Keenan v. Meyer

424 P.3d 351
CourtAlaska Supreme Court
DecidedJuly 20, 2018
Docket7259 S-16176
StatusPublished
Cited by10 cases

This text of 424 P.3d 351 (Keenan v. Meyer) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Alaska Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Keenan v. Meyer, 424 P.3d 351 (Ala. 2018).

Opinion

MAASSEN, Justice.

I. INTRODUCTION

Landowners sued their neighbors over use of a well and an access easement, and the neighbors counterclaimed for damages caused by interference with their water rights and loss of access to their cabin. The superior court ruled in favor of the neighbors following trial and awarded them compensatory loss-of-use damages, as well as full attorney's fees based in part on a finding that the landowners had engaged in vexatious and bad faith conduct. The landowners appeal. We conclude that the superior court did not clearly err in the findings underlying its damages award and that it did not abuse its discretion in its award of full attorney's fees to the neighbors. We therefore affirm the judgment.

II. FACTS AND PROCEEDINGS

A. Keenan And Wade Subdivide Their MacDonald Spit Property.

Michael Keenan and Hugh Wade co-owned about five acres of property near Seldovia at the base of MacDonald Spit. 1 The property is unique in the Spit community because its access routes do not cross any beaches and *354 can be used by highway-legal vehicles. Motorized access to other properties on the Spit is primarily limited to all-terrain vehicles (ATVs).

In 1993 Keenan and Wade subdivided the property into three lots, Lots 1, 2, and 3, and sold Lots 1 and 2, retaining joint ownership of Lot 3. The subdivision plat called for a public access easement along the southern border of all three lots. As part of the sale of Lot 1, Keenan and Wade executed a written memorandum agreement with the new owners, committing to build a year-round ATV and pedestrian trail within the public access easement and to allow a water well to be drilled near the easement; the subdivided lots would "share equally in the right to the water." Keenan testified that he intentionally failed to have the memorandum agreement notarized, believing that it could not then be recorded and he would not be bound by it. The Lot 1 owners recorded it anyway.

A trail known as the Beach Access Trail was constructed along the public access easement, deviating from the easement at one point in Lot 3 to get around an impassable rocky bluff. Subdivision residents and other property owners and lessees in the area customarily used the Beach Access Trail, usually by ATV or foot, despite its deviation from the public easement.

During this time Keenan and Wade reached Lot 3 by taking the western portion of the Beach Access Trail to where it forked into another trail-the Southern Original Trail-that cut across the southeastern corner of Lot 2. After the Lot 2 owners constructed a gravel pad in the corner of their lot, Keenan and Wade crossed the gravel pad before entering Lot 3 via the remnant of the Southern Original Trail, which became known as Jerry's Trail. The Lot 2 owners also used Jerry's Trail to reach their house.

B. Keenan And Wade Subdivide Lot 3.

In 1995 Michael Keenan and his wife Dolores built a second house on the southern portion of Lot 3, accessible by highway-legal vehicles via the Beach Access Trail. By 1999 Keenan and Wade had entered into a de facto partition of Lot 3, 2 which Keenan sought to formalize in 2004. 3 Wade was named the owner of the northern part, Lot 3A-1, and Keenan was named the owner of the southern part, Lot 3A-2. 4 A 2006 court order recognized that Keenan and Wade had agreed to reciprocal easements and directed the parties to file "any necessary documents to preserve said easements, and access to water." In 2008, presumably in order to comply with the court order, Wade granted Keenan a view easement, and Keenan granted Wade water rights and an access easement. The water rights agreement purported to grant Wade rights to water from the well on the Keenans' land. The access easement established a ten-foot-wide easement along the western boundary of Lot 3A-2 (the Keenans' half) that would "run[ ] with the land." The written grant of the access easement was executed and recorded. But at the time the easement was granted, only the northern part of it, coinciding with Jerry's Trail, was in use; the southern part, bordering the Keenans' land, was mostly undeveloped. Wade continued to use Jerry's Trail and never further developed the rest of the easement along the Keenans' land.

C. The Meyers Take Ownership Of Lot 3A-1.

In 2010 Wade sold Lot 3A-1 to Jackson and Kandice Meyer. The Meyers believed that the 1994 memorandum agreement (among Keenan, Wade, and the Lot 1 owners) granted water rights to the well on Lot 3A-2 to all subdivision properties, including theirs. They confirmed that a series of easements granted them motorized access from Jakolof Bay Road, and they understood that the Lot 1 and 2 owners and the Keenans drove to their properties using highway-legal vehicles; the Meyers also understood that Wade had driven to Lot 3A-1 via Jerry's Trail.

The Meyers promptly began renovating the cabin on Lot 3A-1. In the course of the renovations, in late 2010 or early 2011, the Meyers disconnected the Keenans' sewage pipe; this caused a backup in the Keenans'

*355 house, and, as the superior court later found, "did not contribute to good feelings between the neighbors."

The Meyers' renovations required the regular transportation of equipment and materials to their property. They primarily used Jerry's Trail for this until, in July 2011, the Lot 2 owner informed them "that he was closing their access across Lot 2 based on pressure from others in the MacDonald Spit community." Turning instead to the unused access easement along the western edge of the Keenans' lot, the Meyers discovered that it would not be passable without significant improvement.

In the fall of 2011 the Meyers cleared the access easement and made improvements to the Lot 3 well, rotating the well house to reduce its encroachment on the easement. But in spring 2012 the Keenans rotated the well house to again encroach on the easement. The Keenans also placed a burn barrel in the easement, blocked the northern end with large rocks, and posted signs at each end declaring it could only be used for pedestrian traffic. The Meyers dropped their attempts to develop it.

D. The Keenans Initiate Legal Action Regarding The Meyers' Use Of The Access Easement And Water Rights.

In April 2012 the Keenans sent the Meyers a letter threatening legal action if the Meyers further developed the access easement. The Keenans asserted that use of the easement was limited to pedestrian traffic, and then only when tidal conditions prevented use of the Beach Access Trail in conjunction with another trail, to the northeast of the Meyers' lot, known as the Crossover Trail. The Meyers stopped using the access easement altogether, but they also consulted a lawyer and by letter asserted their right to continue making reasonable improvements to it.

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424 P.3d 351, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/keenan-v-meyer-alaska-2018.