Dayton v. Jordan

460 P.3d 525, 302 Or. App. 256
CourtCourt of Appeals of Oregon
DecidedFebruary 12, 2020
DocketA166490
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 460 P.3d 525 (Dayton v. Jordan) 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
Dayton v. Jordan, 460 P.3d 525, 302 Or. App. 256 (Or. Ct. App. 2020).

Opinion

Argued and submitted January 4, 2019, affirmed February 12, petition for review denied May 21, 2020 (366 or 492)

Stephen G. DAYTON and Carolyn LaVerne Dayton, Plaintiffs-Appellants, v. Randy JORDAN and Sun Buggy Fun Rentals, Inc., Defendants-Respondents. Coos County Circuit Court 14CV1087; A166490 460 P3d 525

Plaintiffs appeal from a judgment determining that defendants have an implied easement over a road on plaintiffs’ property. The trial court based its determination in part on a plat map on which the disputed road appears. Plaintiffs argue that the trial court erred in rejecting their contention that the easement is foreclosed by ORS 92.075, which requires that any easement created by a plat be stated by the declarant in a signed declaration. The plat on which the trial court relied does not include a declaration of an easement. In the absence of such a declaration, plaintiff contends, the plat cannot support the existence of an easement. Held: ORS 92.075 sets forth the legal requirements for establishing a plat, but does not foreclose the existence of an implied easement. In determining whether an implied easement exists, a court is not precluded from considering a plat that does not include the required declaration. The trial court correctly con- sidered the plat among the factors that led to its conclusion that defendants have an implied easement over the disputed road. Affirmed.

Paula M. Bechtold, Judge. George W. Kelly argued the cause and filed the briefs for appellants. William McDaniel argued the cause and filed the brief for respondents. Before Armstrong, Presiding Judge, and Tookey, Judge, and Shorr, Judge. TOOKEY, J. Affirmed. Cite as 302 Or App 256 (2020) 257

TOOKEY, J. This is the third appeal in a dispute over defen- dants’ use of a road over plaintiffs’ property for access to the Oregon Dunes National Recreation Area in conjunction with defendants’ business renting all-terrain vehicles (ATV) for recreational use. Plaintiffs appeal from a judgment deter- mining that defendants have an implied easement over the disputed road, arguing that the trial court erred in reject- ing plaintiffs’ contention that the easement is foreclosed by ORS 92.075,1 which requires that any easement created by a plat be stated by the declarant in a signed declaration. The appeal presents a question of statutory construction, which we review for errors of law. State v. Gaines, 346 Or 160, 171-72, 206 P3d 1042 (2009) (questions of statutory con- struction reviewed for errors of law, first examining the text and context of the statute and any useful legislative history to determine the legislature’s intent). We conclude that the trial court did not err and therefore affirm. The underlying facts have been described in two previous opinions, Dayton v. Jordan, 280 Or App 236, 381 P3d 1041 (2016) (Dayton II); Dayton v. Jordan, 279 Or App 737, 381 P3d 1031 (2016) (Dayton I), and the trial court also made findings, which we summarize here. Plaintiffs and defendants own adjacent properties in Coos County at the Oregon coast, to the west of Highway 101 and to the east of the Oregon Dunes National Recreational Area.2 On their properties, they operate businesses renting ATVs for recre- ational use on the sand dunes. Plaintiffs’ and defendants’ adjacent properties were once part of a larger common ownership of Pacific Coast Recreation RV, Inc. Pacific Coast operated an ATV rental

1 ORS 92.075 provides, in pertinent part: “(1) In order to subdivide or partition any property, the declarant shall include on the face of the subdivision or partition plat, if a partition plat is required, a declaration, taken before a notary public or other person autho- rized by law to administer oaths, stating that the declarant has caused the subdivision or partition plat to be prepared and the property subdivided or partitioned in accordance with the provisions of this chapter. Any dedication of land to public purposes or any public or private easements created, or any other restriction made, shall be stated in the declaration.” 2 A map of the properties is included as an appendix to this opinion. 258 Dayton v. Jordan

business on the portion of its property that is now owned by plaintiffs. In 1990, Pacific Coast acquired an easement appurtenant to all of its property over land to the west owned by Coos Bay Lumber, for recreational access to the dunes. The disputed road, which runs in an easterly- westerly direction along what is now the southern boundary of plaintiffs’ property, connects the Coos Bay Lumber ease- ment to Highway 101. Defendants’ only direct access from their property to the Coos Bay Lumber easement and the dunes is over the disputed road.3 Pacific Coast first partitioned its property in 1997, creating Parcel 603, to the south of the disputed road, toward the dunes and south and west of the parties’ prop- erties. Parcel 603 had access to the dunes and Highway 101 only over the disputed road, but the partition plat did not describe an easement over the disputed road. Plaintiffs concede that Parcel 603 has an easement over the disputed road. Pacific Coast made another partition in 1999, cre- ating two more parcels to the south of the disputed road— Parcel 606, which now belongs to defendants, and Parcel 607, immediately to the west of Parcel 606, which would have been landlocked without an easement over the dis- puted road. At that time, plaintiffs’ parcel, to the north of the newly created parcels, remained part of Pacific Coast’s larger undivided property. On a “Notice of Tentative Plat Approval” for the 1999 plat, the Coos County Planning Department included this requirement: “Because there is an existing private road to be used as access to the proposed parcels the subject parcels must enjoy non-exclusive easements covering the entire exist- ing private road being used to access the property being divided.” As part of the 1999 partition, Pacific Coast entered into an agreement with Coos County “To Maintain Right of Way and Hold Coos County Harmless,” which bound Pacific Coast and its successors to maintain the disputed road. Plaintiffs concede that Parcel 607 has an easement over the disputed 3 Defendants can drive approximately one mile on Highway 101 to a different access point. Cite as 302 Or App 256 (2020) 259

road; but they dispute that Parcel 606, now owned by defen- dants and created by the same partition, has an easement for use of the disputed road. In 2004, defendants’ immediate predecessor, Endicott, acquired Parcel 606 from Pacific Coast. The deed described the property by reference to the 1999 plat. At the time of sale, Endicott agreed that it would not engage in the busi- ness of recreational or ATV rentals for a period of 10 years. In 2005, Pacific Coast further partitioned its prop- erty, creating plaintiffs’ parcel, Parcel 600, and two other parcels. The 2005 partition plat depicts the disputed road running on and forming the southern boundary of Parcel 600. The plat also expressly grants easements over the road to the three newly created parcels, for ingress and egress to the sand dunes. In 2008, plaintiffs acquired Parcel 600 and Pacific Coast’s ATV rental business. In 2014, defendants acquired Parcel 606 from Endicott. The 10-year restriction on the use of the property for recreational or ATV rentals had expired, and defendants sought to develop the parcel for their ATV rental business.

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Bluebook (online)
460 P.3d 525, 302 Or. App. 256, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/dayton-v-jordan-orctapp-2020.