S & S Enterprises v. Marathon Ashland Petroleum, LLC

799 N.E.2d 18, 2003 Ind. App. LEXIS 2161, 2003 WL 22724642
CourtIndiana Court of Appeals
DecidedNovember 20, 2003
Docket49A02-0212-CV-1033
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 799 N.E.2d 18 (S & S Enterprises v. Marathon Ashland Petroleum, LLC) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Indiana Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
S & S Enterprises v. Marathon Ashland Petroleum, LLC, 799 N.E.2d 18, 2003 Ind. App. LEXIS 2161, 2003 WL 22724642 (Ind. Ct. App. 2003).

Opinion

OPINION

NAJAM, Judge.

STATEMENT OF THE CASE

In June 2000, S & S Enterprises ("S & S") filed its Verified Complaint for Dam *20 ages and Injunctive Relief against Marathon Ashland Petroleum, LLC ("Marathon"). S & S alleged that Marathon was trespassing on its property and sought in-juncetive relief accordingly. S & S further alleged that the parties disagreed on the location of the Easement granted to Marathon in 1972 by S8 & S's predecessor in title, Ramada Indiana, Inc. Specifically, while the Easement itself grants Marathon an easement along the west property line, a Rider to the Easement grants Marathon an easement along the east property line. Marathon filed its Answer and requested that the trial court determine the actual location of the easement.

In March 2002, S & S moved for summary judgment, arguing that the Rider governs the easement's location. Marathon then filed its cross-motion for summary judgment, arguing that the Rider was the product of mutual mistake and should be reformed to reflect the parties' intentions, which was to grant an easement along the west side of the property line. On November 26, 2002, the trial court issued its Order and found that "mutual mistake existed in the execution of the Easement and Rider," denied S & S's summary judgment motion, and granted Marathon's motion. § & S now appeals and presents a single issue for review: whether the trial court erred when it granted Marathon's summary judgment motion and reformed the Rider based on mutual mistake.

We affirm.

FACTS AND PROCEDURAL HISTORY

In 1972, Ramada Inns, Inc. embarked on a project to build a hotel near the Indianapolis airport on a 7.5 acre parcel in the Park Fletcher Industrial Park. For that project, Ramada Inns, Inc. formed Ramada Indiana, Inc. ("Ramada"), an Indiana corporation. On May 12, 1972, Ramada and Marathon Oil Company entered into an Option to Purchase in which Ramada granted Marathon Oil Company an option to purchase a portion of the 7.5 acre parcel. Marathon Oil Company exercised the option and took title to a 0.587 acre parcel ("Marathon Parcel") by Corporate Warranty Deed ("the Deed") dated December 21, 1972, which was recorded in the Marion County Recorder's Office on January 23, 1978.

Marathon Oil Company planned to operate a service station on the Marathon Parcel. When Marathon Oil Company exercised its option to purchase, Ramada agreed to grant Marathon Oil Company a non-exclusive twenty-five-foot easement for purposes of a common driveway to serve both the service station and the hotel. Specifically, on November 18, 1972, Ramada executed the Easement, which provided in relevant part: "Marathon [Oil Company] shall have a non-exclusive 25 foot easement on the West property line in order that Marathon [Oil Company] and Ramada may have a common joint driveway use to serve both the service station and the Ramada Motor Hotel located in the Park Fletcher Industrial Park." Ramada amended the Easement with a Rider, which provides:

The Easement is hereby amended in the following manner:
Paragraph 1 is deleted and the following is inserted in lieu thereof:
1. [Marathon Oil Company] shall have a non-exclusive twenty-five (25) foot wide easement running from Bradbury Street along the Hast property line ... in order that [Marathon Oil Company] and Ramada shall have a common joint driveway use to serve both the service station and the Ramada Motor Hotel located in the Park Fletcher Industrial Park.

*21 (Emphasis added). Ramada alone executed both the Easement and the Rider, and those documents were recorded on January 28, 1978.

Before Ramada executed the Easement in November 1972, Robert J. Isbell, Ramada's vice president, reviewed and approved the Marathon Plot Plan dated July 14, 1972, The Marathon Plot Plan was prepared showing north at the bottom, south at the top, west on the right, and east on the left. Isbell also reviewed and approved a survey dated August 29, 1972, prepared by Weihe Engineers, Inc. Unlike the Marathon Plot Plan, the Weihe survey showed north at the top, south at the bottom, west on the left, and east on the right. However, both the Marathon Plot Plan and the survey show that Bradbury Street borders the Ramada property and the Marathon Parcel to the north, and that Ramada's property surrounds the Marathon Parcel on all remaining sides. There are two easements, electrical and drainage, located on Ramada's property to the east of the Marathon Parcel.

In 1982, David Ayres began operating the Marathon service station, and he was familiar with the station under its prior operator because he was employed at another station nearby. When Ayres took over at the Marathon station, the station and the hotel shared a common driveway on the west side of the station, between the station and the hotel. On the east side of the station there was a steep drainage ditch, incapable of being used as a driveway. While Ayres operated the station, the station's sales volume tripled, which resulted in an increase in traffic coming and going from the station. That increase in traffic caused delays for cars waiting to enter or exit the hotel parking lot from the common driveway between the two businesses. In early 1984, the Ramada management erected large concrete barricades to close off the entrance and exit to the hotel parking lot from the common driveway between the two businesses. Those barricades routed traffic from the Ramada parking lot out its main entrance farther west on Bradbury Street. The barricades did not obstruct ingress and egress from Bradbury Street to the service station.

In 1986, Ramada conveyed its parcel by Special Warranty Deed to S & S. S & S's title search conducted in connection with the conveyance disclosed the recorded Easement and Rider. Prior to the sale, S & S inspected the property. A survey completed two weeks after the sale showed the location of the "25 INGRESS-EGRESS EASEMENT-Inst. 73-4329" on the east side of the Marathon Parcel. "Inst. 73-4829" refers to the recorded Easement and Rider.

In 1987, a United States Air Force jet crashed and destroyed the hotel on S & S's property. Ayres, who continued to operate the Marathon service station, had to remove some of the barricades along the west property line so that the government could use the service station as a staging area for the recovery effort. Ayres and his employees later returned the barricades to their original location.

In 1997, Marathon Oil Company transferred its interest in the Marathon Parcel to Marathon by Quitclaim Deed. In 1999, a fire damaged the Marathon service station, which caused the business to close. In January 2000, while Marathon was in the course of rebuilding the station, William E. Cramer of Marathon sent S & S's legal counsel a letter, which provides in part:

[Marathon] owns the subject property located directly east of S & S Enterprises [sic] parcel along Bradbury Street. Upon review of our survey, ..., we found that concrete barriers have been erected across an area where Marathon retains easement rights. For your re *22

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Bluebook (online)
799 N.E.2d 18, 2003 Ind. App. LEXIS 2161, 2003 WL 22724642, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/s-s-enterprises-v-marathon-ashland-petroleum-llc-indctapp-2003.