Miller v. Shenk

354 P.3d 732, 272 Or. App. 12, 2015 Ore. App. LEXIS 800
CourtCourt of Appeals of Oregon
DecidedJune 24, 2015
Docket161124908; A152844
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 354 P.3d 732 (Miller v. Shenk) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Oregon primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Miller v. Shenk, 354 P.3d 732, 272 Or. App. 12, 2015 Ore. App. LEXIS 800 (Or. Ct. App. 2015).

Opinion

DUNCAN, P. J.

In this action under the Uniform Declaratory Judgment Act, ORS 28.010 to 28.160, defendants Terry and Trudy Shenk appeal from a judgment for plaintiff Douglas Miller declaring that plaintiff has an implied easement over defendants’ property for access to plaintiffs undeveloped forest land. Defendants contend that the trial court erred in failing to dismiss the action for failure to join neighboring property owners who defendants contend are necessary parties. On the merits, defendants contend that clear and convincing evidence does not support the trial court’s ruling. Because we agree with defendants that necessary parties have not been joined in this declaratory judgment action, we reverse the judgment and remand.

Defendants own a five-acre parcel in rural Lane County, Lot 2400. Plaintiff owns a 15-acre parcel adjacent to and immediately east of defendants’ property, Lot 2402. Defendants have access to their property from a county road by way of a deeded easement over a parcel owned by Steve and Karla Mattox. Plaintiff does not currently have access to his property from a public road, and he brought this action, seeking a declaration that he has an implied easement for access to his property over a roadway on defendants’ property. The trial court agreed with plaintiff and granted the declaration, and defendants appeal. The map below was created by the trial court, and, for ease of use, we have added the names of the current owners of the lots.1

[14]*14[[Image here]]

Because it is dispositive, we first address the jurisdictional question — whether the trial court erred in denying defendants’ motion to dismiss, based on plaintiffs failure to join as parties the owners of properties that are affected by, or necessary to, the declaration that plaintiff requests. We describe those facts necessary to our consideration of the jurisdictional issue. Plaintiffs and defendants’ parcels were once part of a single 40-acre rectangular tract acquired by Joel and Vernita Mayes in 1943. A photograph taken in 1953 shows a roadway coming onto the property at its northwest corner and travelling in a north/south direction; in that photo, a “spur” road comes off of the north/south roadway in an east/west direction. The photograph shows that the northeastern portion of the property (now belonging to plaintiff) had recently been logged.

In 1963, Joel and Vernita deeded the southern 20 acres (Lot 2401) to their son Duane and his wife, Thelma. (That 20-acre parcel is now owned by the Arnolds.) The deed to Duane and Thelma granted an easement for access “to use an existing roadway in common with the Grantors” across the northern half of the 40-acre parcel retained by Joel and Vernita:

“The Grantors do hereby grant, bargain, sell and convey unto the Grantees an easement of right of way to use an existing roadway in common with the Grantors approximately 30’ in width across the North Half[.]”

The roadway is not otherwise described.

[15]*15In December 1965, Duane and Thelma sold Lot 2401 to Rose Rich. In April 1966, Joel and Vernita partitioned their northern 20-acre tract, creating an eastern 15-acre parcel, now owned by plaintiff (Lot 2402), and a western five-acre parcel, now owned by defendants (Lot 2400). Joel and Vernita sold the eastern, 15-acre parcel to Rose Fritz (formerly Rose Rich) and her husband, Leonard Fritz. At the time, Rose also owned the southern 20-acre parcel, with its express easement for access over the “existing roadway” on Lot 2400, the five-acre parcel retained by Joel and Vernita. But the deed to Rose and Leonard for Lot 2402 did not include an express easement for access to Lot 2402 over Lot 2400. Although the photograph from 1953 showed that the property had been logged some time before 1953, there is no evidence that Lot 2402 was actively being logged in 1966, when Rose and Leonard acquired it.

Ultimately, defendants acquired Lot 2400 in 1992, and plaintiff acquired Lot 2402 in 1995. The southern 20-acre parcel is now owned by the Arnolds. Defendants’ property does not join the county road. But it is undisputed that defendants and the Arnolds have express easements over the Mattoxes’ property to the north of defendants’ property for access to the county road. Additionally, the Arnolds have an express easement over defendants’ property. Plaintiffs property does not have a recorded easement for access over defendants’ or the Mattoxes’ property; nor does plaintiff have permission to travel over either property.

In his complaint seeking declaratory relief, plaintiff alleged:

“4. There exists a certain road running north to south across Defendants’ property which was the subject of a grant of easement in favor of the then owners of the parcel of land immediately south of both Plaintiffs and Defendants’ properties[.] *** There also exists a road trending east from the granted easement road to and through the border of Plaintiffs and Defendants’ described parcels of property (the east road)[.] * * *
"* * * * *
[16]*16“7. The east road and the granted easement road to where it meets the east road were apparent and permanent at the time Plaintiff’s parcel was created by the * * * deed.
“8. The east road and the granted easement road to where it meets the east road were and are important for the enjoyment of Plaintiff’s parcel, as the east road and the granted easement road to where it meets the east road were and are the only access to Plaintiffs parcel; because of this Plaintiff is justified in expecting an easement to use the east road and the granted easement road to where it meets the east road under the circumstances in which Plaintiff purchased his property.”

Plaintiff sought a judgment “[declaring Plaintiff to be the owner of and entitled to an easement across Defendants’ property consisting of the east road and the granted easement road to its junction with the east road, and quieting title in the easement in Plaintiff.”

At trial, plaintiff disputed the exact location of the Arnolds’ express easement across defendants’ property, suggesting that the express easement actually crossed onto plaintiffs property. An expert witness testified that the Arnolds’ easement “was uncertain and indefinite when it was created.” The trial court made these findings:

“5. It is unclear where the easement granted in 1963 crossed over into the southern 20 acres (Lot 2401). It is clear, however, that the 1963 easement was a ‘common road’ that began at the northwest corner of Lot 2400 and then travelled ‘across the North half of the original 40 acre parcel into the southern half of that parcel.
“6. When Fritz purchased Lot 2402 in 1966, there was a gravel spur road that trended east from the common roadway on Lot 2400 and crossed over onto Lot 2402.
“7. The established road on Lot 2400 together with the spur road that crossed over Lot 2400 provided the main access to Lot 2402 in 1966.
“8. The manner of use of Lot 2402 was as forest land (i.e. — logging) in 1966 and this should reasonably have been known to the Mayes and the Fritz.
[17]*17“9.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
354 P.3d 732, 272 Or. App. 12, 2015 Ore. App. LEXIS 800, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/miller-v-shenk-orctapp-2015.