Potter v. Houston

847 N.E.2d 241, 2006 Ind. App. LEXIS 868, 2006 WL 1320132
CourtIndiana Court of Appeals
DecidedMay 16, 2006
Docket53A05-0506-CV-359
StatusPublished
Cited by9 cases

This text of 847 N.E.2d 241 (Potter v. Houston) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Indiana Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Potter v. Houston, 847 N.E.2d 241, 2006 Ind. App. LEXIS 868, 2006 WL 1320132 (Ind. Ct. App. 2006).

Opinion

OPINION

FRIEDLANDER, Judge.

Gary Potter brings this appeal stemming from a series of actions he filed regarding an easement granted in favor of Richard Houston and Houston's predecessors. Potter raises one issue: Is "timber-ing" an agricultural use of land? Appellant's Brief at 3. Houston raises one issue on appeal: He requests appellate attorney's fees based upon Potter's alleged frivolous appeal that is "a part of a pattern of abusive filings made on behalf of [Potter] constituting bad faith." Appellee's Brief at 11.

*243 We affirm the judgment, and we remand the cause for an award of attorney's fees to Houston.

Potter did not include in the record the transcripts or statements of evidence from the trial held on August 19, 2004. 1 Further, Potter did not include in his Appendix the trial court's order after the trial, dated October 18, 2004, that set out in great detail the underlying facts with citations to exhibits, the applicable law with citations to authority, as well as the answer to Potter's question on appeal. Houston, however, did include this order in his Appendix. Because we have no other official source for the information, and it aids our review, we recite the order in nearly its entirety:

In 1986 Gary Potter ... sought the vacation of the end portion of what was then called Arbutus Road, and that ran along the east and to the south of [Potter's] property, which was commonly known as ... 751 S8. Twinleaf Trace. The road provided access to a parcel of land owned by Catherine Royer, now deceased. Richard J. Houston ... inherited Mrs. Royer's property, through his wife, now also deceased, and is the current owner of the parcel and other, adjacent parcels. When Mrs. Royer learned of the request to vacate the road through a local news story, she filed a remonstrance opposing the vacation of the road on the ground that, if granted, she would no longer be able to access her property by means of a public way. Mrs. Royer was specifically concerned with her ability to continue to use the road for her daughter's horseback riding school, and as am access point from which hay and timber could be extracted from her property onee harvested.
[Potter] then entered into an agreement with Mrs. Royer on August 29, 1986 ("1986 Agreement") that provided for Mrs. Royer's withdrawal of her remonstrance. The 1986 Agreement stated in relevant part that, while the parties had not "fully resolved the existing questions concerning access," the parties had "determined that vacation of a portion of Arbutus Church Road sought by the Potters will have no effect on any portion of any roadway along which Mrs. Royer may have access rights." The request to vacate the road was again put forward by [Potter] at a subsequent County Commissioner session on September 12, 1986. Mrs. Royer attended the meeting and asked the Commission if the vacation "would effect her in any way as far as ingress or egress." She was assured by Guy Loft-man, [Potter's] attorney and the draftee of the 1986 Agreement, that the vacation would "absolutely not" effect her ingress or egress, and the Commission then unanimously approved the motion to vacate.
Mrs. Royer's and her heirs's right to access the southern property via the roadway, however, has continued to remain an issue of ongoing contention between the parties. [Potter] testified that in 1988, with the intention of blocking access to the roadway, he erected a chain fence. [Houston] removed the chain sometime in 1993. After 1998, and up to January of 2008, [Potter] placed other obstructions in the disputed easement, including, an 8-foot barrier fence, swing-set, sandbox, shrubbery, and by *244 parking a motor vehicle. During these periods, [Houston's] family continued to use the roadway on [a] semiannual basis; crossing the land on horseback and on foot. [Houston] or members of his family would occasionally encounter [Potter] or his wife. On at least one occasion, sometime in 1997, [Houston] was confronted by [Potter's] wife who asserted that he was trespassing on private land. [Houston] replied that he was not trespassing but was simply using his easement.
On January 31, 2008, [Houston] cut down the barrier fence erected by [Potter] to block access to the roadway and cleared yew bushes and a wood pile on [Houston's] property along the path of the disputed easement. In response, [Potter] filed suit in small claims court for damages and trespass. Upon motion and amended answer and counterclaim from [Houston] the action was moved to plenary court. A partial grant of a motion for summary judgment by [Potter] limited the issues at trial to: 1) whether the 1986 Agreement established an implied easement; and 2) if the 1986 Agreement did establish an implied easement along the disputed roadway, whether such easement remains valid today, and, if not, when the easement was destroyed.

Appellee's Appendix at 1-2 (citations omitted) (emphasis supplied).

The trial court's order then analyzed the law of implied easements with regard to vacation of a public roadway and blocking access of property owners. The trial court determined that, based upon Potter's and his attorney's assurances, Houston's predecessors abandoned their remonstrance against Potter's proposed vacation of the public roadway in exchange for the preservation of their rights of access as stated in the 1986 Agreement. The trial court concluded:

There can be no dispute that both [Potter's] and [Houston's] family, along with any other driver so inclined, had a right to the use of Arbutus Road prior to its vacation. The 1986 Agreement can be interpreted in no other way than to foresee the subsequent vacation as a foreclosure of all public rights to the road except for those held by the signing parties: [Potter] would gain the roadway, or an assigned portion of the roadway, as his personal property, and the Royer[s] would continue to be able to use the roadway as they had before, to access their adjacent land.
The Royer{s] objected to the vacation of the road because it would block access to their property. Their promise to forgo the objection was obtained by [Potter} in consideration of the 1986 Agreement's assurance that the subsequent vacation of the road would have "no effect" on the Royer[s] ability to continue to exercise their right of access. The Court finds that the 1986 Agreement and the subsequent vacation of that portion of Arbutus [Rload that bordered [Potter's] land, gave rise to an implied easement that allowed continued use of the roadway in order to access the Roy-er property.

Id. at 8 (emphasis in original).

After determining that the 1986 Agreement gave rise to an implied easement, the trial court analyzed Potter's contention that any easement had been extinguished by his adverse possession of the former public access roadway. The trial court set out the law of adverse possession and set out the facts that demonstrated that Houston had continuously used the easement, including by removing barriers erected by Potter. The trial court concluded that Potter's use was not exclusive or continu *245 ous for the statutory period; thus, the easement remained intact.

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847 N.E.2d 241, 2006 Ind. App. LEXIS 868, 2006 WL 1320132, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/potter-v-houston-indctapp-2006.