GORDON BUNDY and MARLENE BUNDY, trustees of the Gordon G. Bundy and Marlene K. Bundy Trust dated December 13, 2017, Appellants v. BRETT RAPIEN and TRISHA RAPIEN, Respondents

CourtMissouri Court of Appeals
DecidedJune 17, 2025
DocketSD38365
StatusPublished

This text of GORDON BUNDY and MARLENE BUNDY, trustees of the Gordon G. Bundy and Marlene K. Bundy Trust dated December 13, 2017, Appellants v. BRETT RAPIEN and TRISHA RAPIEN, Respondents (GORDON BUNDY and MARLENE BUNDY, trustees of the Gordon G. Bundy and Marlene K. Bundy Trust dated December 13, 2017, Appellants v. BRETT RAPIEN and TRISHA RAPIEN, Respondents) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Missouri Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
GORDON BUNDY and MARLENE BUNDY, trustees of the Gordon G. Bundy and Marlene K. Bundy Trust dated December 13, 2017, Appellants v. BRETT RAPIEN and TRISHA RAPIEN, Respondents, (Mo. Ct. App. 2025).

Opinion

Missouri Court of Appeals Southern District

In Division

GORDON BUNDY and ) MARLENE BUNDY, trustees of the ) Gordon G. Bundy and Marlene K. Bundy ) Trust dated December 13, 2017, ) ) Appellants, ) ) No. SD38365 v. ) ) Filed: June 17, 2025 BRETT RAPIEN and TRISHA RAPIEN, ) ) Respondents. )

APPEAL FROM THE CIRCUIT COURT OF BARRY COUNTY

Honorable Robert Foulke, Judge

VACATED AND REMANDED

Neighboring property owners sued each other over the use and maintenance of a gravel

road running over a dedicated easement. Because the trial court misapplied the law in entering a

judgment granting injunctive relief, we vacate the judgment and remand the case to the trial court

for further proceedings consistent with this opinion. Background1

Mr. and Mrs. Rapien own property bounded on the southern edge by Highway 76. Near

the eastern edge of their property runs a dedicated, 20-feet-wide, curving, ingress/egress easement

topped by a gravel road (the “Road”). The Rapiens do not use the Road to access their home. Mr.

and Mrs. Bundy own a home and property further back from the highway. They and other

neighbors regularly use the Road to access their homes. The easement is non-exclusive and does

not specify the standard to which the easement must be maintained or who shall maintain it.

The Road requires maintenance due to wear caused by vehicles driving on it. Portions of

the Road are prone to wash-outs with heavy rainfall. The Road requires a fresh layer of gravel

periodically.

From 2013-2017, the Bundys’ predecessor in interest maintained the Road by smoothing

out ruts and holes with a blade attached to his tractor. The Road was in poor condition when the

Bundys purchased their home in 2017. Mr. Bundy has maintained the Road since 2018, using a

blade attached to his tractor.

Mr. Rapien knew the Road had holes and occasional wash-outs, but he believed it required

no major maintenance as it had always been “passable.” The Rapiens did not perform road

improvement or maintenance until about 2020, when they built and opened an event center. At

that time, they hauled in some gravel, filled holes, and cut in a driveway off of the Road to the

event center. In May of 2023, Mr. Rapien filled holes and attempted to put a crown on the section

of the Road between the highway and their event center.

Use and maintenance of the Road were not problematic until after the Rapiens opened their

1 We must view the facts in the light most consistent with the trial court’s judgment. Burg v. Dampier, 346 S.W.3d 343, 347 n.1 (Mo.App. W.D. 2011).

2 event center, the driveway for which is approximately midway between Highway 76 and the

southern edge of the Bundys’ property. The event center has increased the number of vehicles

using the Road between the highway and the event center, and event attendees occasionally have

parked vehicles on or alongside the Road.

In the summer of 2021, the Bundys performed significant work on the Road. They hauled

in and laid down red clay as a foundation, followed by gravel, which Mr. Bundy spread with the

blade attached to his tractor. Mrs. Bundy thinks the improvements have minimized wash-outs.

The Rapiens were not pleased. They called the sheriff to have the clay delivery contractor

removed from the property due to a previous harassment incident. According to the Rapiens, the

clay and gravel layers were laid too thick, they were not properly compacted, and no crown was

placed on the Road, all of which have resulted in poor water drainage, premature rutting, and

increased wash-outs.

The Bundys filed suit, seeking to enjoin the Rapiens and their invitees from blocking or

obstructing the Road and from interfering with the Bundys’ maintenance of the Road and

easement. The Rapiens counter-sued, seeking damages and to enjoin the Bundys and their agents

“from taking any actions to alter the Easement Area, from using improper equipment and

techniques on the Easement Area, and from allowing contractors on the Easement Area who

engage in harassing behavior[.]”

At trial, the Rapiens’ expert testified that the Road had not been properly maintained and

it required repairs. He further testified that the Road had a good foundation, but additional

truckloads of gravel were needed, and that gravel should be spread to place a crown on the Road.

Mr. Bundy testified he was not asking the court to require the Rapiens to maintain the

Road. He wanted the court to enjoin the Rapiens’ interference with his maintenance of the Road,

3 to permit him to trim bushes and shrubs growing over the Road, and to enjoin the Rapiens and

their invitees from blocking the road.

Mr. Rapien testified his main dispute with the Bundys was over the location of the Road,

as Mr. Rapien believed part of it was outside the easement. Mr. Rapien testified he never told Mr.

Bundy he could not maintain the Road, but he did not want Mr. Bundy to use certain methods on

the portion of the Road leading up to the event center. “Beyond my venue, it’s his property. He

can do whatever he wants.” Mr. Rapien did not agree to maintain the Road or to be the sole arbiter

of how to maintain it:

[Bundys’ counsel] Q. Is it your intention, sir, to maintain the road from the highway to your venue?

[Mr. Rapien] A. I never said that.

Q. What -- how do you propose to the Court to share the responsibility on maintenance of this road?

A. I don’t have -- well, what I don’t want is the road to be maintained improperly. That’s what I’m trying to stop.

Q. But if the road is -- if no one is going to maintain the road, how’s that going to -- for anyone to use it? I mean how – I’m looking for an answer here and --

A. Well, continual incorrect maintenance of a road doesn’t help. That makes the road worse. So in order to go forward and make the road better, firstly you have to stop making it worse.

Q. And -- but how do you decide when it’s time if Mr. and Mrs. Bundy are, you know, hitting ruts with their vehicle, do you expect them not to attempt to maintain the road?

A. I don’t expect that, and I’ve never stopped them.

Q. So you didn’t stop them when [the clay contractor] was there?

A. I stopped them from doing the road incorrectly is what my intention was, yes.
Q. In your opinion --

4 A. If he wants to do it correctly, I have no problem with that. But doing it incorrectly, I have a problem with.

Q. And you’re the one who determines correctness?

A. I have a fair good idea of what correct is, but no, I shouldn’t be the only one that determines that.

Mr. Rapien further testified he wanted the court to enjoin the Bundys from altering the Road in the

future and “performing maintenance in a manner that further damages the roadway,” and to enjoin

the use of the contractor the Bundys hired for previous jobs.

After hearing the testimony and receiving evidence, the trial court enjoined the Bundys and

their agents “from taking any actions to alter, maintain, park[] vehicles, [or] plac[e] posts or

obstructions on the easement roadway” for the portion of the Road that runs from Highway 76

north to roughly the event center’s driveway. A reciprocal injunction was entered against the

Rapiens for the portion of the Road from the Bundys’ southern property boundary to the Bundys’

residence.

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GORDON BUNDY and MARLENE BUNDY, trustees of the Gordon G. Bundy and Marlene K. Bundy Trust dated December 13, 2017, Appellants v. BRETT RAPIEN and TRISHA RAPIEN, Respondents, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/gordon-bundy-and-marlene-bundy-trustees-of-the-gordon-g-bundy-and-marlene-moctapp-2025.