Lee v. SCHOOL DISTRICT NO. R-1 IN COUNTY OF JEFFERSON

435 P.2d 232, 164 Colo. 326, 1967 Colo. LEXIS 801
CourtSupreme Court of Colorado
DecidedDecember 11, 1967
Docket21766
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 435 P.2d 232 (Lee v. SCHOOL DISTRICT NO. R-1 IN COUNTY OF JEFFERSON) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Colorado primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Lee v. SCHOOL DISTRICT NO. R-1 IN COUNTY OF JEFFERSON, 435 P.2d 232, 164 Colo. 326, 1967 Colo. LEXIS 801 (Colo. 1967).

Opinion

Opinion by

Mr. Justice Day.

This writ of error stems from the denial of plaintiffs in error’s petition in the trial court under R.C.P. Colo. 105 to establish an implied easement by way of necessity over the lands of defendant Jefferson County School District No. R-l, hereinafter referred to as School Dis7 trict or defendant. We will refer to plaintiffs in error as plaintiffs or as Robert and Mary.

Minnie A. Lee, the mother of Robert, was originally the sole owner of a large tract of land — a farm and orchard — in Jefferson County. In 1952 she divided the land among her several children by conveying a parcel thereof to each child and his or her spouse as joint tenants with herself. Robert and Mary became joint owners with her of property described herein as parcels 77 and 84 — the subject matter of the within action — whereas Minnie and other children and their spouseá held the lands adjoining the west boundary line of parcels 77 and 84. These westerly parcels will be referred to as No. 8 and 76. ¡

Minnie Lee had been adjudged a mental incompetent when in 1959, along with the trustees or conservators of Minnie’s estate, the plaintiffs conveyed parcel 84 to the defendant School District. The southern boundary of 84 abutted on West 38th Avenue with a frontage of 543 feet. The deeds to the School District were silent as to any right of way or easement across parcel 84 conveyed *328 for the benefit of parcel 77 which had been retained. The matter of right of way or easement across the lands of the defendant was not discussed by the parties at any time during the negotiations for conveyance of the land. After the conveyance and before this suit was instituted a school had been built on parcel 84. The easement which plaintiffs below sought was a 30 foot wide street through the school grounds to West 38th Avenue.

The easement by way of necessity was sought approximately four years after the conveyance to the defendant and apparently after the death of Minnie Lee, at which time her common ownership of parcels 77, 76 and 8 merged into the various surviving joint tenants, leaving Robert and Mary as sole owners of 77 and their kinsfolk and spouses as respective owners of 76 and 8.

At the close of plaintiffs’ evidence, defendant moved for dismissal of plaintiffs’ petition. This was granted and thus was effected a denial of the request for a way of necessity. Nevertheless the court found that at the time of the conveyance in 1952 from Minnie to herself and plaintiffs as joint tenants there arose a dominant and servient estate between the parties so that plaintiffs had a right to the same access to parcel 77 as used by the grantor Minnie Lee. The trial court found that there was an access roadway from West 38th Avenue used for many years and still in existence in 1959 when parcel 84 was conveyed away. This road to and from West 38th Avenue was in a north-south direction through parcel 76, hence northwesterly to the farm house in parcel 8 and from the farmhouse north-easterly across No. 8 and the north corner of parcel 84 and northerly into parcel 77. (See Figure No.l)

The court on these findings adjudged and decreed that the portion of the roadway, which was still visible at the time of the trial,, across the corner of the defendant’s land, constituted an implied easement by preexisting use and that the burden thus imposed upon *330 parcel 84 would remain. The easement by way of necessity was denied.

*329

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
435 P.2d 232, 164 Colo. 326, 1967 Colo. LEXIS 801, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/lee-v-school-district-no-r-1-in-county-of-jefferson-colo-1967.