Finley v. Botto

327 P.2d 55, 161 Cal. App. 2d 614, 1958 Cal. App. LEXIS 1781
CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedJune 24, 1958
DocketCiv. 9286
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 327 P.2d 55 (Finley v. Botto) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering California Court of Appeal primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Finley v. Botto, 327 P.2d 55, 161 Cal. App. 2d 614, 1958 Cal. App. LEXIS 1781 (Cal. Ct. App. 1958).

Opinion

SCHOTTKY, J.

Plaintiffs commenced an action against defendants in which plaintiffs alleged that they owned an easement in a certain walkway lying between two apartment houses owned by the respective parties. Plaintiffs prayed for judgment quieting their title to said alleged easement and for an injunction compelling defendants to remove a fence constructed by defendants upon said walkway. Defendants in their answer denied that plaintiffs had any right to any easement. Following a trial the court entered judgment denying plaintiffs’ right to an easement and to an injunction, one of the findings of the court reading as follows:

“That the predecessors in interest of the parties to this action who owned the respective properties involved in this case when the space between the houses began to be used for walkway purposes by plaintiffs’ predecessors were congenial, cooperative neighbors, and such use was permitted by defendants’ predecessors as a gesture of good will and neighborly accommodation. That no claim of right was asserted by plaintiffs’ predecessors, nor was any indication ever brought to the notice of defendants or their predecessors that such a claim would or might be asserted, until defendants constructed a fence on their north property line in 1955, thus denying to plaintiffs the full use of the walkway, at which time plaintiff, Thomas Finley, did. to and in the presence of defendant, Daniel L. Botto, assert such a claim for the first time. This was approximately two months prior to the filing of this action, and therefore the Court concludes and finds that plaintiffs’ showing is lacking in essential factors that are necessary to *616 establish by prescription or adverse possession the right claimed by them.”

Plaintiffs have appealed from the judgment and contend most earnestly that ‘‘on the facts and as a matter of law, plaintiffs are entitled to a boundary line easement.” Before discussing the-specific contentions of appellants we shall summarize the evidence which is not in substantial dispute.

The appellants and the respondents are adjoining land-. owners. Appellants’ property lies to the north of that of the respondents. Each lot extends from E Street in the city of Marysville to a rear alley, and each contains an apartment building which is constructed close to the common boundary line. On appellants’ property, in addition to the apartment house, are three cottages which are in the rear of the apartment house. At the rear of the apartment building is a laundry room which is used by all the tenants of appellants. The distance between the two apartment buildings is four feet. The areaway between the two buildings was used by appellants’ tenants to reach the laundry room, and for the tenants of the cottages to reach E Street. In 1955, respondents erected a fence on their side of the boundary line. This fence is one foot south of appellants’ building and prevents easy access to the rear of the building. When the fence was constructed appellants voiced an objection and thereafter this suit was brought. It appears that at one time there was a brick wall dividing the properties at the boundary line and when the wall was in place it was impossible to walk from E Street to the rear of appellants’ property. The wall disintegrated and by 1939 was in bad shape. In 1941 there was no actual wall between the buildings but evidence remained that there had been one. After 1944 the then owner of respondents’ property completed the demolition of the wall and made the brick walkway, between the two apartment houses. The then owner of respondents’ property testified:

‘ ‘ [Mr. Weis] Q. Did anything occur which would indicate or convey to you any knowledge or impression that the Ertmodes were making or asserting a claim to an easement across your property?
“A. Of course not, no. It was a matter of we were just being neighborly and we wouldn’t have thought of anyone trying to make a legal claim to it. That would have been the last thing we would have expected.”

Appellants acquired the legal title to their property in 1949 and respondents acquired the. title to theirs in 1950. Appellant *617 Thomas Finley testified that his relations with respondents have always been friendly and that the first indication he gave to respondents that he claimed any easement over respondents’ part of the property was when respondents started to build the fence. Respondent Daniel L. Botto testified that the relationship between appellants and respondents after respondents acquired their property have been neighborly and friendly, and that appellants’ son had married respondents’ daughter.

Appellants first cite the following from a note in 27 A.L.R. 2d at page 341:

“In the great majority of instances in which a lane, private .road, alley, driveway, or passageway lying over and along the boundary between lots or tracts has been used without interruption by the adjoining owners for the full prescriptive period, and for a common purpose, and without any oral agreement therefor being shown, the user of each owner has been regarded as adverse to the other and the claim of prescriptive easement upheld as against any attempt to restrict or deny the use.’’

Appellants then state that in the case at bar the vital factors thus recognized in the great majority of American jurisdictions as creating an easement are present: (1) There is a passageway lying over and along the boundary between lots; (2) the passageway has been used without interruption between adjoining owners for the full prescriptive period, for a common purpose; and (3) no oral agreement for such use was shown on trial.

Appellants then argue that the user of each owner should be regarded as adverse to the other, and that plaintiff Finley’s claim to a prescriptive easement should be upheld as against any attempt to restrict or deny his use.

Appellants rely strongly on the case of Bernstein v. Dodik, 129 Cal.App. 454 [18 P.2d 983], in which plaintiffs sought to quiet title to an easement and to enjoin defendants from interfering therewith. Plaintiffs and defendants owned adjoining lots in a Los Angeles subdivision. A driveway had been constructed between the two lots, over and along the dividing line; a strip of 4.6 feet of the driveway was on one lot and a strip of 3.1 feet of driveway was on the other lot. Plaintiffs, and their predecessors, had made use of the way without oral agreement for more than five years. Defendants claimed that plaintiffs’ use was permissive; that there had not been communicated to defendants any knowledge that plaintiffs’ use was under claim of right. The trial court gave *618 judgment in favor of plaintiffs, and appellants quote from the opinion affirming the judgment, at page 458, as follows: ”... While it is a well-established principle that the use must be adverse, yet it is an equally well-established principle that where the use of the easement is continuous or openly and notoriously adverse to the owner, it creates the presumptive knowledge in him that the person using the easement is doing so under a claim of right.”

However, the appellate court also said, at page 457:

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Bluebook (online)
327 P.2d 55, 161 Cal. App. 2d 614, 1958 Cal. App. LEXIS 1781, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/finley-v-botto-calctapp-1958.