McDonald v. Harris

978 P.2d 81, 1999 Alas. LEXIS 46, 1999 WL 195753
CourtAlaska Supreme Court
DecidedApril 9, 1999
DocketS-8197
StatusPublished
Cited by10 cases

This text of 978 P.2d 81 (McDonald v. Harris) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Alaska Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
McDonald v. Harris, 978 P.2d 81, 1999 Alas. LEXIS 46, 1999 WL 195753 (Ala. 1999).

Opinion

OPINION

FABE, Justice.

I. INTRODUCTION

When Denise McDonald discovered that Sylvia Harris’s driveway encroached on McDonald’s property, McDonald blocked Harris’s use of the driveway. As a result, Harris sought a prescriptive easement, and the superior court found that Harris met the three requirements of a prescriptive easement— continuity, hostility, and notoriety — for the required period of ten years. On appeal, McDonald argues that the trial court used the wrong dates for determining the required period of continuity and that both McDonald’s and Harris’s lack of knowledge of the encroachment negated the hostility and notoriety elements. Because we conclude that the superior court correctly determined that Harris satisfied the requirements for a prescriptive easement, we affirm.

II. FACTS AND PROCEEDINGS

Sylvia Harris and Denise McDonald own adjacent lots of real property in Mountain Glacier Estates about fifteen miles east of Homer. David Truss previously owned a larger parcel that included both the Harris and McDonald lots, as well as a gravel pit. Truss sold the lot now owned by McDonald to a predecessor in title in 1978.

The Harrises bought their lot from Truss in November 1982. 1 The bill of sale, recorded in February 1983, did not reserve an easement to Truss; it only provided that the Harrises would pay the $30,000 purchase price by performing construction work for the gravel pit on Truss’s property. The Har-rises then selected the exact site for their log home on the lot in late 1982 or early 1983.

Although Donald Harris did not complete construction of the log home until October 1985, he built a driveway to the property in the spring of 1983. Donald then erected a barbed wire fence on the side of the driveway that was thought to abut the lot later purchased by Denise McDonald. The Harrises have maintained and used the driveway year-round from 1983 to the present. In addition to posting “no trespassing” and “private drive” signs, Donald put logs across the access road behind the house in approximately 1986 to block public traffic.

While Donald and his workers occasionally used the driveway as a way to access the gravel pit when doing construction work for Truss, the public did not generally use the driveway. For the three months out of the year that the gravel pit was in use, alternative routes existed to access the pit. In fact, Donald had supervised the construction of Mossberry Avenue in 1985, which was intended to provide alternate access to the gravel pit.

When Denise McDonald bought her property in April 1986, she did not have a survey performed; instead, she relied on a rough sketch of the property that did not correctly identify its boundaries. When, approximately nine and a half years later, she commis *83 sioned a formal site survey, she discovered that the Harris driveway encroached on her property. She then blocked the driveway.

Because of the disputed driveway, Harris sought a prescriptive easement. After a bench trial on the matter, Superior Court Judge Harold Brown awarded the prescriptive easement to Harris. McDonald appeals.

III. DISCUSSION

Harris claims a prescriptive easement for the portion of the driveway that encroaches onto the McDonald property. The elements of a prescriptive easement are essentially the same as the elements of adverse possession, 2 except that adverse possession focuses on possession rather than use. 3 To be entitled to a prescriptive easement, a party must prove (1) continuity— that the use of the easement was continuous and uninterrupted; (2) hostility — that the user acted as the owner and not merely one with the permission of the owner; and (3) notoriety — that the use was reasonably visible to the record owner. 4 A claimant must prove each element by clear and convincing evidence. 5 Finally, a claimant must have engaged in the adverse use for at least ten years. 6

A. Standard of Review

The question of whether a claimant has satisfied the elements of a prescriptive easement is factual in nature. 7 We will overturn such factual findings “only if they are clearly erroneous and there exists a definite and firm conviction that a mistake has been made.” 8

B. Harris Has Proved the Elements of a Prescriptive Easement.

1. Continuity

To meet the requirement of continuity, Harris must show continuous and uninterrupted use for at least ten years prior to December 1995, when McDonald interrupted the adverse use of the encroachment. We explained this concept, in the context of adverse possession, in Alaska National Bank v. Linck: 9

The nature of [possession or use] sufficient to meet this requirement depends on the character of the property. One test is whether the adverse possessor has used and enjoyed the land as “an average owner of similar property would use and enjoy it.” An interruption of possession caused by the record owner or third parties, or abandonment by the possessor, tolls the running of the statute of limitations.[ 10 ]

We have applied this test in determining the existence of prescriptive easements as well. 11 To establish interruption of use, the record owner or third party must usually do more than merely post signs against trespassing; the owner or party ordinarily needs to physically block access to the easement. 12

The superior court found that the commencement date for the required period of adverse use was in early or mid 1983, when Donald Harris built the driveway to the building site of his new home. But because Truss and others used this driveway as an access to Truss’s gravel pit, McDonald argues that the Harrises’ use was not exclusive and thus cannot be characterized as continuous and uninterrupted from the time of the *84 driveway’s construction. McDonald maintains that the Harrises’ easement rights did not begin to accrue until Donald physically blocked Truss’s access to the gravel pit in 1986. 13

While McDonald acknowledges our holding-in McGill v. Wahl 14 that “[ejxclusivity of use is not generally a requirement for a prescriptive easement,” 15

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
978 P.2d 81, 1999 Alas. LEXIS 46, 1999 WL 195753, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/mcdonald-v-harris-alaska-1999.