Knight v. Rosanta Company CA1/4

CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedJune 16, 2023
DocketA163554
StatusUnpublished

This text of Knight v. Rosanta Company CA1/4 (Knight v. Rosanta Company CA1/4) 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
Knight v. Rosanta Company CA1/4, (Cal. Ct. App. 2023).

Opinion

Filed 6/16/23 Knight v. Rosanta Company CA1/4 NOT TO BE PUBLISHED IN OFFICIAL REPORTS California Rules of Court, rule 8.1115(a), prohibits courts and parties from citing or relying on opinions not certified for publication or ordered published, except as specified by rule 8.1115(b). This opinion has not been certified for publication or ordered published for purposes of rule 8.1115.

IN THE COURT OF APPEAL OF THE STATE OF CALIFORNIA

FIRST APPELLATE DISTRICT

DIVISION FOUR

JERRY KNIGHT, Plaintiff, Cross-complainant A163554 and Respondent, v. (Sonoma County ROSANTA COMPANY, Super. Ct. No. SCV-262559) Defendant, Cross-defendant and Appellant.

Plaintiff Jerry Knight owns the River Theater in Guerneville, California. Defendant Rosanta Company (Rosanta) owns commercial property that adjoins and surrounds the theater on three sides. Rosanta’s property includes additional commercial buildings and an undeveloped area used for parking. At trial, evidence was presented that these two properties were originally a single parcel owned by Rosanta. In the 1950’s, Rosanta subdivided its lot, carving out a separate parcel for the theater building. Ownership of the theater has changed hands several times in the last 60 years, most recently to Knight in 2010.1

Attached as appendix A is a survey map, admitted into evidence at 1

trial, which provides a visual overview of the two properties.

1 Knight’s operation of the theater, like that of each prior owner, encroaches on Rosanta’s property at several locations. As relevant here, theater guests often park in the undeveloped lot located behind the theater, which can be accessed through gated driveways on the east and west sides of Rosanta’s property. From the parking lot, guests access the theater’s side doors through a set of stairs on the east side of the building or a ramp on the west side of the building, both of which are located on Rosanta’s property. There are also fenced storage areas adjacent to the rear of the theater that sit on Rosanta’s property.2 The historically workable relationship between the various theater owners and Rosanta soured sometime after Knight’s purchase when Rosanta sought to further develop its property. As a result, in 2018, Knight filed a complaint against Rosanta seeking to establish his legal right to permanent and continued use of Rosanta’s property based on the longstanding use by him and the previous property owners. Rosanta filed a cross-complaint against Knight seeking to preclude Knight’s continued use of, among other areas, the parking area including gates and driveways, the ramp, and stairs that lead to the theater’s side exits and the storage areas behind the theater. Following a bench trial, the court issued a statement of decision making findings of fact regarding the uses of the property and entered a judgment in favor of Knight establishing his right to several easements supporting his permanent and continued use of Rosanta’s property. After trial, the court modified the judgment to eliminate Knight’s right to use the east gate and driveway to access the parking lot and to add a requirement

2Attached as appendix B are photos, admitted into evidence at trial, which depict the stairs, ramp and storage areas.

2 that Knight maintain the ramp, stairs and other improvements on Rosanta’s property as a condition of his continued use. On appeal, Rosanta contends, among other things, that the judgment must be reversed because the easements permitting Knight’s use of the ramp and fenced storage areas are exclusive easements prohibited by law. In his cross-appeal, Knight contends the court erred by modifying the judgment. We find no error and affirm the modified judgment. Factual Background The properties at issue in this case share a lengthy history that is necessary to understand the present dispute. In 1947, Rosanta purchased a large parcel in Guerneville, California, that consisted of an approximately 600-seat theater, adjacent commercial buildings and an unimproved area located behind the properties. The theater is a rectangular building with its primary entrance on Main Street. One of the commercial buildings, now operating as a restaurant, sits to west side of the theater and shares a wall with the theater. Another commercial building, once operated as a cocktail lounge or nightclub, sits to the other side of the theater with a small, gated alleyway running between the two buildings. Shortly after Rosanta purchased the parcel, another commercial building, once used as a post office, was built next to the former nightclub. In other words, the theater is situated towards the middle of a row of four commercial buildings, all facing Main Street. In 1951, Rosanta formed a subsidiary company known as the River Grove Theater Company (Theater Company). Rosanta then created a separate parcel for the theater, consisting of only the walls of the theater and conveyed that parcel to the Theater Company. The property retained by Rosanta surrounded the theater on three sides. At that time, Rosanta and the

3 Theater Company entered into an agreement acknowledging the shared wall between the theater and the building to its west and agreeing to various obligations regarding its repair and continued use in the event that either party decided to erect a new building on their respective properties. In 1965, Rosanta dissolved the Theater Company and sold the theater, thus ending almost two decades of ownership. Between 1965 and 2010, several third parties owned the theater. Throughout the years, however, the property continued to operate as an entertainment venue, sometimes showing movies, other times hosting large live music events. Testimony established that the undeveloped area in the rear of the theater was consistently used for parking by the theater owners and guests and that the theater was regularly accessed from the parking lot via the side doors of the theater. In 2010, Knight purchased the theater. At the time of his purchase, the original double doors on the west side of the theatre opened onto the wooden ramp (one of the structures which is the subject of Rosanta’s appeal) that leads to the rear of the building. These doors were used as emergency exits, to move equipment in and out of the theater and for access to the theatre by people with disabilities. Testimony established that in 1965, when the theater was first sold to a third party, the double doors on the west side of the theater led to a wooden porch and a set of stairs led from the porch to the parking area. Although no testimony was presented as to when the ramp, which replaced the staircase, was built, witness testimony established that the ramp existed in the late 1980’s and was used at that time by performers to load equipment in and out of the theater from their vehicles which were parked in the back.

4 On the east side of the theater, a second set of outward-opening double doors open to the alley that runs to the front of the building and to a set of stairs that leads to the to the rear of the building. Witness testimony established the stairs existence since at least the late 1960’s. The theater has a recorded easement for use of the alleyway for egress and ingress. The undeveloped area at the rear of the theater can be accessed by vehicles from two directions. To the east of the theatre, it can be accessed through a gate next to the old post office on Main Street and a road that runs the eastern perimeter of Rosanta’s property. It can also be accessed via a gated access road on the western perimeter of Rosanta’s property. Knight, like the prior owners, has regularly used the area for parking. Finally, there are two fenced storage areas (the other structures at issue in Rosanta’s appeal) that are adjacent to each other and located immediately behind the theater.

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Knight v. Rosanta Company CA1/4, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/knight-v-rosanta-company-ca14-calctapp-2023.