Reichardt v. Hoffman

52 Cal. App. 4th 754, 60 Cal. Rptr. 2d 770, 97 Daily Journal DAR 1303, 97 Cal. Daily Op. Serv. 909, 1997 Cal. App. LEXIS 86
CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedFebruary 6, 1997
DocketH013548
StatusPublished
Cited by296 cases

This text of 52 Cal. App. 4th 754 (Reichardt v. Hoffman) 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
Reichardt v. Hoffman, 52 Cal. App. 4th 754, 60 Cal. Rptr. 2d 770, 97 Daily Journal DAR 1303, 97 Cal. Daily Op. Serv. 909, 1997 Cal. App. LEXIS 86 (Cal. Ct. App. 1997).

Opinion

Opinion

MIHARA, J.

Plaintiffs own a house in Monterey County adjacent to a vacant lot owned by defendant. Defendant’s lot is benefited by a deeded nonexclusive easement over plaintiffs’ property for access purposes. Plaintiffs are required to keep the easement “clear” in order to ensure “proper access” for defendant. After years of dispute about the easement, plaintiffs obtained a judgment extinguishing defendant’s easement, enjoining defendant from interfering with plaintiffs’ enjoyment of their property and awarding plaintiffs compensatory and punitive damages based on causes of action for nuisance, violation of conditions, covenants and restrictions (hereafter CC&R’s) applicable to defendant’s property and interference with contract or prospective economic advantage. Defendant’s appeal challenges the sufficiency of the evidence to support (1) the extinguishment of his easement, (2) the court’s finding that he was liable to plaintiffs for interference with contract or prospective economic advantage, (3) nuisance liability, (4) damages for violation of the CC&R’s and (5) damages for emotional distress. *758 Defendant also claims that the punitive damages award was improper because plaintiffs failed to adduce evidence of his financial condition. Finally, defendant claims that the judgment must be reversed because the trial court conducted a “view” of the property while court was not in session without notifying the parties. We conclude that the evidence does not support the trial court’s extinguishment of defendant’s easement. Accordingly, we modify the judgment by striking the order extinguishing defendant’s easement and affirm the modified judgment.

Facts

In 1977, defendant paid $21,000 for a one-acre lot adjacent to the property now owned by plaintiffs. Plaintiffs’ property already had a home on it at that time. The only use that defendant has ever made of his vacant lot has been as a place to store old trucks, a boat and other debris including roofing tile, beams, concrete blocks and fragments, a cement mixer, saw horses and lumber. Defendant’s neighbors and the health department asked him to remove this debris, but he did not respond to these requests. Defendant kept a nonfunctional pickup truck on his lot for a decade even though he was cited in both 1987 and 1989 by the Monterey County Department of Health for storing this vehicle on his property and directed to remove this “health and safety” hazard immediately. In 1989, defendant was cited by the California Department of Forestry for maintaining a fire hazard on his lot. Defendant has also been cited for illegally grading his lot without a permit. Less than a month before trial, defendant removed the nonfunctional pickup truck from his lot.

Defendant’s grant deed states that he has a “non-exclusive easement for driveway purposes” over a strip of land 25 feet wide and 80 feet long across the front of plaintiffs’ property. Defendant’s lot is not landlocked. It fronts on a public street. The front porch of plaintiffs’ home encroaches a few feet into defendant’s easement. Defendant became aware of this encroachment in the 1970’s. In 1980, a variance was granted to previous owners of plaintiffs’ property which permitted the house to violate the setback requirement 1 on the condition that “the right-of-way be kept clear to provide proper access” to defendant’s lot.

Plaintiffs purchased their property in June 1987. In August 1987, defendant first encountered plaintiffs when he found vehicles parked in the easement blocking his access to his lot on the day of plaintiffs’ wedding. He knocked on plaintiffs’ door, complained about the cars parked in front of *759 plaintiffs’ house and told plaintiff Judith Reichardt (hereafter Judith) that “they weren’t supposed to park” in the easement. Judith had just gotten out of the shower and was wet and in her robe. She explained that this was their wedding day, and they were going to have a number of guests. She asked defendant if he was going to require access to his property again that day. Defendant told her “it doesn’t matter whether I will be back later today or not. No cars are ever to be parked there.” Defendant insisted upon talking to “the groom,” but he was not permitted to do so.

Through the years, defendant has consistently insisted that no cars are allowed to park anywhere in the easement area. He claims that there is not adequate room for a vehicle to pass if another vehicle is parked in the easement. However, he concedes that the easement area is at least 20 feet wide. Everyone other than defendant has concluded that there is plenty of room for two cars to pass one another in the easement area. A few days after the August 1987 encounter, while plaintiffs were away on their honeymoon, defendant returned and removed much of the vegetation and part of a tree that were growing on plaintiffs’ property along the edge of the easement. He did not contact plaintiffs before doing so. Plaintiffs’ friend, who was house-sitting for them while they were away, saw defendant doing this and asked defendant to stop, but defendant refused. Defendant’s mutilation of this vegetation left a “mud wall” bare of vegetation in front of plaintiffs’ house. The tree later died, and the vegetation never grew back.

In late 1987, plaintiff William Reichardt (hereafter William) first met defendant. Defendant told William that “this was his easement and we were to treat that easement area, the paved area, as if it were a street with no parking signs on it. . . .” William asked defendant if it would be advantageous for defendant to have direct access to his property from the street. Defendant asked whether William had $50,000 “to contribute to the possibility of putting in a new driveway.” William replied that he did not. Around Christmas of 1987, defendant pounded on plaintiffs’ front door very early on a Saturday morning and demanded that a car parked on the easement be moved. William moved the car so that defendant could get by, but he did not move the car off the easement. Defendant became irate and demanded that the car be removed entirely from the easement area. William did so, but defendant insisted that the car was still on the easement and became even more angry. He said “you just can’t park in front [of your house] at all. This is my easement, you are never to park on it.” William removed his car from the front of his house. William had a similar encounter with defendant in March 1988. These incidents were “ongoing" through early 1991 although William could not remember the dates of any other specific incidents.

Plaintiffs had not been apprised of the existence of defendant’s easement when they purchased their property. After learning of its existence, they *760 made a claim against their title insurer, the seller and the seller’s real estate agent. This claim was settled in 1990. In 1991, plaintiffs tried to contact defendant in an attempt to convince him to sell them his easement. In May 1991, defendant told them that he had received their communications and “he was sure we could work something out.” A month later, defendant told them that he “was still thinking about it” but “had been too busy to get to it.” In the fall of 1991, Judith met with defendant and showed him plans that plaintiffs had had prepared for an alternative driveway access for defendant’s property.

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Bluebook (online)
52 Cal. App. 4th 754, 60 Cal. Rptr. 2d 770, 97 Daily Journal DAR 1303, 97 Cal. Daily Op. Serv. 909, 1997 Cal. App. LEXIS 86, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/reichardt-v-hoffman-calctapp-1997.