Pavan v. Walmer CA3

CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedJuly 10, 2015
DocketC073012
StatusUnpublished

This text of Pavan v. Walmer CA3 (Pavan v. Walmer CA3) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering California Court of Appeal primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Pavan v. Walmer CA3, (Cal. Ct. App. 2015).

Opinion

Filed 7/10/15 Pavan v. Walmer CA3 NOT TO BE PUBLISHED California Rules of Court, rule 8.1115(a), prohibits courts and parties from citing or relying on opinions not certified for publication or ordered published, except as specified by rule 8.1115(b). This opinion has not been certified for publication or ordered published for purposes of rule 8.1115.

IN THE COURT OF APPEAL OF THE STATE OF CALIFORNIA THIRD APPELLATE DISTRICT (Sacramento) ----

BARRY PAVAN et al., C073012

Plaintiffs, Cross-Defendants and (Super. Ct. No. 07AM04185) Appellants,

v.

LOLA M. WALMER et al.,

Defendants, Cross-Complainants and Appellants,

CITY OF CITRUS HEIGHTS,

Defendant, Cross-Complainant and Respondent,

MIKE MAGERS et al., C073012

Plaintiffs, Cross-Defendants and (Super. Ct. No. Appellants, 34200700881239CLORGDS)

1 PAT COCHRAN et al.,

Plaintiffs, Cross-Defendants and Respondents,

BARRY PAVEN, et al.

Defendants, Dross-complainants and Appellants.

These appeals arise from litigation over a private easement and a partly overlapping public easement. Following a court trial before an assigned judge, the judge found in favor of the parties seeking to enforce the easements (including the City of Citrus Heights; hereafter, the city) and prepared a statement of decision to that end. When the assigned judge later became unavailable, the presiding judge signed the judgment under Code of Civil Procedure1 section 635 over the objection of the parties who opposed the easements. They appealed. Subsequently, some of the parties who had succeeded in enforcing the public easement (not including the city) filed a motion for attorney fees under section 1021.5. The presiding judge denied that motion. A motion for new trial/motion to vacate followed. The presiding judge denied that motion as well. The parties who sought attorney fees appealed from the order denying their fee motion and from the order denying their motion for new trial/motion to vacate. On their appeal from the judgment, the parties who opposed the easements contend: (1) the offer of dedication for the public easement was never effective; (2) the city was estopped from accepting the offer; (3) individual members of the public were not entitled to enforce the public easement; (4) there was no substantial evidence to support

1 All further undesignated section references are to this code.

2 enforcement of the private easement; and (5) the presiding judge had no power to sign the judgment. We find no merit in these arguments and therefore affirm. On their appeal from the order denying their motion for attorney fees and the order denying their motion for new trial/motion to vacate, the parties who sought the fee award contend: (1) the presiding judge lacked jurisdiction to deny their fee motion; (2) the parties who opposed the easement waived any objections to a fee award; and (3) the presiding judge erred in denying the fee motion. We find no merit in these arguments either. We also conclude that the order denying the motion for new trial/motion to vacate was not appealable. Accordingly, we dismiss the appeal from that order and affirm the order denying the fee motion. FACTUAL AND PROCEDURAL BACKGROUND2 This case involves certain rural properties now located within the City of Citrus Heights. So far as we can determine, originally there were two parcels known as lot 183 and lot 184 that lay adjacent to each other south of Twin Oaks Avenue, with lot 184 to the west and lot 183 to the east. In 1975, it appears, the southern portion of both of those lots was owned by the DeBernardis. The DeBernardis wanted to subdivide their properties but could not meet a zoning requirement that required every building lot to have at least 75 feet of frontage on a public street. Ultimately, however, they were granted a variance on the condition that they make two offers of dedication, only one of

2 The factual background of this litigation is difficult to recount because none of the parties provided us with a comprehensive summary of the facts proven at trial presented in the light most favorable to the judgment and supported by citations to the record on appeal (as they ought to have done). Moreover, our own attempt to make sense of the underlying facts is hampered by the fact that much of the pertinent trial testimony refers to exhibits that either were not designated for inclusion in the clerk’s transcript or that were designated for inclusion but had been returned to the parties and were not delivered to the superior court clerk for inclusion in the transcript after they were designated.

3 which is at issue here.3 Specifically, the DeBernardis were required to make an offer of dedication of a strip of land 42 feet wide that straddled the eastern edge of lot 184 and the corresponding western edge of lot 183 for the extension of Catalpa Drive northward to connect with Jurgens Lane, a private roadway that ran south from Twin Oaks Avenue along the boundary of lots 183 and 184 on the portions of those lots north of the portions the DeBernardis owned. The DeBernardis signed the offer of dedication for the extension of Catalpa Drive on October 27, 1975. The same day they signed the offer of dedication, the DeBernardis deeded a portion of lot 183 to Frank and Mary Pavan. That deed specifically referenced the offer of dedication. In 1995, Frank and Mary Pavan, joined by their son, Barry, and his wife, Patsy, purchased the remainder of the DeBernardis’ property -- that is, their remaining part of lot 183 and all of their part of lot 184. In 2001, Bonnie Pollock and her husband, Donald, sold that part of lot 184 lying north of the Pavans’ property to George and Lola Walmer and their daughter, Donna Gonsalves. That property was bisected by a creek that would flood periodically. When the creek flooded, the southern part of the property could not be reached from the north; instead, access could be had only by means of a 21-foot-wide easement south across the Pavans’ property to Catalpa Drive, which, at its northern end, partially overlapped the area subject to the offer of dedication made in 1975.4 During this flooding, the bridge that carries Jurgens Lane over the creek could become completely submerged. Also in 2001, the Pavans sought to subdivide their property into four parcels: three on that part of the property that was originally part of lot 184 and the fourth on that

3 The parties refer to the offer of dedication as the IOD, for irrevocable offer of dedication. 4 The private easement apparently dates back to 1955.

4 part of the property that was originally part of lot 183. As one of the conditions of approval of the subdivision, the city’s engineering department required the abandonment of the offer of dedication to extend Catalpa Drive. Sometime thereafter, a dispute arose over access to the south across the Pavans’ property from Jurgens Lane due to the periodic flooding that could make Jurgens Lane impassible. In addition to the Walmers and Gonsalves, who sought to enforce their private easement, certain individuals who own parcels along the east side of Jurgens Lane north of the Pavans’ property -- Mike Magers, Pat Cochran, and Man and Chun Ko (hereafter, the Magers parties) -- sought to secure access across the Pavans’ property using the area subject to the offer of dedication for the extension of Catalpa Drive. The city manager was involved in trying to resolve the dispute, but his efforts were unsuccessful. Accordingly, in April 2007, this litigation commenced when the Pavans filed suit against the Walmers and Gonsalves to quiet title to the area subject to the private easement (case No. 07AM04185), claiming abandonment and termination by prescription.

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Pavan v. Walmer CA3, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/pavan-v-walmer-ca3-calctapp-2015.