Farnsworth v. Meadowland Ranches, Inc.

519 P.3d 153, 321 Or. App. 814
CourtCourt of Appeals of Oregon
DecidedSeptember 21, 2022
DocketA175091
StatusPublished
Cited by14 cases

This text of 519 P.3d 153 (Farnsworth v. Meadowland Ranches, Inc.) 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
Farnsworth v. Meadowland Ranches, Inc., 519 P.3d 153, 321 Or. App. 814 (Or. Ct. App. 2022).

Opinion

Argued and submitted May 31, affirmed September 21, 2022

Allen FARNSWORTH and Stephanie Farnsworth, Plaintiffs-Respondents, v. MEADOWLAND RANCHES, INC., an Oregon Corporation et al., Defendants, and Patrick O. McPURDY and Rose Marie McPurdy, Defendants-Appellants. Harney County Circuit Court 19CV18173; A175091 519 P3d 153

Plaintiffs, the Farnsworths, and defendants, the McPurdys, own neighbor- ing properties outside Burns. Both properties used to be part of a larger plot that Meadowland purchased in the 1960s with the intention of subdividing it. Meadowland partitioned and sold over 1,400 parcels before its administrative dissolution in 1982, but it never recorded a plat with the county, and the deeds that it recorded do not reference any map or plat. In both the original 1971 deed for plaintiffs’ property and the original 1978 deed for defendants’ property, Meadowland reserved “an easement of forty feet (40 feet) along all boundaries for public highway use in common with others, with power to dedicate.” In recent years, a dispute arose between plaintiffs and defendants regarding the use of a road on the eastern edge of plaintiffs’ property. Plaintiffs brought this quiet- title action, asserting an exclusive right to use the road, and defendants counter- claimed, seeking a declaration that they “enjoy a valid easement.” After a bench trial, the trial court ruled in plaintiffs’ favor. On appeal, defendants contend that they were legally entitled to judgment in their favor. Held: The trial court did not err. First, it did not err in concluding that an express easement had not been proved, because the reservation in the original deeds was an easement in gross, personal to Meadowland. Second, it did not err in concluding that an implied public easement had not been proved, given its express and implied factual find- ings. Third, it did not err in rejecting defendants’ third-party beneficiary theory, which was premised on the existence of an express or implied public easement. Finally, it did not err in concluding that an implied public dedication had not been proved, because Meadowland never recorded a plat or otherwise clearly and unequivocally manifested to the public an intention to dedicate the entire outer 40 feet of each parcel as public roads. Affirmed.

W. D. Cramer, Jr., Judge. Cite as 321 Or App 814 (2022) 815

Dominic M. Carollo argued the cause for appellants. Also on the briefs was Carollo Law Group. Shawn E. Logan argued the cause and filed the answer- ing brief for respondents. Also on the supplemental brief was Logan & Copple, P.C. Before James, Presiding Judge, and Aoyagi, Judge, and Joyce, Judge. AOYAGI, J. Affirmed. 816 Farnsworth v. Meadowland Ranches, Inc.

AOYAGI, J. This case involves a dispute between neighboring landowners regarding who may use a gravel road located on plaintiffs’ property (the Road). Plaintiffs Allen and Stephanie Farnsworth and defendants Patrick and Rose McPurdy own neighboring properties. Both properties were once owned by Meadowland Ranches, Inc. (Meadowland). In the original deeds conveying them, Meadowland reserved “an easement of forty feet (40 feet) along all boundaries for public highway use in common with others, with power to dedicate.” Plaintiffs brought this action to quiet title to their property, asserting an exclusive right to use the Road. Defendants counterclaimed, seeking a declaration that defendants “enjoy a valid easement” over the Road.1 After a bench trial, the trial court found in plaintiffs’ favor. Defendants appeal the resulting judgment. For the follow- ing reasons, we affirm. I. FACTS “In reviewing a trial court’s determinations follow- ing a bench trial, we review the trial court’s explicit and implicit findings of fact for any evidence in the record to sup- port them, and the legal consequences of those facts for legal error.” Pistol Resources, LLC v. McNeely, 312 Or App 627, 629, 496 P3d 28 (2021) (internal quotation marks omitted). We state the facts, briefly, in accordance with that standard.2 In the early 1960s, Meadowland purchased a large plot of land outside Burns and planned to develop it. Meadowland partitioned the property and sold over 1,400 parcels before its administrative dissolution in 1982. Each deed contained the following reservation: “Reserving therefrom an easement of forty feet (40 feet) along all boundaries for public highway use in common with

1 The McPurdys were not the only defendants in the action, but they are the only defendants who appealed the judgment, so we limit our discussion to the claims against and by the McPurdys. All references to “defendants” herein are to the McPurdys. 2 We do not understand defendants to request de novo review, nor would de novo review be warranted here. See ORS 19.415(3) (allowing discretionary de novo review in certain types of cases); ORAP 5.40(8)(c) (stating that we will exercise that discretion “only in exceptional cases”). Cite as 321 Or App 814 (2022) 817

others, with power to dedicate, and, excepting therefrom all petroleum, oil, minerals, and products derived therefrom, within or underlying said land or that may be produced therefrom and all rights thereto; and further reserving a right of way, with right of entry upon, over, under, along, across, and through the said land for the purpose of erect- ing, constructing, operating, repairing and maintaining pole lines with cross arms for the transmission of electrical energy, and for telephone lines, and/or for laying, repairing, operating and renewing, any pipe line or lines for water, gas or sewerage, and any conduits for electric or telephone wires, and/or a right-of-way along, across, and through said land for the purpose of constructing irrigation and drain- age ditches or other facilities, and reserving to the Seller the sole right to convey the rights hereby reserved.” (Emphases added.) Despite its plans, Meadowland never recorded a plat with the county, and the deeds do not reference any map or plat. A 1963 map titled “Meadowland Ranches Road Map” was found in Meadowland’s file on the county’s website and admitted at trial; that map shows a combination of exist- ing and proposed paved, gravel, and other roads running through the planned development, some of which exist today. However, beyond whatever the deeds themselves accomplish, Meadowland never conveyed any easement rights to anyone, nor did it formally dedicate any roads. Consequently, as the trial court put it, “The Meadowland Ranches venture has left a legacy of confusion, frustration, uncertainty, and in this instance litigation.”3 The dispute that gave rise to this litigation arose more than 50 years after Meadowland embarked on its devel- opment. In 2007, defendants purchased Tax Lot 300 (orig- inally deeded in 1978), and, in 2009, plaintiffs purchased Tax Lot 1000 (originally deeded in 1971). The properties are located outside Burns, in an area south of Highway 20 E, and both are large parcels (20 or 40 acres). The original deeds for both properties contain Meadowland’s standard 3 This is not the first time that property owners have looked to the courts to resolve road access disputes in the Meadowland development. See Williams v. Harrsch, 297 Or 1, 9, 681 P2d 119 (1984) (holding that the plaintiffs had failed to prove that they and the public had a prescriptive easement to use a certain road on land sold by Meadowland). 818 Farnsworth v. Meadowland Ranches, Inc.

reservation provision quoted above. It is undisputed that both parties took title to their respective properties subject to that deed reservation. The parties have not pointed us to any useful map in the trial court record, nor have we found one, so we must try to convey the lay of the land in words, based on the trial testimony.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
519 P.3d 153, 321 Or. App. 814, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/farnsworth-v-meadowland-ranches-inc-orctapp-2022.