CORBETT v. COFFMAN

2014 OK CIV APP 58, 329 P.3d 764, 2014 WL 2735669, 2014 Okla. Civ. App. LEXIS 35
CourtCourt of Civil Appeals of Oklahoma
DecidedMay 9, 2014
Docket111,251
StatusPublished

This text of 2014 OK CIV APP 58 (CORBETT v. COFFMAN) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Civil Appeals of Oklahoma primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
CORBETT v. COFFMAN, 2014 OK CIV APP 58, 329 P.3d 764, 2014 WL 2735669, 2014 Okla. Civ. App. LEXIS 35 (Okla. Ct. App. 2014).

Opinion

KENNETH L. BUETTNER, Judge.

11 Defendant/Appellant Joe Coffman appeals from a judgment directing that a road through his property must be kept open as a *765 public road until officially vacated by the county and enjoining Coffman from preventing Plaintiff/Appellee Joe Corbett from using the road. The record shows that although the road was occasionally gated, it remained in use and therefore had not been abandoned. The trial court's decision is not clearly against the weight of the evidence or contrary to law and we affirm.

2 In his Petition, Corbett alleged that he and Coffman owned adjacent property in McCurtain County. Corbett alleged that for ingress and egress he had used a public road which went through Coffman's property until Coffman prevented Corbett from using the road. Corbett sought to enjoin Coffman from interfering with public use of the road.

18 Coffman denied Corbett's allegations. For his counter-claim, Coffman alleged that Corbett's claim was a cloud on his title. Coffman claimed both to have obtained the land by warranty deed and by adverse possession. Coffman asserted he and his predecessors had allowed others to use the road across his property by agreement for over fifty years. He asserted his counsel had prepared an "Agreement Regarding Road Easement for Ingress and Egress" which would grant Corbett the same use of the road. Coffman denied the road on his property was public and denied that anyone had obtained an easement by prescription over the road on his property. Coffman asserted he consented to judgment granting Corbett the easement described in the agreement he prepared, but otherwise sought to have titled quieted in his favor. Corbett answered and denied the allegations in Coffman's counterclaim.

{4 Bench trial was held September 25, 2012. In its Order Nunc Pro Tunc, the trial court found that prior to 1967, State Highway 98 was on a section line running south from Highway 70 toward the Red River, and approximately a mile before the river, Highway 98 left the section line and ran east through the southwest corner of Section 5-8S-22E until it ended at Highway 37. The court noted that on July 10, 1967, the State Highway Commission moved the junction of Highways 98 and 87 to the north and therefore transferred this 1.3 mile segment of road to MeCurtain County for maintenance or abandonment. The court and the parties referred to the disputed road as the "gravel cut-through." The court found that MeCur-tain County maintained it until sometime in the 1980s, when the owners placed gates at both ends, but the gravel cut-through remained on the county's road inventory and the county obtained funds for it until ODOT removed it from the inventory in 2000 because of the gates. The court found the county had never taken formal action to abandon the gravel eut-through. The court next found that Corbett had viewed the property before purchasing it and saw the south gate to the gravel cut-through was open, but that there was no evidence as to whether Corbett viewed the north gate before the purchase. The court found Coffman purchased his property in 1990 and he contended the gravel cut-through was abandoned by the county over 20 years ago.

15 The trial court noted the question of law presented was whether the gravel cut-through was a public road or had been abandoned by the county. The court found that one mile of the gravel cut-through runs along the section line, and the remaining three-tenths of a mile cuts diagonally across Coff-man's property. The court addressed those two segments separately. The court noted that the gravel cut-through is in the Choctaw Nation and found that, pursuant to the Civilized Tribes Allotment Act of 1906, section line roads in the Choctaw Nation may not be vacated or abandoned. The trial court concluded therefore that the one mile segment which is on the section line remains a public road and Coffman could not deny Corbett access to that segment for ingress or egress.

T 6 In addressing the .3 mile portion of the gravel cut-through which leaves the section line and crosses Coffman's property in the southwest corner of Section 5, the court found that road had been treated as a public road for many years, and originated as a route to the ferry crossing the Red River. The court noted there was no evidence as to why the road diverged from the section line. The court found that when the Highway Commission moved the junction of Highways 98 and 37 in 1967, it officially abandoned the *766 gravel cut-through and transferred it to the county. The court found that the county added it to its inventory and maintained it and that the public traveled on it for several years after. Therefore the court concluded that the moved highway connection did not amount to an abandonment of the old road.

T7 The court next noted authority that once a road has been dedicated to public use, it remains a public road until official action by the county changes that status, citing 69 0.8.2011 § 646. The court concluded that the gravel cut-through was a dedicated and maintained public road which the State properly abandoned to the county and which stayed on the county's inventory until ODOT discovered the gates and directed the county to remove it from its inventory in 2000. The court noted the statutory procedures for opening or vacating public roads not on seetion lines, and found those procedures were not followed here. The court concluded, therefore, that the .3 mile segment remained a public road because the county had not taken formal, statutory action to vacate the road. The court directed that the 1.83 mile gravel cut-through remained a public road and imposed a permanent injunction against Coffman impeding Corbett's use of the road. Coffman appeals.

18 The award of a permanent injunction is a matter of equitable cognizance in which we will not disturb the trial court's decision unless it is clearly against the weight of the evidence or contrary to law. Jackson v. Williams, 1985 OK 103, 714 P.2d 1017, 1020 (footnotes omitted). - Coffman does not dispute the trial court's findings of fact. 1 Coffman also does not challenge the trial court's findings as to the one mile segment which is on the section line. He challenges only the trial court's decision that the remaining .3 mile segment of the gravel cut-through could be abandoned only by official county action. 2 Coffman contends that abandonment may be shown by conduct as well.

9 The record shows no dispute that the cut-through was previously part of the state highway system and then in 1967 was properly abandoned by the state and transferred to the county "for further maintenance or abandonment" and thereby became part of the county's road inventory and was maintained by the county until at least the 19803; necessarily it was a public road. 69 0.8.2011 § 282; Op.Atty.Gen.2008-10. The question presented here is whether a public road may lose that status without official county action to remove the road from public use. The statutory procedure for counties to vacate public roads is set out in 69 0.S8.2011 § 646. That section provides, in pertinent part (emphasis supplied):

A. The board of county commissioners may open, establish, reserve or condemn roads on section lines and may vacate, alter, widen, change or lay out other new roads according to the following procedure:

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Related

Jackson v. Williams
1985 OK 103 (Supreme Court of Oklahoma, 1985)
Oldfield v. Donelson
1977 OK 104 (Supreme Court of Oklahoma, 1977)
Wetsel v. Johnson
1970 OK 69 (Supreme Court of Oklahoma, 1970)
Salyer v. Jackson
1924 OK 1173 (Supreme Court of Oklahoma, 1924)
Hillsdale Co. v. Zorn
1939 OK 553 (Supreme Court of Oklahoma, 1939)

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Bluebook (online)
2014 OK CIV APP 58, 329 P.3d 764, 2014 WL 2735669, 2014 Okla. Civ. App. LEXIS 35, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/corbett-v-coffman-oklacivapp-2014.