Lozier v. Blattland Investments, LLC

2004 WY 132, 100 P.3d 380, 2004 Wyo. LEXIS 172, 2004 WL 2473268
CourtWyoming Supreme Court
DecidedNovember 4, 2004
Docket03-243
StatusPublished
Cited by21 cases

This text of 2004 WY 132 (Lozier v. Blattland Investments, LLC) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Wyoming Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Lozier v. Blattland Investments, LLC, 2004 WY 132, 100 P.3d 380, 2004 Wyo. LEXIS 172, 2004 WL 2473268 (Wyo. 2004).

Opinion

VOIGT, Justice.

[¶ 1] This is an appeal from a summary judgment granted in an easement contest. At issue is a road across the appellee’s lands that the appellant uses to access his ranch. The district court determined that the easement benefited only part of the appellant’s ranch and that the right to use and the right to assign the easement were limited. We reverse.

ISSUES

1. Did the district court err in granting summary judgment to the appellee and in holding that the only lands benefited by the easement are the appellant’s Section 8 lands?

2. Did the district court err in granting summary judgment to the appellee and in holding that only the appellant, his family members, employees, agents, guests, visitors, invitees and licensees, but not unrelated third parties, are entitled to the use and benefit of the easement?

3. Did the district court err in granting the appellee’s motion to strike and in denying the appellant’s motion to amend concerning the implied easement contention?

4. Alternatively, does equity require recognition of an implied easement?

NATURE OF THE CASE

[¶2] The appellant’s family has owned the Box R Ranch in Sublette County since the 1890s. The ranch has been operated as a cattle business and guest ranch since 1898. Historically, the ranch abutted Sublette County Road 120, which provided the sole means of access to the ranch. A road traversed the ranch from the county road to the ranch home and headquarters.

[¶ 3] In 1965, the appellant’s family sold to John Welborn the portion of the ranch abutting the county road. The appellant’s family retained land in Sections 5 and 8, Township 35 North, Range 109 West, 6th P.M., and Sections 31 and 32, Township 36 North, Range 109 West, 6th P.M. After the conveyance, the appellant’s family and ranch guests continued to use the part of the ranch road that crossed the parcel sold to Welborn. The road exits Welborn’s property and enters the ranch at Section 8, in which section lie the appellant’s ranch home and headquarters.

[¶ 4] In 1988, an Easement for Access Purposes from Welborn to the appellant was recorded. The pertinent portions of that easement read as follows:

JOHN B. WELBORN, grantor, residing in Sublette County, Wyoming, for good and sufficient considerations HEREBY *382 GIVES AND GRANTS to IRVIN L. LO-ZIER, grantee, residing in Sublette County, Wyoming, and to his administrators, executors, personal representatives, heirs and assigns, the full and free right and liberty, option, privilege and authority for him and his family members, employees, agents, guests, visitors, invitees and licensees, in common with others having the same or similar right, perpetually for all times hereafter to freely pass and re-pass on foot, or with animals, vehicles, loads or otherwise, upon, over, along and across the established, private ranch road of the grantor situated in Sublette County, Wyoming, which said road is located ...
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TO HAVE AND TO HOLD forever for the use and benefit of said grantee, his family members, employees, agents, guests, visitors, invitees and licensees, in common as aforesaid, as a means of ingress and egress to and from Section 8, Township 35 North, Range 109 West of the 6th P.M., Sublette County, Wyoming;
The grantor hereby expressly consents and agrees that grantee, his administrators, executors, personal representatives, heirs, and assigns may, at their own costs and expense, maintain, repair and otherwise keep said road in a passable condition!.]

[¶ 5] The appellant’s family members and ranch guests continued to use the ranch road for several years after the easement was recorded. In 1999, the appellee purchased the Welborn property. The following year, when the appellant made known his plans to subdivide the Box R Ranch, the appellee responded by filing this action. The appel-lee’s first complaint sought a declaratory judgment under Wyo. Stat. Ann. § 1-37-103 (LexisNexis 2003). 1 Specifically, the appellee asked the district court to declare:

1.That access over the easement across the appellee’s property is limited to the appellant, his family members, employees, agents, guests, visitors, invitees and licensees and cannot be used for access by unrelated third parties, nor can the appellant transfer any rights to a third party for that purpose.

2. That access over the easement across the appellee’s property is limited to access to the lands of the appellant located in Section 8 only and cannot be used by the appellant or anyone claiming through him to access any other lands.

3. That access over the easement across appellee’s property is limited to access the appellant’s lands for purposes of operation of the appellant’s ranch and cannot be used by multiple residential property owners.

[¶ 6] An amended complaint added allegations of trespass and negligence, and sought an injunction. The appellant’s motion for summary judgment, filed before the complaint was amended, was heard after the amendment. The motion was denied on the ground that genuine issues of material fact existed that precluded summary adjudication. Subsequently, the parties settled the issues that had been added by the amended complaint, none of which concerned the easement.

[¶ 7] After a newly appointed district judge took over the case, both parties filed motions for summary judgment. In the memorandum filed in support of his motion, the appellant raised for the first time the alternative theory of implied easement. Pri- or to the motion hearing, the district court granted the appellee’s motion to strike the implied easement theory because it had not previously been pled or otherwise raised. The summary judgment motions were heard on November 7, 2003, and the resultant order granting judgment to the appellee was filed on December 1, 2003. The pertinent findings and conclusions from the order are as follows:

1. The appellee’s summary judgment motion did not address his third listed issue, and *383 upon the appellee’s motion, that issue is dismissed. 2

2. The district court concurs with both parties’ positions that the easement language is unambiguous.

3. From the plain language of the easement, the parties did not intend the easement to be an unfettered, unlimited access, but intended specifically to limit the persons entitled to the use and benefit of the easement and the lands that were to be benefited by the easement.

4. The use and benefit of the easement is limited to the appellant and his family members, employees, agents, guests, visitors, invitees and licensees, and not unrelated third parties.

5. The benefited lands are those lying in Section 8, and not any other lands belonging to the appellant.

6. The appellant’s motion to amend his answer to include a counterclaim for implied easement is untimely and prejudicial to the appellee and is denied.

STANDARD OF REVIEW

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
2004 WY 132, 100 P.3d 380, 2004 Wyo. LEXIS 172, 2004 WL 2473268, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/lozier-v-blattland-investments-llc-wyo-2004.