Miller Land Co., Inc. v. McCaleb

2020 Ohio 794
CourtOhio Court of Appeals
DecidedFebruary 27, 2020
Docket19CA898
StatusPublished

This text of 2020 Ohio 794 (Miller Land Co., Inc. v. McCaleb) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Ohio Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Miller Land Co., Inc. v. McCaleb, 2020 Ohio 794 (Ohio Ct. App. 2020).

Opinion

[Cite as Miller Land Co., Inc. v. McCaleb, 2020-Ohio-794.]

IN THE COURT OF APPEALS OF OHIO FOURTH APPELLATE DISTRICT PIKE COUNTY

Miller Land Company, Inc., : Case No. 19CA898

Plaintiff-Appellant, :

v. : DECISION AND JUDGMENT ENTRY Walter L. McCaleb, et al., :

Defendants-Appellees. : RELEASED 2/27/2020

______________________________________________________________________ APPEARANCES:

Robert Huff Miller, Robert Huff Miller L.L.C., Columbus, Ohio, for appellant.

James L. Mann, Circleville, Ohio, for appellees. ______________________________________________________________________ Hess, J.

{¶1} Miller Land Company, Inc. (“MLC”) appeals from a judgment of the Pike

County Court of Common Pleas that granted summary judgment in favor of Walter and

Ann McCaleb on MLC’s prescriptive easement claim. The McCalebs satisfied their initial

burden to demonstrate entitlement to summary judgment, and MLC failed to set forth

specific facts to show that a genuine issue of material fact existed for trial. Accordingly,

the trial court properly granted summary judgment to the McCalebs on the prescriptive

easement claim, and we affirm its judgment.

I. FACTS AND PROCEDURAL HISTORY

{¶2} MLC and the McCalebs own adjoining properties in Pike County. It appears

that the McCalebs obtained their property in 1999; however, it has been in their family Pike App. No. 19CA898 2

since at least 1871. MLC obtained its property in 2000. A legal description of the MLC

property indicated it was landlocked.

{¶3} According to averments of Mrs. McCaleb, MLC “purchased an easement

from Hubert Ingall, so that it could obtain access to its landlocked property to timber it.”

Ingall lived at the property where the easement was located, but a trust owned the

property. At some point, Tom Smith purchased the property. In 2016, through counsel,

MLC claimed that it and its predecessors had crossed over the property “for decades

and decades” and requested that Smith sign an easement agreement to “formalize and

document” its rights. After Smith ignored the request, MLC sought access to the MLC

property through the McCaleb property.

{¶4} In 2017, MLC filed a complaint against the McCalebs alleging they had

interfered with its right to use an “Access Road” that crossed the McCaleb property,

connected to Buck Hollow Road, and had been used by MLC and its predecessors in

interest to access the MLC Property for at least 100 years. MLC asserted claims for

declaratory judgment, quiet title, easement by prescription, easement by necessity,

trespass, and tortious interference with a business relationship with a survey crew.

{¶5} MLC moved for summary judgment on its claims for declaratory judgment,

quiet title, and easement by necessity. The McCalebs filed a memorandum in opposition

and moved for summary judgment on all claims. The McCalebs filed affidavits to support

their motion and filed MLC’s responses to discovery requests, which they asserted

“provided no facts which would refute the information contained in the defendants’

affidavits.” Pike App. No. 19CA898 3

{¶6} Relevant here, the McCalebs submitted the affidavit of Bryant Abt, a

licensed surveyor, who averred that he conducted a survey of the McCaleb property and

“found no evidence of any road or easement on the McCaleb property” or of “any road or

easement which extended across the McCaleb property to the adjoining property owned

by the Miller Land Company, Inc.” He “found the remnants of a logging road which

began and ended on the McCaleb property and which had obviously not been used for

some period of time. The logging road did not extend to the border of the McCaleb

property or to any existing County or Township Road.”

{¶7} The McCalebs also submitted the affidavit of Mrs. McCaleb who averred

that the Access Road “did not cross” the McCaleb property. She averred that the Access

Road was “at one time a private road which in the past was used by persons to travel to

the area of the Buck Hollow Community Church; that church had a different name at the

time the private road was used.” The Access Road had “not been used by anyone for

over 50 years.” The road “no longer exists and only the very end of it at the church is

even visible.” In addition, she averred:

At no time has anyone ever attempted to use a road or pathway of any type to cross our land and thereby gain access to the real property owned by the Miller Land Company Inc. This is true for a period of time far greater than 21 years, and far greater than 21 years prior to the date the plaintiff filed its complaint.

She averred that MLC’s surveyors had tried to survey a logging road created to timber

the McCaleb property around 1990-1991, that the logging road was entirely on the

McCaleb property, and that it was not used by MLC or its agents to access MLC’s

property. Pike App. No. 19CA898 4

{¶8} MLC filed a memorandum in opposition which it supported with the

admissions of the McCalebs that the Access Road “was at one time a private road,” that

“in the past persons used the Access Road to travel from the area of Swift Creek Road

and/or Five Bucks Road to the area of the Buck Hollow Community Church,” and that

“the Access Road historically provided access to and from” the MLC property. MLC also

submitted the affidavit of Gerald Wallingford, a civil engineer and licensed surveyor. He

averred that the Access Road was “the only access to the MLC Property from a public

right-of-way” and was “located on property owned by” the McCalebs. He further averred

that the road was “plainly visible where it intersects with Buck Hollow Road at the

intersection of Buck Hollow Road and Ervin Hill Road and, while it is not passable due to

vegetation and stream erosion, it is plainly visible and can be followed and located as it

runs from Buck Hollow Road to the MLC Property, and beyond.” Wallingford averred

that the Access Road was “different and distinct from the logging road identified * * * on

the survey by Mr. Abt” and was “much older than the logging road * * * and dates back

over 100 years.” In addition, Wallingford averred that the Access Road was depicted on

five maps from 1906 to 1957 that were attached to his affidavit. Wallingford averred that

the Access Road “was and has been the access to the MLC Property for over one

hundred years” and “shows continuous, apparent, permanent and necessary use for

access to the MLC Property for over one hundred years.”

{¶9} The trial court granted the McCalebs summary judgment on the

prescriptive easement claim, explaining:

* * * [T]here is no evidence in the record showing open, continuous, adverse, and notorious use for over twenty-one years of any of the land now owned by the Defendants. Pike App. No. 19CA898 5

The assertion in Defendant Ann McCaleb’s affidavit that the “access road” referred to in the Plaintiff’s complaint did not cross the Defendant’s property and the assertion in surveyor Abt’s affidavit that he found no evidence of any road or easement which extended across the McCaleb property to the adjoining property owned by the Miller Land Company, Inc.

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2020 Ohio 794, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/miller-land-co-inc-v-mccaleb-ohioctapp-2020.