Hanshaw v. Long Valley Road Ass'n

11 Cal. Rptr. 3d 357, 116 Cal. App. 4th 471, 2004 Cal. Daily Op. Serv. 1905, 2004 Daily Journal DAR 2760, 2004 Cal. App. LEXIS 252
CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedMarch 2, 2004
DocketC041796
StatusPublished
Cited by15 cases

This text of 11 Cal. Rptr. 3d 357 (Hanshaw v. Long Valley Road Ass'n) 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
Hanshaw v. Long Valley Road Ass'n, 11 Cal. Rptr. 3d 357, 116 Cal. App. 4th 471, 2004 Cal. Daily Op. Serv. 1905, 2004 Daily Journal DAR 2760, 2004 Cal. App. LEXIS 252 (Cal. Ct. App. 2004).

Opinion

Opinion

MORRISON, J.

In Hanshaw v. Long Valley Road Assn. (July 31, 1997, C023486) a nonpublished opinion (Hanshaw I), we upheld a judgment awarding various property owners (collectively, Hanshaw) a private road easement south to Long Valley Road (the road); whether they could use the road itself was not adjudicated. Hanshaw then sued an association of the landholders along the road, defendant Long Valley Road Association (LVRA), alleging the road had become a public road by virtue of public use and dedication; he also alleged a prescriptive easement.

The trial court rejected the prescriptive easement theory, but found the road had become public, notwithstanding Nevada County’s refusal to accept an offer to dedicate the road pursuant to California’s Subdivision Map Act. (Gov. Code, § 66410 et seq. (the Act).) We agree with the trial court that a failure to complete a statutory dedication does not negate the possibility of a common law dedication. We conclude substantial evidence supports the trial court’s finding that such a dedication took place. We also conclude that Civil Code section 1009—which allows a landowner to open land for public recreational use without fear of an implied dedication finding—has no application to nonrecreational use of land. Finally, we conclude LVRA’s failure to appeal from the postjudgment fee award bars its challenge to that award. We shall affirm.

FACTUAL AND PROCEDURAL BACKGROUND

We reproduce in the appendix two crude sketches we used in Hanshaw I to illustrate the area of the road. (See appen.)

*475 Although there was some evidence of paths connecting Indian Springs Road north to Rex Reservoir, they were undocumented meanders. There was some evidence that a four-wheel-drive vehicle could travel from Indian Springs Road up to Highway 20 before the road was built, and that the road generally followed the old track except that it was straighten The road was built beginning in 1975 and extends from Indian Springs Road to the Warren-Ardito property. Across that property is an S-shaped bypass called Angie Court, which leads to Flying T Road, where Hanshaw lives. The road was built for a new subdivision and it was a deadend road until Hanshaw used it to shorten the commute to the south.

The land along the road was burdened by recorded road maintenance agreements which allow LYRA to make assessments to maintain the road. When the road was built and the land subdivided, the owners offered to dedicate the road to Nevada County (the County) in three stages, for convenience the Northern, Middle and Southern stages. An offer to dedicate a road under the Act is supposed to be accepted, accepted subject to improvement, or rejected. (Gov. Code, § 66477.1.) The County accepted the Middle portion “for all public utility purposes, and for public access, but without accepting maintenance responsibility” for the road. However, it never acted on the other offers, thereby creating a landlocked public road.

There was testimony that the County’s policy on accepting road offers had changed over time. Beulah “Boots” Rusk, one of the LYRA developers, testified developers want roads to be public “because then the public become^] responsible for the repairs and the maintenance. But it was very clear to us in Nevada County, they did not own these little side roads, everything was private, basically.” “[Y]ou have to dedicate to the County, but they don’t accept it, they just say do the dedication and you have to build to the County [specifications]. But then they don’t take over the road, that’s why everybody else has to take care of them.”

Beginning in 1986, LYRA erected permissive use signs on the road. People living to the north of LYRA parcels used the road. In 1993, LYRA asked Hanshaw to join LYRA and contribute to the maintenance, but he refused.

In an oral tentative decision the trial court concluded the unaccepted offers to dedicate, which were irrevocable by statute except in cases not here relevant, created “public rights” in the road. The trial court reasoned that after recordation of a dedication offer, ensuing public use of the road could be an informal type of acceptance.

In a minute order ruling on objections to the tentative decision, the court held “The basis of the decision is . . . use pursuant to a subdivision map with *476 an offer of dedication made under the [Act] and recordation of that map, coupled with the sale of lots, pursuant to that map and use as a result thereof.” The court rejected the argument that the Act required acceptance “by a government entity pursuant to the procedures set forth in the Act.” The court rejected the view that Hanshaw had acquired a prescriptive easement, and therefore had to share in the maintenance costs.

We now quote part of the statement of decision:

“57. Long Valley Road, all the way from Indian Springs Road to a point beyond its intersection with Angie Court, has been the subject of various express written offers of dedication to Nevada County. The first [two] offers were recorded ... on June 20, 1975. True copies of these offers, along with certificates recorded by the County of Nevada which neither accepted nor rejected the offers at that time, were marked as Exhibits 9 and 10 ... .
“58. True copies of a third express written offer of dedication . . . along with the County’s certificate neither accepting nor rejecting it, both recorded on November 9, 1976 [were marked as exhibit 14] . . .
“59. A true copy of the final map ... for Wildflower Estates subdivision . . . showing an offer of dedication of a portion of [the road] to public use, and its acceptance by [Nevada County], was [exhibit 32] . . . .”

The statement of decision concludes:

“[T]he offer to dedicate the middle portion of Long Valley Road, adjacent to the Wildflower Estates subdivision as shown on plaintiff’s Exhibit 32, was accepted . . . [on] October 4, 1988 ‘for all public utility purposes and for public access.’ It is concluded that said acceptance of the offer of dedication only affected the [Middle] portion of Long Valley Road ....
“[L]ong Valley Road became [a] public road to the full extent of the offer of dedication. Except to the extent noted below, it cannot be determined exactly when the road became public, but it is concluded that it did so between 1975 and 2000 by virtue of the recording of the said parcel and subdivision maps each containing offers of dedication, by virtue of the sales of the more than eighty individual lots by deeds referring to the recorded maps, and by virtue of use made by the public during and after said sales.”

LVRA timely filed a notice of appeal. The trial court later found Hanshaw was entitled to fees.

*477 DISCUSSION

I. Common law dedication where a statutory dedication

fails.

The Act sets forth rules for acceptance of subdivision road offers. Failure to accept the Northern and Southern offers equated to rejections under the Act.

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11 Cal. Rptr. 3d 357, 116 Cal. App. 4th 471, 2004 Cal. Daily Op. Serv. 1905, 2004 Daily Journal DAR 2760, 2004 Cal. App. LEXIS 252, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/hanshaw-v-long-valley-road-assn-calctapp-2004.