Romanowicz v. Starr CA1/5

CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedJanuary 31, 2024
DocketA166238
StatusUnpublished

This text of Romanowicz v. Starr CA1/5 (Romanowicz v. Starr CA1/5) 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
Romanowicz v. Starr CA1/5, (Cal. Ct. App. 2024).

Opinion

Filed 1/31/24 Romanowicz v. Starr CA1/5 NOT TO BE PUBLISHED IN OFFICIAL REPORTS California Rules of Court, rule 8.1115(a), prohibits courts and parties from citing or relying on opinions not certified for publication or ordered published, except as specified by rule 8.1115(b). This opinion has not been certified for publication or ordered published for purposes of rule 8.1115.

IN THE COURT OF APPEAL OF THE STATE OF CALIFORNIA

FIRST APPELLATE DISTRICT

DIVISION FIVE

BARBARA ROMANOWICZ et al., Plaintiffs, Cross-defendants and Respondents, A166238 v. MOLLIE STARR et al., (Alameda County Defendants, Cross-complainants Super. Ct. No. RG21092642) and Appellants.

This is an appeal from final judgment in a property dispute between next-door neighbors in the City of Berkeley. Following a bench trial, the trial court sided with plaintiffs/cross-defendants, Barbara Romanowicz and Mark Jonikas (Romanowicz/Jonikas), by (1) recognizing their right to a prescriptive easement for ingress and egress along a two-foot strip of land on the property of defendants/cross-complainants, Mollie and Adam Starr (Starrs), and (2) prescriptively extinguishing a recorded easement favoring the Starrs’ property to the extent it allowed for vehicular use of Romanowicz/Jonikas’s driveway. The court thus entered judgment for Romanowicz/Jonikas on both the complaint and the cross-complaint. The Starrs challenge the judgment on the grounds that (1) the trial court lacked authority to effectively give Romanowicz/Jonikas exclusive

1 ownership rights over the two-foot strip on the Starrs’ property under the guise of granting them a prescriptive easement; (2) the trial court lacked authority to completely extinguish their recorded easement over Romanowicz/Jonikas’s driveway without the requisite evidence of adverse possession; (3) the judgment violated the bona fide purchaser doctrine; and (4) the judgment on the cross-complaint was inconsistent with the court’s findings. We find no merit to these arguments and therefore affirm. FACTUAL AND PROCEDURAL BACKGROUND Romanowicz/Jonikas have owned and resided at 2954 Hillegass Avenue, a parcel of real property in the City of Berkeley, since 1992. The Starrs are Romanowicz/Jonikas’s next-door neighbors. They purchased 2956 Hillegass Avenue, the adjacent property to the south of 2954 Hillegass Avenue, in 2019. For decades, a fence stood on 2956 Hillegass immediately to the south of its border with 2954 Hillegass. John Thacher Hurd, from whom Romanowicz/Jonikas purchased 2954 Hillegass, understood this fence sat along the property line. Hurd constructed a gate across the driveway and positioned the gate’s southern post at the end of this fence. Hurd and his family then regularly used the two-foot strip of land in front of the gate to enter and exit their backyard, as did Romanowicz/Jonikas once they moved in. In 2019, the Starrs learned, during the course of drawing up remodeling plans, that this fence was in fact on 2956 Hillegass, approximately two feet from the actual property line between 2954 Hillegass and 2956 Hillegass. In January 2021, the Starrs, well into their remodeling plans, shared this information for the first time with Romanowicz/Jonikas. Shortly thereafter, the Starrs unilaterally relocated the fence to the property

2 line, which prevented Romanowicz/Jonikas from accessing their backyard through the gate Hurd built across their driveway, as the occupants of 2954 Hillegass had done for well over 30 years. The Starrs also learned that a 1909 grant deed identified an easement that gave the owners of 2956 Hillegass a right-of-way over an eight-foot parcel on 2954 Hillegass immediately to the north of the property line for egress and ingress (hereinafter, recorded easement). This recorded easement was also mentioned in the grant deed by which the Starrs took title to their property from the previous owner, Ruth Shelby. However, this recorded easement was not memorialized in the deeds by which Romanowicz/Jonikas and their predecessor in interest (the Hurds) took title to 2954 Hillegass. Both Romanowicz/Jonikas and the Hurds had for decades regularly parked one or more of their vehicles across this eight-foot parcel of land that encompassed their driveway. On October 1, 2021, Romanowicz/Jonikas filed the operative fourth amended complaint1 against the Starrs, asserting causes of action relating to both the two-foot strip of land on the Starrs’ property (2956 Hillegass) that extended the length of the fence that sat between the two properties (hereinafter, two-foot strip) and the eight-foot driveway on Romanowicz/Jonikas’s property (2954 Hillegass) (hereinafter, driveway). As to the two-foot strip, this complaint sought (1) to quiet title to a prescriptive easement for ingress and egress to Romanowicz/Jonikas’s backyard over the two-foot strip (first cause of action), (2) a judicial declaration that Romanowicz/Jonikas own this prescriptive easement (third cause of action), and (3) an injunction prohibiting the Starrs from interfering with their use and enjoyment of the two-foot strip (fifth cause of action). As to the driveway,

1 This action was originally filed in March 2021.

3 the complaint sought (1) to quiet title to Romanowicz/Jonikas’s property on the theory that any easement that may have existed over the driveway in favor of 2956 Hillegass was extinguished by the 2954 Hillegass owners’ prescriptive use of the driveway (second cause of action), (2) a judicial declaration that the recorded easement was extinguished (fourth cause of action), and (3) an injunction prohibiting the Starrs from interfering with Romanowicz/Jonikas’s use of the driveway (sixth cause of action).2 On September 9, 2021, after the original complaint was filed, the Starrs filed a cross-complaint asserting five causes of action, each relating to the recorded easement giving the owners of 2954 Hillegass the right of ingress and egress over the driveway. By this cross-complaint, the Starrs sought on various theories to quiet title to this easement. Trial began on March 2, 2022, at which the following largely undisputed evidence was presented. I. The Two-foot Strip of Land on 2956 Hillegass. Romanowicz/Jonikas testified that nearly every day, and sometimes multiple times a day, they openly and continually walked or cycled along the fence and across the two-foot strip to access their backyard.3 In addition, Romanowicz/Jonikas and their children transported bicycles and, on occasion, their vehicle over this two-foot strip while entering or leaving their backyard. Romanowicz/Jonikas never sought or received permission from their neighbors at 2956 Hillegass to use this two-foot strip, and their neighbors never objected to their use.

2 The fourth amended complaint also asserted a cause of action for libel

that settled prior to trial. 3 The small gate built by Hurd crossed the end of 2954 Hillegass’s

driveway and opened directly onto the two-foot strip.

4 The previous owner of 2954 Hillegass, John Thacher Hurd, likewise testified that, during their 12-year residence, he and his wife, co-owner Olivia Hurd, openly and regularly (often multiple times a day) used the two-foot strip to access their backyard. When they took extended vacations, the Hurds stored their car in the backyard after driving it across the two-foot strip and through the gate. The Hurds never sought or received permission to do so, and their neighbor never objected. Similarly, Romanowicz/Jonikas’s gardeners, Trang Vo and Huong Hong Thi Cao, testified that for at least 15 years, when performing gardening services at 2954 Hillegass twice monthly, they used the two-foot strip to enter and exit Romanowicz/Jonikas’s backyard. In performing these services, Vo and Cao regularly pushed a lawn mower, leaf blower, waste bin and other equipment in and out of the backyard via the two-foot strip.

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Romanowicz v. Starr CA1/5, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/romanowicz-v-starr-ca15-calctapp-2024.