Rye v. Tahoe Truckee Sierra Disposal

CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedJanuary 10, 2014
DocketC067970M
StatusPublished

This text of Rye v. Tahoe Truckee Sierra Disposal (Rye v. Tahoe Truckee Sierra Disposal) 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
Rye v. Tahoe Truckee Sierra Disposal, (Cal. Ct. App. 2014).

Opinion

Filed 1/10/14 (unmodified version attached) CERTIFIED FOR PUBLICATION

IN THE COURT OF APPEAL OF THE STATE OF CALIFORNIA THIRD APPELLATE DISTRICT (Placer)

BRIAN RYE, C067970

Plaintiff, Cross-defendant and Respondent, (Super. Ct. No. SCV22362) v.

TAHOE TRUCKEE SIERRA DISPOSAL ORDER MODIFYING COMPANY, INC., OPINION AND DENYING Defendant, Cross-complainant and Appellant; REHEARING

DAWN C. RYE, [NO CHANGE IN JUDGMENT] Cross-defendant and Respondent.

THE COURT: It is ordered that the opinion filed herein on December 16, 2013, be modified as follows: On page 12, following the first paragraph and before heading “C. The Lease,” add the following: On Petition for Rehearing Tahoe Truckee argues that the trial court failed to consider objective evidence of the intent of the parties in 1980 regarding the scope of use of the easement. To support that claim, Tahoe

1 Truckee conflates the easement with the lease, referring to “the evidence relating to the circumstances surrounding the 1980-1982 transaction.” There was no 1980-1982 transaction. There were three transactions, the failed exchange of properties in 1980, the easement in 1981, and the lease in 1982. Both the easement and the lease were initiated for the same purpose, to redress the failure of the parties to complete an exchange of properties. The issue is whether that purpose shows that the scope of the easement in 1981 was to grant the easement holder the right to use the whole of the easement property. But conflating the easement and lease to prove the intent in drafting the easement proves too much. If the easement achieved the purpose to grant the use of the whole of the property in 1981, what purpose did the lease serve in 1982? A signal difference between an easement and a lease is the scope of use of the subject property. A lease grants the right to the exclusive occupation and use of the whole of the property, an easement is limited to the right granted in the easement. If the express language of the easement grants the right to use the whole of the property, the easement is exclusive. But the language of the easement in this case is not exclusive and Rye agrees. An exclusive easement must explicitly say so. Thus, if the lease was necessary to achieve that purpose, it could only have been to cure a defect in the easement, which means that the easement failed to achieve the purpose of granting the easement holder a right to use the whole of the property. Thus, no inference can be drawn from the events giving rise to the easement that it was meant to grant the Ryes the scope of use of the easement requested. There is no change in the judgment.

2 Appellant’s petition for rehearing is denied.

BY THE COURT:

RAYE , P. J.

BLEASE , J.

NICHOLSON , J.

3 Filed 12/16/13 (unmodified version) CERTIFIED FOR PUBLICATION

IN THE COURT OF APPEAL OF THE STATE OF CALIFORNIA THIRD APPELLATE DISTRICT (Placer)

Plaintiff, Cross-defendant and Respondent, (Super. Ct. No. SCV22362) v.

TAHOE TRUCKEE SIERRA DISPOSAL COMPANY, INC.,

Defendant, Cross-complainant and Appellant;

DAWN C. RYE,

Cross-defendant and Respondent.

APPEAL from a judgment of the Superior Court of Placer County, Charles Wachob, Judge. Affirmed.

Sinclair Law Office, Sinclair Wilson Baldo & Chamberlain and Robert F. Sinclair for Defendant, Cross-complainant and Appellant.

Porter Simon, Professional Corporation and Louis A. Basile for Plaintiff, Cross- defendants and Respondents.

This is a tale of intertwined claims of right by the plaintiffs to the use of property at Kings Beach, Lake Tahoe, for the parking of garbage trucks and the storage of garbage bins. One claim is predicated on an easement, the other on a lease. The property subject

1 to the easement and lease is referred to as a portion of “Parcel One.” The property, owned by plaintiffs Brian and Dawn Rye (the Ryes), is the subject of a complaint and cross-complaint to determine the rights of the parties to its use. The complaint by Brian Rye, based on the easement, seeks to bar defendant Tahoe Truckee Sierra Disposal Company, Inc. (Tahoe Truckee) from the use of the area subject to the easement beyond its historic uses. The cross-complaint by Tahoe Truckee against the Ryes claims the right to use all of the subject property, as the need arises, either by reliance on the easement or the lease.1 The lease and the easement oddly concern the use of the same piece of property for the same purposes. If the lease is valid, there is no need to rely on the easement since the rights conferred by it are encompassed within the lease. Defendant Tahoe Truckee operates a garbage disposal business and has need of the area of the property subject to the easement or lease for the use of its garbage trucks and the storage of its garbage bins. The easement derives from a reservation in a 1981 recorded deed transferring the servient tenement to the Ryes’ predecessors. The unrecorded lease derives from a purported 1982 agreement between the Shaffers and Tahoe Truckee. The parties disagree whether Tahoe Truckee may expand its parking and storage within the area subject to the easement beyond its historic uses. They necessarily disagree whether the lease was invalid or abandoned. The property is described on a survey map as subject to an “easement for parking, ingress, egress, utilities and storage in favor of” Kings Beach Disposal Company, Inc. (Kings Beach) doing business as Tahoe Truckee.2 (Appendix A, post, p. 14.) The map shows a paved area and a dirt area. The reservation in the grant deed describes an

1 The complaint was filed by Brian Rye alone but the cross-complaint named both Brian and Dawn Rye. For convenience of designation the court will refer to both as plaintiffs. 2 Silvano Achiro answered “correct” to the assertion that Kings Beach “does business as Tahoe Truckee . . . .” Accordingly, we shall use their names interchangeably.

2 easement over the property for “ingress, egress, parking, storage, [and] utilities . . . .”3 A shaded area on a drawing attached to the grant deed shows the contested area of Parcel One. (Appendix B, post, p. 15.) A substantially identical area to the drawing of a portion of Parcel One is shown on an exhibit to an unrecorded, 1982, 99-year lease from the Shaffers to Kings Beach (Tahoe Truckee) for use “in conjunction with its solid waste disposal business, including the storage of empty garbage bins.” The terms of the lease (exhibit 57) parallel the area and purpose of the easement. Neither Tahoe Truckee nor the owners of Parcel One sought to enforce the lease in the 22 years from its inception until its sale to the Ryes. The trial court ruled that, assuming the validity of the lease, it had been abandoned because “Tahoe City Disposal Company [(Tahoe Truckee)] clearly disregarded the lease as soon as it was signed.” “[A]lthough the lease was valid when formed, the lease was completely ignored and abandoned.” The trial court also ruled that the terms of the written easement were not exclusive. It limited the defendant to the historic use of the paved area and 10 feet beyond the paved area. It issued an injunction barring Tahoe Truckee from expanding its use beyond this area. We agree. We shall affirm the judgment limiting the defendant to the historic uses of the easement. FACTS The case was tried to the court and the facts are taken mainly from the trial court’s statement of decision.

3The scope of the easement for ingress and egress from the area subject to the easement was not litigated.

3 A. The Easement The defendant, Tahoe Truckee, is the owner of a recorded easement over a portion of Parcel One at Kings Beach, California for the use by its garbage trucks and the storage of its garbage bins. Originally Kings Beach owned two adjoining parcels, Parcel One and parcel 27.

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Bluebook (online)
Rye v. Tahoe Truckee Sierra Disposal, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/rye-v-tahoe-truckee-sierra-disposal-calctapp-2014.