Leach v. Gunnarson

604 P.2d 419, 43 Or. App. 761, 1979 Ore. App. LEXIS 3468
CourtCourt of Appeals of Oregon
DecidedDecember 24, 1979
DocketNo. 77-1396, CA 13659
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 604 P.2d 419 (Leach v. Gunnarson) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Oregon primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Leach v. Gunnarson, 604 P.2d 419, 43 Or. App. 761, 1979 Ore. App. LEXIS 3468 (Or. Ct. App. 1979).

Opinion

LEE, J.

Two cases were consolidated for trial. In the primary action, not subject to appeal, plaintiffs Henry and Betty Leach successfully established their right to use and maintain a spring situated on property in Douglas County. The owners of the property were defendants in the main action and also third party plaintiffs seeking damages for breach of warranty from their grantor, Wilma Leach, third party defendant. Hereinafter, those third parties are simply denominated plaintiffs and defendant.

Plaintiffs’ action was for damages for breach of the warranty against encumbrances in a deed conveying real property, the asserted encumbrance being the irrevocable license for use of the spring adjudicated in the primary case. At trial, the court instructed the jury that if they found the license to be an open, notorious and visible physical encumbrance, there was no breach of warranty. The jury so found, and judgment was entered for defendants. Plaintiffs’ four assignments of error1 essentially turn on whether the court properly allowed the jury to determine whether the license was an open, notorious and visible, physical encumbrance.

In 1954, defendant and her husband2 were owners of a 20-acre parcel of land. They sold a small piece of an adjoining parcel, which they also owned, to defendant’s brother-in-law and his wife and orally granted them the right to locate, construct and maintain a spring facility. The spring was situated in a small canyon on the 20 acres, where the new neighbors built a storage basin one foot high by three feet long, with a 370 gallon storage tank (and later, another 1000 gallon tank), with a plastic pipe running for 175 feet [764]*764across defendant’s land. In 1975, plaintiffs bought the 20-acre parcel from defendant and her husband. At the time, plaintiffs were aware of the spring and knew that their neighbors used the water from it. The evidence is conflicting as to precisely what they were told about the nature of that right and to what extent plaintiffs had viewed the spring facility. The warranty deed given to plaintiffs covenanted that the property was "free and clear of all encumbrances”.

At trial, the court gave the following instruction on the question of breach of warranty:

"A covenant in a deed conveying real property that the same is free from encumbrances except those listed therein is not breached by the existence upon the property described in said deed by an open, notorious and visible, physical encumbrance.
"The mere existence of one or more irrevocable licenses owned by the [neighbors], as decreed by the court in its decree of March 29, 1978, for some installation or use on Plaintiffs’ land, as are admitted by all parties, do not constitute an encumbrance which is a breach of any convenant in the deed from Defendant and her husband as grantors to the Plaintiffs as grantees, if you find that any of such irrevocable licenses were open, notorious and visible, physical encumbrances capable of being seen and known to the Plaintiffs, before they took delivery of said deed.”

Plaintiffs requested an alternative instruction3 on the grounds that the physical encumbrance rule does not apply where the deed fails to list the encumbrance.4

[765]*765In Ford v. White, 179 Or 490, 495, 172 P2d 822 (1946), the Oregon Supreme Court held:

"A covenant to convey real property free from incumbrances is not breached by the existence upon the property of an open, notorious, and visible physical incumbrance * *

The encumbrance in Ford was the presence over 20 feet of vendees’ land of two guy wires which were fixed to a common anchorage in order to secure a power line pole located off the property. The encumbrance complained of here is no less obvious than that found to be open, visible and notorious in the Ford case. Additional guidance, albeit dicta, is contained in Fitzstephens v. Watson, 218 Or 185, 209, 344 P2d 221 (1959), where the encumbrance was a redwood storage tank with an intake pipe from a spring and a two-inch pipe running to the user’s land:

"Even though the instrument had not been recorded the defendants would have had notice of plaintiff’s interest from the presence of the pipe line running from the water source on defendants’ land to the land of the plaintiff. Zink v. Davis, 203 Or 49, 277 P2d 1007 (1954); Ford v. White, 179 Or 490, 172 P2d 822 (1946); McDougal v. Lame, 39 Or 212, 64 P 864 (1901); Low v. Schaffer, 24 or 239, 33 P 678 (1893); Annotation, 'Physical Conditions Which will Charge Purchaser of Servient Estate with Notice of Easement’ 41 ALR 1442 at 1445, supplemented 74 ALR 1250 at 1251.”

Under the facts of the instant case, we cannot say that the irrevocable license to use and maintain the basin, tank and pipe for purposes of water supply is not, as a matter of law, a physical encumbrance within the ambit of Ford v. White, supra.5 Therefore, we hold that the question was properly submitted to the jury.

Affirmed.

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Related

Leach v. Gunnarson
619 P.2d 263 (Oregon Supreme Court, 1980)

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Bluebook (online)
604 P.2d 419, 43 Or. App. 761, 1979 Ore. App. LEXIS 3468, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/leach-v-gunnarson-orctapp-1979.