Curtman v. Piezuch

494 S.W.2d 668, 1973 Mo. App. LEXIS 1244
CourtMissouri Court of Appeals
DecidedApril 24, 1973
DocketNo. 34933
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 494 S.W.2d 668 (Curtman v. Piezuch) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Missouri Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Curtman v. Piezuch, 494 S.W.2d 668, 1973 Mo. App. LEXIS 1244 (Mo. Ct. App. 1973).

Opinion

SIMEONE, Judge.

Plaintiffs-appellants, Wendell and Betty Curtman, brought this action to establish a private road, pursuant to Sec. 228.340, RS Mo 1969, V.A.M.S., over the land owned by defendant-respondent, Raymond Pie-zuch. After a hearing the trial court found the issues in favor of the defendant-respondent, Piezuch, and found that the evidence did not sustain the petition for the establishment of a private road as prayed for. Judgment was entered accordingly. The Curtmans appealed. We affirm.

In order to obtain a clearer picture of the facts a brief description of the various tracts may be helpful. The Curtmans are the owners of the north half of the southwest quarter of Section 14, Township 42 North, Range 5 west of the principal meridian. The defendant Piezuch owns land directly south of the Curtmans. Mr. L. Howard owns land north of the Curtman farm through which an “old road” passes. Property referred to as the Wacker property (owned by Elvin Carroll) is directly west of the Curtman and Piezuch lands. South of the Wacker and Piezuch properties are lands owned by F. Nicks and C. Branson. The Branson property is directly south of the Piezuch property and the Nicks property intersects at the southwest corner of the Piezuch property. A portion of plaintiffs’ exhibit showing the relative positions of the lands follows:

The plaintiffs filed their petition for the establishment of a private road alleging that they were the owners of land in Gasconade County and that no public roadway passed through or along their land; that a county road is situated nearby which is south of the plaintiffs’ land and that Piezuch is the owner of the land through which they seek to establish the private road. They alleged that the road they seek to establish through Piezuch’s property is a way of strict necessity and prayed the court to appoint commissioners to view the premises and mark out the road and assess the damages of the defendant. In answer Piezuch denied that no public way passes through the Curt-mans’ property and affirmatively pleaded that the Curtmans have an outlet from their property leading to the county road. Pie-zuch pleaded that the road, proposed by the plaintiffs was not the most practical and feasible route upon which to construct and maintain a road from their property to the county road.

[670]*670The evidence showed that the Curtmans purchased their eighty-acre tract of land situated about two and one-half miles northeast of Owensville, Missouri from Mr. Thomas M. Hibler about two years prior to the trial which was held in September, 1970. At the time of the trial the Curtmans had not lived on it since buying it. At the time of their .purchase the only access was a road (known as the “old road”) to the north across the land owned by Mr. Howard. This road is approximately six to eight feet in width and has five gates which are marked “private” or “keep closed.” When the Curtmans purchased the property Mr. Howard, according to Mr. Curtman, told him that he wouldn’t make him any promises with respect to the use of the road across Howard’s land. Mr. Curtman testified that he had not been “prevented . from using this road.” To use the old road takes about thirty minutes tO' travel to the county road, but if the Curtmans could establish the new road as a private road their travel would be shortened by about two miles. The road proposed would start from the southwest corner of the Curtman property and go south along the western part of the Piezuch property until it encountered a clay pit; it would then require a jog of about 127 feet and go south some 374 feet and then jog back to the west line some 90 feet. The county surveyor testified that he thought it would be best to build the road on the Piezuch tract because if it were taken on the west side of the property (the Wacker tract) it would have to cross a creek, go around a clay pit which is partially located on the Wacker property and then go around a bend that is on the Nicks’ property to the south. The surveyor admitted that the shortest route would be from the southwest corner of the appellants’ property to the southeast corner of the Wacker property, then west 500 feet along Wacker’s southern boundary to a county road.

Mr. Thomas Hibler, an elderly gentleman who sold the land to the Curtmans and was born and. raised on the Curtman land, had used the “old road” over the Howard property for some sixty years and could remember the old road for some eighty years. He indicated that the gates were put up about twenty years ago. When the gates were put up Mr. Hibler talked to Mr. Howard and asked if he was being locked out. Howard replied “If I want to I will.” Putting up the gates brought about some controversy; no litigation ensued and the Hiblers continued to use the old road.

Mr. Piezuch was born and raised on his land and has lived on it for at least fifty years. He and others have used the old road without permission from Howard. The signs were put up about one and one-half or two years prior to the trial, although the gates had apparently been there for years. According to Mr. Piezuch the old road was the access road for the Curtman farm for fifty years. He stated that on his land there is a large clay pit about 160 feet in diameter with 90 feet on his side. This pit is for watering livestock. The water in the clay pit is the only supply when it is dry. He contended that if the proposed road was established it would be necessary to jog around the pit and such a proposed road would cause him damage, detract from the value of his farm (about $4,000) and would be inconvenient to him. The plaintiffs had proposed that in order for Mr. Piezuch to obtain water from the pit a gravity type water system be established so that the water could be used. But Piezuch contended that the gravity flow system would require constant attention and would freeze in cold weather. He urged that a road could be established on property immediately west of his land, on land owned by Wacker. On that land the road would swerve only a few feet around the clay pit and would not deprive Wacker of any water supply because of the contour of the pit at that point.

Eight witnesses testified that the old road had been in use for forty to sixty years and had been used without obtaining the permission of or interference from the owners of the Howard farm.

[671]*671The appellants contend that the court erred in rendering judgment for the defendant because they have no reasonable, practical or legally enforceable way to' and from their land, and because the evidence clearly shows that there is no more reasonable and practical location for the establishment of the road.

The respondent urges the trial court did not err because the road prayed for was not a way of necessity and because there was a more reasonable and practical location for the establishment of the road.

Appellants originally filed their appeal in the Supreme Court on January 14, 1971, prior to the adoption of a constitutional amendment effective January 1, 1972. In Curtman v. Piezuch, 484 S.W.2d 181 (Mo.1972), the Supreme Court held that it did not have jurisdiction under Mo.Const. Art. V, Sec. 3 since “ . . . the title to real estate is not involved herein, though it may be affected by the outcome of the suit.” Curtman, supra at 181. The cause was then transferred to this court.

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Bluebook (online)
494 S.W.2d 668, 1973 Mo. App. LEXIS 1244, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/curtman-v-piezuch-moctapp-1973.