Ditzian v. Unger

243 Cal. Rptr. 3d 322, 31 Cal. App. 5th 738
CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal, 5th District
DecidedJanuary 24, 2019
DocketA152946
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 243 Cal. Rptr. 3d 322 (Ditzian v. Unger) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering California Court of Appeal, 5th District primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Ditzian v. Unger, 243 Cal. Rptr. 3d 322, 31 Cal. App. 5th 738 (Cal. Ct. App. 2019).

Opinion

SIMONS, J.

*740Appellant Steve Unger (appellant) and respondents Jason and Lauren Ditzian (respondents) own neighboring parcels in Mendocino County. The scenic sand dunes of MacKerricher State Park are behind the parcels, and respondents historically accessed the dunes via a path that runs along the parties' property line, then crosses appellant's property, and then crosses the parcel of another neighbor. In October 2015, appellant erected a fence that blocked respondents' access to the dunes via the property line path. Respondents brought suit and the trial court granted respondents a prescriptive easement allowing them and their invitees (including Airbnb guests) to use the path. Among other things, appellant contends the easement is a public easement prohibited by Civil Code section 1009.1 We affirm.

BACKGROUND

In June 2016, respondents filed suit against appellant, seeking to establish a prescriptive easement allowing them to cross appellant's parcel on a path leading to MacKerricher State Park. Respondents' complaint alleged that in October 2015 appellant constructed a fence along the parties' property line that blocked access to the state park. The complaint alleged respondents had *741acquired a prescriptive easement through "open, notorious, continuous, and adverse" use of the path for "an uninterrupted period of five years" by themselves and the predecessor owners of respondents' property.

At trial in April 2017, respondents first called appellant as an adverse witness. He bought his Mendocino property in 2006. At the time, Jack and Hyla Bolsta (the Bolstas) owned the property now owned by respondents; Anna Moody is another neighbor. Appellant acknowledged the Bolstas had accessed the state park dunes by crossing his property. It was also necessary to then cross the parcel owned by Ms. Moody to reach the dunes.

Aharon Bolsta, the son of the predecessor owners, testified on respondents' behalf. His parents purchased the Mendocino property in 1998 or 1999. He first visited the property in 1999, and thereafter visited at a "minimum three times a year, sometimes up to five times a year. The holidays, birthdays, whenever I could visit from the Bay Area." He usually stayed for three or four days, and he also lived there from May to October/November 2000 and from July to November 2011. When he visited his parents used the path to the dunes that crossed appellant's property "[a]lmost every day."2 The Bolstas were friends with the prior owner of appellant's property, Romana Downie. The Bolstas moved from *325the property in around 2013. Aharon Bolsta's parents were deceased at the time of trial.

Respondent Jason Ditzian testified he bought the Bolstas' property in 2013. Mr. Ditzian, who was friends with Aharon Bolsta, began coming to the Bolstas' Mendocino property in summer 2008. From 2008 to 2013, he visited the Bolstas two or three times a year. During those visits, he would take the path across appellant's property to the dunes, either by himself or with the Bolstas. Following purchase of the property from the Bolstas, he lived there part time between February and May 2013, and he lived on the property full time between May 2013 and summer 2016.

Jason Ditzian testified that in September or October 2015, while he and Lauren were on their honeymoon, appellant built a fence that blocked the path providing access to the dunes from respondents' parcel. Previously, Mr. Ditzian had never encountered any obstructions to using that path to the dunes, he had never seen any "no trespassing" signs, and he had never been told he could not use the path.

*742Respondent Lauren Ditzian testified she married Jason in September 2015.3 She lived on the Mendocino property full time from May 2014 through the summer 2016, and has visited about once a month since then. When she lived on the property (and during previous visits to the property), she used the path to the dunes across appellant's land "[s]everal times a week," until appellant put up a fence. Previously, she had encountered no obstacles and had never been told she could not walk on the path, either the part crossing appellant's land or the part crossing Ms. Moody's parcel.

Beginning in July 2015, respondents began hosting vacation renters at their Mendocino property through Airbnb. By the time of trial, 146 separate Airbnb reservations had been made. In September 2016, respondents were cited by the Mendocino County Department of Planning & Building Services for not having a permit to have paying overnight guests at their property. Respondent Jason Ditzian testified he was remedying the situation and the County was aware respondents continued to have Airbnb guests.

Appellant presented the testimony of the prior owner of his parcel, Romana Downie. She continued to reside on the parcel, after sale to appellant in 2006. Ms. Downie testified she and her husband built a path to the dunes in 1991. This is not the path that is the subject of the easement at issue in the present case, which runs along the property line. The path they built was "somewhere in the middle of the property;" she knew nothing about a path running "along the boundary line of [her] property." Ms. Downie told the Bolstas they could use the path she and her husband built.

The trial court issued a detailed ruling finding in favor of respondents. After describing the evidence presented at trial, the trial court found respondents had made the showing required to establish a prescriptive easement on a path leading to the dunes along the parties' property line. Among other things, the court "credit[ed] the testimony of Aharon Bolsta that both he and his parents regularly traversed the subject path dating as far back as 1998." Reflecting on a site visit to respondents' Mendocino property, the trial court observed, "Hiking out to the dunes is the greatest highlight of living on or visiting the property. Enjoyment of that natural *326resource is presumably why the parties bought the property in the first place. It would be more startling and unexpected if no one ever bothered to hike out to the dunes on a regular basis." The court also observed the path was "very evident" and "well-trodden," and it was "obvious[ ]" the path had long been used to access the dunes. The court also rejected other contentions made by appellant, including that section 1009 precluded formation of an easement, that the Airbnb rentals *743substantially increased the burden of the easement, and that the doctrine of unclean hands justified denial of the requested easement.

In September 2017, the trial court entered judgment in favor of respondents, granting them "an easement along the pathway which originates on their land and traverses that of defendant along the boundary line between the two properties." The judgment specified that the easement extended to "[respondents], personal invitees, and business invitees, but only while such business invitees are residing on the property." The present appeal followed.

DISCUSSION

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
243 Cal. Rptr. 3d 322, 31 Cal. App. 5th 738, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/ditzian-v-unger-calctapp5d-2019.