Kaynor v. Fisch

230 P.2d 418, 103 Cal. App. 2d 832, 1951 Cal. App. LEXIS 1246
CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedApril 27, 1951
DocketCiv. 17781
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 230 P.2d 418 (Kaynor v. Fisch) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering California Court of Appeal primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Kaynor v. Fisch, 230 P.2d 418, 103 Cal. App. 2d 832, 1951 Cal. App. LEXIS 1246 (Cal. Ct. App. 1951).

Opinion

WOOD (Parker), J.—

Action for declaration of rights and to quiet title to an easement. Judgment was in favor of the plaintiffs and the interveners. Defendant appeals from the judgment.

Appellant asserts in part that the court erred in granting a wider right of way over defendant’s ranch than the road which existed when defendant sold land to plaintiffs; that the court erred in enlarging the easement from a right of way for ingress and egress to include “all road purposes”; and that since there was a more convenient means of ingress and egress an easement over defendant’s ranch was not necessary, and that no grant of easement by implication arose.

In 1931 defendant Fisch purchased the west half of Lot 72 of tract 102 in Los Angeles County. The front or south line of Lot 72 adjoins Foothill Boulevard. The lot is rectangular and extends northerly about 727 feet. In 1936 defendant Fisch purchased a parcel of land which adjoins the northeast corner of said Lot 72 (but it does not adjoin the west half of that lot), and in 1945 he sold said parcel to plaintiffs Kaynor. Thereafter, the Kaynors sold a portion of that property to the interveners, Mr. and Mrs. Saniger. The first parcel of land purchased by defendant will be referred to as the Fisch ranch, and the second parcel will be referred to as the Kaynor ranch.

Since 1913 there had been an unpaved road upon the Fisch ranch along the west line thereof, extending from Foothill Boulevard to the north line. A ranch known as the Ferree ranch adjoins said Lot 72 on the north. Along the south line of the Ferree ranch there was an unpaved road which was a continuation of the road that was on the Fisch ranch. That road adjoined a road that extended across the Kaynor ranch and upon lands to the north of the Kaynor ranch. In other words, there was a continuous open road from Foothill Boulevard to the lands north of the Kaynor ranch, which road extended north across the Fisch ranch along the west line thereof, and then east across the Ferree ranch along the south line thereof, and then across the Kaynor ranch. After defendant purchased the second parcel of land (the Kaynor ranch) in 1936, he used the road on the Ferree ranch and the road on the Fisch ranch to go from the Kaynor ranch to Foothill Boulevard and to return from that boulevard to the Kaynor ranch. *835 On March 31, 1948, Mr. and Mrs. Ferree, who owned the land adjoining the Fisch ranch on the north, by a deed of easement granted to plaintiffs an easement for ingress and egress within the south 20 feet of the Ferree ranch. (This action was filed on November 5, 1947.)

Plaintiffs alleged in their fourth amended complaint, in part, that at the time defendant sold the Kaynor ranch to plaintiffs the plaintiffs had “no access from” said property to a public highway; and they still have no access to a public highway ; that they are entitled to a private way of necessity over defendant’s land to Foothill Boulevard; that there is a private road along the westerly 20 feet of the Fiseh ranch. In the second cause of action therein, they alleged that plaintiffs are the owners and entitled to possession of a right of way over and through the westerly 20 feet of the Fisch ranch “as appurtenant to” the Kaynor ranch; that defendant claims an interest in and to said easement and right of way adversely to the plaintiffs. In the third cause of action plaintiffs alleged that about April 1, 1945, defendant offered to sell the Kaynor ranch to plaintiffs together with an easement for all road purposes over the westerly 20 feet of the Fisch ranch for the sum of $10,500; that plaintiffs orally accepted said offer; that plaintiffs paid said consideration, and on April 13, 1945, defendant conveyed the Kaynor ranch to plaintiffs; that during negotiations regarding the sale the defendant told plaintiffs that an easement over defendant’s land would be included in the property sold to plaintiffs; that until August 1, 1947, plaintiffs believed that they had acquired said easement; that the failure to include said easement in the deed was due to the fraud of defendant in omitting the easement from the deed. In the fourth cause of action plaintiffs alleged that by mutual mistake of plaintiffs and defendant the deed omitted a provision conveying said easement. In a fifth cause of action it was alleged that said mistake was brought about by the failure of plaintiffs and defendant to advise the scrivener, who prepared the deed, to include therein a provision conveying said easement.

In 1913 the person who owned the land which adjoins the Kaynor ranch on the north and the person who then owned the Kaynor ranch made a road, with the consent of the person who then owned the Fisch ranch, on the Fisch ranch along the west line of the ranch from the north line to the south line or Foothill Boulevard. A witness, called by plaintiffs, *836 who is the son of the person who owned the land north of the Kaynor ranch, testified that in 1913 he resided on the land north of the Kaynor ranch; that his mother still resides there; that he saw the road above referred to “staked out” and that it was made the width of two hayracks (with bales of hay on them) or 24 feet, and the road was straight; that the road was used to gain access to the land where he resided, and that it has been used continuously for such purpose since 1913; that at the present time the road is not 24 feet wide, the road “varies in width” and “isn’t a straight line width”; when automobiles pass each other, it is necessary to “pull off on parts of the road that are not bare”; in order for automobiles to pass, it is necessary that one of them go upon plowed ground on the east side of the road and that the other one go upon hard surface and weeds on the west side.

There was evidence (plaintiffs’ Exhibits 6 and 9A—plats of surveys) showing (1) that the easterly edge of the traveled portion of the road for a distance of 510 feet north from Foothill Boulevard was approximately 18 feet from the westerly line of the Fisch ranch; (2) that the easterly edge of said traveled portion of the road for the next 50 feet was approximately 17 feet from the said westerly line; (3) the easterly edge of the traveled portion for the next 40 feet was various distances from said westerly line, ranging from a maximum of approximately 17 feet to a minimum of 11 feet; (4) the easterly edge for the next 112 feet was various distances from said westerly line, ranging from a maximum of approximately 15 feet to a minimum of 11 feet; (5) the easterly edge for the last 16 feet (being at the turn in the road) was various distances from said westerly line, ranging from a minimum of approximately 15 feet to a maximum of 26 feet. The trial judge, with the consent and in the presence of counsel for the parties, made an inspection of the premises.

The court found, among other things, that at the time of the sale of the Kaynor ranch to plaintiffs that ranch did not front upon a public street, and there was no means of ingress or egress thereto or therefrom except over the Fisch ranch; that on the date of said sale to plaintiffs, and for more than 30 years prior thereto, there existed a road (particularly described in another finding) over the westerly portion of the Fisch ranch running from Foothill Boulevard to the north line of the ranch, and thence running across the Ferree ranch within the south 20 feet of that ranch; that defendant owned the Fisch ranch and the Kaynor ranch for more than *837

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Bluebook (online)
230 P.2d 418, 103 Cal. App. 2d 832, 1951 Cal. App. LEXIS 1246, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/kaynor-v-fisch-calctapp-1951.