Greiner v. Kirkpatrick

241 P.2d 564, 109 Cal. App. 2d 798, 1952 Cal. App. LEXIS 1915
CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedMarch 19, 1952
DocketCiv. 14909
StatusPublished
Cited by9 cases

This text of 241 P.2d 564 (Greiner v. Kirkpatrick) 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
Greiner v. Kirkpatrick, 241 P.2d 564, 109 Cal. App. 2d 798, 1952 Cal. App. LEXIS 1915 (Cal. Ct. App. 1952).

Opinion

BRAY, J.

Defendant Lois A. Kirkpatrick * appeals from a judgment in favor of plaintiff enjoining defendant from interfering with plaintiff’s use of a right of way.

*799 Question's Presented

1. Is plaintiff estopped to assert any easement 1 2. Did the court include in the casement more land than reasonably necessary to accomplish its purpose? 3. The effect of the injunction in requiring defendant to remove a portion of a certain wall.

Facts

The controversy arises over the use by plaintiff of a certain area required to enable her to get in and out of her garage, over which area she originally received a grant of an easement.

On June 21, 1943, the major portion of Lot 1022 in a certain tract in Oakland was conveyed to plaintiff by Mr. and Mrs. E. W. Pehr. Plaintiff thought she had purchased all of Lot 1022. However, a considerable portion of Lot 1022 was excluded from the purchase. This portion was owned by Oscar 0. and Annie I. Uhle, who also owned Lot 1021. This fact was discovered when plaintiff talked to Mrs. Uhle concerning a certain low avail Avhich partially blocked plaintiff’s driveway. The portion excluded from plaintiff’s deed is on a slope, and most of it is used as the driveway from Lot 1021 to the street. The house on Lot 1021 was then occupied by the Uhles. Plaintiff immediately started to negotiate with the Uhles for the remoA'al of a portion of the wall and the grant to her of an easement over the excluded portion of Lot 1022. She then took doAAm the portion of the wall which interfered Avith her getting in and out of her garage. On September 11th the Uhles signed the grant to plaintiff of a nonexclusive easement, or right of Avay, over that portion of Lot 1022 which had been excluded from the original deed. The grant particularly described by metes and bounds the area over which the easement was granted. It avas the same description which was used in excluding the area from the original deed. This grant Avas recorded September 29th.

On September 19th defendants made a deposit in escrow for the purchase of the Uhle home. The deed from the Uhles to defendant is dated September 25th. It was not recorded until October 7th. The deed covered Lot 1021 and the portion of Lot 1022 described in the easement from the Uhles to plaintiff. No mention, however, was made of that easement. Within two weeks of September 19th defendant’s husband saw plaintiff’s husband taking down the wall. It is claimed for defendant that she did not know of plaintiff’s easement until *800 March or April, 1944. Plaintiff testified that after the rock wall was removed and for over two years, the easement was used without any protest by defendant.

In the preliminary report from the abstract company obtained by defendant there is no mention of the easement, but it is mentioned in the final report. Defendant claims her escrow was closed at 10 o'clock September 29th. The easement to plaintiff was recorded at 11 o’clock that same day. July 19, 1946, defendant constructed a 14-foot extension to the wall.

Record

When defendant, on protest, refused to remove the wall, plaintiff brought this action asking that defendant be enjoined from maintaining the wall or obstructing her use of the easement. Defendant answered and cross-complained, claiming ownership of the strip in question, and alleging that plaintiff had no easement, that plaintiff had full ingress and egress to her property without going over the strip, that the wall is necessary to keep the ground from sliding and does not interfere with plaintiff’s ingress and egress; and that in any event it was the intention of the Uhles and plaintiff that plaintiff was to have an easement only over such portion of the strip as was actually needed for ingress and egress. Defendant asked that plaintiff be denied relief, or, at best, that the easement be reformed.

While the deed from the Uhles to plaintiff granted an easement over the entire strip, without any limitation, both parties and the court tried the case on the theory that if plaintiff was entitled to an easement it should be only over such portion of the strip as was reasonably necessary for egress and ingress. The court found that plaintiff was entitled to an easement and found the area which it believed necessary for that purpose (considerably less than that described in the easement), ordered defendant to remove that portion of the wall which was within that area, and permanently enjoined defendant from obstructing plaintiff’s use of that area for ingress and egress.

1. The Easement and Estoppel.

Defendant contends that as her deed was dated September 25th and the escrow for the purchase of the property “closed” September 29th at 10 o’clock, and plaintiff’s easement deed, although dated September 11th, was not acknowledged by Oscar Uhle until September 27th, and was not recorded until 11 o’clock September 29th, defendant must be held to have *801 taken without notice and gets the land free of the burden of the easement. Defendant of course cannot claim to be a purchaser “whose conveyance is first duly recorded.” (See Civ. Code, § 1214.) Again, just what is meant by the term, the escrow was “closed,” does not appear * The purchase and the escrow were subject to the Uhle title being clear. Thus, the transaction was not complete or final at the time of the “closing” of the escrow. It only became final when the title company recorded the Uhle deed to defendant (and was ready to issue its title insurance policy), which was not until October 7th. At that time, at least, the title company knew of the recorded easement. Its knowledge was that of defendant, as it obviously was defendant’s agent as well as that of the seller. Defendant’s husband testified that when “we” were at the property he saw plaintiff’s husband taking down the wall within two weeks of September 19th. The court under this evidence could very well have concluded that defendant’s husband would have communicated that fact to his wife and that defendant did have knowledge that plaintiff was asserting rights to the strip, even though the husband testified that when he asked Mrs. Uhle about it she said the man was doing some repair work. Defendant did not testify, so there is no evidence that defendant, at the time she purchased the Uhle property, did not know of plaintiff’s easement. The evidence supports the court’s conclusion that at the time the transaction between the Uhles and defendant was completed defendant had been put on notice of plaintiff’s rights both by the recording of plaintiff’s easement and by observation of plaintiff’s use of a portion of it.

The very first, and perhaps most important, element of estoppel is missing in this case, namely, ignorance of the true situation by the person now attempting to assert the estoppel. The burden of proving the facts necessary to constitute an estoppel is on the party asserting it—here, the defendant. (General Motors Accept. Corp. v. Gandy, 200 Cal. 284 [253 P. 137].) Moreover, it should be pleaded. (Producers Holding Co. v. Hill, 201 Cal. 204 [256 P. 207].) It was not pleaded here.

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Bluebook (online)
241 P.2d 564, 109 Cal. App. 2d 798, 1952 Cal. App. LEXIS 1915, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/greiner-v-kirkpatrick-calctapp-1952.