HILL-CREEK ACRES ASS'N, INC. v. Tomerlin

99 S.W.3d 521, 2003 Mo. App. LEXIS 347, 2003 WL 1203068
CourtMissouri Court of Appeals
DecidedMarch 18, 2003
DocketWD 60726
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 99 S.W.3d 521 (HILL-CREEK ACRES ASS'N, INC. v. Tomerlin) 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
HILL-CREEK ACRES ASS'N, INC. v. Tomerlin, 99 S.W.3d 521, 2003 Mo. App. LEXIS 347, 2003 WL 1203068 (Mo. Ct. App. 2003).

Opinion

VICTOR C. HOWARD, Judge.

Appellants purported to create an emergency roadway easement across a lot in Respondent’s subdivision to allow for Appellants’ use of Respondent subdivision’s *522 private roads when Appellants’ sole way of ingress and egress to their properties in their abutting subdivision floods or is otherwise impassable. Respondent filed suit, seeking to declare the attempts to create the easement null and void and seeking an injunction from Appellants’ further attempts to so use the lot.

The trial court declared Appellants’ two attempts to create the emergency roadway easement null and void and issued an injunction enjoining the owners of the lot in question from ever granting such an easement and also preventing the abutting subdivision’s property owners (certain of the Appellants) from using the private roads in Respondent’s subdivision. Appellants challenge the trial court’s basis for such judgment, bringing nine points of error on appeal.

As explained below, the trial court did not err in declaring Appellants’ two attempts to create an emergency roadway easement null and void and issuing a permanent injunction. Therefore, we affirm the trial court’s judgment.

Background

This case arose after Appellants twice attempted to create an emergency roadway easement across a lot in Respondent’s subdivision to allow for their access to Respondent’s private roads from Appellants’ abutting subdivision. Because of the various parties involved and the timing of when the attempts to create the easements occurred, the following succinct description of the parties involved and a timeline of events is helpful to understanding the background of this case:

Parties

Respondent: Hill-Creek Acres Association, Inc., the Plaintiff at the trial court level and Respondent herein, is the homeowners’ association for Hill-Creek Acres subdivision in Columbia, Missouri, where the lot in controversy is located. It owns, operates, and maintains the subdivision’s private roads for the benefits of the homeowners.

Appellants: Appellants, who were the defendants below, can be separated into three groups based on their interests in this litigation. The first group consists of Thomas Mendenhall, John McGee, Gary Evans, and Meir Lazar as general partners of the Bonne Femme Partnership, which developed the Bonne Femme Estates (the subdivision abutting Respondent’s Hill-Creek Acres subdivision) 1 and which owns six of the subject lots in Bonne Femme Estates. The second group is Thomas and Diane Mendenhall, who, as husband and wife, own Lot 32A, the other subject lot in Bonne Femme Estates. The third group is Jerry and Karon Tomerlin, who, as husband and wife, are the current owners of Lot 25 in Hill-Creek Acres — the lot upon which they sought to create an easement to allow the Bonne Femme Estates lot owners to gain access to Respondent’s roads when the road to Bonne Fem-me Estates flooded. As explained below in the timeline, the Tomerlins purchased Lot 25 from Thomas and Diane Menden-hall, John and Cynthia McGee, and Gary and Virginia Evans (“the Mendenhalls, McGees, and Evanses”). Mr. Tomerlin is an employee of Mr. Mendenhall.

Timeline:

June 30,1967: Merle and Frances Smarr execute a document entitled “Protec *523 tive Covenants,” which establishes and implements certain restrictive covenants for the benefit of Hill-Creek Subdivision. The Protective Covenants were recorded in Boone County, Missouri, on July 3,1967.
July 29, 1971: Respondent, Hill-Creek Acres Association, Inc., becomes incorporated for the benefit of the record homeowners in Hill-Creek Acres Subdivision. The Smarrs transferred ownership of the roads in Hill-Creek Acres to the Association. Homeowners pay an annual road license and use fees of $100 for maintenance of Hill-Creek Acres’ private roads.
May 29, 1975: Respondent grants and records an “easement ... to run with the land” to all present and future lot owners in Hill-Creek Acres for ingress and egress over all of the Hill-Creek Acres subdivision’s private roads owned by Respondent.
May 28,1998: The Mendenhalls, McGees and Evanses execute a “Roadway Easement for Emergency Use” (“ER EASEMENT 1”) across Lot 25 of the Hill-Creek Acres subdivision in favor of themselves, the partners in the Bonne Femme Partnership and owners of other lots located in the Bonne Femme Estates subdivision. None of the grantors have an ownership interest in Lot 25 at this time. It was owned by Susan Langhorst.
June 30, 1998: Susan Langhorst executes a General Warranty Deed, transferring Lot 25 to the Menden-halls, McGees, and Evanses, who executed ER EASEMENT 1 on May 28, 1998. They record the deed 38 seconds before they record ER EASEMENT 1 with the Boone County, Missouri, Recorder of Deeds.
July 8, 1998: Thomas Mendenhall meets with Respondent to propose his plan to construct a roadway across Lot 25 in Hill-Creek Acres to connect the Bonne Femme Estates lots with Hill-Creek Acres for emergency access to use Respondent’s roads during the occasions in which the only access road from a public road to Bonne Femme Estates floods. He reasons that to “raise” the low water crossing would require installing an $80,000 box culvert and it would cost $200,000 to install a new bridge over the low water crossing.
That same day, Respondent unanimously votes to reject the proposal.

July 12, 1998: In accordance with amendment procedures set forth in the “Protective Covenants” recorded for the benefit of Hill-Creek Acres on June 30, 1967, sixty percent of Hill-Creek Acres homeowners execute an amendment to the covenants. The amendment provides:

—No homeowner shall: construct or permit the construction of a road, drive or way to any adjacent tract of land; permit an owner of any adjacent tract of land to use any portion of Hill-Creek Subdivision for ingress and egress; or grant or have the power to grant any person, firm or organization the right to use the private roads owned by Respondent.
—No road, drive, or way shall be constructed or permitted upon any tract of land within Hill-Creek Subdivision which shall connect with, lead from, or to, or join, or permit connection with, or permit the joining of any Hill-Creek Subdivision private road to any adjacent tract of real estate.
—No homeowner shall permit an adjacent landowner use of any portion of Hill-Creek Subdivision for the purpose of access to or egress to the *524 private roads of Respondent from any adjacent tract of land; and
—No Hill-Creek Subdivision homeowner or possessor of any tract of land shall grant to any person or firm or organization any right to use the private roads located in Hill-Creek Subdivision, which are owned by Respondent.
July 27, 1998: Respondent notifies Mr. Mendenhall by letter of its unanimous rejection of his July 8, 1998, proposal for the roadway across Lot 25.

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Bluebook (online)
99 S.W.3d 521, 2003 Mo. App. LEXIS 347, 2003 WL 1203068, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/hill-creek-acres-assn-inc-v-tomerlin-moctapp-2003.