Ruebe v. Parsa CA2/6

CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedJanuary 5, 2015
DocketB251016
StatusUnpublished

This text of Ruebe v. Parsa CA2/6 (Ruebe v. Parsa CA2/6) 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
Ruebe v. Parsa CA2/6, (Cal. Ct. App. 2015).

Opinion

Filed 1/5/15 Ruebe v. Parsa CA2/6 NOT TO BE PUBLISHED IN THE OFFICIAL REPORTS California Rules of Court, rule 8.1115(a), prohibits courts and parties from citing or relying on opinions not certified for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 This opinion has not been certified for publication or ordered published for purposes of rule 8.1115.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

SECOND APPELLATE DISTRICT

DIVISION SIX

BAMBI RUEBE, 2d Civil No. B251016 (Super. Ct. No. 56-2011-00404786- Plaintiff, Cross-defendant and CU-OR-VTA) Respondent, (Ventura County)

v.

DAYRUSH J. PARSA et al.,

Defendants, Cross-complainants and Appellants,

HAMID LASHKARI,

Defendant and Appellant.

A California poet famously questioned whether good fences make good neighbors.1 In this case, they did not. Appellants Dayrush and Kathleen Parsa and respondent Bambi Ruebe own neighboring properties. Ruebe has a backyard but no driveway or back door to access it. So she built a gate in the fence enclosing her backyard that opens onto the Parsas'

1 (Frost (1914) Mending Wall in North of Boston, pp. 11-13 ["'Why do they make good neighbours? . . . Before I built a wall I'd ask to know / What I was walling in or walling out, / And to whom I was like to give offence . . .'"].) Although Robert Frost's poetry is "intimately associated with rural New England, one tends to forget that the first landscape printed on his imagination was both urban and Californian," Frost having lived in San Francisco until the age of 11. (Parini, Robert Frost: A Life (1999) p. 3.) driveway. She accessed her backyard through the gate by traveling over the Parsas' driveway to and from the public street. Disturbed by this intrusion onto their property, the Parsas built their own fence surrounding the gate, preventing Ruebe from using it. Ruebe sued, claiming that she had a prescriptive easement to use the Parsas' driveway with which appellants unlawfully interfered. The jury agreed with her and awarded compensatory and punitive damages against Parsa and punitive damages against appellant Hamid Lashkari, the Parsas' property manager.2 In addition, the trial court ordered the Parsas to repave their driveway to remedy a continuing nuisance from water drainage onto Ruebe's property. The Parsas and Lashkari appeal, challenging the prescriptive easement finding, the injunction to repave their driveway, and the punitive damages award. We affirm. FACTS Ruebe's Evidence The Parsas have owned the rental property located at 58 North Oak Street in Ventura since 1980. Lashkari and Buena Properties have been managing the property since 2002. The property includes a driveway leading to a parking lot, which the Parsas also own. The driveway is the only means of access to the parking lot. Parsa also owns a commercial building (Zander building) that connects to the parking lot. Ruebe moved into the property next door at 50 North Oak Street in 1989 or 1990 when she was pregnant with her son, Lancelot, and the two of them have lived there since. The Parsas' driveway runs between the house they own and Ruebe's house. At the time Ruebe purchased her house, she understood from disclosures in the purchase agreement that there was a prescriptive easement allowing her access to her backyard area via the driveway.3

2 Throughout this opinion, "Parsa" in the singular refers to Dayrush Parsa, "Parsas" in the plural refers to Dayrush and Kathleen Parsa, and "appellants" refers to the Parsas 3and Lashkari. This was only her understanding. Nothing in the record suggests that a prescriptive easement was ever recorded. 2 At the time Ruebe moved in, her backyard area was unenclosed. She installed a white picket fence in approximately 1993. The fence contained an eight- to ten-foot-wide gate that allowed her to enter and exit the backyard. The gate appeared different from the surrounding fence in that it had a scallop-shaped top, big black hinges, and a handle with a lock. The pavement led up to and through the gate. There were two large potted plants on either side. Throughout the 1990s and early 2000s, Parsa would visit the parking lot each week. Ruebe used the gate "multiple times a day on most days," occasionally in one of her vehicles, depending on her needs. She would bring cars into the backyard to perform maintenance on them. She frequently parked one of her cars there for security reasons. Ruebe used the driveway for walking and driving access to her backyard, taking out the trash, bringing in groceries, running her business, maintaining plants along the driveway and the back end of her property, and maintaining the property itself. She believed she had a right to use the gate and always did so openly. Except for when the Parsas repaved the driveway and the parking lot, Ruebe used the driveway continuously until the Parsas blocked the gate leading to her backyard. The Parsas have never given Ruebe permission to use their driveway. Since the 1990s, Ruebe and the Parsas have been in a dispute over Ruebe's use of it. Parsa frequently complained about Ruebe parking her vehicles in the parking lot. Their dispute led to litigation in the 1990s. In 1995, Parsa wrote a letter to Ruebe's attorney stating that she was not allowed to use his parking spaces and could use the driveway only if she had a grant deed permitting her to do so. At some point in the 1990s, Parsa asked Ruebe to move her vehicle out of the parking lot, and she told him that she would put the vehicle in her backyard. She parked her car in the backyard whenever the Parsas asked, such as when they repaved the parking lot. Although Ruebe never saw Parsa when she had the gate open, she left it open for periods of time. From 1995 onward, appellants were aware that Ruebe was using the driveway and that she claimed she had a right to do so, but they ignored it. Appellants did "not pretend it [was] okay" for Ruebe to use the parking lot.

3 In approximately 2009, Ruebe spent three months remodeling the fence and replacing the gate with restored wood, handcrafted metalwork, and antique lanterns. The new gate was approximately the same size and in the same location as the previous gate. Although there are fast-growing bushes in front of the gate, they did not impede Ruebe's ability to enter and exit her backyard. After Ruebe completed the gate, appellants sent her a letter demanding that she remove it within 10 days or they would install a fence. Lashkari told her that if she did not pay him $100 per month, he would build a wall in front of her gate. She refused, and appellants began constructing a wooden fence around the gate. Ruebe told appellants that the gate was how she had always accessed her backyard. Because no one warned Ruebe that construction was about to commence, she did not have an opportunity beforehand to remove her car from the backyard where it was parked. Her car became trapped inside. In deposition testimony read to the jury, Parsa stated, "[Ruebe] felt she had a right to build a fence and we had a right to build a fence. We countered her fence." When the Parsas' fence was completed in December 2010 or January 2011, it prevented Ruebe from opening her gate more than a few feet and completely blocked all vehicular access to her backyard. The only way to reach the backyard was by crawling through a window at the rear of the house over her sink counter or by shimmying around a one-foot gap between the Parsas' fence and Ruebe's gate.4 The Parsas repaved their driveway in October 2008. Prior to that time, the driveway had a channel running down the middle. The channel would cause groundwater to be diverted away from the properties on either side as it flowed out to the street.

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