K & H Hideaway v. Cheloha

CourtNebraska Court of Appeals
DecidedAugust 30, 2016
DocketA-15-275
StatusPublished

This text of K & H Hideaway v. Cheloha (K & H Hideaway v. Cheloha) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Nebraska Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
K & H Hideaway v. Cheloha, (Neb. Ct. App. 2016).

Opinion

Nebraska Supreme Court Online Library www.nebraska.gov/apps-courts-epub/ 08/30/2016 09:09 AM CDT

- 297 - Nebraska Court of A ppeals A dvance Sheets 24 Nebraska A ppellate R eports K & H HIDEAWAY v. CHELOHA Cite as 24 Neb. App. 297

K & H Hideaway, LLC, appellee, v. Rodney M. Cheloha, appellant. ___ N.W.2d ___

Filed August 30, 2016. No. A-15-275.

1. Easements: Adverse Possession: Equity: Jurisdiction: Appeal and Error. A suit to confirm a prescriptive easement is one grounded in the equitable jurisdiction of the district court and, on appeal to this court, is reviewed de novo on the record, subject to the rule that where credible evidence is in conflict on material issues of fact, the appellate court will consider that the trial court observed the witnesses and accepted one version of the facts over another. 2. Easements: Adverse Possession: Proof. A claim for prescriptive ease- ment requires that all the elements of such adverse use be clearly, con- vincingly, and satisfactorily established. 3. Easements: Words and Phrases. An easement is an interest in land owned by another person, consisting in the right to use or control the land, or an area above or below it, for a specific limited purpose. 4. Easements. A claimant may acquire an easement through prescription. 5. Easements: Adverse Possession. The use and enjoyment that will establish an easement through prescription are substantially the same in quality and characteristics as the adverse possession that will give title to real estate, but there are some differences between the two doctrines. 6. Easements. The law treats a claim of prescriptive right with disfavor. The reasons are obvious—to allow a person to acquire prescriptive rights over the lands of another is a harsh result for the burdened land- owner. And further, a prescriptive easement essentially rewards a tres- passer, and grants the trespasser the right to use another’s land without compensation. 7. Easements: Proof: Time. A party claiming a prescriptive easement must show that its use was exclusive, adverse, under a claim of right, continuous and uninterrupted, and open and notorious for the full 10-year prescriptive period. - 298 - Nebraska Court of A ppeals A dvance Sheets 24 Nebraska A ppellate R eports K & H HIDEAWAY v. CHELOHA Cite as 24 Neb. App. 297

8. Easements: Adverse Possession: Words and Phrases. The word “exclusive” in reference to a prescriptive easement does not mean that there must be use only by one person, but, rather, means that the use cannot be dependent upon a similar right in others. 9. ____: ____: ____. A use is continuous and uninterrupted if it is estab- lished that the easement was used whenever there was any necessity to do so and with such frequency that the owner of the servient estate would have been apprised of the right being claimed. 10. Easements: Presumptions: Proof: Time. Generally, once a claimant has shown open and notorious use over the 10-year prescriptive period, adverseness is presumed. At that point, the landowner must present evi- dence showing that the use was permissive. 11. Easements: Presumptions. When a claimant uses a neighbor’s drive- way or roadway without interfering with the owner’s use or the drive- way itself, the use is to be presumed permissive. Of course, this rule merely creates a presumption. 12. Evidence: Appeal and Error. When credible evidence is in conflict on material issues of fact, the appellate court may consider and give weight to the fact that the trial court observed the witnesses and accepted one version of the facts over another. 13. Easements: Proof. The party asserting a prescriptive right must also clearly establish the nature and scope of the easement. 14. Easements. The extent and nature of an easement are determined from the use made of the property during the prescriptive period. 15. ____. The law requires that the easement must be clearly definable and precisely measured.

Appeal from the District Court for Platte County: Robert R. Steinke, Judge. Affirmed. David A. Domina, of Domina Law Group, P.C., L.L.O., and Mark M. Sipple, of Sipple, Hansen, Emerson, Schumacher & Klutman, for appellant. George H. Moyer, of Moyer & Moyer, for appellee. Inbody, Pirtle, and R iedmann, Judges. Pirtle, Judge. INTRODUCTION Rodney M. Cheloha appeals from an order of the district court for Platte County granting K & H Hideaway, LLC - 299 - Nebraska Court of A ppeals A dvance Sheets 24 Nebraska A ppellate R eports K & H HIDEAWAY v. CHELOHA Cite as 24 Neb. App. 297

(K&H), a prescriptive easement across Cheloha’s property and enjoining Cheloha from interfering with K&H’s use of the prescriptive easement. Based on the reasons that follow, we affirm.

BACKGROUND In May 2013, K&H brought an action against Cheloha, Paul Donoghue, and Donoghue’s wife, seeking the establishment of a prescriptive easement over a private road located on land owned by Cheloha. K&H also sought injunctive relief enjoin- ing Cheloha from interfering with K&H’s use of the easement. Trial was held on multiple days in 2014. A summary of the evidence is as follows: In 2012, K&H acquired a 7-acre tract of land in Platte County, Nebraska. The triangular tract of land is bordered by the Loup River on the north. Cheloha owns property to the east and southeast of the 7-acre tract. Cheloha’s parents owned the property prior to Cheloha. Donoghue owns property adjacent to and located south of the tract’s southern boundary. There is a cabin located on K&H’s property, and the property is primar- ily used for recreational purposes, although approximately 4 acres of the tract consists of a meadow that provides an annual hay crop. K&H’s property is landlocked and is not accessible by a public road. Until October 2012, the 7-acre tract was accessed by way of a private road extending north along the section line separating Cheloha’s property on the east from the Donoghue property on the west. Although Donoghue and his deceased wife were originally named as defendants in this case, they were dismissed when it was determined that the disputed pri- vate road lies east of the section line and is located entirely on Cheloha’s property. Evidence was offered to show the historical ownership of the 7-acre tract. The property was owned by John Bredehoft as early as 1901 and was transferred to Theodore Bredehoft in 1945. It stayed in the Bredehoft family until 1986, when - 300 - Nebraska Court of A ppeals A dvance Sheets 24 Nebraska A ppellate R eports K & H HIDEAWAY v. CHELOHA Cite as 24 Neb. App. 297

it was conveyed to Robert Grimes. After his death in 2005, the property was inherited by Keith Grimes (Grimes). In February 2006, Grimes executed a warranty deed conveying the property to himself and his friend, Harlan Siefken, as joint tenants. Upon the death of Grimes in August 2009, Siefken, as surviving joint tenant, took ownership of the property. Siefken sold and conveyed title to the property to K&H by deed dated September 18, 2012. As far back as the witnesses could remember—at least since 1956—the 7-acre tract was always accessed by way of the private road along the east side of the section line separating the Cheloha and Donoghue properties. The road was described as a fairly well maintained and graded gravel drive approxi- mately 15 feet in width. The disputed road runs north, approx­ imately 1,300 feet, to a drive that enters the K&H property. The disputed road extends further north beyond the K&H drive to a drive which extends on Cheloha’s property. The disputed road is well-defined and is bounded on the west by a boundary fence between the Cheloha and Donoghue properties. It is bounded on the east by rows of crops dur- ing the growing season, and an area with a Quonset and machine shed that has living quarters.

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Bluebook (online)
K & H Hideaway v. Cheloha, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/k-h-hideaway-v-cheloha-nebctapp-2016.