Michelle Barnes and Raymond Surzycki v. Prairie Horse Farms, Llc

CourtIndiana Court of Appeals
DecidedDecember 30, 2014
Docket53A01-1404-PL-178
StatusUnpublished

This text of Michelle Barnes and Raymond Surzycki v. Prairie Horse Farms, Llc (Michelle Barnes and Raymond Surzycki v. Prairie Horse Farms, Llc) 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
Michelle Barnes and Raymond Surzycki v. Prairie Horse Farms, Llc, (Ind. Ct. App. 2014).

Opinion

Pursuant to Ind. Appellate Rule 65(D), this Memorandum Decision shall not be regarded as precedent or cited before any court except for the purpose of establishing the defense of res judicata, Dec 30 2014, 9:30 am collateral estoppel, or the law of the case.

ATTORNEY FOR APPELLANTS: ATTORNEYS FOR APPELLEE: MATTHEW R. LEMME MICHAEL L. CARMIN Lemme Law Offices, LLC GREGORY A. BULLMAN Jeffersonville, Indiana Carmin Parker, PC Bloomington, Indiana

IN THE COURT OF APPEALS OF INDIANA

MICHELLE BARNES and ) RAYMOND SURZYCKI, ) ) Apellants-Defendants, ) ) vs. ) No. 53A01-1404-PL-178 ) PRAIRIE HORSE FARMS, LLC, ) ) Appellee-Plaintiff. )

APPEAL FROM THE MONROE CIRCUIT COURT The Honorable E. Michael Hoff, Judge Cause No. 53C01-1306-PL-1082

December 30, 2014 MEMORANDUM DECISION – NOT FOR PUBLICATION

MATHIAS, Judge Michelle Barnes (“Barnes”) and Raymond Surzycki (“Surzycki”) (collectively

“the Defendants”) appeal the order of the Monroe Circuit Court granting a permanent

injunction in favor of Prairie Horse Farms, LLC (“Prairie Horse Farms”) with regard to

an easement on land owned by the Defendants in favor of land owned by Prairie Horse

Farms. On appeal, the Defendants present five issues, which we renumber and restate as

the following four:

I. Whether the Defendants were denied due process when the trial court allegedly considered issues outside the request for injunctive relief and determined the scope of the rights granted under the easement;

II. Whether certain of the trial court’s findings of fact were clearly erroneous;

III. Whether the trial court erred in granting injunctive relief when Prairie Horse Farms had expressed only an intent to pasture horses in Lot 2; and

IV. Whether the trial court erred in determining the scope of the area encompassed by the easement.

We affirm.

Facts and Procedural History

The Defendants own a parcel of land in Monroe County comprising approximately

2.41 acres. The property consists of a long east-west strip of land that is approximately

fifty feet wide that connects the main portion of the property to a nearby road. To the

east of the main portion of the land and to the north of the strip are two lots now owned

by Prairie Horse Farms. The following map is provided for reference:1

1 The map on the next page is based on an exhibit admitted at trial, which is too large to be faithfully reproduced in this opinion. We include this map for reference purposes only.

2 See Appellee’s App. p. 1.

Prairie Horse Farms Properties

Kn i g htridg e Ro Lot 2 Lot 1

ad nce R eside

Barnes/Surzycki Property

Surzycki purchased the property in 2010 from Steven and Elizabeth Bray. The

warranty deed Surzycki received noted that the property was subject to a “[g]rant of

easement by and between Teddy Lee Deckard and Ralph L. Deckard and Vera Evelyn

Deckard, recorded September 21, 2005, as Instrument Number 2005019238, in the office

of the Recorder of Monroe County, Indiana.” Ex. Vol., Plaintiff’s Ex. 1. This deed was

recorded on November 1, 2010. Two days later, Surzycki transferred the property to

himself and his wife, Barnes, by a quitclaim deed, which again noted that the property

subject to the easement recorded in Instrument Number 2005019238.

The Grant of Easement recorded in this Instrument Number provides that the

Surzycki property is the servient estate and that what is referred to as “Lot 2” on the map

above is the dominant estate. Id., Ex. 3. The Grant of Easement also states, “The

easement granted herein shall be for ingress and egress for vehicular and pedestrian

3 traffic and utilities for the use and benefit of the Dominant Estate.” Id. Under the

heading “Maintenance,” the Grant of Easement provides:

Grantee and Grantor, and their successors in interest shall jointly be responsible for reasonable maintenance and upkeep of the easement area. In the event any construction work, repairs or maintenance are performed within the easement area, said easement area shall be returned to the same condition as existed prior to such construction work, repairs or maintenance at the expense of the party causing the work or maintenance to be performed. Grantee’s real estate, the Dominant Estate, shall be required to contribute to the maintenance in accordance with this paragraph only after a residential structure is placed on the Dominant Estate. As long as the Dominant Estate remains unimproved without a residential structure, the maintenance of the easement area shall be solely the responsibility of the owner of the Servient Estate.

Id. The Grant of Easement provided also that “[t]his easement shall be perpetual and

shall be appurtenant to the Dominant Estate and shall run with the land. The obligations

of Grantee as stated herein for maintenance shall pass to and are binding on subsequent

owners of the Dominant Estate.” Id. The Grant of Easement provides that the Easement

Area is defined by an attached Exhibit C, which consists of a diagram of the servient

estate but does not include a description of the Easement Area by metes and bounds. The

final plat of the subdivision, however, describes the Easement Area by metes and bounds

as including the entirety of what is now the Defendant’s property.

Prairie Horse Farms purchased Lot 2 from the Decker’s in May 2011 and Lot 1 in

April 2012. Lot 2 is a pasture with a horse barn with a feed room and tack room. For

over forty years, Lot 2 had been used as a horse pasture by the prior owners. Prairie

Horse Farms desired to use Lot 2 for similar purposes and began to improve the barn, cut

back some of the woods that had overgrown on the Lot, and planned to install a

4 Lexington fence to replace the barbed-wire fence that had been in place. The plans to

install the fence were delayed by actions of the Defendants. Specifically, the Defendants

placed in the fifty-foot-wide strip area a line of fence-posts standing approximately six

feet tall and dug holes for other fence posts. The Defendants also installed a geo-thermal

heating and cooling system in the easement area, which left large mounds of dirt. The

Defendants also placed their trash bins at the entrance of the drive, blocking Prairie Horse

Farms from accessing the drive on the easement area. At one point, the Defendants and

members of their family stood in the easement area in order to block the path of vehicles

owned by the contractor hired by Prairie Horse Farms to improve Lot 2.

As a result of these actions, Prairie Horse Farms filed a verified complaint for

permanent injunctive relief and a preliminary injunction on June 6, 2013. The trial court

held an evidentiary hearing on the matter on February 24, 2014. At the conclusion of the

hearing, the trial court took the matter under advisement, and both parties submitted

proposed findings and conclusions. On March 27, 2014, the trial court entered findings

of fact and conclusions of law, which provided in relevant part:

Findings of Fact *** 8. Lot 2 is primarily open pasture with a horse barn. The historic use of Lot 2 at the creation of the easement was to pasture and stable horses. 9. The pasture and horse barn were in existence at the time the Defendants acquired title to Defendant’s real estate. 10. Plaintiff intends to continue the use of Lot 2 to pasture and stable horses. 11. The Easement provides pedestrian and vehicular access, including walking horses, from a public road to Lot 2.

5 12.

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Michelle Barnes and Raymond Surzycki v. Prairie Horse Farms, Llc, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/michelle-barnes-and-raymond-surzycki-v-prairie-horse-farms-llc-indctapp-2014.