Peterson v. Medlock

884 S.W.2d 679, 1994 Mo. App. LEXIS 1336, 1994 WL 447747
CourtMissouri Court of Appeals
DecidedAugust 18, 1994
Docket19099
StatusPublished
Cited by15 cases

This text of 884 S.W.2d 679 (Peterson v. Medlock) 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
Peterson v. Medlock, 884 S.W.2d 679, 1994 Mo. App. LEXIS 1336, 1994 WL 447747 (Mo. Ct. App. 1994).

Opinions

SHRUM, Chief Judge.

Defendants appeal from a decree in which the trial court declared that Plaintiffs have a road easement by implication across Defendants’ land and denied Defendants relief on their counterclaim.

Because of our conclusion that the trial court did not commit prejudicial error when, on its own motion, it ordered a survey of the disputed road after the close of all evidence, we affirm the declaration of an easement by implication. Because the legal description of the easement is insufficient, we remand for further proceedings. We reverse the trial court’s denial of relief to Defendants on their counterclaim and remand.

FACTS

Until June 1977, Plaintiffs owned two adjoining 40-acre parcels of land in Howell County, Missouri: the Southeast ⅝ of the Northeast ⅜ of Section 34, Township 22 North, Range 9 West (Tract A) and the Southwest ⅜ of the Northwest ⅜ of Section 35, Township 22 North, Range 9 West (Tract B). Plaintiffs’ house was located on Tract A near its southeast comer. Access to Tract A was via the now-disputed road, which ran in an easterly direction from Plaintiffs’ house, crossed Tract B, and ended at a public highway (now State Route “JJ”).

Plaintiffs’ evidence concerning the use of the road included testimony from Plaintiff Allan Peterson that he and his wife had lived on Tract A for 44 years during which time they had continuously used the disputed road as the only access to their home. Former Howell County Commissioner Buford Skaggs testified that he had “known [the road] for over 60 years.” He said that during that period there never was a time the disputed road was not used to go to and from what is now Plaintiffs’ house and he had never known of any other road to the house.

On June 24, 1977, Plaintiffs sold Defendants Tract B without expressly reserving or mentioning in the deed a road easement to serve Tract A.

Controversy over the road arose in 1988 after Defendant Gertrude Medloek bought the 20-acre “Knox” tract. Described as the North ½ of the Northwest ⅛ of the Southwest ⅝ of Section 35, Township 22 North, Range 9 West, the Knox tract lay south of and adjoined Tract B. After buying the Knox land, Defendants began to fence it and Tract B. When Defendants erected gates at each end of the disputed road, Plaintiffs sued.

In Count I of their petition, Plaintiffs asked the trial court to declare that they had a “prescriptive easement established by use and necessity, or in the alternative ... by implication at the time Defendants purchased their property from Plaintiffs.” In the same count, Plaintiffs alleged facts in addition to those in support of their easement claim and requested money damages. In Count II, Plaintiffs sought an order preventing Defendants from blocking Plaintiffs’ use of the road. In response to Count II, the trial court entered a temporary restraining order against Defendants and, later, a preliminary injunction.

In their answer to Plaintiffs’ Count I, Defendants denied that Plaintiffs were entitled to relief but stated, “Defendants admit that Plaintiffs traversed a roadway across land of Defendants which was formerly owned by Plaintiffs.”

[682]*682Defendants filed a counterclaim having three counts; in each count they sought money damages. By separate motion, Defendants requested the trial court to sever the “claim of Plaintiffs for a declaration of easement” from “the counterclaim of Defendants for damages.” A docket sheet entry of January 29, 1992, states, in part, “Hearing on motion to sever -> Sever Counterclaim ... Easement Case set Bench Trial 4/3/92.”

The “easement case” was tried April 16, 1992. Although Defendants’ motion to sever the claims and the trial court’s ruling appeared to separate for trial only Defendants’ counterclaim, the transcript of the April 16 trial indicates the court and counsel for both sides treated all money damages claims, including that of Plaintiffs, to have been severed. Plaintiffs’ counsel did not offer evidence directly related to his clients’ alleged damages, and Defendants’ attorney objected on the few occasions that Plaintiffs’ evidence appeared remotely related to Plaintiffs’ damages claim. Defendants offered no evidence concerning their claims for damages.

On June 23, 1992, the trial court entered an “Interlocutory Order” in which it declared the existence of an easement by implication and ordered a survey of the roadway “to describe its exact location as to the property line in question_”

Nearly 14 months later, on August 6, 1993, after completion of the survey, the trial court held another hearing. Willard Schnurbusch, registered land surveyor, testified he located the south line of the Northwest Quarter of Section 35, Township 22 North, Range 9 West (the southern boundary of Tract B) and found that the disputed road lay entirely north of that line.

Asked how wide a strip of land the road occupied, Schnurbusch replied, “It’s a gravel-type thing of irregular dimensions, but we chose to call it approximately ten feet wide for the road itself.” On a plat identified by the surveyor as containing the results of his survey (admitted into evidence as Plaintiffs’ Exhibit 8), the disputed road is depicted in an inset drawing. The drawing shows the road to be on Tract B, located north of the quarter section line and south of a fence. The distance between the fence and the quarter section line is not indicated on the drawing. Asked about the distance, Schnur-busch said, “From memory ... it’s approximately 30 feet between the fence and ... the quarter section line.”

Schnurbusch agreed that the road was “not perfectly straight.” He said the road was “what you might expect for a gravel road. It gets from Point A to B.” The drawing, marked “Not to Scale,” shows the “appr. centerline” to be 8 feet north of the southwest comer of Tract B. The “appr. centerline” is 12 feet and 14 feet, respectively, north of two steel fence posts set at unspecified positions along the south boundary of Tract B.

On August 9, the trial court wrote the attorneys for the parties. In the letter the court stated its findings and conclusions, including a ruling in favor of Plaintiffs on Defendants’ counterclaim, but made no reference to Plaintiffs’ claim for damages. In the letter, the court directed the attorney for Plaintiffs “to prepare a judgment and to present to [Defendants’ attorney] as to form only and for submission to the court for signature.” The letter closed with the request, “If there is anything that I have not covered in this letter or that you cannot glean from the Interlocutory Order of June 23, 1992, please let me know.”

In response Plaintiffs’ counsel submitted a document denominated “Judgment, Findings and Conclusions of Law,” which the trial judge signed without change other than to add the date he affixed his signature. In that document, filed September 28, 1993, the court stated that Plaintiffs were “entitled to the use and benefit of the road or lane as depicted upon the survey, which road is established as an easement by implication.” The court found the easement “to be contained within a strip of land thirty feet (30') wide as depicted on the survey....” The court enjoined Defendants from interfering with Plaintiffs’ use of the road. The court made no ruling regarding Plaintiffs’ claim for damages and ruled in favor of Plaintiffs on Defendants’ counterclaims. The court ordered the cost of the survey to be shared equally by Plaintiffs and Defendants.

[683]*683DISCUSSION AND DECISION

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Bluebook (online)
884 S.W.2d 679, 1994 Mo. App. LEXIS 1336, 1994 WL 447747, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/peterson-v-medlock-moctapp-1994.