McBride v. Smith CA1/4

CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedMarch 1, 2021
DocketA157724
StatusUnpublished

This text of McBride v. Smith CA1/4 (McBride v. Smith CA1/4) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering California Court of Appeal primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
McBride v. Smith CA1/4, (Cal. Ct. App. 2021).

Opinion

Filed 2/26/21 McBride v. Smith CA1/4 NOT TO BE PUBLISHED IN OFFICIAL REPORTS California Rules of Court, rule 8.1115(a), prohibits courts and parties from citing or relying on opinions not certified for publication or ordered published, except as specified by rule 8.1115(b). This opinion has not been certified for publication or ordered published for purposes of rule 8.1115.

IN THE COURT OF APPEAL OF THE STATE OF CALIFORNIA

FIRST APPELLATE DISTRICT

DIVISION FOUR

KATHLEEN MCBRIDE, Plaintiff and Appellant, A157724 & A158396 v. BYRON C. SMITH AND KALMIA (Napa County SMITH, Super. Ct. No. 26-63368) Defendants and Respondents.

This is Kathleen McBride’s second appeal in a dispute over a strip of land providing access to McBride’s property (the Secondary Access Easement). Defendants Byron C. and Kalmia Smith (the Smiths) own land adjoining McBride’s property, and McBride alleged in her fifth amended complaint that they were the owners of the servient tenement for the Secondary Access Easement. Sometime in 2013 or 2014, the Smiths placed certain items, including a pole and chain, in the Secondary Access Easement. McBride’s fifth amended complaint states a claim for nuisance arising from the placement of those items, as well as a claim for a prescriptive easement based on use of the Secondary Access Easement beyond the use allowed by the instrument creating the easement. The trial court granted the Smiths’ motion for summary judgment. It found that McBride failed to show a triable issue of fact as to “ ‘primary,

1 daily’ ” use of the Secondary Access Easement or use that exceeded the terms of the easement grant. It further found no triable issue of fact regarding substantial interference with McBride’s use and enjoyment of her property, as opposed to the strip of land comprising the Secondary Access Easement. The trial court denied McBride’s subsequent request for leave to file a sixth amended complaint joining the heirs of Delores Daniels as indispensable parties and alleging that they, not the Smiths, owned the servient tenement. The court later awarded prevailing party attorney fees to the Smiths. McBride challenges each of these rulings. Because there are triable issues of fact on McBride’s prescriptive easement and nuisance claims, we reverse the judgment. Our reversal places the parties in the same procedural posture as if the trial court had not granted the Smiths’ summary judgment motion and entered judgment in their favor, so we need not address McBride’s challenge to the court’s order denying leave to amend her complaint.1 As we are reversing the judgment, we shall also reverse the trial court’s subsequent order granting the Smiths attorney fees.

I. BACKGROUND McBride purchased the property located at 1664 Spring Street in St. Helena, California (1664 Spring) in 2003. The only access route from Spring Street, a public road, to 1664 Spring is an alley that runs north from Spring Street and then turns sharply east, ending at 1664 Spring. The portion of the alley that runs east and ends at 1664 Spring consists of two parallel access easements, each twelve feet wide, that benefit 1664 Spring. One of these

1 McBride is free to request leave to amend her complaint on remand. However, in light of her representation to this court that she now owns the land that served as the servient tenement for the Secondary Access Easement, we observe that this long-simmering dispute appears appropriate for a negotiated resolution and urge the parties to consider settlement.

2 easements derives from an express grant from McBride’s neighbor at 1660 Spring Street (1660 Spring) and provides a “Driveway Easement” for “vehicular and pedestrian ingress, egress, and access” burdening 1660 Spring (the Driveway Easement). The other easement, the Secondary Access Easement, is at issue in this litigation. It was created in 1993 by an express grant from Delores Daniels and burdened the property located at 1670 Spring Street (1670 Spring), Assessor’s Parcel No. 009-313-018.2 The Secondary Access Easement provided for “a secondary right-of-way over the existing roadway surface within the easement location, for the purpose of emergency ingress and egress to the dominant estate as herein specified.” “Grantee or successors may only use the easement created hereby for the purpose of emergency or secondary ingress and egress to a single-family residency and not as primary access. Grantee may not improve or expand their use of the easement beyond the boundaries of the existing roadway surface without the express written consent of Grantor, nor may Grantee cut or remove any trees or shrubbery within said easement except as necessary to keep said roadway clear for normal vehicular travel.” In or around 1998, the Smiths purchased 1670 Spring from the heirs of Delores Daniels, although McBride now contends that this purchase did not include the land burdened by the servient tenement.

2 We explained the configuration of the relevant properties in our decision on McBride’ earlier appeal: “The southern border of 1664 Spring adjoins the northern border of 1670 Spring. Another relevant property, 1660 Spring, adjoins the eastern border of 1670 and part of 1664. An alley connecting to the public street runs east below the southern border of 1660 and 1670 Spring.” (McBride v. Smith (2018) 18 Cal.App.5th 1160, 1163– 1164.)

3 A. The Fifth Amended Complaint The pleading history for this litigation is set forth in detail in McBride’s first appeal, McBride v. Smith, supra, 18 Cal.App.5th at pages 1165–1172 (McBride I). There, we held that McBride stated causes of action for private nuisance and a prescriptive easement, and we reversed a judgment in favor of the Smiths after the trial court sustained a demurrer to McBride’s fourth amended complaint. (Id. at pp. 1178–1182.) After remand, McBride filed a verified fifth amended complaint. McBride alleged that she owned the dominant tenement and the Smiths owned the land burdened by the Secondary Access Easement. As in her prior complaint, McBride alleged that the following actions gave rise to her claims: the Smiths constructed 2x4 wood dividers that stretched along the “entire length” of the Secondary Access Easement and protruded out of the ground; the Smiths erected a “heavy chain and large pole” at the “end” of the Secondary Access Easement, with the chain extending “the entire width” of the Secondary Access Easement; the pole was bolted to the ground and could not be removed without special tools or a significant amount of strength; “[b]oth the pole and chain . . . obstruct[ed] Plaintiff’s access. Even if the chain was removed, the pole would still block Plaintiff’s access”; and, “because of the encroachments,” McBride could not use the Secondary Access Easement. McBride alleged that the encroachments in the Secondary Access Easement constituted a nuisance because they “obstruct[] the free use of [her] property so as to interfere with the comfortable enjoyment of her property, create visual blight and further obstruct the free passage over the . . . Secondary Access Easement.” She alleged that she had acquired prescriptive rights for expanded use of the Secondary Access Easement

4 because she and her predecessors had used it for primary access for at least the preceding five years.

B. The Motion for Summary Judgment The Smiths filed a motion for summary judgment or summary adjudication. They argued that McBride could not establish substantial or unreasonable interference with the use and enjoyment of her land for her nuisance claim, and she could not show use of the Secondary Access Easement “in violation of the terms of the recorded grant of easement” for a period of five years in a manner that was open and notorious.

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Bluebook (online)
McBride v. Smith CA1/4, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/mcbride-v-smith-ca14-calctapp-2021.