Paxson v. Glovitz

50 P.3d 420, 203 Ariz. 63, 392 Ariz. Adv. Rep. 24, 2002 Ariz. App. LEXIS 117
CourtCourt of Appeals of Arizona
DecidedJuly 25, 2002
Docket1-CA-CV-01-0571
StatusPublished
Cited by11 cases

This text of 50 P.3d 420 (Paxson v. Glovitz) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Arizona primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Paxson v. Glovitz, 50 P.3d 420, 203 Ariz. 63, 392 Ariz. Adv. Rep. 24, 2002 Ariz. App. LEXIS 117 (Ark. Ct. App. 2002).

Opinion

OPINION

EHRLICH, Judge.

¶ 1 Alvera Paxson and her attorney, Stephen L. Cox, appeal a summary judgment granted Robert J. Glovitz by the superior court, thus denying Paxson relief in her action to establish a prescriptive easement over real property owned by Glovitz. The court declared that the easement was a permissive one, and it awarded Glovitz attorneys’ fees from Paxson and Cox jointly and severally. We find, however, that a prescriptive easement was established as a matter of law, and, therefore, we reverse the judgment and remand this case.

FACTS AND RELEVANT PROCEEDINGS

¶2 The material facts are not disputed. Paxson and Glovitz own adjoining parcels of residential property. Together, the two parcels may be described as forming a rectangle; the long axes are horizontal along the northern and southern boundaries of the property. The top or northern half of the rectangle is owned by Glovitz. The bottom or southern half has been divided from north *65 to south into two sections; Paxson owns the eastern portion. Sixty-fourth Street runs north and south along the eastern boundary of the rectangle.

¶ 3 Immediately before February 1979, the southern half of the rectangle was one parcel jointly owned by Eugene and Irma Murphy, and Roger Baker. That month, the Murphys and Baker divided the land roughly in half from north to south with the result that Baker thereafter owned the eastern half and the Murphys took the western half. 1

¶ 4 Later in 1979, the Murphys and Baker bought the parcel comprising the northern half of the rectangle. They then orally agreed to create an easement running east and west straddling the northern and southern parcels to facilitate access to 64th Street, locating this easement on the boundary line between the northern and southern halves of the rectangle, running west some 311 feet from 64th Street, past Baker’s western property line and continuing onto the Murphys’ land where it dead-ended. Intending to settle the matter “for all time,” they agreed that the easement would be twenty feet wide, ten feet on either side of the dividing property line.

¶ 5 After the easement was settled, Mr. Murphy had it paved. He also gave instructions to a title agency to prepare a property description so that a formal easement could be recorded. For reasons not in the record, the easement was never recorded, and no written grant of easement was produced. There is, however, no dispute as to the original intention to create the easement, and it is this easement, a strip of land ten feet wide across Glovitz’s property, that is the subject of Paxson’s claim.

¶ 6 In 1984, the Daleidens purchased the Murphys’ southwestern parcel. The next year, they bought from the Murphys and Baker the northern half of the rectangle.

¶ 7 The Daleidens owned the property until 1998, when they sold it to Glovitz. When they bought the property, the Murphys and Baker told them that the paved roadway was for garbage collection and other public access, and, during the time the Daleidens owned the property, the roadway was used by members of the public, by visitors to their home and by the residents of the house now owned by Paxson, as well as by utility, postal, and other private and commercial vehicles. The Daleidens believed that this use was as a matter of right; they gave no permission.

¶ 8 Paxson acquired the Baker parcel in 1995. She was shown the paved easement and told that it was for her use and for that of the general public. The City of Scottsdale had posted a sign at the entry: “Not a Through Street.”

¶ 9 Paxson took part in measuring the paved driveway. The property line between Glovitz’s northern parcel and Paxson’s property is marked at the corners by surveyor’s pins, and the driveway covers at least ten feet of the Glovitz property, continuing west in a straight line past Paxson’s western boundary line.

¶ 10 When Glovitz purchased the property, he questioned the Daleidens about the driveway and was told that it had always been used for ingress and egress by neighbors as well as by the public. Glovitz knew that the twenty-foot-wide driveway extended ten feet onto the property he was purchasing. He also knew that “everybody used it” if for no other reason than that the Daleidens told him that the driveway, “throughout their ownership, had always been used for ingress and egress by neighbors as well as the public.”

¶ 11 In September 2000, Glovitz began to construct a block fence along his property line where the driveway ran, and Paxson filed this action to obtain an easement by *66 prescription for the ten-foot portion of the driveway extending onto Glovitz’s land. She also sought a temporary restraining order (“TRO”) and preliminary injunction.

¶ 12 At the hearing for the TRO and preliminary injunction, Glovitz took the position that use of the purported easement had never been hostile but was in fact permissive. Paxson contended that use of the property as a matter of right, over time, created a presumption of “hostility.”

¶ 13 Mrs. Murphy testified at the hearing as to the circumstances surrounding the creation of the easement along the property line between the northern and southern parcels, paving ten feet on either side to make a twenty-foot road. The Murphys and Baker had anticipated that additional houses would be built on the land and that these people would have access over the easement “so that garbage trucks could come up, so fire trucks could come up, and so we could have any access that we needed.”

¶ 14 Mrs. Murphy also testified that, while she owned the land, the easement was used by various people and entities, and that the former owners of the Paxson property had used the driveway for vehicles to get to their garage and the back part of their property. When the property was sold to the Daleid-ens, they were told that it was a road and an easement. She also testified that the use of the roadway by the owner of the Paxson property was a matter of right and not by permission.

¶ 15 The superior court denied interim relief to Paxson. It found no basis in fact or law for a TRO or preliminary injunction and no likelihood of success on the merits of Paxson’s claim.

¶ 16 Glovitz then moved for summary judgment. He argued that Paxson could not establish the elements of a prescriptive easement as a matter of law. The basis for his argument was that the driveway had been established by agreement among the adjacent landowners and, therefore, its use had remained permissive since inception.

¶ 17 Paxson countered that the encroachment on Glovitz’s land had been “open, visible, continuous and unmolested” for more than ten years and was therefore presumptively under a claim of right and not by license of the owner, citing Gusheroski v. Lewis, 64 Ariz. 192, 167 P.2d 390 (1946). Glovitz replied that the undisputed intention to create the easement rendered the use permissive and rebutted the presumption of hostility. The superior court granted Glovitz summary judgment “for the reasons and based upon the facts and legal authorities cited by [him].”

¶ 18 Glovitz then moved for an award of attorneys’ fees.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
50 P.3d 420, 203 Ariz. 63, 392 Ariz. Adv. Rep. 24, 2002 Ariz. App. LEXIS 117, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/paxson-v-glovitz-arizctapp-2002.