Key v. Allison

70 So. 3d 277, 2010 Ala. LEXIS 237, 2010 WL 5130313
CourtSupreme Court of Alabama
DecidedDecember 17, 2010
Docket1090582
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 70 So. 3d 277 (Key v. Allison) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Alabama primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Key v. Allison, 70 So. 3d 277, 2010 Ala. LEXIS 237, 2010 WL 5130313 (Ala. 2010).

Opinion

COBB, Chief Justice.

Albert W. Key appeals from a judgment as a matter of law entered on his claims against Eleanore K. Allison and Baldwin County. We reverse and remand.

Facts and Procedural History

A walkway known locally as “the boardwalk” extends alongside the bay side of a number of privately owned bayfront properties along Mobile Bay in Point Clear from south of Zundel’s Lane northward to the Grand Hotel, a distance of about one mile. 1 The boardwalk has been in existence and in use by the residents of Point Clear and the general public for over 100 years. The boardwalk was originally con *279 structed of wooden boards, but it is currently composed of various materials, including boards and concrete, and in some places it is simply an unimproved path across the sand. Property owners along the boardwalk have historically maintained the portion of the boardwalk that crossed their property in accordance with their own wishes and judgment.

The landward side of the bayfront properties that the boardwalk crosses abuts Scenic Highway 98. Any destination that can be reached by the boardwalk can also be accessed by Scenic Highway 98. At the time of the trial of this case, the portion of Scenic Highway 98 that parallels the boardwalk did not have a sidewalk or a shoulder that could be used for pedestrian traffic. However, at the time of the trial of this case, plans existed to create a bike path along Scenic Highway 98, which could also be used by pedestrians.

For approximately 20 years, Key has lived on the bay in a house just south of Zundel’s Lane, which runs perpendicular to Scenic Highway 98. Key is familiar with the boardwalk, and he uses it regularly. Key knows of no one who has ever requested or received permission to use the boardwalk. In the past, Key regularly used the boardwalk to travel by foot between his house and his office, which is located north of the Grand Hotel. Members of his family, including his children and grandchildren, have also used the boardwalk for beach access and to travel by foot and on bicycle to various destinations along the bay.

In 1987, Allison purchased the bayfront property just north of Zundel’s Lane. She moved a house onto the property and has since lived there. The public has historically accessed the boardwalk north of Zun-del’s Lane through a gap in a fence that runs along Allison’s southern property line. The part of the boardwalk that crosses Allison’s property is composed of concrete slabs. According to Allison, “lots of people” have asked her for permission to use the part of the boardwalk that traverses her property. She testified at trial that the people who asked for permission “usually ... were from like Germany or something.”

In 2004, Hurricane Ivan damaged the portion of the boardwalk on Allison’s property. Allison’s pier was also destroyed in Hurricane Ivan, and Allison stacked the boards from the pier on the damaged concrete slabs that had been the boardwalk by her house. Afterward, people using the boardwalk walked around Allison’s stack of boards.

At some point, Key and his wife asked Allison to move the stack of boards from the area of the boardwalk. Allison did not move the stack of boards; instead, she boarded up the gap in her fence, effectively blocking public access to the boardwalk north of Zundel’s Lane.

On June 10, 2008, Key sued Allison, seeking a judgment declaring that “the boardwalk is a dedicated public walkway” across Allison’s property and declaring that Key has a legal right to maintain and repair the portion of the boardwalk that crosses Allison’s property. In addition, Key sought an order enjoining Allison from interfering with his repairs to that portion of the boardwalk or from interfering with access to the boardwalk through a gate Key proposed be installed in her fence by Key. On August 6, 2008, Key amended his complaint to add Baldwin County as a defendant.

On July 9, 2009, a bench trial was held. Joey Dunley, an engineer for Baldwin County, testified at trial that the boardwalk had been in existence for approximately 100 years. Dunley had studied the history of the boardwalk in preparation for *280 his testimony on behalf of the County at trial.

John Brodbeck, an 83-year-old resident of Point Clear who was born and reared in the area, testified that the boardwalk had been in existence and used by the public for as long as he could remember. Brod-beck testified that he had used the boardwalk throughout his life and that, to his knowledge, neither he nor anyone else had ever asked for or obtained permission to walk on the boardwalk. According to Brodbeck, other than Allison’s recent closure of her portion of the boardwalk, no property owner along the boardwalk had ever attempted to close the boardwalk or to prevent members of the general public from using it.

The trial transcript includes the following exchange from Brodbeck’s testimony:

“Q [Allison’s counsel]: In your experience using the boardwalk, isn’t it true it was your understanding that you always had the consent or the permission of whoever owned the property to walk along there?
“A [Brodbeck]: No, no.
“Q: You thought you were going on it against the wishes of the landowner?
“A: No, no. Most people along there invited you to walk the boardwalk, they were proud of it.
“Q: That’s what I mean. The boardwalk was installed at the owners’ expense, correct?
“A: Oh, yeah, yeah.
“Q: They improved it and maintained it and encour—
“A: But they did it for the public.
“Q: Exactly. And they encouraged people to walk on it, correct?
“A: Yeah.
“Q: And you’re not saying that anyone other than the adjoining owner worked to improve the boardwalk, to build the boardwalk out of wood or whatever it was built out of?
“A: Well, most people took enough pride in their property that they maintained it themselves.
“Q: Right. You’re not aware of any instance where anyone else maintained it for them, are you?
“A: Not right off, I haven’t been aware of it.”

Key likewise testified at trial that members of the public used the boardwalk without asking for permission to do so. His testimony on this point is reflected in the following exchange:

“Q [Allison’s counsel]: Is there anything more that could have been done by Ms. Allison or by her predecessors in title to make people think they were welcome to walk along the boardwalk in front of her property?
“A [Key]: I don’t — Other than putting up a sign, you know, I mean, it was— There was never any question that people could walk there.
“Q: It opened straight onto Zundel’s Lane, it was a paved, level — not paved, it was concrete, level sidewalk.

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Related

Grocholski v. Grocholski
89 So. 3d 123 (Court of Civil Appeals of Alabama, 2011)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
70 So. 3d 277, 2010 Ala. LEXIS 237, 2010 WL 5130313, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/key-v-allison-ala-2010.