Humphreys v. Huls

343 Or. App. 683
CourtCourt of Appeals of Oregon
DecidedOctober 1, 2025
DocketA180139
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 343 Or. App. 683 (Humphreys v. Huls) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Oregon primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Humphreys v. Huls, 343 Or. App. 683 (Or. Ct. App. 2025).

Opinion

No. 850 October 1, 2025 683

IN THE COURT OF APPEALS OF THE STATE OF OREGON

Brian HUMPHREYS and Sara Humphreys, Plaintiffs-Respondents, v. Robert HULS and Racquel Huls, individually and as Trustees for the RA Huls and RA Ventura-Huls Family Trust; Frank J. Folino; and Angelica S. Calderon, Defendants-Appellants, and Randy ONYSKO et al., Defendants. Lane County Circuit Court 20CV17274; A180139

Karrie K. McIntyre, Judge. Argued and submitted December 4, 2024. D. Rahn Hostettter argued the cause for appellants. Also on the opening brief was Hostetter Law Group, LLP. Also on the reply brief was Benjamin Boyd. Erin E. Gould argued the cause for respondents. Also on the brief was Erin E. Gould, LLC. Before Aoyagi, Presiding Judge, Egan, Judge, and Joyce, Judge. AOYAGI, P. J. Reversed and remanded. 684 Humphreys v. Huls Cite as 343 Or App 683 (2025) 685

AOYAGI, P. J. Leroy and Marlene Boehm (the Boehms) owned approximately 20 acres of rural land in Lane County. Over time, they divided it through a series of property line adjust- ments and partitions, ultimately resulting in four tracts, all of which they eventually sold. Along the way, the Boehms filed documents purporting to create access easements for existing and future tracts. The present litigation is an easement dispute among the Boehms’ successors, includ- ing plaintiffs Brian and Sara Humphreys and defendants Robert and Raquel Huls, John and Cynthia Koza, Frank Folino and Angelica Calderon, and Randy and Mary Onysko. Only the Hulses, Folino, and Calderon appear on appeal, so, going forward, we use “defendants” to refer only to them.1 Plaintiffs brought claims seeking a declaration that their property is benefited by an access easement meet- ing Stephens Road, as well as nuisance damages and an injunction. Defendants responded with various affirmative defenses and counterclaims. The equitable claims were tried to the court, and the legal claims were tried to a jury, after which a judgment was entered in plaintiffs’ favor on all claims. Defendants appeal, raising six assignments of error. We begin and end our analysis with the first assignment of error, in which defendants challenge the trial court’s ruling that plaintiffs have an express easement over the Hulses’ property, as it is dispositive. We agree that the trial court erred in that regard. That conclusion requires reversal of the judgment and remand for further proceedings consis- tent with this opinion, including revisiting other claims and counterclaims affected by the erroneous express easement ruling. Accordingly, we reverse and remand. I. FACTS We limit our discussion to the key facts, which are undisputed. The Boehms bought an approximately 20-acre parcel in the 1970s. At some point, they divided the southern- most four acres into a separate tract, which we call tract D, 1 The Hulses sold their property to the Kozas during this litigation. For ease of reference, we continue to refer to that parcel as the Hulses’ property. 686 Humphreys v. Huls

and transferred that tract into joint ownership with their son and his wife. Then, in 2004, they divided the northern 16-acre parcel into two tracts: a rectangular tract contain- ing the existing house and barn, which we refer to as tract B, and a tract consisting of two roughly rectangular areas connected by a very long 30-foot-wide strip, which we refer to as tract AC. Tract AC would later be partitioned into two parcels, A and C, but, in 2004, it was a single tract. For ease of reference, we provide the following sketch, adapted from an exhibit and labeled to show how the 20 acres were ulti- mately divided into four parcels:

In December 2004, when there were a total of three tracts—tract AC (which included the areas marked A and C above), tract B, and tract D—the Boehms and their son and his wife executed and recorded a “Declaration of Private Cite as 343 Or App 683 (2025) 687

Access Easement.” The declaration recites, “This private access easement is being prepared to allow access to [tract B] across [tract AC] and [tract D] from Stephens Road.” That purpose is also reiterated in a later provision: “The purpose of this easement is to allow ingress and egress across [tracts AC and D] to serve [tract B].” The location of the described easement, which was to run with the land, is indicated in hashmarks on the above sketch. A few months later, in March 2005, the Boehms and their son and his wife executed and recorded another “Declaration of Private Access Easement.” Its recitals include that the Boehms “are in the process of partitioning” tract AC into two parcels, one of which will be a five-acre parcel (parcel A), and that “[t]his private access easement is being prepared to allow access to the future [parcel A] across [tract B] and [future parcel C] and [tract D].” The location of the described easement, which was to run with the land, is the same as that in the December 2004 easement. It should be noted that the described easement includes the easternmost 10 feet of tract B. Due to terrain, the 30-foot-wide strip of land in the middle of tract AC would not provide vehicle access on its own. In January 2006, the Boehms sold tract B to the Hulses. The deed does not mention any easements, refer- ring only generally to the chain of title. It states, “This prop- erty is free from encumbrances, EXCEPT: All those items of record, if any, as of the date of this deed, including any real estate taxes due, but not yet payable.” In 2011, the Boehms divided tract AC into two par- cels, A and C, through a partition plat. Parcel A consists of the upper rectangle of what used to be tract AC, plus the 30-foot-wide strip lying east of tract B, and parcel C con- sists of the lower portion of what used to be tract AC. Leroy Boehm died in 2015. Marlene Boehm then sold parcel A to plaintiffs, transferring the property by deed recorded in 2016. Plaintiffs sought a declaration that they have an express easement over tract B, parcel C, and tract D to access 688 Humphreys v. Huls

their property from Stephens Road.2 The trial court agreed with plaintiffs and issued the requested declaration. The court rejected most of defendants’ affirmative defenses and counterclaims, except the nuisance counterclaims. The nui- sance counterclaims, along with plaintiffs’ nuisance claim, were tried to a jury, which was instructed that plaintiffs have a valid easement, and, so instructed, the jury found for plaintiffs on all of those claims. II. ANALYSIS Defendants the Hulses contend that the trial court erred in ruling that plaintiffs (as owners of parcel A) have an express easement over the Hulses’ property (tract B). They argue that the 2004 declaration does not create such an ease- ment, because it expressly creates only an easement benefit- ting tract B, and that the 2005 declaration created an invalid easement, because the burdened and benefitted estates were in common ownership at the time. Plaintiffs defend the court’s rulings. Because the court rendered its decision fol- lowing a bench trial, and we understand defendants to accept the court’s factual findings but challenge its application of the law, we review for legal error. Pistol Resources, LLC v. McNeely, 312 Or App 627, 629, 496 P3d 28 (2021). A. 2004 Declaration “An easement is created by grant or reservation, express or implied, or by prescription from which a grant is presumed.” Bloomfield v. Weakland, 224 Or App 433, 445, 199 P3d 318 (2008), rev den, 346 Or 115 (2009) (citing Tusi v. Jacobsen, 134 Or 505, 508, 293 P 587, reh’g den, 134 Or 505 (1930)). An express easement—the only type of ease- ment at issue here—“is one expressed clearly in writing containing plain and direct language evincing the grantor’s intent to create a right in the nature of an easement.” Id.; see also Farnsworth v.

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Humphreys v. Huls
343 Or. App. 683 (Court of Appeals of Oregon, 2025)

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Bluebook (online)
343 Or. App. 683, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/humphreys-v-huls-orctapp-2025.