Koeppen v. Bolich

2003 MT 313, 79 P.3d 1100, 318 Mont. 240, 2003 Mont. LEXIS 774
CourtMontana Supreme Court
DecidedNovember 13, 2003
Docket02-029
StatusPublished
Cited by13 cases

This text of 2003 MT 313 (Koeppen v. Bolich) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Montana Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Koeppen v. Bolich, 2003 MT 313, 79 P.3d 1100, 318 Mont. 240, 2003 Mont. LEXIS 774 (Mo. 2003).

Opinion

JUSTICE RICE

delivered the Opinion of the Court.

¶1 Appellants Jon Bolich and Janlee Ruff, hereinafter referred to interchangeably as Bolich and Ruff or Appellants, appeal from the findings of fact, conclusions of law, order, and final judgment and injunction entered in the District Court for the Twenty-First Judicial District, Ravalli County, in favor of the Respondents, Donald B. Koeppen and Grace E. Koeppen (Koeppens). Appellants contend the District Court’s findings are clearly erroneous and its conclusions are incorrect as a matter of law. The findings determined, inter alia, that *242 the terminus of Appellants’ relocated easement on land adjoining Koeppens’ property did not reach Appellants’ existing road right of way across Koeppens’ property, leaving a gap of some seventy to eighty feet between the old road and new road. The permanent injunction ordered Bolich and Ruff to refrain from entering or interfering with Koeppens’ land for purposes of connecting the replacement easement with their existing easement on Koeppen property. The order required Bolich and Ruff to resurface and restore the Koeppen property.

¶2 We affirm.

¶3 We rephrase the Appellants’ issues as follows:

¶4 1. Whether the District Court’s finding that the terminus of a replacement easement owned by Appellants across land adjoining Koeppens’ property missed connecting to Appellants’ existing easement before crossing the Koeppen property line is clearly erroneous.

¶5 2. Whether the District Court’s injunction enjoining Appellants from using the connection road across Koeppen property was a manifest abuse of discretion.

¶6 3. Whether the District Court’s finding that Appellants must reinstall Koeppens’ fence line and gates to a condition equivalent to that which pre-existed Appellants’ construction of a relocated easement across adjoining property is clearly erroneous.

¶7 4. Whether the District Court’s finding that Appellants must pay $2,016.00 for remediation of Koeppens’ property is clearly erroneous.

¶8 5. Whether the District Court’s finding that Appellants must pay $200.00 for Koeppens’ loss of use of their property is clearly erroneous.

¶9 6. Whether the District Court’s conclusion that Appellants are in contempt of court is correct as a matter of law.

¶10 7. Whether the District Court’s conclusion to grant Koeppens their costs of suit is correct as a matter of law.

FACTUAL AND PROCEDURAL BACKGROUND

¶11 This dispute involves real property located in Ravalli County in the vicinity of Kootenai Creek near Stevensville, Montana. Specifically, the dispute involves an easement appurtenant to several tracts of land, including that owned by Respondents, located in Section 17, Township 9 North, Range 20 West, M.M. The essence of the dispute before the District Court was whether there was a physical convergence of the terminus of a relocated easement installed by Appellants on property adjoining that of the Respondents with the roadbed of Appellants’ original easement on the adjoining land prior to crossing Respondents’ property line.

*243 ¶12 Ruff is co-trustee, along with her mother, of the Henry Lynn Stiter and M. Jo Stiter Revocable Trust (Stiter Trust), a trust consisting of approximately thirty-seven and one-half wooded acres near Kootenai Creek. Bolich, Ruffs brother, is the authorized agent of the Stiter Trust for the purpose of making improvements upon and developing the Stiter Trust property. The easement at issue in the present dispute is owned by the Stiter Trust. Beginning at Kootenai Creek Road, the easement transverses four parcels of land before reaching the Stiter Trust property, specifically those belonging to the Coxes, the Bushes, the Koeppens (Respondents), and the VanLoons, all of which are situated adjacent to each other in an east-west row, with the Stiter property being the western-most parcel. Each of these properties is a servient tenement to the easement, the Stiter Trust holding the dominant tenement. Kootenai Creek, a tributary with a high bluff, actually flows through each of the properties.

¶13 On September 19, 1950, the predecessor in title to Ruff obtained an easement to provide roadway access to the Stiter Trust property. The easement deed granted a twenty-foot access on the edge of the bluff above Kootenai Creek, to be located as near to the edge of the bluff as possible. It is undisputed that for over forty years the Stiter Trust easement was physically located on the bluff above Kootenai Creek, roughly parallel to the natural watercourse. Although the easement was neither surveyed nor depicted as to its exact location, the existence and use of the Stiter Trust easement was noted on Certificate of Survey (COS) 1056, dated June 29, 1976, records of Ravalli County, Montana.

¶14 For many years, the Stiter Trust did not use its easement. In the interim, the predecessors in title to both the Bushes and the Coxes built homesites and backyards physically located either on, or very near, the easement roadbed. In 1998, the Bushes gave Bolich and Ruff permission to use a temporary route across their property, but this, however, was not a satisfactory arrangement to either of the parties. Meanwhile, the Bushes and the Coxes attempted to negotiate the purchase of a corner of the Koeppens’ property as part of their ongoing efforts to relocate the Stiter Trust easement to a more acceptable location. Don Koeppen testified he agreed to a price, but withdrew his offer after a year’s time when no one paid him for the land.

¶15 In August of 1999, this dispute was precipitated by Bolich’s and Ruffs arrival at the Cox property intending to exercise their right to use their easement. When Appellants were dismantling a swing set in the Bushes’ backyard to drive a bulldozer through, the Bushes and the Coxes approached Bolich and Ruff to try to work something out. Bolich *244 and Bush walked the Bush property for several hours, with Bolich placing stakes marking a route for a relocated easement.

¶16 Two days later, on August 24, 1999, Ruff and her mother as co-trustees of the Stiter Trust, the Bushes, and the Coxes signed an agreement “to settle a dispute involving a Right of Way Deed.” The agreement provided that: (1) Ruff would abandon the Stiter Trust easement across the Cox property in exchange for payment of $35,000 from Cox; and (2) Ruff would abandon the Stiter Trust easement across the Bush property in exchange for a relocated easement on the Bush property. The Bushes agreed to retain Greg Martinson, a professional surveyor, to survey, plat, and file the new twenty-foot easement based on the centerline, as staked by Bolich. The Martinson survey was filed as COS 5920, with minor changes subsequently filed as COS 5940 and COS 5940 ES.

¶17 The Koeppens took no part in the August 24, 1999, agreement. Thus, it became crucial for the Stiter Trust, in order to avoid becoming landlocked, to assure that any relocated roadbed on Bushes’ property connected to their existing 1950 easement on Bush property before it crossed the Bush/Koeppen property line.

¶18 Following the signing of the agreement in August 1999, Bolich began construction of the relocated easement on Bush property.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
2003 MT 313, 79 P.3d 1100, 318 Mont. 240, 2003 Mont. LEXIS 774, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/koeppen-v-bolich-mont-2003.