Johnson v. Suttles

2009 OK CIV APP 89, 227 P.3d 664
CourtCourt of Civil Appeals of Oklahoma
DecidedOctober 30, 2009
Docket105,646. Released for Publication by Order of the Court of Civil Appeals of Oklahoma, Division No. 4
StatusPublished
Cited by10 cases

This text of 2009 OK CIV APP 89 (Johnson v. Suttles) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Civil Appeals of Oklahoma primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Johnson v. Suttles, 2009 OK CIV APP 89, 227 P.3d 664 (Okla. Ct. App. 2009).

Opinion

DOUG GABBARD II, Presiding Judge.

1 1 Defendants, Merlen and Nancy Suttles, appeal the trial court's order granting Plaintiffs, Arnold and Wynema Johnson, an easement of necessity across Defendants' property to the upper portion of Plaintiffs' land. We affirm as modified herein.

BACKGROUND

12 In April 2006, Plaintiffs purchased a T5-acre tract of land located in Carter County, Oklahoma. The tract is located directly east and south of Defendants' property, The southern portion of Plaintiffs' property is accessible from the south by a public road, but the upper portion of the property is difficult to access because a waterway known as Wildhorse Creek flows east and west across the entire tract.

8 Prior to their purchase, Plaintiffs had leased the land for eight or nine years. They used the upper portion of the property to grow alfalfa, which they baled and sold as animal feed. They reached this part of the property by traveling on a county section line road along the northern perimeter of Defendants' property almost to its northeast corner, and then traveling on an oil well service road in an east/southeasterly direction across Defendants' property to their present property. Plaintiffs often transported baling equipment over the service road.

4 The service road passing through Defendants' property was built sometime after Defendants purchased their land in 1994. Dehart Company built it for the purpose of servicing oil well sites in the area. In 2001, Dehart paid Defendants a settlement for a release from claims of surface damages. Defendants claim Dehart also agreed to remove the service road onee the oil sites had been abandoned.

15 Defendants were absentee landowners residing outside the state until 2002 when they moved to Velma, Oklahoma. They have been interested in acquiring Plaintiffs' land, and they started locking the gate at the service road entrance shortly after Plaintiffs bought their property in 2006.

16 Plaintiffs petitioned the trial court to grant them an easement, alleging that access *667 to their property was "virtually impossible and beyond reasonable" except by means of the service road through Defendants' property. Defendants countered that Plaintiffs could create an alternate means of access by building a low-water crossing across the creek. Defendants also argued that Plaintiffs were not entitled to an easement since the service road was not in existence when Defendants and Plaintiffs' parcels were severed from common ownership.

T7 At the conclusion of the trial, the trial court found that the tracts of both parties had previously been owned by Pat Peck, that unity of title existed despite the fact that each of the parties had purchased their tracts from different immediate grantors, that Plaintiffs had "no other reasonable means of access to their property except across the serviceable road," and that an easement thereon in favor of Plaintiffs would cause Defendants "minimal" inconvenience. The trial court granted Plaintiffs an easement of necessity over the service road, and stated that it was continuing in nature and transferable to subsequent grantors. Defendants appeal.

STANDARD OF REVIEW

T8 When a trial court grants or denies an easement of necessity, the appellate court will examine the record and affirm unless the trial court's decision is found to be against the clear weight of the evidence or contrary to law or established principles of equity. Mooney v. Mooney, 2008 OK 51, ¶ 27, 70 P.3d 872, 878; DeWitt v. Cavender, 1994 OK CIV APP 93, ¶ 14, 878 P.2d 1077, 1080.

DISCUSSION

T 9 In Franks v. Tyler, 1974 OK CIV APP 55, ¶ 4, 531 P.2d 1067, 1069 (overruled on other grounds by Childress v. Jordan, 1980 OK CIV APP 35, 620 P.2d 470), the Oklahoma Court of Civil Appeals explained the theory of common law easements of necessity:

The common law easement by necessity was based upon the implication of a grant of an easement by the owner of the ser-vient estate when necessity of access to the dominant estate required it. Such a theory requires proof of a common grantor at one time of the two properties since the creation of such an easement is based upon the presumed intent of the grantor to convey a way as well as the property. 1

Generally, to show the existence of a common law easement of necessity, a plaintiff must prove the following elements: (1) unity of title; (2) conveyance of part of the land previously held under unity of title; and (8) a resulting necessity for access to the property at the time of its severance. 28A C.J.S. Easements § 98 (1996). Onee granted, an easement of necessity continues as long as the need exists. Id. at § 96.

{10 Here, Defendants' various propositions of error may be grouped into three arguments challenging the sufficiency of Plaintiffs' proof: first, unity of title did not exist because the parties acquired their respective properties from different grantors; second, an easement cannot be granted over the service road because the road was not in existence at time of severance; and third, an easement is not necessary because Plaintiffs have an alternative means of access to their property.

1. Unity of Title

T11 Although Defendants assert there was no unity of title because the parties purchased their respective properties from different grantors, this is not what unity of title means. Instead, the term means "that the two tracts must have been owned at some time in the past by the same person. It is not the law that both tracts must have been owned by the same person at the time of ... conveyance ... to [the owner of the servient estate)." DeWitt v. Cavender at ¶ 8, 878 P.2d at 1079 (emphasis and citations omitted); see also Haas v. Brannon, 1924 OK 500, 99 Okla. 94, 225 P. 981.

*668 {12 In the present case, Plaintiffs introduced into evidence a 1946 probate decree which recited that Pat Peck owned both properties at his death. In addition, Plaintiffs testified they acquired title to their property in April 2006 from Carmen Hun-sucker, who acquired title from David Gaya-nich, who in turn acquired title from the Peck estate. Defendants purchased their property in 1994 from Geree Kirkpatrick, the widow of Pat Peck, who also acquired her title from the Peck estate. The clear weight of the evidence supports the trial court's finding that the two tracts had been owned at some time in the past by the same party, Pat Peck, and, therefore, had unity of title.

2. Existence of necessity at time of severance

{18 Defendants assert that the trial court erred in granting an "implied easement" because the oil well service road was not in use prior to the conveyance which separated the parties' tracts. They rely on Story v. Hefner, 1975 OK 115, ¶ 16, 540 P.2d 562, 566, for the proposition that "[tlo establish an easement by implication there must first be a conveyance that divides one ownership into separately owned parts. At the time of the conveyance one part of the property must be being used for the benefit of the other part, creating a quasi-easement."

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
2009 OK CIV APP 89, 227 P.3d 664, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/johnson-v-suttles-oklacivapp-2009.