Hester v. Johnson

335 S.W.2d 574, 1960 Ky. LEXIS 275
CourtCourt of Appeals of Kentucky
DecidedMay 13, 1960
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 335 S.W.2d 574 (Hester v. Johnson) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Kentucky primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Hester v. Johnson, 335 S.W.2d 574, 1960 Ky. LEXIS 275 (Ky. Ct. App. 1960).

Opinion

PALMORE, Judge.

This case involves the rights of several owners of land for the benefit of which a passway easement has been exercised continuously since 1900, as against the rights of the owner of the land across which the passway runs. In its essential particulars the decree of the trial court adjudged that the plaintiffs, owners of the dominant tenements, were entitled to an easement 30 feet in width for a distance of some 400 feet through the servient lands of the defendant, Hester, and enjoined Hester from interfering with their use of it. Hester appeals, claiming that appellees are not entitled to a 30-foot right-of-way and, further, if they are so entitled, the course of the passway should be altered so as to be partially located on the adjoining land of Paul Burke, one of the appellees. It is our conclusion, however, that the judgment of the trial court was correct.

All of the lands involved were part of a large tract owned by John D. Fannin at the time of his death in 1899. In 1900 the estate was divided pursuant to an ex parte partition proceeding brought in the Boyd County Court. Hester, the appellant, is now the owner of lot 1 of the division, and the appellees own various portions of the remainder of the division, including lots 3, 4, 5 and 7, all of which are benefited by the use of the roadway in question.

A geographical description is necessary to an understanding of the case. All of the land in question lies north of a public road called the Bolts Fork Road, which runs in an east-west direction. Bolts Fork Creek runs along the south side of this road. Coming from the north-northwest and running under the road and into Bolts Fork Creek is a small tributary which we shall hereinafter call simply the branch. The disputed roadway comes down the hollow along the east side of the branch and enters Bolts Fork Road at right angles. The plat filed by the county court commissioners in 1900 shows the boundary between lot 1 on the east and lot 2 on the west as roughly coinciding with the course of the creek. Proceeding clockwise, lot 4 lies north of lot 2, bordering lot 1 for a short distance, and lot 3 lies immediately east of lot 4 and north of lot 1. Lot 1 therefore is contiguous to lots 2, 4 and 3, in that order. Lots 5 and 7 lie to the north and west of lots 4 and 3 and do not join lot 1, their access being through a continuation of the lane across lot 3. Lots 3 and 4, to the north and northwest of Hester’s lot 1, are owned by the appellee Burke.

That portion of the passway which is involved in this case emerges southward out of lot 3 into the northwest corner of lot 1 (Hester’s land) and runs a distance of some 400 feet along the westerly boundary of lot 1 to the public road. It is indicated on the 1900 plat by broken lines, which were not surveyed but apparently drawn freehand to show the approximate course of the farm lane as it then existed. There is a single broken line for the short distance from lot 3 to the point opposite the corner of lots 4 and 2 in the west line of lot 1, but from that point southward to the Bolts Fork Road the course of the passway [576]*576is shown by double lines that are more or less astride the branch and, therefore, astride the boundary line between lots 1 and 2. Actually, however, no part of the pass-way has ever been located on lot 2 or lot 4, and the owner of lot 2 is not a party to this proceeding.

In the various deeds made pursuant to the partition in 1900 (including the conveyance of lot 1 to Hester’s predecessor) the roadway was established by the following language :

“The foregoing land is conveyed subject to and with benefit of the following road and haulway, as an easement upon and to be appurtenant to, and used with, and in behalf of Lots Nos. 1, 2, 3, 4 and 7, and also as an easement to be appurtenant to and used with and for the benefit of Lots Nos. 5 and 7, of the division of land in the action aforesaid, to-wit: Beginning on Bolt’s Fork at or near beginning corner of said Lot No. 5; thence down along said creek till it strikes land of Jos. H. Ross as an easement in behalf of all the lots of division of lands of said John D. Fan-nin, deceased, as per this, the division above mentioned. Said right of way to be at least 30 feet wide and along the roadway now used up and down said creek, and sufficient for ordinary travel thereon with wagon and team, with right of owner of any of said lots to locate and keep gates across said roadway on the line of same on terms that those using same shall be responsible for damage, injury to, or negligent use of said gates, or failing to close same as used by them.” (The words “Bolt’s Fork” and “creek” in the deeds refer to the branch, not the main creek).

Ever since the time of the division in 1900 there has been a fence along the east side of the branch, which fence now forms the west border of the lane or roadway in controversy. There is a small strip of ground between the branch and the fence forming the west border of the lane where it passes lot 4, but since the fence has been regarded all along as the boundary this strip of ground between the branch and the fence must be regarded as a part of lot 4 belonging to the appellee Burke.

No part of that portion of the passway which is' here in dispute has ever been located anywhere but on the appellant’s property, lot 1 of the division. Originally, instead of following closely the boundary line along the west side of his tract, it angled somewhat eastward and reached the Bolts Fork Road east of its present mouth. However, some 40 years ago Hester’s predecessor in title moved the lane over to the fence line next to the branch, and either he or Hester later erected another fence along the east border of the lane, so that it was then fenced on both sides. Over the years the appellees kept their fence up, but when the fence along the east side of the lane deteriorated the appellant, Hester, took it down, resulting in one of the factors which precipitated this lawsuit, wherein the appellees complain that Hester in tilling his ground to its uttermost limits has thrown dirt into the lane. Coincident to the removal of this fence Hester placed a gate across the lane where it enters Bolts Fork Road, and there is much crimination and recrimination about the gate. Appellees say it is too narrow and flimsy and so crudely hung that at times when the ground is muddy it is nearly impossible to open and close. Hester, on the other hand, contends that the reason for its unsatisfactory state is that the appellees have made -a habit of running into it with their automobiles and other vehicles.

The irritations just mentioned, however, were not the main source of the trouble. In order to provide proper drainage there has always been a little ditch, perhaps 1½ feet deep, running down along the east border of the lane to a culvert in the bottom, which culvert crosses under the lane and provides drainage to the branch. There is some question as to exactly who put- the culvert in, but it may be assumed that it was constructed by some of the áp-[577]*577pellees or their predecessors, who have maintained and used the road and from time to time have received help from the county. At any rate, although the culvert is of sufficient size to handle the drainage from this ditch it is not sufficient to handle also the drainage from Hester’s adjoining 6-acre field of bottom land. It appears that in the old days this bottom was used as a hog wallow but at some time after the construction of the culvert Hester cut a ditch 4½ feet deep in order to drain the field through the culvert.

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Bluebook (online)
335 S.W.2d 574, 1960 Ky. LEXIS 275, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/hester-v-johnson-kyctapp-1960.