Sinnett v. Werelus

365 P.2d 952, 83 Idaho 514, 1961 Ida. LEXIS 218
CourtIdaho Supreme Court
DecidedOctober 31, 1961
Docket9004
StatusPublished
Cited by47 cases

This text of 365 P.2d 952 (Sinnett v. Werelus) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Idaho Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Sinnett v. Werelus, 365 P.2d 952, 83 Idaho 514, 1961 Ida. LEXIS 218 (Idaho 1961).

Opinion

*518 KNUDSON, Justice.

Appellants are owners of residence property in the city of Pocatello which is bounded on the north by residence property owned by respondents. Both properties are bounded on the west by South Fourth Street and on the east by an alley. Prior to 1919 a dwelling, which faces west, was built on each of said lots.

A strip of ground approximately 10 ft. in width (hereinafter referred to as a “driveway”) separates the two dwellings and the boundary line separating the two properties is located approximately in the center of said driveway. A garage exists in the rear on the easterly portion of each lot.

From 1919 to 1940 the driveway was used by the then owners of said properties to gain access to the garages at the rear of their respective homes, to make coal deliveries into their basements and for parking purposes.

In 1940 the then occupant of appellants’ property erected a fence across a portion of the driveway, restricting the use of the full driveway. Said restriction continued for approximately a year and a half and was removed in about 1942.

During 1945 respondents’ predecessor surfaced the driveway with concrete extending from the garage on respondents’ property along the driveway between the two houses, from which point concrete strips were laid to the street providing a concrete surface for the wheels of a vehicle using the driveway.

From the time the obstructing fence was removed in 1942 until 1959 when this action was commenced, a common use of the driveway by the adjoining owners was continuous. In December, 1959, appellant undertook to remove some of the concrete surfacing and respondents brought this action seeking a permanent injunction restraining appellants from obstructing or interfering with respondents’ use and enjoyment of the driveway, and a declaration of a perpetual easement along said driveway for the benefit of respondents, their heirs, assigns and successors in common with appellants, their heirs, assigns and successors. This appeal is taken from a judgment granting the relief prayed for.

Appellants contend that the court erred in entering judgment for the reason that the complaint does not state a claim upon which relief can be granted. The claimed deficiency of the complaint is that the land of appellants (which is involved in this *519 action) is not fully described, nor is the area of the alleged easement adequately described. Before answer appellants moved to dismiss this action “for the reason that the same does not state a cause of action upon which relief could be granted”. The record does not show what appellants’ contention in support of their said motion was. Appellants also moved for an order requiring respondents to make their complaint more definite and certain, however, a more particular description of appellants’ property and the area of the claimed easement was not requested.

The property involved is described in the complaint as follows:

“That plaintiffs are the owners of the following described parcel of real property:
“Lot 17 and the northwesterly 25' of Lot 16, lying next to and adjoining said Lot 17, Block 303, Pocatello Townsite, Bannock County, Idaho, and that the street address thereof is 814 South Fourth Avenue, in the City of Pocatello, Idaho.
“That the defendants are the owners of an adjoining and adjacent parcel of real property, the same being a site immediately south of and next to and adjoining the property of plaintiffs’, both parcels of real property facing along and upon South Fourth Avenue in Pocatello, Idaho.”

The area covered by the claimed easement is described as follows:

. “That there is a driveway constructed of concrete which lies between the homes of both parties hereto, said driveway occupying a portion of both the plaintiffs’ real property and the defendants’ real property, and that said driveway has been in existence and in constant use for over twenty years.”

There is no claim or showing that appellants were in doubt as to the identity of the area in controversy or that they were in any respect misled or prejudiced by the descriptions used in the complaint. Since the location of appellants’ property and the area involved in this action is so described that a party familiar with the locality is able to identify the premises in controversy and in the absence of a request for a more specific and detailed description, we conclude that the description was sufficient as against the motion to dismiss.

By assignments of error I and III appellants challenge the sufficiency of the evidence to sustain the judgment. The right claimed in this action is an easement by prescription to use that portion of appellants’ premises occupied by the driveway involved. Appellants contend that the provisions of I.C. § 5-210 (pertaining to acquisition of property by adverse possession) are controlling in this case and the great majority of Idaho cases cited by appellants *520 in support of their contention are cases involving the right to real property allegedly acquired by adverse possession. With this contention we do not agree.

While the expressions “title by prescription” and “title by adverse possession” are frequently used interchangeably, it should be noted that “prescription” applies only to incorporeal rights. “Prescription”, strictly speaking, is regulated by the common law which has adopted the prescriptive period from an analogy to the statute of limitations, while “adverse possession” is regulated by statutory provision, 2 C.J.S. § 1, p. 512.

The term “easement” has been variously defined and may be said broadly to be a privilege which the owner of one tenement has a right to enjoy over the tenement of another; a right which one person has to use the land of another for a specific purpose, or a servitude imposed as a burden upon land. 17A Am.Jur. 616, § 1. The following definitions are contained in Black’s Law Dictionary, Fourth Edition, p. 599:

“Easement. A right in the owner of one parcel of land, by reason of such ownership, to use the land of another for a special purpose not inconsistent with a general property in the owner. Hollomon v. Board of Education of Stewart County, 168 Ga. 359, 147 S.E. 882, 884; Frye v. Sibbitt, 145 Neb. 600, 17 N.W.2d 617, 621.”
“A privilege, service, or convenience which one neighbor has of another, by prescription, grant, or necessary implication, and without profit; as a way over his land, a gate-way, watercourse, and the like. Kitch. 105; 3 Cruise, Dig. 484. And see Harrison v. Boring, 44 Tex. 255, 267.”

Under the provisions of I.C. § 5-210 protection by substantial enclosure and payment of taxes are essential to the successful assertion of title to land by adverse possession, however these requirements do not apply to an easement which is merely appurtenant to the dominant estate and is not taxable separate and apart from it. Humphreys v. Blasingame, 104 Cal. 40, 37 P. 804; Silva v. Hawn, 10 Cal.App. 544, 102 P. 952; Ferguson v. Standley, 89 Mont. 489, 300 P. 245; Bernstein v. Dodik, 129 Cal.App. 454,

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
365 P.2d 952, 83 Idaho 514, 1961 Ida. LEXIS 218, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/sinnett-v-werelus-idaho-1961.