Potts v. Burnette

273 S.E.2d 285, 301 N.C. 663, 1981 N.C. LEXIS 1020
CourtSupreme Court of North Carolina
DecidedJanuary 6, 1981
Docket108
StatusPublished
Cited by58 cases

This text of 273 S.E.2d 285 (Potts v. Burnette) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of North Carolina primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Potts v. Burnette, 273 S.E.2d 285, 301 N.C. 663, 1981 N.C. LEXIS 1020 (N.C. 1981).

Opinions

CARLTON, Justice.

I.

This case arose out of the long-continued use by plaintiffs of a roadway over defendants’ property to get to and from plaintiffs’ land. Plaintiffs brought this action to establish their right to use defendants’ roadway by virtue of an easement by prescription and to enjoin defendants from interfering with plaintiffs’ use of the road.

In their complaint plaintiffs alleged that they and their predecessors in title had openly and continuously used a road leading from the lands of plaintiffs across the lands of defendants to State Road No. 1149 and that the use of the road by plaintiffs and their predecessors in title had been open, notorious, hostile, adverse and continuous for a period of more than fifty years. The complaint requested, inter alia, that the court enjoin defendants from interfering with their use of the roadway and decree a permanent and existing easement in the roadway in favor of plaintiffs’ land. Defendants denied the material allegations of the complaint.

At trial, plaintiffs’ evidence tended to show that the road in question had been in existence for substantially more than fifty years and had remained essentially in the same location. The road is the only means of access for vehicular traffic to plaintiffs’ property. Plaintiffs, members of their families and the public have used the road for at least fifty years to reach plaintiffs’ land for social and agricultural purposes and also to visit and attend funerals at the John H. Potts Memorial Cemetery, which is located in the upper corner of plaintiffs’ land. Neither plaintiffs nor members of the [665]*665public have ever requested permission of defendants or their predecessors in title to use the road and none has been given. Plaintiffs have maintained the road by smoothing, upgrading and gravelling it on at least one occasion. Defendants presented no evidence, but moved for a directed verdict, which was denied. At the close of the evidence, the following issue was submitted to the jury: “(1) Have the Plaintiffs and their predecessors in interest used the roadway over Defendant’s [sic] land openly, notoriously, and adversely for a continuous period of twenty (20) years or more?” The jury answered, “Yes,” and Judge Leatherwood entered judgment granting plaintiffs a permanent easement for a road right-of-way over defendants’ lands and permanently restraining and enjoining defendants from “blocking, obstructing, fencing, chaining, or in any manner interfering with Plaintiffs’ easement over the lands of the Defendants.” Defendants’ motion under Rule 50 (b) for judgment notwithstanding the verdict was denied.

Defendants appealed and the Court of Appeals reversed. Judge Arnold, in an opinion in which Chief Judge Morris and Judge Vaughn concurred, found plaintiffs’ evidence insufficient to go to the jury on the issue of hostility and held that defendants were entitled to a directed verdict or a judgment notwithstanding the verdict. Plaintiffs thereupon petitioned for our discretionary review of the Court of Appeals’ decision, which we granted on 15 August 1980.

Other facts pertinent to our decision will be set out below.

II.

Defendants are entitled to a directed verdict and, thus, a judgment notwithstanding the verdict only if the evidence, when considered in the light most favorable to plaintiffs, fails to show the existence of each and every element required to establish an easement by prescription. Dickinson v. Pake, 284 N.C. 576, 583, 586, 201 S.E. 2d 897, 902, 903 (1974); Sizemore, General Scope and Philosophy of the New Rules, 5 Wake Forest L. Rev. 1, 41 (1969); see Snider v. Dickens, 293 N.C. 356, 237 S.E. 2d 832 (1977); Summey v. Cauthen, 283 N.C. 640, 197 S.E. 2d 549 (1973); Kelly v. Harvester Co., 278 N.C. 153, 179 S.E. 2d 396 (1971). Plaintiffs are also entitled to the benefit of every reasonable inference which may be legitimately drawn from the evidence, and all evidentiary conflicts must be resolved in their favor. Daughtry v. Turnage, 295 N.C. 543, 246 S.E. 2d 788 (1978); Husketh v. Convenient Systems, 295 N.C. 459, 245 [666]*666S.E. 2d 507 (1978); Clark v. Bodycombe, 289 N.C. 246, 221 S.E. 2d 506 (1976).

In order to prevail in an action to establish an easement by prescription, a plaintiff must prove the following elements by the greater weight of the evidence: (1) that the use is adverse, hostile or under claim of right; (2) that the use has been open and notorious such that the true owner had notice of the claim; (3) that the r se has been continuous and uninterrupted for a period of at least twenty years; and (4) that there is substantial identity of the easement claimed throughout the twenty-year period. E.g., Dickinson v. Pake, 284 N.C. at 580-81, 201 S.E. 2d at 900-01. The Court of Appeals determined that plaintiffs’ evidence failed to establish the first element, that their use of the road over defendants’ land was “adverse, hostile, or under a claim of right.” This Court has, on several occasions, considered the meaning of this requirement. In the most recent of these cases, Dickinson v. Pake, 284 N.C. 576, 201 S.E. 2d 897, we reiterated the principle established in a long line of cases that:

“To establish that a use is ‘hostile’ rather than permissive, ‘it is not necessary to show that there was a heated controversy, or a manifestation of ill will, or that the claimant was in any sense an enemy of the owner of the servient estate.’ [Citations omitted.] A ‘hostile’ use is simply a use of such nature and exercised under such circumstances as to manifest and give notice that the use is being made under a claim of right.” Dulin v. Paires, [266 N.C. 257, 260-61, 145 S.E. 2d 873, 875 (1966)]. There must be some evidence accompanying the user which tends to repel the inference that it is permissive and with the owner’s consent. [Citations omitted.] A mere permissive use of a way over another’s land, however long it may be continued, can never ripen into an easement by prescription. [Citations omitted.]

Dickinson v. Pake, 284 N.C. at 580-81, 201 S.E. 2d at 900.

Much confusion and controversy have arisen over the requirement that the use be hostile.1 Plaintiffs have vigorously urged us to reject our present position that a user is presumed to be permissive [667]*667and adopt the rule, obtaining in the majority of jurisdictions, that the user is presumed to be adverse.2 This we decline to do. An easement by prescription, like adverse possession, is not favored in the law, 2 G. Thompson, Real Property §§ 335, 337 (1980), and we deem it the better-reasoned view to place the burden of proving every essential element, including hostility, on the party who is claiming against the interests of the true owner. Additionally we note that “[t]he modern tendency is to restrict the right of one to acquire a prescriptive right-of-way whereby another, through a mere neighborly act, may be deprived of his property by its becoming vested in one whom he favored.” 2 G. Thompson, Real Property § 335, at 145. Thus, in order for plaintiffs to succeed in their claim, they must have shown sufficient evidence of the hostile character of their use to create an issue of fact for the jury.

The facts and legal posture in Dickinson v. Pake, 284 N.C. 576, 201 S.E. 2d 897, are strikingly similar to the case before us. In Dickinson,

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Bluebook (online)
273 S.E.2d 285, 301 N.C. 663, 1981 N.C. LEXIS 1020, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/potts-v-burnette-nc-1981.