Steed v. SOLSO

2010 MT 264, 246 P.3d 697, 358 Mont. 356, 2010 Mont. LEXIS 423
CourtMontana Supreme Court
DecidedDecember 14, 2010
DocketDA 10-0265
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 2010 MT 264 (Steed v. SOLSO) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Montana Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Steed v. SOLSO, 2010 MT 264, 246 P.3d 697, 358 Mont. 356, 2010 Mont. LEXIS 423 (Mo. 2010).

Opinion

JUSTICE COTTER

delivered the Opinion of the Court.

¶1 This appeal arises from an easement dispute among several property owners living on or near the shores of Glen Lake near Eureka, Montana. The Steeds own the servient estate of a 6-foot-wide pedestrian easement that allows neighboring landowners access to Glen Lake. The Steeds filed the original complaint seeking, among other things, to quiet title and extinguish the easement. The Sanguines own property adjacent to the easement. They later joined the Steeds’ suit as plaintiffs, claiming trespass by Larry Casazza, one of the easement holders. Following a non-jury trial, the Nineteenth Judicial District Court for Lincoln Comity ruled that the easement was valid and the easement holders were entitled to use and maintain the easement. The Court awarded $10 in damages to the Sanguines for trespass. The Steeds and Sanguines appeal. We affirm, but vacate the District Court’s findings of fact and conclusions of law related to the proposed dock.

ISSUES

¶2 A restatement of the dispositive issues on appeal is:

¶3 Did the District Court err in denying the Steeds’/Sanguines’ motion for summary judgment?

¶4 Are the District Court’s conclusions of law correct?

FACTUAL AND PROCEDURAL BACKGROUND

¶5 In October 2006, the Steeds purchased approximately 3.5 acres (a double lot) of lakefront property on Glen Lake from Peter Klinke (Klinke) and his daughter. At the time of purchase, the Steeds were *358 told that a 6-foot easement ran along the northwest boundary of the property and that the easement provided access to Glen Lake for certain neighbors without lakefront property. Steeds assert that the title search revealed 2 titles granting easement rights to 5 families. ¶6 The property purchased by the Steeds was part of a larger parcel of property (20+ acres) owned for many years by Klinke. In 1989, Klinke divided this large parcel into smaller parcels. Subsequently, successive owners subdivided one of these parcels into 7 more lots. In each instance, the deeds given to the lot buyers contained grants of easement rights to access Glen Lake. Although some of the deeds contained drafting errors, the District Court concluded that such clerical errors did not affect the validity of the easements. For ease of review, given the number of persons originally parties to this lawsuit and the path the litigation has taken, the following table reflects Klinke’s original division of his property and the subsequent divisions, as well as the name of the parcel’s current owner and that owner’s status in this lawsuit:

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¶7 During the course of this litigation, the Dales and the Murrays settled with the Steeds and Sanguines and are no longer defendants in this case. The Daniels and Prices had default judgments entered against them by the District Court and are no longer defendants. Also, *359 the Steeds and the Sanguines settled with the Follensbees and the Bakers. Younglove and the Tisdells entered into stipulated settlement agreements with the Steeds and Sanguines. Under these agreements, if the easement is extinguished, the Steeds will pay Younglove and Tisdells $5,000 each. If the easement is not extinguished, Younglove and the Tisdells retain their easement rights.

¶8 At the time the Steeds purchased their property from Klinke, the easement had seen little foot traffic and was primarily used by deer and other game. It was covered with brush and small trees. The easement is approximately 400 feet long and 6 feet wide. As the trail nears the shores of Glen Lake, the land drops approximately 10 to 12 feet into a steep bluff. The District Court described access to the lakeshore from that part of the easement as being “all but unusable except for the most intrepid and athletic adventurer.”

¶9 The Steeds purchased the double-lot Parcel F in October 2006 with the intention of having the boundary between the 2 lots redrawn. They then planned to sell the lot that had Klinke’s former house on it and build a new home on the second lot. The second lot carried the easement.

¶10 On Memorial Day weekend in May 2007, the Steeds visited the property. When they arrived they encountered Defendant/Appellee Larry Casazza clearing the easement. Casazza and a friend had been working for approximately an hour. Using a chain saw, a pulaski, various hand tools, a trailer and an ATV, the two men had cleared much of the brush from the entire 6-foot width of the easement, had cut some small trees, and had moved and arranged rocks along the easement to create switchbacks for easier foot access to the lake.

¶11 The Steeds introduced themselves to Casazza, who did not know that Klinke had sold the property to the Steeds. Casazza explained to the Steeds his plan for the easement, including the removal of at least 3 more trees, excavation of the bluff for installation of steps down to the shore and construction of a dock for the easement holders. The Steeds immediately protested the removal of certain trees and the use of a wheeled vehicle on the easement. Casazza replied that his interpretation of the easement language did not preclude use of an ATV or wheeled vehicles on the trail. Casazza agreed, however, to not cut the designated trees but rather to drive his ATV around them. He also agreed to restrict future use of the ATV on the easement after his current maintenance project was complete.

¶12 To avoid the remaining trees while he continued clearing the easement to the bluff, Casazza had to drive his ATV onto the *360 Sanguines’ property. He decided to continue working, drive on Sanguines’ property and call them later. By the time Casazza had finished working that day, in addition to clearing brush and small trees, he had roughly excavated the bluff. This required that he remove dirt from around the root bed of one of the trees Steed had wanted to protect. Casazza also had built a crude set of steps by placing concrete pavers and rocks down the excavated portion of the bluff, creating a slightly more accessible path to the lakeshore. Casazza did not perform any further maintenance or improvement of the easement during the summer of 2007 and agreed to refrain from further work until resolution of his differences with the Steeds.

¶13 When Casazza subsequently spoke to the Sanguines several days later, Mr. Sanguine denied him permission to use or access his property. Casazza agreed to stay off Sanguines’ property. Not long after this conversation, Sanguine visited his wooded, undeveloped lakefront lot and flagged the boundary line of his property adjacent to the easement. He discovered several places where Casazza had encroached onto his property.

¶14 Within weeks of meeting Casazza on the easement in May, the Steeds retained an attorney to explore their rights vis-a-vis the easement. The attorney sent Casazza a letter setting forth the Steeds’ position that wheeled vehicles are not be used on the easement and that Casazza refrain from any future easement maintenance without first notifying the Steeds.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
2010 MT 264, 246 P.3d 697, 358 Mont. 356, 2010 Mont. LEXIS 423, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/steed-v-solso-mont-2010.