Firebaugh v. Boring

607 P.2d 155, 288 Or. 607, 1980 Ore. LEXIS 746
CourtOregon Supreme Court
DecidedFebruary 26, 1980
DocketCC 77-578, CA 11050, SC 26139
StatusPublished
Cited by13 cases

This text of 607 P.2d 155 (Firebaugh v. Boring) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Oregon Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Firebaugh v. Boring, 607 P.2d 155, 288 Or. 607, 1980 Ore. LEXIS 746 (Or. 1980).

Opinion

*609 PETERSON, J.

In 1977 the defendants deposited a load of dirt in a private roadway, preventing the plaintiffs from using the roadway to reach their house, which was then under construction. The plaintiffs removed the dirt and thereafter filed this suit to (1) quiet title to a claimed prescriptive easement in the plaintiffs over the defendants’ land, and (2) to enjoin defendants permanently from blocking or interfering with the easement. The trial court granted the requested relief, and the defendants appealed. The Court of Appeals reversed, holding "that the easement over defendants’ land was for the special purpose of access to and from the water reservoir, and that when the reservoir property was sold and was no longer used as a reservoir, the easement was terminated.” 39 Or App 189, 192, 591 P2d 421 (1979). We granted review to consider this question: Is a prescriptive easement extinguished by reason of a change in the condition or use of the dominant estate, absent any increased burden upon the servient estate?

THE FACTS

For over 40 years the plaintiffs and their predecessors in interest used a roadway over the defendants’ property for access to a water storage reservoir on the plaintiffs’ property. The Cannon Beach Water Company, plaintiffs’ predecessor, first used the road in the early 1920’s and continued to use the road until the water company and its assets were purchased by plaintiff Firebaugh and his father in the mid-1930’s, who continued to use the roadway. In 1972, the reservoir and property were sold to the City of Cannon Beach, but thereafter Cannon Beach built a new reservoir, discontinued use of the old reservoir, and reconveyed the property to the plaintiffs. The plaintiffs then built a residence upon the property, using part of the old reservoir as a foundation for their new home.

The roadway, which was about 100 feet long and 18 to 20 feet wide, was regularly used by passenger cars *610 and trucks traveling to and from the reservoir throughout the 40-year period. The road was described as an "all-weather road” and was used on a daily basis much of the time, sometimes "many times a day.” The plaintiffs and their predecessors maintained the road with gravel and rock. In addition, a waterline was laid beneath the roadway.

The plaintiffs intended to continue to use the roadway for vehicular access to and from their home, and were so using the road at the time of trial. Neither the frequency of use nor the type of use was materially greater after the house was built than during the period the reservoir was in use.

The trial court wrote a memorandum opinion in which it found:

"* * * [T]he plaintiffs have established by clear and convincing evidence that their use of the roadway in question has been open, exclusive, continuous, under claim of right for the appropriate statutory period and in a manner sufficiently hostile so that plaintiffs should be entitled to the matters prayed for in their complaint.”

A decree was thereafter entered which provided that

<<* * * plaintiffs shall have an easement by prescription, said easement to be permanent until abandoned by the plaintiffs, but limited in width and length to the dimension of the roadway as it existed on February 3, 1978.”

We agree with the trial court that the plaintiffs had established, by clear and convincing evidence, "that their use of the roadway in question has been open, exclusive, continuous, under claim of right for the appropriate statutory period and in a manner sufficiently hostile * * *.” Therefore, a prescriptive easement existed over the defendants’ property. Remaining for decision is the question whether a prescriptive easement is extinguished by reason of a change in condition or use of the dominant estate, absent any increased burden upon the servient estate.

*611 IN DETERMINING WHETHER A PARTICULAR USE OF A PRESCRIPTIVE EASEMENT IS PERMISSIBLE, A COMPARISON SHOULD BE MADE BETWEEN (A) THE USE BY WHICH THE EASEMENT WAS CREATED, AND (B) THE PROPOSED USE

Most courts have adopted a rule that the extent of a prescriptive easement is limited by the use which created it. 1 The term "extent,” in this context, means the scope of the privilege of use arising from an easement as against the owner of the servient tenement. Within the scope of the privilege of use are included the elements of time, place, manner and purpose of use. 5 Restatement of the Law of Property 2991 (1944). This is the rule in Oregon. Walter v. Martinson, 276 Or 411, 414, 555 P2d 21 (1976).

In the instant case the trial court found that a prescriptive easement existed upon the land now owned by the defendants in favor of the plaintiffs, the length and width of the easement being that which was in existence on the day of trial. The decree also provided: "* * * said easement to be permanent until abandoned by the plaintiffs * * *.”

Had there been no change in the condition or use of the dominant tenement, the easement would have existed indefinitely. 2 But here there has been a change in the condition and use of the dominant estate. The defendants claim, and the Court of Appeals held, that if the condition or use of the dominant estate is altered, the appurtenant prescriptive easement is extinguished. We turn to a discussion of that question.

Some authorities contain language which appears to support the proposition that a prescriptive easement *612 is extinguished when the condition or use of the dominant tenement is altered. Section 8.69 of II American Law of Property (1952) contains such language:

"Most prescriptive easements are easements appurtenant. They are created by the use of one piece of land for the benefit of the user as the possessor of another piece. Such a use is necessarily qualified by the condition of the land possessed as of the time the use was made. As the condition of that land changes and developments take place upon it there will be need for a change in the use of the servient tenement if the easement is to be of genuine benefit to the possessor of the dominant tenement. The problem is thus presented as to how uses required by new needs can be justified under a prescriptive right created by uses which satisfied old needs. The new needs must be satisfied if the easement is to be really effective. Yet there is no room for the assumption made in the case of an easement created by conveyance that the conveyance, having by its nature a prospective operation, should be assumed to have been intended to accommodate future needs. All that the owner of the servient tenement subject to a prescriptive easement has done is to fail to make effective objection to the use by which it was created. It seems difficult to go further in the way of allowing new needs of a dominant tenement to be accommodated by a prescriptive easement than to hold that new uses will be permitted to the extent that acquiescence in the old uses justifies the inference that effective objection to the new uses would not have been made had such uses occurred during the prescriptive period.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
607 P.2d 155, 288 Or. 607, 1980 Ore. LEXIS 746, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/firebaugh-v-boring-or-1980.