STAMAS v. County of Madera

795 F. Supp. 2d 1047, 2011 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 62793, 2011 WL 2433633
CourtDistrict Court, E.D. California
DecidedJune 14, 2011
DocketCase CV F 09-0753 LJO SMS
StatusPublished
Cited by10 cases

This text of 795 F. Supp. 2d 1047 (STAMAS v. County of Madera) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, E.D. California primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
STAMAS v. County of Madera, 795 F. Supp. 2d 1047, 2011 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 62793, 2011 WL 2433633 (E.D. Cal. 2011).

Opinion

ORDER ON MOTIONS FOR SUMMARY JUDGMENT OR IN THE ALTERNATIVE SUMMARY ADJUDICATION (Doc. 125,133,134)

LAWRENCE J. O’NEILL, District Judge.

Three motions for summary judgment, or in the alternative, summary adjudication pursuant to Rule 56 are pending before this Court: (1) Defendants Linda Barlow’s and Gerald Houston’s motion against plaintiffs Mark Stamas and Judy Castles, (2) Defendant County of Madera’s and the Board of Supervisors’ motion against plaintiffs Mark Stamas and Judy Castles, and (3) Plaintiff Mark Stamas’ and Judy Castles’ motion to adjudicate material facts and conclusions of law.

Each party filed an opposition on May 18, 2011. The replies were filed on May 25, 2011. Pursuant to Local Rule 230(g), this matter was submitted on the pleadings without oral argument, and the hearing set for June 1, 2011 was VACATED. Having considered the moving, opposition, and reply papers, as well as the Court’s file, the Court issues the following order. 1

*1055 FACTUAL BACKGROUND

A. Factual Overview

This action involves conflicting claims to an easement or private right-of-way, which was created, modified, or revised over a 120-year time span and ownership of which is in dispute. Plaintiffs claim a right to an easement on Cascadel Road. Plaintiffs contend they are entitled to access to a 60-foot wide street, and not a 12-foot road, which plaintiffs complain County of Madera and the Board of Supervisors (“Madera”) and adjacent property owners, Defendants Gerald Houston and Linda Barlow (“Houston/Barlow”) now limit plaintiffs. The Third Amended Complaint (“TAC”) alleges the following causes of action:

1. First Cause of Action for Violation of 42 U.S.C. § 1983-Substantive and Procedural Due Process;
2. Second Cause of Action for Violation of 42 U.S.C. § 1983 — Equal Protection;
3. Third Cause of Action for Malicious Prosecution;
4. Fourth Cause of Action for Slander of Title;
5. Fifth Cause of Action for Breach of Contract;
6. Sixth Cause of Action for Declaratory relief; and
7. Seventh Cause of Action for Quiet Title.

B. Summary of Pertinent Allegations

The Cascadel Woods Subdivision is located in a mountainous portion of Madera. The subdivision map for Cascadel Woods, Subdivision No. 4, was recorded in Madera County in 1963. Plaintiffs are the owners of Lot 38 of Subdivision No. 4 in the Cascadel Woods Subdivision. Plaintiffs’ property abuts Cascadel Road which is the main ingress and egress to the Subdivision. Stamas and Castles have lived there since 1981. Houston and Barlow purchased Lot 1, which is a 10.42 acre parcel, in Cascadel Woods in 2004.

1. Brief History of Cascadel Road

The beginning of Cascadel Road dates back to an 1888 Deed to the County of Fresno. 2 This Deed granted to “the County of Fresno, in said state the Right of Way for a Public Road, and all incidents thereto,” as defined by a specific road survey performed in 1888. (Doc. 131-1, Joint Exh. 1.) The Right of Way was defined as a “strip of land sixty feet wide” the location of which was defined by the road survey. The road survey is lost in antiquity, and the precise location of the Right of Way for a Public Road referred to in the 1888 Deed, cannot be determined. 3 Ma *1056 dera acknowledges that the 1888 Deed was an accepted dedication of the right of way. (Doc. 133-1, Madera P & A p. 21.)

No history for the road is presented until 1956. In 1956, Madera quitclaimed the Right of Way described in the 1888 Deed to Cascadel Ranch Properties, Inc., the developer of the Cascadel Subdivision. Thus, any interest in the 1888 Right of Way was quit claimed to Cascadel Ranch Properties. (Doc. 131-1, Exh. 5, Quitclaim Deed.) The Cascadel Woods Subdivision, Subdivision no. 4, was recorded in Madera County in 1963. (Doc. 131, Joint facts no. 1) The subdivision map no. 4 shows Cascadel Road terminated at the easterly boundary of the Houston/Barlow property and is shown as a private, not public road. 4 (Doc. 131-1, Joint Exh. 29, Jones Deck ¶ 2.) Page 2 of the subdivision map shows a 60 foot wide right of way ending at the border of Lot 1 and not crossing Lot 1. (Doc. 131— 1, Joint Exh. 8.) The map does not depict any road or right of way crossing any portion of Lot no. 1, the present day Houston/Barlow property. (Doc. 131, Joint facts no. 2.) There is no notation on the subdivision map of an abandonment of any public road that may have existed and crossed Lot 1 before the filing of the Subdivision Map. 5

Since the time Stamas and Castles moved into their residence in 1981, the width of Cascadel Road between Lot 38 and the entrance to Cascadel Woods has remained substantially the same. It is undisputed that a 60-foot wide, physical road does not cross Lot 1, the Houston/Barlow property, and a 60-foot road has never existed. Instead, a 10-12 foot wide dirt Cascadel Road physically crosses a portion of the Houston/Barstow property. It is undisputed that Cascadel Road as it crossed Lot 1 has always been 10 to 12 feet wide. It is undisputed that this portion of Cascadel Road was not incorporated into the Madera County Highway system.

2. Subsequent conveyances and deeds involving Cascadel Road

After the recordation of the subdivision map in 1963, a series of deeds, quit claims, unrecorded conveyances and late recorded conveyances compound the ownership, rights and the very existence of the 60-foot wide easement across Lot 1.

In 1964, Cascadel Ranch Properties deeded Lot 1 to Three Power Foundation (“3Ps”), which presumably conveyed the entirety of the Lot 1 property, the underlying fee property and the right of way, without any reservation of the right of way across Lot 1. (Doc. 131.-1, Joint Exh. 12, Grant Deed to 3Ps.) On September 5,1967, 3Ps grant deeded Lot 1 back to Cascadel Ranch Properties, and there is no reservation for the right of way, and presumably conveyed the entirety of the Lot 1 property, the underlying fee property and the right of way. This grant deed was recorded on September 8, 1967. Then on Sep *1057 tember 11, 1967, Cascadel Ranch Properties quitclaimed a sixty foot right of way, as described in the 1888 Deed, to County of Fresno. 6 (Doc. 131-1, Joint Exh. 14.) This deed is recorded on September 18, 1967. On September 12, 1967, Cascadel Ranch Properties deeded Lot 1 to 3Ps, and this grant does not mention the 60 foot right of way.

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795 F. Supp. 2d 1047, 2011 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 62793, 2011 WL 2433633, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/stamas-v-county-of-madera-caed-2011.