INSKO v. Mosier

234 P.3d 984, 235 Or. App. 451, 2010 Ore. App. LEXIS 617
CourtCourt of Appeals of Oregon
DecidedJune 9, 2010
Docket050243064; A134151
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 234 P.3d 984 (INSKO v. Mosier) 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
INSKO v. Mosier, 234 P.3d 984, 235 Or. App. 451, 2010 Ore. App. LEXIS 617 (Or. Ct. App. 2010).

Opinion

*453 LANDAU, P. J.

In this prescriptive easement case, the issue is whether plaintiff established adequate proof of his adverse use of an existing road located on land owned by defendants. 1 The trial court found plaintiffs proof adequate and entered judgment granting a prescriptive easement over the road. Defendants appeal, arguing that plaintiffs proof that he used the existing road was insufficient, because there was inadequate evidence that his use interfered with defendants’ use of the road. On de novo review, Webb v. Clodfelter, 205 Or App 20, 23, 132 P3d 50 (2006); ORS 19.415, 2 we agree and reverse.

The parties’ properties consist of farmland in Union County, north of Elgin, Oregon. All of the properties are east of Cabin Creek Road, 3 a county road. Plaintiffs property lies to the south and the east of the disputed road, with no access to Cabin Creek Road. Defendants’ property is located to the east of plaintiffs. 4 Defendants’ property, however, also includes a strip of land, approximately 33 feet in width and 1,350 feet in length, that includes the disputed road and connects their property with Cabin Creek Road along the north border of plaintiffs land. Defendants acquired the strip from a common grantor, as we explain in more detail below, in order to provide access to Cabin Creek Road. At issue in this case is whether plaintiff, whose property is also “landlocked” from Cabin Creek Road, acquired the right to use the disputed road on the strip by adverse possession. Proof as to whether plaintiff did so entails evidence of plaintiffs own use of the disputed road, as well as the use of predecessors-in-interest. Accordingly, we are required to describe a complicated chain of title in order to make sense of the testimony of *454 the various owners and previous owners of the relevant parcels.

All parties’ deeds originate with common grantors, C. H. and Sadie Gerber (the common grantors), whose 480 acres were directly east of Cabin Creek Road. In 1950, the common grantors deeded 220 acres to defendants’ predecessors, Lee and Berta Gerber. Because the property had no access to Cabin Creek Road, the common grantors also transferred to the grantees a strip of land, approximately 33 feet in width and 1,350 feet in length. The strip ran east from Cabin Creek Road to Lee and Berta’s property and, at the time of the original grant, bisected the common grantors’ property. Lee and Berta developed a dirt road — the disputed road — by driving over the strip.

In 1975, Lee and Berta transferred their interest in the property, including the strip, to the Harts, who added a layer of gravel to the disputed road so that it could be used year-round. The Harts, in turn, transferred the property to Grage in 1998. Defendants acquired the property in 2003.

In 1955, the common grantors transferred 200 acres immediately to the south of the strip to plaintiffs predecessors, Louis and Susie Gerber. Louis and Susie in turn transferred the property to Shaw who, in 1969, transferred the property to plaintiffs parents, Lee and Elizabeth Insko. The Inskos believed that their deed encompassed the strip, and they immediately began using the road for access to their property.

In 1973, the Inskos partitioned their land, deeding the western 100 acres, directly contiguous to Cabin Creek Road, to the Bushes. It was at that time that the Inskos learned that they did not own the strip or the disputed road and that their remaining 100 acres would be landlocked. Thus, the Inskos retained a 20-foot easement over the Bushes’ property for access to Cabin Creek Road. That easement runs south of and parallel to the strip. The Inskos nonetheless continued to use the road on the strip for ingress and egress. In the spring of 2004, a dispute arose between defendants and the Inskos concerning the Inskos’ use of the road. After plaintiff acquired the property from the Inskos in *455 August 2004, he brought this action, seeking a prescriptive easement for use of the road.

At trial, it was not disputed that defendants’ predecessors acquired the strip of land and built and used the road for their own access to their property from Cabin Creek Road. It was further undisputed that plaintiff and his predecessors also made open and continuous use of the road for access to their property. What was in dispute was whether plaintiff could establish that his and his predecessors’ use of the road was adverse for the entire prescriptive period. According to defendants, plaintiffs use was permissive and did not interfere with defendants’ use.

The parties offered conflicting testimony about whether defendants’ predecessors gave permission to plaintiffs predecessors to use the road. The trial court found as a credibility matter that plaintiffs predecessors never asked permission of defendants’ predecessors to use the road, and we defer to that finding. D’Abbracci v. Shaw-Bastian, 201 Or App 108, 125, 117 P3d 1032 (2005). Ultimately, however, as explained below, the case turns on the question of interference. For that reason, the trial court’s credibility determination with respect to permission is not dispositive.

On the question of interference, defendant relied on the testimony of several witnesses. Berta Gerber, who owned defendants’ land from 1951 to 1975, testified that during their ownership from 1951 to 1975, she and her husband were the exclusive users of the road and did not notice any use of the road by plaintiffs predecessors. Betty Hart, who owned defendants’ land from 1976 to 1998, testified that the Inskos’ use of the road did not interfere with the Harts’ use. Grage, who acquired the property from the Harts in 1998, testified that shortly after he purchased the property, he improved the road significantly by adding rock, and that the Inskos’ use was occasional and did not interfere with Grage’s use.

Lee Insko, plaintiffs father, testified that when he acquired the property to the south of the strip in 1969, he believed that he owned the strip. At that time, the neighbors to the north of the strip, Louis and Susie Gerber, were living *456 in the nearby town of Umapine. Insko testified that the strip was fenced on both its north and south boundaries, with access gates to the Inskos’ property.

Insko testified that his family did not live on the property and used it exclusively for farming and recreation. They used the road for access for farming equipment and recreational vehicles, for moving cattle, and for maintaining the fences along the northern boundary of their property. Insko testified that for a couple of weeks in each of two years, he put up temporary fencing across the strip to enclose yearlings, but that he stopped that practice in 1970 or 1971, when the Gerbers returned to their property, so that he did not block their use of the road.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
234 P.3d 984, 235 Or. App. 451, 2010 Ore. App. LEXIS 617, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/insko-v-mosier-orctapp-2010.