Sprankles v. Sullivan CA4/1

CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedAugust 20, 2020
DocketD075334
StatusUnpublished

This text of Sprankles v. Sullivan CA4/1 (Sprankles v. Sullivan CA4/1) 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
Sprankles v. Sullivan CA4/1, (Cal. Ct. App. 2020).

Opinion

Filed 8/18/20 Sprankles v. Sullivan CA4/1 NOT TO BE PUBLISHED IN OFFICIAL REPORTS California Rules of Court, rule 8.1115(a), prohibits courts and parties from citing or relying on opinions not certified for publication or ordered published, except as specified by rule 8.1115(b). This opinion has not been certified for publication or ordered published for purposes of rule 8.1115.

COURT OF APPEAL FOURTH APPELLATE DISTRICT

DIVISION ONE

STATE OF CALIFORNIA

CHUCK SPRANKLES et al., D075334

Plaintiffs, Cross-defendants and Appellants, (Super. Ct. No. 37-2014- v. 00029243-CU-OR-NC)

SEAN SULLIVAN et al.,

Defendants, Cross-complainants and Respondents.

APPEAL from a judgment of the Superior Court of San Diego County, Ronald F. Frazier, Judge. Affirmed. Blake Law Firm, Steven W. Blake and Andrew E. Hall for Plaintiffs, Cross-defendants and Appellants. Lewis Brisbois Bisgaard & Smith, Jeffry A. Miller, Timothy J. Watson, and Ernest Slome; Chuck & Tsoong, Stephen C. Chuck and Carley Mak Lee for Defendants, Cross-complainants and Respondents. This appeal arises from a boundary dispute between two neighbors (the Sprankleses and the Sullivans) who live in a rural area of San Diego County. After a court trial with 20 witnesses and 79 exhibits, the court found the Sullivans were occupying a portion of the Sprankleses’ property, but the Sullivans were entitled to remain in this portion of the property under

theories of equitable easement and/or implied easement.1 The court directed the Sullivans to pay the Sprankleses $40,053 as compensation for the exclusive easement. The court also restricted the Sullivans’ use of the easement to certain activities; required the Sullivans to pay property taxes and insurance for the easement; and ordered that the easement would run with the land. On appeal, the Sprankleses challenge the court’s legal and factual conclusions. As to the equitable easement, we conclude the court applied the correct legal principles and its findings are supported by the evidence. Based on this conclusion, we do not reach the court’s alternative implied easement finding. FACTUAL AND PROCEDURAL SUMMARY Background The Sprankles and Sullivan properties were a single 1.71-acre parcel in the early 1960’s, owned by the Andersons. A home (built in 1952) was on the lower part of the parcel. There were no other buildings on the property. In about 1964, Mr. Anderson applied to split the parcel into a larger upper lot and a smaller lower lot, and submitted a proposed map prepared by his contractor. The existing home was on the lower lot. The county granted

1 The two properties are depicted on Appendix A, post, page 32. The Sprankles property and home are at the top of the map, and the Sullivan property and home are at the bottom. The triangle bordered by the blue and purple lines reflects the disputed area. 2 the application and approved a final division plat map in January 1965 (1965 Map; attached as Appendix B, post, page 33). As depicted on Appendix B, this map showed the boundary line about 37 feet from, and parallel to, the corner of the existing home on the lower lot. (See Appendix B, green circle.) In 1966, the Andersons built a home on the upper lot and moved into that home, and lived there for the remainder of their lives. They never recorded the 1965 Map, and the county assessor continued to tax the Andersons for the property as a single 1.71-acre parcel. During the next several decades, the home on the lower lot was occupied by various Anderson family members, including their grandson. In 2004, after both Andersons had died, the Anderson estate initially listed the entire Anderson parcel for sale as a single, 1.7-acre property with two homes (the home built by the Andersons in 1966, and the home on the lower lot built in 1952.). In April 2004, the estate changed the listing to state it was in the “ ‘process of effecting recordation of division of land to [the upper] parcel at 1.1 acres, and “lower” parcel . . . [a]t .6 acres.’ ” The estate then hired surveyor William Teas to prepare the metes and bounds descriptions to be used in the grant deed for each parcel. Teas prepared the metes and bounds using the 1965 Map (he was not retained to physically survey the property). It is undisputed Teas made mathematical errors in preparing the metes and bounds description. As discussed below, instead of making the boundary line 37 feet from the home on the lower parcel, the line reflected in Teas’s description came quite close to the lower house, within nine or 10 feet of the front door and cutting through a small portion of the roof. The deeds using Teas’s metes and bounds descriptions were recorded in 2004. Thereafter (and to the present day) the county assessor taxed the

3 upper property as a 1.11-acre parcel and the lower property as a .6-acre parcel. After the division, in 2004, the Anderson estate sold both parcels to a financial entity (U.S. Financial), which then sold the upper lot (1.1-acre parcel) to Roseanne Kemp in about November 2004. The next year, in 2005, U.S. Financial sold the lower lot (.6-acre parcel) to Tracey Sullivan (who later added her husband Sean to the title). Before purchasing the property, the Sullivans were given a copy of the 1965 Map, which was marked “FINAL” and showed the property line 37 feet from the southwest corner of the house. (See Appendix B, green circle.) The grant deed also referenced the 1965 Map. At the time, an 8-foot by 8-foot shed and a large propane tank were located in the area within 37 feet of the lower parcel residence. The lower parcel (which sloped down from the upper property) was also cut in such a way “to create a [level] pad” for the house on the lower lot. The building pad for the lower property was marked by a five foot tall cut in the hillside along the then-existing tree line. Before the purchase, the Sullivans had asked the seller to mark the corners of the property, but the seller refused. However, when the Sullivans walked through the property before the purchase, they observed that the house, the cut and trees, and the placement of the shed and propane tank were fully consistent with the 1965 Map boundaries. Although their realtor recommended a survey, they decided not to retain a surveyor because of the expense and because the 1965 Map appeared to accurately reflect the boundaries of the property. At the time of their purchase, there was no fence or other physical dividing line separating the two parcels. Soon after their purchase, Mr. Sullivan erected a fence separating the properties. He intended to build the

4 fence where he believed their property line was located as depicted on the 1965 Map, which was 37 feet away from and parallel to their house. To do so, he measured about 37 feet “off the house” and also used the tree line (which was not on the 1965 Map) to determine the proper location of the fence boundary line. He used his footsteps, a measuring tape, the 1965 Map, and the tree line. As he was doing this, neighbor Kemp approached him and indicated she disagreed with the proposed location because she thought he was installing the fence on her property. She told him she had a survey of her property, but he did not ask to see it and she did not offer to show it to him. She testified she then brought out a lengthy string to help Mr. Sullivan measure and “figure out” where the fence should be placed. Within days or weeks, Kemp observed “some workers come out and start to put the fence up.” When Kemp saw they were putting the fence “a little bit too far up” on her property, she or her son “asked them to move it down a little bit [toward the Sullivan property].” Kemp testified that after the workers complied by moving the fence “a few feet,” she was satisfied and had no issue with the fence location. She believed the fence was at or near the property line, but never confirmed this with the survey.

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Sprankles v. Sullivan CA4/1, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/sprankles-v-sullivan-ca41-calctapp-2020.