and farm work and the free use of the land for farm purposes. Without attempting to determine such dispute of facts as may be presented in the affidavits, it is clear that Sylvia Strait, whom the record discloses is the owner of the lands sought to be subjected to the easement, has done nothing that indicates acquiescence in the judgment. The appeal will be entertained.

Appellants’ specifications of error cover the trial court’s ruling on their demurrer to the evidence, the finding that appellee could and did acquire title by adverse possession from his father while a tenant of his father, in rendering judgment for the appellee, and in denying their motion for a new trial. Consideration thereof requires a summation of the evidence, although before that is done we direct attention to certain facts which were stipulated or otherwise admitted.

John Chinn, father of appellee, acquired title to the southeast quarter of section 25 in 1905. Although not expressly stated, John Chinn mortgaged this land and the mortgage was foreclosed. In July, 1936, a sheriff’s deed was made and delivered to Plymouth Guaranty Savings Bank and recorded July 18, 1936. A. B. Chinn appellee, testified he contracted with Warren Mortgage Company, whose source of title is not shown, to purchase the quarter section in 1936, the month and day not being stated, and that later a deed was delivered to him. In a memorandum opinion the trial court stated that A. B. Chinn received his deed in January, 1941.

John Chinn acquired title to the west half of the west half of section 30 in 1899. Although not definitely described, John Chinn acquired title to another eighty acres of land which the evidence indicates was to the south of the land just described. Although not expressly stated, he mortgaged this land and the mortgage was foreclosed and a sheriff’s deed was delivered to John Hancock Mutual Life Insurance Company and filed July 18, 1936. That company conveyed the lands to J. E. Frazer and wife by a deed recorded May 7, 1937, and by a deed recorded March 21, 1951, Sylvia Strait, one of the appellants, acquired title. At the oral argument in this court, in response to a question, it was stated that in none of the various instruments of title was there any grant of, or reservation or exception pertaining to, any right of way or any easement in favor of one tract and a burden on the other. Because of contentions later discussed, it is noted that at the trial in response to a question by the trial court, counsel for Chinn stated, “Our prescrip *628 tive right actually started some time in — perhaps 40 years ago, and has continued over that 40-year period.”

A. B. Chinn, testifying in his own behalf, stated relative locations of his lands and that of appellants and that he lived with his father on the land in section 30 until he was married in 1909 and moved on the land in section 25 and that he drove north on his east line and crossed what is now the Strait land between the two eighties; that there was a pretty good route across the Strait property, fenced on both sides and in substance that the land had been so used for over forty years; that no one had interfered with the route; that there had never been a gate at either end; that Staats, tenant on the Strait land while Frazers were the owners was going to put up gates and Chinn had told him if he put up a gate he would open it clear up, that he meant he would petition a road through there, that there is a trail west from his quarter across Thompson s land; that the road across the Strait property was closed last summer (1951) but the day and month was not stated. He further stated he had no conversations with Mr. and Mrs. Frazer about using the road in question but did ask her if hé could take up the fence and grade the road and she refused.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
250 P.2d 806, 173 Kan. 625, 1952 Kan. LEXIS 241, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/chinn-v-strait-kan-1952.