Mountain View Cemetery v. Granger

574 P.2d 254, 175 Mont. 351, 1978 Mont. LEXIS 728
CourtMontana Supreme Court
DecidedJanuary 18, 1978
Docket13691
StatusPublished
Cited by12 cases

This text of 574 P.2d 254 (Mountain View Cemetery v. Granger) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Montana Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Mountain View Cemetery v. Granger, 574 P.2d 254, 175 Mont. 351, 1978 Mont. LEXIS 728 (Mo. 1978).

Opinion

MR. JUSTICE SHEA

delivered the opinion of the Court.

*353 Mountain View Cemetery appeals from a judgment entered in the District Court, Silver Bow County, denying the Cemetery a roadway easement over the adjacent property of defendants Granger and denying an award of treble damages for the Grangers’ cutting of two 60 foot blue spruce trees on the Cemetery’s property. The Grangers cross appeal from the District Court’s findings that the cemetery fence line was the true boundary line between the properties and from the award of $4,000 damages for the wrongful cutting of the Cemetery’s trees.

The Cemetery, a corporation, brought action March 21, 1975, against the Grangers to establish the Cemetery’s right to an easement by prescription across the southwest edge of Grangers’ property near the city of Butte. The Cemetery also alleged damages of $12,000 for the cutting of the two trees just inside the Cemetery’s fence line.

The Grangers answered and filed a counterclaim against the Cemetery for encroachments upon Grangers’ property. Grangers also filed a third party complaint against F. & S. Contracting Company and Title Insurance Company of Minnesota for insuring title free of the encumbrance of the easement alleged by the Cemetery. The District Court ordered a separate trial on the third party complaint pending outcome of the Cemetery-Granger dispute.

The Cemetery, property is adjacent to and south of the Granger property. For approximately 45 years cemetery personnel, and visitors to the cemetery regularly used, without interference, a strip of land approximately 25 feet wide by 247 feet long on the south border of the Granger’s land as a second roadway into the cemetery. The road runs from west to east. The fence line involved is just to the south of the roadway. The blue spruce trees were just to the south of the fence, as was a garage and shed owned and used by the Cemetery. Over a period of 30 years the Cemetery corporation president, Carroll Fabian, had built up the roadway 2 to 3 feet, maintained the road at all times, kept it plowed in winter, and erected a “slow” sign near the road to direct traffic oming into the roadway from Harrison Avenue, a major thoroughfare in Butte which leads south out of Butte. Until the time of the controversy *354 here, the Granger land was open, unenclosed, and unimproved, although at one time part of the land was used for a sand pit.

The Grangers purchased the land adjacent to the cemetery in 1968. In 1973 the Grangers notified the Cemetery by mail to quit using the road. The Cemetery did not reply and continued to use the road. Before this letter there had never been contact between Cemetery personnel and the Grangers or their predecessors in interest concerning the use of the road. The Grangers’ land remained unfenced and unimproved until 1973, at which time they began construction of a car dealership on that site.

The Cemetery continued to use the roadway until the Grangers blocked the roadway by parking large trucks and automobiles in it. The blockage of the road resulted in this action filed by the Cemetery against the Grangers seeking to establish the roadway as an easement. The Cemetery also alleged damages for wrongful cutting of 2 60-foot blue spruce trees just south of the alleged easement and inside the cemetery’s fence line. Pending the outcome of litigation the District Court granted a temporary order allowing the Cemetery to use a strip 15 feet by 130 feet of the area in question, for access pending the outcome of the trial.

The District Court denied the easement, finding that all elements for a prescriptive easement had been established except for adverse or hostile use. The court also fixed the cemetery fence line as the boundary line between the adjoining properties and assessed damages of $2,000 each for the 2 blue spruce trees cut by Grangers’ agents. The court did not award treble damages in the amount of $ 12,000 as requested by the Cemetery for the cutting of the trees.

The Cemetery contends the trial court should have granted the easement and should have awarded $ 12,000 as treble damages for the cutting of the trees. In their cross appeal the Grangers contend the trial court erred in determining that the cemetery fence line is the actual boundary line between the adjacent properties. They further contend the $4,000 damages for cutting of the trees was improper because two surveys demonstrate the trees were actually on the Grangers’ property.

*355 Cemetery witnesses, including undertakers and florists, as well as the Cemetery owners, testified they had regularly used the road without seeking permission and without interference during periods of up to 45 years. The corporation’s president testified that on Memorial Day alone, as many as 600 cars used the roadway in the past. Each day at least ten automobiles used the roadway to go to the cemetery. The Cemetery’s evidence there was never permissive use was uncontradicted. Grangers contend it is not their duty to prove they or their predecessors in interest gave permission to the Cemetery to use the road.

Over objection, the Cemetery intorduced in evidence a 1914 map depicting the boundaries of the cemetery property to be as the court found them. It is not clear whether or not the map was based on a previous survey. In support of the map’s accuracy a former Silver Bow County surveyor testified that during all the years he was in office, the county surveyor and his crews relied on the map as their “Bible” when they were working in the area of the cemetery. Also, Carroll Fabian, the Cemetery’s corporation president, testified that using the map as a guide, he had measured to the fence line and it conformed to the dimensions stated in the map.

The Grangers introduced 2 independent surveys of the land involved, which established the cemetery fence was actually on the Grangers’ property and that the trees south of the fence were also on the Grangers’ property. There was a slight discrepancy between the 2 surveys. They agreed however, that one of the trees rested midway between the cemetery property and the Grangers’ property. One of the surveys was made before the trees were cut, in conjunction with the purchase of the land by the Grangers, and the other was made after the trees were cut and after this controversy started. The Grangers contend the court was bound to accept the evidence and testimony offered by the 2 surveys.

Grangers further contend that even if it is ultimately determined the trees were not on their property, nevertheless, in cutting the trees they relied in good faith upon a survey which showed the trees to be on their property.

*356 Under section 93-2507, R.C.M.1947, a party claiming the existence of an easement by prescription must show open, notorious, exclusive, adverse, continuous and uninterrupted use of the easement claimed for the full 5 years. Taylor v. Petranek (1977), 173 Mont. 433, 568 P.2d 120; Scott v. Weinheimer (1962), 140 Mont. 554, 560, 374 P.2d 91; White v. Kamps (1946), 119 Mont.

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Bluebook (online)
574 P.2d 254, 175 Mont. 351, 1978 Mont. LEXIS 728, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/mountain-view-cemetery-v-granger-mont-1978.