Corey v. United Savings Bank, Mutual

628 P.2d 739, 52 Or. App. 263, 1981 Ore. App. LEXIS 2491
CourtCourt of Appeals of Oregon
DecidedMay 18, 1981
Docket109250 CA 18015
StatusPublished
Cited by8 cases

This text of 628 P.2d 739 (Corey v. United Savings Bank, Mutual) 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
Corey v. United Savings Bank, Mutual, 628 P.2d 739, 52 Or. App. 263, 1981 Ore. App. LEXIS 2491 (Or. Ct. App. 1981).

Opinions

[265]*265BUTTLER, J.

Plaintiffs appeal from a trial court decree declaring that they have no right to an easement of access between their property and that of defendant and denying plaintiffs an injunction. Plaintiffs contend on appeal that the evidence was sufficient to establish plaintiffs’ right to an express easement over the property in question, or that plaintiffs are entitled to an irrevocable license in the nature of an easement because of substantial expenditures they claim to have made in reliance on defendant’s predecessor’s promise to permit common access. We affirm.

Plaintiffs purchased their parcel in 1959 and erected and operated a fast-food restaurant thereon the following year. At that time the parcels which adjoin plaintiffs’ comer parcel were used as a tree nursery and pasture. Sometime prior to 1964, defendant’s predecessor, Far West Properties, Inc., purchased the two adjoining parcels and developed them as a shopping center. Incidental to that development, Far West and plaintiffs exchanged two small parcels of their respective lands of approximate equal area. This exchange was mutually beneficial in that it squared off plaintiffs’ parcel and gave Far West ownership of a finger of land, originally part of plaintiffs’ land, which jutted into defendant’s parcel. Plaintiffs contend that at the time of the exchange, it was agreed that the parties would have mutual access between the properties along their common north boundary.

In support of their contention, plaintiffs offered a letter dated July 1,1964, purportedly signed by an employe of Far West. After referring to the improvement plan and the exchange of parcels, that letter states:

"If you agree to allow common access along the North side of your property (except the incinerator area), we will tile the creek, remove your concrete curb and wood fence and pave to, and match, your existing asphalt pavement in such a manner as to minimize the possibility of our yard drainage entering your property. The tiling will extend to the Northwest comer of your new property and South from that point a sufficient distance to eliminate any chance for erosion around your incinerator area. If this common access arrangement goes into effect, we will not put in the concrete wall and wood fence North of your incinerator, [266]*266but rather we will incorporate the paving around your incinerator with our parking paving and install as much of the North fence, which we have removed, as necessary to enclose your incinerator on the North, West and South sides.
"We are looking forward to a harmonious, equitable relationship with you, and hope that this letter will be sufficient assurance of our good intent to allow you to execute the deed in our behalf and authorize us to proceed with the common access operation.”

The exchange deeds were recorded on July 15, 1964; however, neither deed mentioned any easement or agreement between the parties. Pursuant to the letter, the improvements to plaintiffs’ property and the common boundary were made by Far West; they created a continuous asphalt surface over which cars could pass. Lines for parking slots were painted on the shopping center property, including along a portion of the plaintiffs’ north boundary; all of the parking alleys running in an east-west direction terminated at the west end approximately 60 feet from the west boundary nearest the street, leaving an aisle open to permit passage of traffic. An arrow was painted on the shopping center lot in that aisle to direct traffic, including that coming from the direction of plaintiffs’ premises, to the south.

In 1965, Far West conveyed the property to D & L Properties, Inc., which, in turn, conveyed it, to the trustee of a testamentary trust in 1971.1 Defendant bought the land in 1974. Plaintiffs admit that no mention of an easement in their favor appears in any deed or other recorded instrument.

In 1978, defendant resolved to build a branch bank on the part of the parking lot adjacent to plaintiffs’ premises. Part of that plan was to construct a five-foot high wall along the boundary line, which would cut off access between the shopping center and plaintiff s’ land. When plaintiffs learned of this proposal, they brought this lawsuit to enjoin defendant from erecting the wall or otherwise disrupting use of the access.

[267]*267The trial court found that the letter quoted above and full performance of the agreement were sufficient to overcome defendant’s objection that the transaction failed to comply with the statute of frauds. The court held, however, that the language of the letter evidenced only an intent to create an easement of access in the shopping center and its customers, not to create a "reciprocal servitude.” Defendant, as holder of the dominant estate, was therefore free to terminate the easement at any time. The court held further that, assuming the language was broad enough to evidence an easement in favor of plaintiffs, there was insufficient evidence to show that the purchasers from Far West in 1965 and 1971 had notice sufficient to require them to inquire into the possible existence of an easement.

We agree with the trial court’s conclusions, although it may be only a matter of semantics whether the letter was a sufficient memorandum in general, but not a sufficient, or any, memorandum to charge the Far West property with a perpetual easement in favor of plaintiffs’ property.

Aside from the exchange of land between plaintiffs and Far West, which stood on its own merit and was for the benefit of both parties, the letter does not grant, or even agree to grant, any interest of any kind in the Far West shopping center property. The critical language of the letter is: "If you [plaintiffs] agree to allow common access along the North side of your property (except the incinerator area), we will tile the creek, * * (Emphasis supplied.) It is clear from that language that Far West sought permission to allow cars from plaintiffs’ property to pass into the Far West shopping center property for the benefit of Far West, in consideration for which Far West agreed to do certain things for plaintiffs, all of which were specifically set forth in the letter and none of which included the granting of any easement or servitude over Far West’s property for the benefit of plaintiffs’ property.

The letter, therefore, is not a sufficient memorandum to charge Far West with an obligation to provide any form of easement or servitude over the shopping center property in favor of plaintiffs’ property, and there was no other writing between the parties with respect to this [268]*268matter. That letter would be a thin reed, indeed, on which to hang the burden of a perpetual easement over defendant’s property for plaintiffs’ benefit. The use to which defendant’s property could be put would be forever limited — and with little, if any, apparent countervailing advantage to plaintiffs unless defendant is required to continue the property’s use as a shopping center with substantial parking available. Certainly, no such requirement exists. If defendant constructs an office building on the property, must it provide a tunnel access through the building for plaintiffs’ access? Such questions are endless. ORS 41.580(5) provides:

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Corey v. United Savings Bank, Mutual
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Bluebook (online)
628 P.2d 739, 52 Or. App. 263, 1981 Ore. App. LEXIS 2491, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/corey-v-united-savings-bank-mutual-orctapp-1981.