Michael O. Cain and Linda A. Raymond v. William J. Huff, II, Revocable Trust Declaration, Dated June 28, 2011, and Nicole E. Huff Revocable Trust Declaration, Dated June 28, 2011

CourtIndiana Court of Appeals
DecidedMay 29, 2020
Docket19A-PL-2176
StatusPublished

This text of Michael O. Cain and Linda A. Raymond v. William J. Huff, II, Revocable Trust Declaration, Dated June 28, 2011, and Nicole E. Huff Revocable Trust Declaration, Dated June 28, 2011 (Michael O. Cain and Linda A. Raymond v. William J. Huff, II, Revocable Trust Declaration, Dated June 28, 2011, and Nicole E. Huff Revocable Trust Declaration, Dated June 28, 2011) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Indiana Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Michael O. Cain and Linda A. Raymond v. William J. Huff, II, Revocable Trust Declaration, Dated June 28, 2011, and Nicole E. Huff Revocable Trust Declaration, Dated June 28, 2011, (Ind. Ct. App. 2020).

Opinion

FILED May 29 2020, 8:52 am

CLERK Indiana Supreme Court Court of Appeals and Tax Court

ATTORNEYS FOR APPELLANTS ATTORNEYS FOR APPELLEES Michael L. Carmin Sean M. Clapp Daniel M. Cyr Sean T. White CarminParker, P.C. Clapp Ferrucci Bloomington, Indiana Indianapolis, Indiana

IN THE COURT OF APPEALS OF INDIANA

Michael O. Cain and May 29, 2020 Linda A. Raymond, Court of Appeals Case No. Appellants-Plaintiffs, 19A-PL-2176 Appeal from the Monroe Circuit v. Court The Honorable Holly M. Harvey, William J. Huff, II, Revocable Judge Trust Declaration, Dated June Trial Court Cause No. 28, 2011, and Nicole E. Huff 53C06-1804-PL-755 Revocable Trust Declaration, Dated June 28, 2011, Appellees-Defendants

Baker, Judge.

Court of Appeals of Indiana | Opinion 19A-PL-2176 | May 29, 2020 Page 1 of 22 [1] This case has been here before. Michael Cain and Linda Raymond

(collectively, Cain) are homeowners in The Shores subdivision in Monroe

County. William and Nicole Huff (the Huffs) own over 200 acres adjacent to

The Shores. The Huffs have an easement to use a roadway in The Shores to

access their real estate. Cain sought to enjoin the Huffs from their use of the

easement to conduct logging activities on their real estate. The trial court

granted a preliminary injunction, which this Court vacated as overbroad. On

remand, Cain renewed his prior motion and filed a new one addressing a

different portion of the Huffs’ real estate. This time, the trial court denied the

requests for preliminary injunction. We affirm.

Facts [2] In March 1990, Kenton Robinson granted an easement (the Grant of Easement)

to Terre Haute Real Estate Corporation (THR), the then-owner of property

adjacent to Robinson’s property. Subsequently, Robinson conveyed his real

estate, which became The Shores, a residential subdivision. Cain is the current

owner of Lot 9 in The Shores. The Huffs are the current owners of the real

estate adjacent to the Shores (the Huff Real Estate), including the former

property owned by THR (the THR Property), and are the successors in interest

to the Grant of Easement.

[3] The Grant of Easement contains multiple easements. Relevant here are

easements allowing the Huffs to use Shady Side Drive, the principal road

serving The Shores, and a fifty-foot wide section over Lot 1 and part of the

Court of Appeals of Indiana | Opinion 19A-PL-2176 | May 29, 2020 Page 2 of 22 Common Nature Preserve in The Shores, which connected The Shores to a part

of the Huff Real Estate. The Huffs’ use of the easements was limited to

construction, development, and use of single-family residences that would be

built on the Huff Real Estate.

[4] The Huff Real Estate totals over 200 acres, including the THR Property and

approximately 44 acres that they acquired from Chumley, LLC (the Chumley

Parcel). The only way to access the THR Property is via the easements in The

Shores. The only way to access the Chumley Parcel (by land) is via the THR

Property.

[5] The subsequent events, as described by this Court in the first appeal involving

this litigation, are as follows:

The Huff Real Estate is heavily wooded and hilly land, and access by land to the Huff Real Estate is via the three access easements. After the Huffs acquired their land, they . . . developed a Stewardship Plan specifically for the Huff Real Estate, which was finalized in July of 2017. . . . The Stewardship Plan included certain well-delineated goals for the Huff Real Estate, including to improve the stand of trees, improve the wildlife habitat, control exotic and invasive species, provide an enjoyable place to recreate, selectively harvest trees throughout the woods in the future, develop four home sites, provide better access throughout the property, and develop fire trails.

***

In December 2017, the Huffs entered into a contract with Tri- State Timber (“Tri-State”) to cut and remove trees from the Huff Real Estate. The Huffs were to receive a percentage of the Court of Appeals of Indiana | Opinion 19A-PL-2176 | May 29, 2020 Page 3 of 22 proceeds from the sale of the removed trees. . . . Around April 10, 2018, Tri-State began harvesting the timber on the Huff Real Estate, and Tri-State expected the work to be finished in approximately ten weeks, weather permitting. As part of its logging activities, Tri-State drove large commercial logging trucks and equipment over Easement No. 1, Shady Side Drive, which is a hilly and curvy two-lane road with no sidewalks or shoulders.

On April 18, 2018, Cain filed his complaint for declaratory judgment and injunctive relief. In the complaint, Cain requested declaratory judgment to determine the rights granted to the Huffs by the Grant of Easement and for a declaration that the easements do not authorize ingress and egress for commercial logging activity on the Huff Real Estate. Cain also requested a permanent injunction against the Huffs, enjoining use of the easements for commercial logging activities or any purpose other than specifically authorized by the general conditions in the Grant of Easement. . . .

On May 3, 2018, a hearing was held on the issue of a preliminary injunction. At the hearing, Cain presented evidence that he is a member of The Shores Homeowners’ Association and owned property in The Shores. Cain testified that he objected to the Huffs’ use of the easements to remove logs from the Huff Real Estate for commercial sale even if for the development of single- family homes. Cain further testified, “I feel like these logging trucks and this machinery are trespassing across the easements because they don't have permission to be there.” Cain also presented evidence that the use of logging trucks on the easements is an annoyance and inconvenience to him, although he only lives in his home in The Shores approximately four months out of the year. Cain testified that he had safety concerns regarding the logging trucks using the easements and introduced a picture of a neighbor standing behind a mailbox as a logging truck passed, but Cain did not have any knowledge of any

Court of Appeals of Indiana | Opinion 19A-PL-2176 | May 29, 2020 Page 4 of 22 accidents occurring on Shade [sic] Side Drive in the years since he has owned his property.

At the hearing, William J. Huff (“William”) testified that, although he was clearing trees from the Huff Real Estate, he was not in the process of building homes on the land; instead, he was “preparing for the future use of [the] land.” The evidence presented at the hearing included William’s statement that the logging activity on the Huff Real Estate at the time the complaint was filed was to remove trees in accordance with the Stewardship Plan. In discussing what is necessary for future development, the Huffs presented testimony from a civil engineer that the “standard first step in a development project is clearing” the land. After reviewing the relevant portions of the Grant of Easement, the civil engineer testified that the development and use of the Huff Real Estate would include “clearing and grading, establishment of building sites for these buildings,” the extension of utility lines, and building of homes and garages. The engineer further testified that, as part of this process, any valuable timber that is removed during the clearing could be sold to help offset costs.

William testified that he understood that the process of harvesting the timber would only continue for a period of about eight weeks, depending on weather, and that harvesting would not need to be done again for approximately ten years.

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Michael O. Cain and Linda A. Raymond v. William J. Huff, II, Revocable Trust Declaration, Dated June 28, 2011, and Nicole E. Huff Revocable Trust Declaration, Dated June 28, 2011, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/michael-o-cain-and-linda-a-raymond-v-william-j-huff-ii-revocable-indctapp-2020.