Ghiglieri v. Tomalak

469 P.3d 262, 304 Or. App. 717
CourtCourt of Appeals of Oregon
DecidedJune 17, 2020
DocketA167699
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 469 P.3d 262 (Ghiglieri v. Tomalak) 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
Ghiglieri v. Tomalak, 469 P.3d 262, 304 Or. App. 717 (Or. Ct. App. 2020).

Opinion

Submitted June 11, 2019, affirmed June 17, 2020

Michael P. GHIGLIERI, Plaintiff-Respondent, v. Eric S. TOMALAK and Holly Anne Tomalak, Trustees of the Eric S. Tomalak Living Trust, Defendants-Appellants. Jackson County Circuit Court 17CV13826; A167699 469 P3d 262

In this dispute between neighboring landowners, plaintiff claimed that he has an express or implied easement over a portion of defendants’ property and that defendants have interfered with that easement by building a fence. In par- ticular, as to an implied easement, plaintiff argued that an implied easement is reasonably necessary to access his own property and that, when the two prop- erties were taken out of common ownership, his predecessor would have been justified in expecting an implied easement under the circumstances. The trial court ruled on summary judgment that plaintiff does not have an express ease- ment but does have an implied easement and that defendants have interfered with the implied easement. Defendants appeal, arguing that the trial court erred in granting summary judgment to plaintiff on the implied easement and inter- ference claims. Held: The trial court did not err. There is no genuine dispute of material fact and, on this record, plaintiff was entitled to judgment as a matter of law that an implied easement exists and that defendants have interfered with it. Affirmed.

Benjamin M. Bloom, Judge. Michael W. Franell filed the briefs for appellants. Joseph M. Charter filed the brief for respondent. Before DeHoog, Presiding Judge, and Egan, Chief Judge, and Aoyagi, Judge. AOYAGI, J. Affirmed. 718 Ghiglieri v. Tomalak

AOYAGI, J. This is an easement dispute between neighboring landowners. Plaintiff brought this action alleging that he has an express or implied easement over a portion of defen- dants’ property and that defendants have interfered with that easement by building a fence. The trial court ruled on summary judgment that plaintiff has an implied easement and that defendants have interfered with it. Defendants appeal. We affirm.1 I. STANDARD OF REVIEW Summary judgment is appropriate when the plead- ings, depositions, affidavits, declarations, and admissions on file show that there is no genuine dispute of material fact and that the moving party is entitled to judgment as a mat- ter of law. ORCP 47 C. A material fact is “one that, under applicable law, might affect the outcome of a case.” Zygar v. Johnson, 169 Or App 638, 646, 10 P3d 326 (2000), rev den, 331 Or 584 (2001). “On review of cross-motions for sum- mary judgment, we view the record for each motion in the light most favorable to the party opposing it to determine whether there is a genuine issue of material fact and, if not, whether either party is entitled to judgment as a matter of law.” O’Kain v. Landress, 299 Or App 417, 419, 450 P3d 508 (2019). II. FACTS This case involves two adjacent properties situated between Highway 62 and the Rogue River. Lot 100 is upriver, has a house on it, and is currently owned by plaintiff. Lot 2400 is downriver, undeveloped, and currently owned by defendants. Both lots are accessed from the highway via a driveway on Lot 100; the highway is “quite a ways above the level” of Lot 2400. The first photo in the Appendix shows the general layout of the properties (with the white captions added by the court for reference). The following is a sum- mary of the evidence in the summary judgment record.

1 Plaintiff cross-assigns error to the trial court’s summary judgment ruling in favor of defendant on plaintiff’s alternative claim for an express easement, i.e., its ruling that plaintiff does not have an express easement. Given our disposition, we need not discuss the cross-assignment. Cite as 304 Or App 717 (2020) 719

Prior to 1984, Ralph Train owned both lots and built the house on Lot 100. In 1984, Train conveyed Lot 2400 to Bettis. The deed expressly reserved “an easement for ingress and egress” over Lot 2400 for the benefit of Lot 100.2 Around 2003—when Train owned Lot 100 and Bettis owned Lot 2400—someone built a “woven wire” fence, “like a horse fence,” on Lot 2400. The fence was located well inside Lot 2400. It is unknown who built the fence or why. Soon thereafter, Train died, and Lot 100 appears to have gone into foreclosure. In 2004, the Richmonds obtained ownership of Lot 100, and, in 2005, they purchased Lot 2400 from Bettis, thus bringing the two lots back into common ownership. In 2007, the Richmonds sold both lots to defen- dants. As part of the same transaction, defendants obtained a mortgage from the Federal National Mortgage Association (Fannie Mae), which resulted in Fannie Mae acquiring a property interest in Lot 100 by way of a deed of trust. In 2011, Fannie Mae foreclosed on Lot 100. As a result of the foreclosure, the lots were once again in separate ownership. In 2012, Fannie Mae conveyed Lot 100 to plaintiff,3 and plaintiff’s son moved into the house. That same year, plaintiff’s son replaced the wire fence on Lot 2400 with a wooden fence, erroneously believing it to mark the prop- erty line. In 2014, plaintiff’s son built a carport on Lot 100, attached to the garage, at a cost of $4,750. In 2017, defendants, who had by then transferred their property interest to a trust, obtained a survey of Lot 2400. Soon thereafter, defendants erected a fence on the prop- erty line, and they removed the wooden fence that plaintiff’s

2 Defendants speculate that the 1984 easement may have been written incor- rectly, because Lot 100 is directly accessible from Highway 62, whereas Lot 2400 is accessible only by crossing Lot 100, and yet the only easement contained in the 1984 deed is an easement across Lot 2400 for “ingress and egress” to Lot 100. 3 Plaintiff initially co-owned Lot 100 with his son’s wife, Czan, but Czan con- veyed her interest to plaintiff after she divorced plaintiff’s son, leaving plaintiff the sole owner. 720 Ghiglieri v. Tomalak

son had built on Lot 2400. The new fence is approximately 20 feet from the garage of the house on Lot 100. The second photo in the Appendix shows both the fenceposts for the new fence on the property line and the older wooden fence built by plaintiff’s son in 2012 (with the white captions added by the court for reference). Once defendants built a fence on the property line, plaintiff’s son could no longer turn into his carport, because the “average turn[ing] radius of a car is 35.5 feet.” He had to remove the carport because he “could not make the turn without hitting the fence.” Plaintiff’s son also spent $460 to pour a concrete ramp near the driveway, as cars other- wise would get stuck coming down the driveway after the fence went in. Because of the new fence, plaintiff’s son has “to drive [his] car north past the entrance to the top of the drive and reverse and then back down the driveway to the garage area”; “[t]here isn’t enough room to turn around at the bottom of the drive due to the closeness of the fence”; “it is impossible to back out and up the steep driveway and on to Highway 62”; he “cannot drive forward down [the] drive- way because there is no way to turn around”; and he “can- not leave [the] property at night because, without the aid of headlights to see behind [him], it is extremely dangerous to back down the driveway in the dark.” It is also “very diffi- cult to accurately maneuver a vehicle in the limited space between the fence and the garage,” and at least one post has already been hit by a vehicle. Within a few months of defendants building the new fence, plaintiff filed this action, asserting, as relevant here, claims for express easement, implied easement, and interference with easement. The parties cross-moved for summary judgment on those claims. The trial court ruled in defendants’ favor on the express-easement claim.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
469 P.3d 262, 304 Or. App. 717, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/ghiglieri-v-tomalak-orctapp-2020.