Hersh Properties, LLC v. McDonald's Corp.

588 N.W.2d 728, 1999 Minn. LEXIS 46, 1999 WL 64573
CourtSupreme Court of Minnesota
DecidedFebruary 4, 1999
DocketC9-97-992
StatusPublished
Cited by22 cases

This text of 588 N.W.2d 728 (Hersh Properties, LLC v. McDonald's Corp.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Minnesota primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Hersh Properties, LLC v. McDonald's Corp., 588 N.W.2d 728, 1999 Minn. LEXIS 46, 1999 WL 64573 (Mich. 1999).

Opinion

OPINION

PAUL H. ANDERSON, Justice.

In 1950, the predecessor in title to a Torrens parcel of real property, now occupied by Dinkytown Wine & Spirits, reserved an appurtenant easement for ingress and egress and signage over an abutting Torrens parcel of real property. The abutting Torrens parcel is currently occupied by a McDonald’s restaurant. Certificates of title to both parcels contain a recital of the easement. Today, almost a half-century after its creation, there is no evidence that this easement has ever been utilized, and the area encompassing the easement is being used by McDonald’s as a parking lot. Appellant Hersh Properties, the owner of Dinkytown Wine & Spirits, is now attempting to utilize the easement to erect a sign advertising liquor. However, respondents McDonald’s Corporation and Choate & Company, Inc., the McDonald’s restaurant franchisee, assert that the Minnesota Marketable Title Act (MTA) extinguished the easement.

Hersh brought a declaratory judgment action in district court seeking a determination of the validity of its claimed easement. The *730 court granted summary judgment in favor of McDonald’s and Choate on the grounds that the MTA terminated Hersh’s claimed easement. The Minnesota Court of Appeals affirmed, concluding that the MTA is applicable to Torrens property and that, under the MTA, Hersh’s easement was extinguished because the recital of the easement on the Torrens certificates of title did not satisfy the MTA notice requirements. We affirm the court of appeals’ conclusion that the MTA is applicable to Torrens property, but we reverse the court of appeals’ conclusion that the easement was extinguished because the MTA notice requirements were not satisfied.

McDonald’s is the fee owner of a Torrens parcel of real property (McDonald’s Parcel) located at 407 15th Avenue Southeast in Minneapolis, Minnesota. Choate operates a McDonald’s restaurant on this parcel. Hersh is the fee owner of a Torrens parcel of real property (Hersh Parcel) located at 1412 5th Avenue Southeast, which is adjacent to the McDonald’s Parcel. The certificates of title for both the McDonald’s Parcel and the Hersh Parcel expressly recite the existence of an ingress and egress and signage easement. The disputed easement was created by an August 1,1950 conveyance.

Prior to 1950, Arthur and Doris Robinson owned both the Hersh Parcel and the McDonald’s Parcel in fee simple. In 1925, the Robinsons registered title to their undivided property under the Torrens Act. In 1944, the Robinsons divided their property into two parcels and registered them separately, but retained ownership of both until 1950. Since 1950, the Hersh Parcel has been sold three times while the McDonald’s Parcel has been sold once.

The Hersh Parcel was first sold on August 1, 1950, when the Robinsons conveyed it by warranty deed to a corporation. In the deed, the Robinsons granted the new corporate owners an easement over the remaining parcel, what is now known as the McDonald’s Parcel. The deed provided for, among other things, the following easement (hereinafter referred to as the signage easement):

for ingress and egress * * * over the Northeasterly 15 feet of the southwesterly 65 feet of Lot One (1), said Block O, and together with the right to maintain a sign upon the 15 foot easement strip last referred to at the point where it connects with Fifteenth Avenue Southeast.

After the deed to the Hersh Parcel was recorded, the Hennepin County Registrar of Titles issued a residue certificate of title to the Robinsons for the remaining property, the McDonald’s Parcel. The Robinsons’ residue certificate of title contained a recital that the McDonald’s Parcel was subject to, among other things, the signage easement.

The second conveyance of the Hersh Parcel occurred over a decade later, on March 18, 1964, when the parcel was conveyed by warranty deed to a new owner. The final conveyance of the Hersh Parcel occurred on June 27, 1995, when the parcel was conveyed to Hersh by warranty deed. The legal description of the Hersh Parcel in each of these conveyances expressly provided that title to the parcel is benefited by the signage easement.

The only sale of the McDonald’s Parcel occurred on November 5, 1984, when McDonald’s acquired a fee simple interest in its parcel under a personal representative’s deed from the estate of Doris Robinson. The certificate of title issued to McDonald’s as a result of this transfer expressly provided that title to the McDonald’s Parcel is burdened by the signage easement.

In the fall of 1995, Hersh informed McDonald’s and Choate that it intended to place a sign advertising liquor within the area of its claimed signage easement. The area encompassing the easement has since been paved and McDonald’s is using it as a parking lot. McDonald’s and Choate responded by challenging the validity of the easement and stating that they would oppose any attempted exercise of the easement.

Hersh then brought a declaratory judgment action in Hennepin County District Court to determine the validity of the signage easement. As an affirmative defense to Hersh’s action, McDonald’s and Choate asserted that the MTA extinguished Hersh’s claim. McDonald’s argued that the easement was extinguished because, following the grant of the easement by the Robinsons in *731 the 1950 warranty deed, neither Hersh nor its predecessors in title filed a sworn notice as required by the MTA. More particularly, McDonald’s pointed to the fact that neither Hersh nor its predecessors in title filed, within 40 years of the creation of the easement, a sworn notice with the county recorder or registrar of titles setting forth the name of the claimant, a description of the real estate affected, and the instrument on which the claim is founded. Because no such notice was filed, McDonald’s asserts that under the MTA the easement was presumed abandoned and, therefore, extinguished. McDonald’s also argued that because there was no evidence that the easement had ever been used, the easement was also extinguished by common law abandonment.

Hersh did not dispute that it failed to comply with the explicit notice requirements of the MTA. Rather, Hersh argued that the MTA notice requirements were constructively satisfied because the recital of the signage easement was contained in the conveyance of the McDonald’s Parcel in 1984 and the conveyances of the Hersh Parcel in 1964 and 1995. Hersh claimed that under the Torrens system, the certificates of title conclusively showed that the easement existed and was, therefore, valid.

On cross-motions for summary judgment, the district court granted summary judgment in favor of McDonald’s and Choate on the grounds that Hersh abandoned its interest in the signage easement as evidenced by its failure to record its interest in the property within 40 years of the date the easement was created. The court first determined that the MTA was applicable to Torrens property and that, while a certificate of title is conclusive evidence of everything contained in it, when the source of the title has been of record at least 40 years, a sworn notice has to be filed with the registrar of titles. The court found that the source of the easement was the August 1, 1950 Robinson conveyance, which had been of record at least 40 years.

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Bluebook (online)
588 N.W.2d 728, 1999 Minn. LEXIS 46, 1999 WL 64573, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/hersh-properties-llc-v-mcdonalds-corp-minn-1999.