Scoville v. Fisher

149 N.W.2d 339, 181 Neb. 496, 1967 Neb. LEXIS 578
CourtNebraska Supreme Court
DecidedMarch 10, 1967
Docket36434
StatusPublished
Cited by15 cases

This text of 149 N.W.2d 339 (Scoville v. Fisher) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Nebraska Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Scoville v. Fisher, 149 N.W.2d 339, 181 Neb. 496, 1967 Neb. LEXIS 578 (Neb. 1967).

Opinion

White, C. J.

Plaintiff brings this action is equity to establish a prescriptive easement for ingress and egress and other purposes over defendants’ appurtenant town lot in the business section of Hartington, Nebraska. The trial court denied her relief and she appeals. We affirm the judgment.

Defendants own Lot 13, Block 30 of the Original Town of Hartington, 25 feet wide, facing west on Washington Avenue, the main business artery of the town. To the east and rear of their building on this lot is an unimproved and unenclosed (until June 1965) area designated areas Al and A2 on exhibit 1, which is the subject of dispute in this case. Area A2 is 25 by 27 feet immediately to the south of the building and the adjoining area Al is 12 by 25 feet stretching east to the north-south alley running to the east of both plaintiff’s and defendants’ property. Plaintiff owns an area 13 by 25 feet in the northeast corner of Lot 13 on which is located a warehouse. Immediately to the north of defendants’ Lot *498 13 is an open area 52 feet long, east and west, and 12 feet wide which opens into the alley on the east and furnishes access to and abuts the rear of plaintiff’s business property. Plaintiff’s building, which houses Marge’s Cafe on the west and the Chief Bar on the east, faces north and fronts on Fifth Street. The rear doors of the cafe and bar open to> the south into the 52 by 12 foot strip which is adjacent to areas Al and A2 on Lot 13. In June of 1965 the defendants, Fishers, erected a cement block wall about 32 to 36 inches high around the two unenclosed and unimproved areas designated as Al and A2 thus preventing the plaintiff’s use of these areas and precipitating this litigation.

The evidence in this case, mostly on behalf of plaintiff, is practically undisputed. The 52 by 12 foot strip or area immediately to the south and rear of the plaintiff’s. building furnishes access to it, but it has been convenient to use the adjoining unenclosed and open portion of defendants’ lot (areas Al and A2) for parking, unloading of trucks, deliveries, and the passage of customers to and from the plaintiff’s' business properties and other businesses in the area. The areas in dispute, A1 and A2, are open and unenclosed, have no defined parts or marks on them, are graveled, and hard packed. For many years beyond the prescriptive period of 10 years they have been used for customer parking and delivering areas, not only to plaintiff’s building, but to many other buildings and businesses in the area. Trucks turned, maneuvered, and parked in these areas as they serviced the various businesses in the area. Areas A1 and A2 were used by the plaintiff and anybody who wanted to, and the public used these areas as a parking lot when patronizing plaintiff’s business properties, others in the area, or shopping elsewhere in town. Customers and people generally crossed the areas on foot. Plaintiff, her tenants, and their customers used these areas in the same manner. Although there is no evidence of express permission, it is readily and reasonably *499 inferable that defendants and their predecessors in title permitted this use without objection through the years. And there is no evidence that the plaintiff or any of the people using these areas did so under any claim of right adverse to defendants or their predecessors in title. The only conclusion to be drawn from the evidence is that the various uses by the public, customers of the various businesses, plaintiff, deliverymen, and others were permissive in nature.

Plaintiff’s use of the area in question was neither under a claim of right adverse to the defendants or their predecessors in title nor was it exclusive. We shall discuss first the requirement that the use be adverse. The law with relation to this element and with regard to the distinction between an adverse and permissive user is well set out in Stubblefield v. Osborn, 149 Neb. 566, 31 N. W. 2d 547, wherein it is said: “ ‘An easement by prescription can be acquired only by an adverse user for ten years. Such use must-be open, notorious, exclusive and adverse.’ Onstott v. Airdale Ranch and Cattle Co., 129 Neb. 54, 260 N. W. 556. See, also, Omaha & R. V. Ry. Co. v. Rickards, 38 Neb. 847, 57 N. W. 739.

“The use and enjoyment which will give title by prescription to an easement or other incorporeal right is substantially the same in quality and characteristics as the adverse possession which will give title to> real estate. It must be adverse, under a claim of right, continuous and uninterrupted, open and notorious, exclusive, with the knowledge and acquiescence of the owner of the servient tenement, and must continue for the full prescriptive period. See 28 C. J. S., Easements, § 10, p. 645.

“ ‘A prescriptive right is not looked on with favor by the law, and it is essential that all of the elements of use and enjoyment, stated above, concur in order to create an easement by prescription.’ 28 C. J. S., Easements, § 10, p. 645.

“ ‘A permissive use of the land of another, that is a use or license exercised in subordination to the other’s *500 claim and ownership, is not adverse and cannot give an easement by prescription no matter how long it may be continued, * * *.’ 28 C. J. S., Easements, § 14, p. 655.

“To establish a prescriptive right to1 an easement, it must have been exercised under a claim of right. A use by express or implied permission or license cannot ripen into an easement by prescription. See Sachs v. Toquet, 121 Conn. 60, 183 A. 22, 103 A. L. R. 677.” (Emphasis supplied.)

In this case the evidence shows the original use of these areas to have been permissive. There is no evidence that the plaintiff, or any of the many other users, ever informed the defendants or their predecessors in title that they claimed as a matter of right a perpetual easement across defendants’ land. The plaintiff, along with many others and the public generally, used and crossed the defendants’ land. But there is no evidence that such use was adverse, under a claim of right.

In Stubblefield v. Osborn, supra, a somewhat comparable case, in disposing of the contention that the use was presumptively adverse because it was open, continuous, and visible for more than the prescriptive period, we said: “The most that can be said as to their crossing the lands in question is that it was permissive only, a neighborly act on the part of the owners or tenants on the land. There was no claim of ownership on the part of plaintiffs of such a nature that they openly and forcibly asserted directly against the actual owners of the land in such a manner that the owners would be required to take affirmative action against the plaintiffs.”

We are not unmindful of the general rule stated in Jurgensen v. Ainscow, 155 Neb. 701, 53 N. W. 2d 196, to the effect that a presumption of adversity arises when there has been open, visible, continuous, and unmolested use for the prescriptive period of 10 years. The same contention was made in Stubblefield v. Osborn, supra. The general rule must be interpreted in the light of the facts of each case. In none of the cases cited can we *501 find a comparable situation to the present case.

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Bluebook (online)
149 N.W.2d 339, 181 Neb. 496, 1967 Neb. LEXIS 578, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/scoville-v-fisher-neb-1967.