Earl v. Pavex

2013 MT 343
CourtMontana Supreme Court
DecidedNovember 12, 2013
Docket12-0466
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 2013 MT 343 (Earl v. Pavex) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Montana Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Earl v. Pavex, 2013 MT 343 (Mo. 2013).

Opinion

November 12 2013

DA 12-0466

IN THE SUPREME COURT OF THE STATE OF MONTANA 2013 MT 343

JAMES EARL and RACHEL E. EARL,

Plaintiffs, Appellees, & Cross-Appellants,

v.

PAVEX, CORP., an Arizona corporation licensed to do business in Montana,

Defendant, Appellant, & Cross-Appellee.

APPEAL FROM: District Court of the Sixteenth Judicial District, In and For the County of Rosebud, Cause No. DV 08-66 Honorable Joe L. Hegel, Presiding Judge

COUNSEL OF RECORD:

For Appellant:

Gerry P. Fagan, Brandon JT Hoskins, Moulton Bellingham PC, Billings, Montana

For Appellees:

Steven W. Jennings, Crowley Fleck PLLP, Billings, Montana

Submitted on Briefs: May 15, 2013 Decided: November 12, 2013

Filed:

__________________________________________ Clerk Justice Laurie McKinnon delivered the Opinion of the Court.

¶1 James and Rachel Earl commenced this action against Pavex Corporation in the

Sixteenth Judicial District Court, Rosebud County. The Earls sought declaratory rulings

concerning two overlapping easements—one 100 feet in width, the other 30 feet in

width—that burden the Earls’ land for the benefit of Pavex’s land. The Earls conceded

the 30-foot-wide easement but disputed the 100-foot-wide easement. They asserted that

the latter easement is unenforceable because it does not appear in the chain of title to the

Earls’ property. In the alternative, even if the 100-foot-wide easement is valid, the Earls

alleged that they are not required to remove structures and cropland that encroach upon

the 30-foot-wide and 100-foot-wide easements.

¶2 The District Court concluded that the 100-foot-wide easement does not burden the

Earls’ property and, thus, granted summary judgment to the Earls on this issue. The court

further concluded that the Earls may be required to remove structures and cropland from

the easements—the 30-foot-wide easement, as well as the 100-foot-wide easement if this

Court found the latter easement valid—to the extent necessary to effectuate the purposes

of the easements. The court thus granted summary judgment to Pavex on this issue.

¶3 Pavex now appeals from the District Court’s ruling that the 100-foot-wide

easement does not burden the Earls’ property, and the Earls cross-appeal from the court’s

ruling that encroachments may need to be removed. We address two issues: (1) whether

Pavex’s 100-foot-wide easement was extinguished by failure to properly record it, and

(2) whether encroachments need to be removed from Pavex’s easements. We reverse as

to Issue 1, affirm as to Issue 2, and remand for further proceedings as specified below.

2 BACKGROUND

¶4 The two parcels of land at issue in this case were previously held by Edward,

Mattie, Robert, Mary, Benjamin, and Kathyrn Keim as a single 390.841-acre tract

designated “Tract 1” on Certificate of Survey No. 85486, which is shown here:1

30-foot-wide easement 

Rosebud County Road #S-447 Tract 1  COS 85486

Tract 1 COS 85486

Tract 1  30-foot-wide easement COS 85486

 Rosebud County 30-foot-wide Road #S-447  easement

¶5 There is a 30-foot-wide easement over Tract 1 beginning at Rosebud County Road

#S-447 and running in easterly and northerly directions, as shown by the dashed line on

the diagram above. It appears from documents in the record that one of the Keims’ 1 The diagrams contained in this Opinion are part of the record in this case, with some labeling added for clarity.

3 predecessors in interest (Tongue River Farms, LLC) granted this easement in 1999 for

purposes of ingress, egress, and utilities to land north and west of Tract 1. As noted,

there is no dispute concerning the validity of this easement, although there is a dispute

concerning the need for the Earls to remove encroachments from it.

¶6 In 2006, the Keims executed Amended Certificate of Survey No. 85486/99927,

which divided Tract 1 into a 275.940-acre parcel designated Tract 1A and a 52.828-acre

parcel designated Tract 2A. (It appears the southernmost 62.073 acres of original Tract 1

had already been severed.) Amended Certificate of Survey No. 85486/99927 shows the

same 30-foot-wide easement over what is now Tract 2A and Tract 1A.

30-foot-wide easement  Tract 1A

30-foot-wide easement  Rosebud County Road #S-447  Tract 1A

 30-foot-wide easement Tract 2A

 30-foot-wide easement

4 ¶7 The Keims filed Amended Certificate of Survey No. 85486/99927 with the

Rosebud County Clerk and Recorder on August 16, 2006. Nine days later, on August 25,

the Keims conveyed Tract 1A to Pavex by a warranty deed which referenced Amended

Certificate of Survey No. 85486/99927. The Keims retained Tract 2A. In the deed, the

Keims granted Pavex a 100-foot-wide easement over Tract 2A, described as follows:

together with a non-exclusive, perpetual easement, 100 feet in width, running with the land, for ingress and egress, and for the installation, maintenance, repair and replacement of utilities, from the Tongue River Road to the aforesaid Tract 1A of COS 99927 along, over and beneath an existing roadway on the southerly boundary of [Tract 2A] . . . .

¶8 It appears from the foregoing description that the 100-foot-wide easement follows

the same course as the existing 30-foot-wide easement. Pavex’s owner, Siamak Samsam,

filed an affidavit in the present lawsuit stating that he insisted on the 100-foot-wide

easement over Tract 2A when he purchased Tract 1A. He explained that the extra width

is necessary to enable the passage of farm equipment and semi-trucks and trailers and that

the 30-foot-wide easement, in its existing configuration, is insufficient for this purpose.

¶9 The Keims-Pavex warranty deed was filed with the Rosebud County Clerk and

Recorder on September 15, 2006. Seven months later, in April 2007, the Keims entered

into a contract for deed for the sale of Tract 2A to the Earls. The contract for deed refers

to Amended Certificate of Survey No. 85486/99927 but makes no mention of the

100-foot-wide easement granted in the Keims-Pavex warranty deed.

¶10 The Earls assert that when they purchased Tract 2A, they had knowledge of the

30-foot-wide easement but were unaware of the 100-foot-wide easement. The Earls state

that they became aware of the latter easement in April 2008 when James Earl stopped a

5 motorist who was using the roadway over Tract 2A in order to reach Tract 1A. When

James asked the motorist what he was doing, the motorist (an associate of Pavex) replied

that Pavex holds a 100-foot-wide easement over the southern portion of Tract 2A and that

the Earls would need to remove their encroachments from this easement.

¶11 Following this encounter, the Earls contacted Pavex’s title company and inquired

about the alleged easement. The title company sent the Earls a copy of the deed in which

the Keims had granted Pavex the 100-foot-wide easement. The Earls then contacted their

own title company. They asserted that their title company had “missed” the Keims-Pavex

deed in the title search and demanded that the title company “fight to get this easement

off our land.”

¶12 The instant action was filed on July 1, 2008, seeking to invalidate Pavex’s claimed

100-foot-wide easement or, in the alternative, to obtain a ruling that the Earls are not

required to remove their structures and cropland from Pavex’s easement(s). The parties

filed cross-motions for summary judgment on both issues.

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2013 MT 343, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/earl-v-pavex-mont-2013.