Johnston v. Cornelius

218 P.3d 129, 230 Or. App. 733, 2009 Ore. App. LEXIS 1349
CourtCourt of Appeals of Oregon
DecidedSeptember 9, 2009
Docket05CV0234MA; A137037
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 218 P.3d 129 (Johnston v. Cornelius) 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
Johnston v. Cornelius, 218 P.3d 129, 230 Or. App. 733, 2009 Ore. App. LEXIS 1349 (Or. Ct. App. 2009).

Opinion

*735 ROSENBLUM, J.

Plaintiffs brought this action for interference with easement, alleging that defendants had blocked their access to a driveway easement across defendants’ property in Deschutes County. Defendants responded with counterclaims alleging that the easement had been extinguished either by abandonment or by adverse possession. The trial court ruled in defendants’ favor on both counterclaims and entered a judgment dismissing plaintiffs’ claim. Plaintiffs appeal. On de novo review, we conclude that defendants failed to prove by clear and convincing evidence that the easement was extinguished. We also conclude that plaintiffs proved that defendants substantially interfered with their use of the easement. Because questions remain as to whether plaintiffs are entitled to damages, we reverse and remand for further proceedings.

We take the following facts from the record. The parties own parcels of property located within a larger tract of land referred to in the deeds to the parcels as the “Southwest Quarter,” 1 which measures 1,320 feet by 1,320 feet. Swalley Road runs along the western and northern boundaries of the Southwest Quarter; the road bends 90 degrees at the northwest corner of the tract. The Southwest Quarter is divided into nine separate tax lots. The north half of the Southwest Quarter is divided into four parallel lots of equal size. From west to east, those lots are designated as lots 400, 600, 702, and 700. The south half of the Southwest Quarter is similarly divided, except that the easternmost parcel is further divided into two lots, lot 800 and lot 701, along an east-west line, such that lot 800 lies to the north of lot 701. From west to east, the remaining lots are designated as lots 500, 601, and 703. Plaintiffs own lots 800 and 701. Defendants own lot 601. Thus, defendants’ property is separated from plaintiffs’ two lots by lot 703. Plaintiffs’ home lies near the eastern boundary of lot 800. Defendants’ home lies near the southern boundary of lot 601. The easement at issue in this case runs directly in front of defendants’ home.

*736 [[Image here]]

The easement in question was created in a warranty deed given by Rollie and Alma Roach to T. R. and Dorothy Wilson on March 4,1974. The deed conveyed, as a single tract of land, lots 700, 701, 702, and 703. 2 The deed from the Roaches to the Wilsons also granted the easement at issue in this case: a 30-foot-wide roadway easement across lots 500 and 601, running along the southern boundary of the lots. 3 In other words, the easement ran east from Swalley Road, along the southern boundary of lots 500 and 601, to the tract purchased by the Wilsons. The deed from the Roaches did not specify whether the easement was intended to benefit any particular portion of the property conveyed.

The Wilsons evidently already owned lot 800, so the conveyance from the Roaches effectively made them the *737 owners of the entire eastern half of the Southwest Quarter. Around the time that they acquired the property from the Roaches, the Wilsons sold, as a single parcel, lots 700, 800, and 701 to Richard and Diane Graue — in essence, the entire eastern half of their property. 4 The deed to the Graues did not mention the easement that the Roaches granted to the Wilsons across lots 500 and 601. Nor did the deed grant an easement across the property that the Wilsons retained — lots 702 and 703.

The Wilsons built a house near the southwestern corner of their property. They used the driveway on the easement across lots 500 and 601 to access the house from Swalley Road.

In 1978, the Graues sold lots 701 and 800 as a single parcel. 5 In the deed, they granted a roadway easement along the eastern boundary of lot 700, thus providing the buyer with access to Swalley Road to the north. That parcel changed hands several more times until plaintiffs acquired it in 1992. None of the deeds, including the deed to plaintiffs, mentioned the easement across lots 500 and 601. All of the deeds included the easement across lot 700. None of the owners of lots 701 and 800 — ^including plaintiffs — ever used the driveway across lots 500 and 601 to access Swalley Road, although, for about 10 years, plaintiffs walked down it once a year to clear an irrigation ditch along Swalley Road.

In the meantime, in 1985, the Wilsons sold lot 703— the southern half of their property — to Mr. and Mrs. Trink. 6 *738 The Trinks continued to use the existing driveway across lots 500 and 601 for several more years. Eventually, they bought lot 702 from the Wilsons and constructed a driveway along the western boundary of lots 702 and 703, which they then used as their primary access to Swalley Road.

The Trinks also built a fence up the center of lot 703, beginning at the southern boundary. There was no gate in the fence. They used the fenced-in area (on the east side of the fence) as pasture land. The fence was in place when plaintiffs purchased their property in 1992. Plaintiffs did not object to the fence blocking any potential vehicle passage across lot 703 for at least 12 years after they bought their property.

The Trinks later sold lots 702 and 703 to Mr. and Mrs. Curry. The Currys used the easement across lots 500 and 601 on several occasions, but they primarily used the driveway on their own property to access Swalley Road to the north. The Currys also used the fenced-in area for pasture.

Defendants purchased lot 601 in 2001. They were aware of the easement across the property, although a lawyer they consulted told them that the easement was no longer valid. At some point before defendants acquired the property, when either that property or the neighboring property to the south was cleared for agricultural use, large rocks were piled along the southern boundary of lot 601. The rocks extend between 15 and 20 feet onto that lot — that is, onto the easement. At various times, both defendants and their predecessors parked vehicles and trailers on the driveway that lies on the easement.

In 2004, plaintiffs applied to Deschutes County for a conditional use permit to allow them to subdivide their property and build a house on lot 701, which they intended to sell. Because their house on lot 800 lies near the eastern boundary, extending their driveway to provide access to lot 701 would mean that the buyers of lot 701 would pass closely by their house when driving to and from Swalley Road. Plaintiffs did not want traffic passing so close to their house, so they sought to create a driveway from the southern part of lot 701 to Swalley Road to the west. Contending that the easement created in the 1974 deed from the Roaches to the *739 Wilsons provided access to the entire property conveyed in the deed — including lot 701 — they asserted that they had a right to use the easement.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
218 P.3d 129, 230 Or. App. 733, 2009 Ore. App. LEXIS 1349, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/johnston-v-cornelius-orctapp-2009.