Savage v. Timsah

CourtCourt of Appeals of Kansas
DecidedFebruary 7, 2025
Docket127122
StatusUnpublished

This text of Savage v. Timsah (Savage v. Timsah) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Kansas primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Savage v. Timsah, (kanctapp 2025).

Opinion

NOT DESIGNATED FOR PUBLICATION

No. 127,122

IN THE COURT OF APPEALS OF THE STATE OF KANSAS

PAUL L. SAVAGE and GAYLE WILLIAMS, Trustees of the Savage-Harrington Family Trust, Paul L. Savage, and Paula J. Savage, Appellees,

v.

AMAL TIMSAH, Appellant.

MEMORANDUM OPINION

Appeal from Sedgwick District Court; STEPHEN J. TERNES, judge. Submitted without oral argument. Opinion filed February 7, 2025. Affirmed.

Jerry D. Bogle, of Young, Bogle, Wells & Blanchard, P.A., of Wichita, for appellant.

Patrick B. Hughes, of Adams Jones Law Firm, P.A., of Wichita, for appellees.

Before ATCHESON, P.J., CLINE and PICKERING, JJ.

CLINE, J.: Amal Timsah appeals the district court's recognition of an easement that allows tenants of nearby triplexes to cross a driveway on Timsah's commercial lot to access a nearby street. She also challenges several procedural decisions and the court's award of attorney fees to Plaintiffs as damages for Timsah's slander of title. After careful review of the record and the parties' arguments in their briefs, we see no error and thus affirm.

1 FACTUAL AND PROCEDURAL BACKGROUND

Around 1940, four triplexes were built near the intersection of Harry Street and Yale Avenue in Wichita. In 1954, Norman and Dorothy Bekemeyer obtained the land on which the triplexes were built (Triplex Property) as well as an 18-foot strip of land (Strip) that connected the triplexes' parking lot to Harry Street. At the time, Harry Jabara owned land (Flower Shop Property) which abutted both the Triplex Property and the Strip. The record includes various maps which depict these properties, one of which identifies the Strip as the "Purported Easement."

The triplexes, now known as the Virgina Oaks Apartment Complex, contain residential rental units. At some point, triplex residents started accessing Harry Street by using the Strip. Residents would access the Triplex Property by entering on Yale Avenue, which is on the east side of the triplexes, and would exit the Triplex Property by using the Strip to reach Harry Street. Residents needed to use the Strip to access Harry Street

2 because there was not enough room for cars to drive in opposite directions without interfering with each other.

A one-way sign is located on the Triplex Property which routed residents to exit the triplex parking lot through the Strip. According to Paul Savage, one of the current interest owners of the Triplex Property, the one-way sign was there when he purchased the property in January 1979 and had been there for a while.

The Bekemeyers conveyed the Triplex Property to the Colemans by deed in 1960. Then in 1964, the Bekemeyers conveyed the Strip to Harry Jabara and his wife Mary. The deed to the Jabaras reserved to the Bekemeyers an easement of egress and ingress over the Strip. The deed from the Bekemeyers to the Colemans, conveying the Triplex Property, did not mention the Strip nor any easement.

After Norman Bekemeyer died intestate in the fall of 1969, Dorothy Bekemeyer was appointed as the administrator of his estate. In 1970, Dorothy filed a sworn petition in his probate case to make a conveyance. In the petition, Dorothy acknowledged that when the Bekemeyers conveyed the Triplex Property to the Colemans, the deed did not recite the location of an easement over the Strip. Even so, Dorothy said an easement of ingress and egress over the Strip for the Triplex Property existed and was being used at the time of the conveyance to the Colemans. Dorothy said she and Norman reserved this easement, which Dorothy contended was an appurtenance to the Triplex Property, as a permanent easement over the Strip when they sold the Strip to the Jabaras. Dorothy said the Colemans now wanted an additional conveyance describing the easement from Norman's estate. She contended in the petition that Norman's estate was legally bound to furnish this conveyance because the Bekemeyers' warranty deed to the Colemans warranted title to the real property, including this appurtenant easement. Dorothy asked the probate court for permission to issue a deed which conveyed all of Norman's right, title, and interest in the easement over the Strip to the Colemans. The probate court

3 granted Dorothy's request. On May 28, 1970, Dorothy recorded an administratrix deed which granted the Colemans and their heirs and assigns the right of ingress and egress over the Strip. She also recorded a quitclaim deed from herself personally to the Colemans which granted the same rights of ingress and egress over the Strip.

The Colemans sold the Triplex Property to James and Florene Cobb shortly thereafter. The deed included a non-exclusive easement of ingress and egress over the Strip, as did all subsequent deeds conveying the Triplex Property.

Plaintiffs acquired the Triplex Property in 1979. Their deed purported to include the easement, and a survey of the land completed before the sale concluded the Triplex Property included "a non-exclusive easement for ingress and egress appurtenant" over the Strip. Since 1979, Plaintiffs "[p]ositively" believed their property possessed an easement over the Strip.

Timsah acquired the Flower Shop Property in 2009. The deed conveying the Flower Shop Property to Timsah stated that the conveyance of the Flower Shop Property is "EXCEPT AND SUBJECT TO: Easements, restrictions and assessments of record."

In 2022, asphalt or a mixture of rock was dumped in the middle of the Strip. Plaintiffs sued Timsah, alleging she wrongfully blocked the Triplex Property's use of the easement for access to and from Harry Street. They sought an order declaring Plaintiffs have a valid ingress and egress easement over the Strip, allowing Plaintiffs and their tenants use of the easement, preventing Timsah from interfering with Plaintiffs' and their tenants' use of the easement, and an injunction requiring Timsah to remove the pile of materials blocking the easement and prohibiting her from blocking or otherwise interfering with the easement. By the time a pretrial conference order was entered, Plaintiffs had added a slander of title claim, for which they sought recovery of their attorney fees as damages.

4 After a bench trial, the district court found Plaintiffs possessed an easement over the Strip "under any of the three following alternate theories." First, it found that an easement exists by implication. Although the Bekemeyers did not expressly mention the easement when they passed the property to the Colemans, the court found "it was the intent of the Bekemeyers to pass the easement with the rest of the apartment property." The court secondly found an easement exists by prescription because "[s]ince at least 1979, 43 years before this suit was filed, and perhaps as far back as 1960, the apartment property has used [the] easement over the flower shop property for ingress or egress." And finally, the court found an easement exists by estoppel because of "both the continuous use of the easement and the maintenance done to the easement by the Savage family."

The district court also found Timsah "slandered the title of plaintiffs' property rights in their easement" because she "deni[ed] the existence of the easement and block[ed] plaintiffs' use of it." It also believed Timsah slandered Plaintiffs' title because she acted with malice when she allegedly said it was her intent to "'[t]each them a lesson.'" The court ordered Timsah to pay Plaintiffs' attorney fees as damages for their slander of title claim in the amount of $33,165.

This appeal followed.

REVIEW OF TIMSAH'S APPELLATE CHALLENGES

I. Did the district court err in finding Plaintiffs possess an easement over an 18-foot strip of land on Timsah's property?

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