Hucke v. Kader

240 P.2d 434, 109 Cal. App. 2d 224, 1952 Cal. App. LEXIS 1825
CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedFebruary 14, 1952
DocketCiv. 14927
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 240 P.2d 434 (Hucke v. Kader) 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
Hucke v. Kader, 240 P.2d 434, 109 Cal. App. 2d 224, 1952 Cal. App. LEXIS 1825 (Cal. Ct. App. 1952).

Opinion

BRAY, J.

Defendants appeal from a judgment restraining them from interfering with plaintiffs’ use of a certain road.

Questions Presented

1. Does the complaint state a cause of action ?

2. Is the judgment uncértain and indefinite?

3. Are additional findings necessary?

• 4. (1) On a private roadway over which several home owners have rights of ingress and egress may one owner maintain a “Private Road” sign? (2) May a majority of the home owners maintain the sign “Glendome Circle” thereon?

Record

The complaint, after alleging the character of the roadway in question as being one over which the property owners, fronting thereon had permanent nonexclusive rights of ingress and egress thereover, and. that plaintiffs and defendants were such owners, alleged that defendants for a long time had obstructed said roadway and interfered with plaintiffs’ rights therein, and sought an injunction to restrain defendants from such obstruction and interference. Defendants answered, admitting plaintiffs’ rights, but denying any obstruction thereof or interference therewith. They then cross-complained, joining the city of Oakland and two of its officers as cross-defendants, alleging that the roadway is not a public street or highway; that defendants’ home is at the entrance of said roadway; that they have been disturbed day and night by all kinds of vehicles passing and repassing and interfering *226 with defendants’ free use and enjoyment of their easement on said (road. It is alleged that the cross-defendants wrongfully erected a sign at the entrance reading “Glendome Circle” and that this sign encourages the public to use the road as a public street, causing a burden upon defendants’ easement by reason of noise, offensive odors, frequency of use by the public and obstruction of defendants’ easement. They pray that all cross-defendants be enjoined from so obstructing or interfering with defendants’ rights.

The court found that the parties (other than the city of Oakland) had the easements in the road alleged in their respective pleadings, but that defendants were obstructing the road and interfering with plaintiffs’ free use thereof, had deliberately diverted plaintiffs’ visitors, had threatened to bisect the road by a curb, represented the road to be a private one for their exclusive use, and had precluded plaintiffs from the full and free use of their easement, and had refused to discontinue these acts. The judgment enjoined defendants from obstructing the road or interfering with its use by plaintiffs and their visitors.

Facts

Some years ago one Heroux subdivided a tract of land in Oakland. He prepared a map of it but never recorded the map. On the map appears a roadway designated “Glendome Circle (not dedicated)” which starts at a public street, “El Centro,” and connects with (or is an extension of) a private road which traverses the tract in somewhat of a loop for about 538 feet, ends at El Centro and Hollywood Avenue some distance from where Glendome Circle started. Fronting on the roadway are a number of lots, of which plaintiffs own one in the interior of the tract and defendants own one at the corner of the easterly extremity of the private road and El Centro at Hollywood Avenue. Actually there are only four homes, including those of the parties, on the road. Defendants’ home is built close to the roadway which at that point is only 16 feet wide. Glendome Circle is 26.29 feet wide. The persons living on the road give Glendome Circle as their postal and residence address. It is conceded that the parties, as well as other owners in the tract, are the owners of a nonexclusive easement and right of way ©n and over the roadway and that it is not a public road or street. According to plaintiff Don Hucke his difficulties with defendants started about 1946, shortly after Heroux, the subdivider, died. He *227 testified that defendants for several months placed their car at almost a diagonal across the entrance to the circle, so that it was impossible to get through, especially for trucks intending to deliver to plaintiffs’ home; that at one time in front of defendants’ premises there was a long bar supported across the road which constituted a full road block. Defendants claimed that this was only there while they were repairing the road and that they never blocked the road, merely parking their car beside their garage. While there is a conflict in the testimony and defendants denied any of the acts of obstruction testified to by plaintiffs and their witnesses, there is substantial evidence to the effect that defendants stated that they owned the road and were going to stop plaintiffs from using it if they could and that they threatened to install a curb bisecting the road and thereby closing it. Defendants installed a sign, “Private Road,” at the entrance to the road. Plaintiff testified that this confused some of his visitors who concluded that the private road, Glendome Circle, was a private entrance to somebody’s home. There is considerable conflict as to when the sign “Glendome Circle” was first put up. Plaintiff testified it had been there off and on since 1939, and that it was first removed in 1948. Defendants claim that it was not there prior to 1947. Mrs. Coffee, a resident on the roadway, testified it had been there for the last 10 years. Oakland’s traffic engineer thought the sign was first put up about 1946. The basis of the dispute between the parties is that defendants want the general public kept off the street. Plaintiffs do not. Defendants testified that prior to the erection of the street sign the traffic was light but thereafter it increased 70 to 80 per cent. Defendant Dan Kader admitted, however, that during the last three weeks when the sign was down he noticed no diminution in traffic. Defendants contend they cannot keep their windows open day or night because of the noise and fumes of passing traffic. Defendants testified that the purpose of the “Private Road” sign was not to keep plaintiffs out, but to discourage heavy traffic. Defendant Anna Kader admitted stopping a garbage man because he stopped his truck by her bedroom window.

1. The Complaint

Defendants’ objections to the complaint are captious. As to defendants ’ acts, the complaint alleges that for a long time past defendants have wrongfully obstructed the right of way by so parking their automobile as to obstruct and interfere *228 with its free use by plaintiffs and their visitors; that defendants have deliberately diverted plaintiffs’ duly authorized visitors who were seeking to use the road; that defendants, seeking to obstruct plaintiffs in their free use of the easement, have installed a sign reading “Private Road” at its entrance, for the sole purpose of wrongly diverting duly authorized individuals; that defendants have threatened to install a curb bisecting the right of way; that defendants have represented it as a private road for their own exclusive use and have precluded plaintiffs from a full and free use of the road; that defendants refuse to discontinue its obstruction, as alleged, and threaten to and will continue to do so unless restrained, “to the irreparable damage of the plaintiffs.” Plaintiffs allege damages, but during the trial waived any claim thereto.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
240 P.2d 434, 109 Cal. App. 2d 224, 1952 Cal. App. LEXIS 1825, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/hucke-v-kader-calctapp-1952.