Moravek v. Ocsody

456 S.W.2d 619, 1970 Mo. App. LEXIS 589
CourtMissouri Court of Appeals
DecidedJune 12, 1970
Docket33566
StatusPublished
Cited by21 cases

This text of 456 S.W.2d 619 (Moravek v. Ocsody) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Missouri Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Moravek v. Ocsody, 456 S.W.2d 619, 1970 Mo. App. LEXIS 589 (Mo. Ct. App. 1970).

Opinion

LYON ANDERSON, Special Commissioner.

This is an action wherein plaintiffs seek a mandatory injunction requiring defendants to remove certain gates and obstructions erected by them across a roadway which traverses defendants’ property and a permanent injunction enjoining them from thereafter obstructing said roadway by placing gates across same or doing anything to make said roadway other than an open roadway to plaintiffs’ land. An easement by prescription is claimed by plaintiffs and denied by defendants. There was a finding and judgment below for plaintiffs. From this judgment defendants have appealed.

The farms owned by the parties to this suit are located in Franklin County, Missouri. Defendants, Alex G. Ocsody and his wife Rita, acquired their land, consisting of seventy-nine acres, from John P. Morisse in April 1940. Plaintiffs, Benedict P. Fieser and his wife Verda L. Fieser, purchased their farm from Monica P. Moravek and her husband Harry J. Moravek September 9, 1967. Said farm contains 131 acres and is located immediately north of defendants’ property. On August 1, 1967 and prior to the purchase by the Fiesers, Harry J. Moravek and his wife sold a strip of land off the south end of their farm to their son Henry J. Mora-vek who owned a 60-acre farm immediately west of defendants’ land and south of the Fieser property. This strip of land *621 runs eastwardly from the Henry J. Mora-vek farm to the roadway in question. This roadway runs north and south from plaintiffs’ land through the western part of defendants’ land to a county road. This county road connects with U. S. Highway SO a considerable distance south of defendants’ farm. From the south it enters defendants’ farm at its southwest corner, then runs northwardly a considerable distance, then turns east across said farm. The roadway in question in this suit connects with the county road at this turn. A very short distance north of the bend in the county road are defendants’ farm buildings. The buildings are east of the roadway over which plaintiffs claim an easement.

In 1906 the farm now owned by defendants was owned by the Fritz Dingerson estate. In that year it was sold to Henry Bray. On December 27, 1921 Bray sold the land to John P. Morisse who owned it until it was conveyed to defendants in 1940.

The chain of title to the Fieser farm runs as follows: In April 1919, Henry W. Kriete and his wife Alice sold the land to Henry G. Altemeyer. In October 1947 Mr. Altemeyer sold the farm to Monica P. Mo-ravek, the wife of Harry Moravek, the mother and father of plaintiff Henry J. Moravek. Monica and Harry, after conveying a strip of the south end to Henry, sold and conveyed the property to the Fies-ers in September 1967. Plaintiff Henry J. Moravek acquired his land from Mr. Story in 1951. The county road heretofore mentioned was established in the year 1905.

Arthur Heckelman, called as a witness by plaintiffs, owns a farm that adjoins the Fieser farm. He testified that he had lived in the vicinity of Gerald during his entire lifetime. His age was sixty-nine years. He stated he had, during his lifetime, traveled across both the Ocsody and Fieser farms. The trips were to haul'fodder and hay. In doing this he used a team. He further testified that at no time during this period were there any gates across the road he traveled and no one stopped him or requested that he not use the road. It was a dirt road, free of stumps and just wide enough to go on through the farms in question. He traveled the road when Altemeyer owned and lived on the Fieser farm. A portion of the road was straightened out and relocated or moved to the west of the Ocsody buildings. The witness stated he thought this was done after Mr. Ocsody bought the property.

Fred Tegeler, aged seventy-two years, was called as a witness by plaintiffs. He testified that when he was 17, 18 or 19 years old he and his uncle crossed what is now known as the Ocsody and Fieser farms to take violin lessons from Joe Heckelman. He also testified the last time he was on the Altemeyer farm was to thresh wheat; that he got to the Ocsody farm by way of the county road, and to the Altemeyer farm on the roadway from the county road. This roadway had been changed since the time he traveled it to take violin lessons by straightening it as it passed the house on the Ocsody farm. This change was made by moving it to the west. The witness stated he did not know when this was done. He further testified that the road at that time consisted of wagon tracks in different places. “Q. More of a trail, was it? A. Yeah.” The witness also testified as follows: “Q. Now, since you’ve known this road and traveled it has there ever been any gate across the road? A. No, I never seen no gate, no gap or nothing because we never went and opened nothing when we rode down there, you know.”

Elizabeth Angel, age sixty-five, testified she had lived in the neighborhood since 1930. She stated that when a young girl she would visit her uncle John P. Morisse who then lived on the Ocsody farm, and also visit at the Altemeyer place. She further stated that there was a road across *622 the Morisse farm during this time, but it was closer to the house than it is now. It was moved to the west. She could not remember when the change was made.

Zeno Angel, age seventy-five, called as a witness by plaintiffs, testified he had lived in the neighborhood of Gerald all his life. He was familiar with the Ocsody farm from the time Henry Bray lived there, and the Fieser farm since Herman Altemeyer occupied it. Twenty-five or thirty years ago the roadway in question was a dirt road; a wagon road. It went past a log house and barn on the Ocsody farm when he first traveled it. It went through the Altemeyer (Fieser) farm to the Heckelman farm where it connected with another county road. There were no gates across the roadway when he traveled it. The road was relocated. After it was relocated he maintained the road by blad-ing it, making ditches on the sides and leveling it. Mr. Moravek paid him for this service. Afterwards his son placed gravel on the road for which he was paid by Mr. Moravek. Mr. Ocsody did not pay for blading the road, nor did he attempt to prevent the process.

Witness Elmer Blaue, age fifty-two, first remembers going to the Fieser farm when it was occupied by one Henry Hel-mich about 1930 or 1931. At that time he was taken there in a Model T automobile over the roadway in question from the county road on the Ocsody farm. The purpose of the trip was to help with the threshing by carrying water for those engaged in the operation. A tractor and threshing machine were also taken in over the same route. Since that time he has delivered fuel oil and gasoline for the past four or five years to Mr. Moravek over the roadway in question, and also to Mr. Fieser. He remembers no gates across the roadway until the last year or so. He stated that it was a gravel road. No one ever tried to stop him using the roadway.

Plaintiff, Henry Moravek, testified that his parents, Harry and Monica Moravek, purchased the farm now owned by Mr. Fieser from the Altemeyers about 1946. His parents did not move to the farm immediately after their purchase. His father remodeled the barn and the house in which the Altemeyers had lived, and put in electricity; also dug a deep well on the farm. His father had the land surveyed and fenced.

Mr. Moravek further testified that after his parents purchased the farm he would hunt and fish there.

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Bluebook (online)
456 S.W.2d 619, 1970 Mo. App. LEXIS 589, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/moravek-v-ocsody-moctapp-1970.