LR Smith Investments, LLC v. Butler

2014 COA 170, 378 P.3d 743, 2014 Colo. App. LEXIS 2083, 2014 WL 7204487
CourtColorado Court of Appeals
DecidedDecember 18, 2014
DocketCourt of Appeals No. 13CA1579
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 2014 COA 170 (LR Smith Investments, LLC v. Butler) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Colorado Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
LR Smith Investments, LLC v. Butler, 2014 COA 170, 378 P.3d 743, 2014 Colo. App. LEXIS 2083, 2014 WL 7204487 (Colo. Ct. App. 2014).

Opinion

Opinion by

JUDGE BERGER

{ 1 In this prescriptive easement case, defendant, Alexandra M. Butler, appeals the trial court's judgment confirming two prescriptive easements in favor of plaintiff, LR Smith Investments, LLC (Smith), across agricultural lands owned by Butler.

T 2 Butler contends that the trial court committed four errors that require reversal: (1) applying a presumption of adversity in favor of Smith; (2) holding that Butler was required to show the existence of an actual agreement between the parties to establish permissive entry; (8) rejecting the "neighborly accommodation" doctrine; and (4) failing to quiet title in favor of Butler because the period of adverse use was physically interrupted before acerual of eighteen years. [745]*745We address and reject each of these contentions and therefore affirm.

I. Relevant Facts

11 3 Smith claims prescriptive easements for ingress and egress across two roads (Roads) owned by Butler. The Roads cross a ranch owned by Butler northwest of Craig in Moffat County, Colorado.

T 4 The Smith ranch has been owned by Smith and its predecessors since at least 1954. The Smith ranch is located east of Moffat County Road 3 (CR 3) and borders the Butler ranch at several points. The Butler ranch is located mostly west of CR 8, but Butler also owns two parcels of land east of CR 3. The following map shows the Smith and Butler ranches and the Roads,.

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5 The Roads both begin on the east side of CR 8. The northerly road travels northeast from CR 3, crosses a portion of the Butler land, and terminates in the Smith ranch, The southerly road travels east/northeast from CR 8, also crosses a portion of the Butler ranch, and terminates in the Smith ranch,

[ 6 The evidence presented by Smith established that both Roads were used for many years by Smith to reach portions of the Smith ranch used for grazing livestock and hunting. This evidence was not seriously contested by Butler.

T 7 The trial court found that Smith and its predecessors continuously, openly, and notoriously used the Roads from the mid-1950s until late 2011, when Butler dug ditches preventing access to the Roads and thereby precipitated this litigation.

[746]*746T 8 Based on this finding, the court concluded that Smith was entitled to a presumption of adversity, which required Butler to prove permissive use sufficient to overcome the presumption, The resolution of this issue centered on actions taken by the parties or their predecessors in the 1950s.

T 9 In the early 19508, Smith built a fence across a portion of Butler's land. Butler's predecessor did not object and instead, the parties reached an arrangement whereby Smith built additional fences along other parcels of Butler's property that bordered CR 8. There was some evidence presented that in exchange for building the fences, Smith received the right to graze a 160-acre parcel owned by Butler for a ten-year period. Butler contended at trial that this evidence established that the parties' predecessors made an agreement that encompassed the use of the Roads, and thus Smith's use of the Roads was permissive, a fact which would prohibit a determination that Smith's use of the Roads was adverse (or overcome any presumption of adversity).

'I 10 Conversely, Smith contended that although it appeared Butler acquiesced to Smith's building of the fences and use of the Roads in the 1950s, no evidence tied such acquiescence to an agreement regarding the use of the Roads and thus permissive use was not established. There was no written memorialization of any 19508' agreement,

{ 11 Resolving this conflicting evidence, the trial court found that neither Smith nor its predecessors had obtained permission to use the Roads in the 1950s, and specifically that Butler's failure to object to the fence or Smith's use of the Roads did not render the use permissive.

€ 12 The court found that the only evidence of permission for Smith to use the Roads was a conversation between the parties or their predecessors in the 1980s. However, the court found that prior to that date Smith had adversely used the Roads for approximately thirty years, well more than the eighteen-year prescriptive period. Relying on Clinger v. Hartshorn, 89 P.3d 462 (Colo. the court concluded that any 1980s#' agreement, entered into after more than eighteen years of open, notorious, and adverse use, did not destroy the right to a prescriptive casement.

€ 183 Accordingly, the court held that Butler did not meet her burden to overcome the presumption of adversity and Smith had satisfied the elements for prescriptive easements to use the Roads. The court quieted title to Smith's nonexclusive right to use the Roads for ranching and agricultural purposes, to access the Smith property for hunting and guiding purposes, and for all other similar uses.

II, Applicable Law-Prescriptive Easements

¶ 14 A prescriptive easement is a nonexclusive right to use the land of another for a specified purpose-usually, but not always, ingress and egress-after adverse use of the land for that purpose for the period specified by law. See Matoush v. Lovingood, 177 P.3d 1262, 1265 n.2 (Colo.2008); Wright v. Horse Creek Ranches, 697 P.2d 384, 387 (Colo.1985); Alexander v. McClellan, 56 P.3d 102, 105 (Colo. Restatement (Third) of Prop.: Servitudes §§ 2.16(1), 2.17, 217 emt. g (2000). In Colorado, a party acquires a prescriptive easement when the prescriptive use is (1) open or notorious; (2) continuous without effective interruption for at least eighteen years; and (8) either adverse or pursuant to an attempted but ineffective grant. Matoush, 177 P.3d at 1270; Maralex Res., Inc. v. Chamberlain, 2014 COA 5, ¶ 20, 320 P.3d 399.1

[747]*747 (T 15 If a claimant establishes that its use of another's property. was. continuous and open or notorious for eighteen years or more, the claimant is entitled to a presumption that the use was adverse. Trueblood v. Pierce, 116 Colo. 221, 233, 179 P.2d 671, 677 (1947). The landowner must then present evidence to overcome the presumption, such as by showing that the use was permissive. Id.; see also Weisiger v. Harbour, 62 P.3d 1069, 1072 (Colo.App.2002). If the landowner fails to do so and the other elements of a prescriptive easement are met, the trial court must determine that a prescriptive easement exists. Trueblood, 116 Colo. at 233, 179 P.2d at 677; Irvin v. Brand, 690 P.2d 1283, 1284 (Colo. App.1984).

T 16 Adverse use need not be established by a hostile or antagonistic act and thus, if all other elements are met, an casement may be acquired through the acquiescence or silence of a property owner. Auslaender v. MacMillan, 696 P.2d 836, 838 (Colo. declined to follow on other grounds by Gerner v.

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Bluebook (online)
2014 COA 170, 378 P.3d 743, 2014 Colo. App. LEXIS 2083, 2014 WL 7204487, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/lr-smith-investments-llc-v-butler-coloctapp-2014.