Stegner v. Milligan

523 S.W.3d 538, 2017 WL 2640089, 2017 Mo. App. LEXIS 631
CourtMissouri Court of Appeals
DecidedJune 20, 2017
DocketWD 79979
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 523 S.W.3d 538 (Stegner v. Milligan) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Missouri Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Stegner v. Milligan, 523 S.W.3d 538, 2017 WL 2640089, 2017 Mo. App. LEXIS 631 (Mo. Ct. App. 2017).

Opinion

Lisa White Hardwick, Judge

Kenneth and Shirley Stegner (“the Steg-ners”) appeal the circuit court’s order dismissing their petition to widen their private road, which they filed against Russell and Donna Milligan (“the Milligans”), the owners of the property over which the proposed widened road would pass. For reasons explained herein, we reverse and remand the case for further proceedings consistent with this opinion.

Factual and Procedural History

The Stegners and Milligans own tracts of land that abut at their southeast and northwest comers. The Stegners also own an L-shaped 14-foot wide gravel road that runs through the Milligans’ property. This road is the Stegners’ only route to and from a public road that adjoins the Steg-ners’ and the Milligans’ properties.

In 2014, the Stegners. filed a : lawsuit against the Milligans (“2014 lawsuit”) asking the court to award them a prescriptive easement over a dirt path that runs through the Milligans’ property. The Steg-ners alleged that, for more than ten years, they and their tenants and assignees had been using the dirt path to access the Stegners’ property with agricultural equip[540]*540ment and passenger vehicles. The Steg-ners asked the court to hold that they were the owners of a 30-foot wide easement by prescription over this dirt path. In the alternative, the Stegners asked the court to hold that they were entitled to condemn an easement by necessity over the dirt path under Section 228.342, RSMo 2016.1

Following a bench trial, the court entered judgment in favor of the Milligans. The court found that the Stegners did not establish the right to a prescriptive easement because they failed to prove that their use of the dirt path was continuous, uninterrupted, visible, and adverse. The court further found that the Stegners did not establish the right to an easement by necessity over the dirt path because the evidence showed that the Stegners’ gravel road was usable or could be made usable to allow them unfettered access to their property.

In March 2016, the Stegners filed a second lawsuit against the Milligans, which is the subject of this appeal. In this suit, the Stegners asked the court to grant them an easement by necessity to widen their gravel road from 14 feet to 25 feet. In their petition, the Stegners alleged that the Mil-ligans had recently built fences enclosing the Stegners’ road on both sides. The Stegners alleged that, with the addition of these fences, the gravel road’s 14-foot width did not allow for the passage of modern farm equipment, including mowers, balers, and hay trailers, to the remainder of their property.

In response to the Stegners’ petition, the Milligans filed a motion to dismiss the case on the basis that res judicata barred the Stegners’ claim. The Milligans argued that the 2014 lawsuit constituted a judgment on the merits involving the same parties, the same claim of private condemnation of a wider road, and the same issue of strict necessity. The Milligans attached the petition and judgment in the 2014 lawsuit to their motion to dismiss. In their suggestions in opposition to the motion to dismiss, the Stegners argued that their claim in this suit was not the same as their claim in the 2014 lawsuit because the sufficiency of the width of them gravel road was not litigated or decided in the prior suit, and the impact of the Milligans’ newly-constructed fences on the Stegners’ access to their property was not considered in the prior suit.

The court held a hearing on the Milli-gans’ motion to dismiss. During this hearing, the parties presented only arguments of counsel; no evidence or testimony was offered. Counsel for both parties asserted their recollections as to the extent of the testimony from the 2014 lawsuit regarding the sufficiency of the gravel road for the Stegners’ agricultural use of their property. The Milligans’ counsel argued that there was evidence offered during the 2014 lawsuit regarding whether the gravel road was sufficient and that, when the court rejected the Stegners’ request in that lawsuit for an easement by necessity over the dirt path, the court specifically determined that the 14-foot-wide gravel road was sufficient.

In response, the Stegners’ counsel argued that, while evidence of the existence of the gravel road may have negated their request for an easement by necessity over the dirt path in the 2014 lawsuit, the sufficiency of the gravel road after the Milli-gans’ addition of barbed wire fences on both sides of the road was not litigated. When the Stegners’ counsel also attempted to argue that, in addition to the barbed wire fences, there was another “change” [541]*541on a “corner”2 of the road that occurred after the 2014 lawsuit, the court stopped Stegners’ counsel and told him that was “beyond where—what I should consider in a motion to dismiss.”

At the conclusion of the hearing, the court advised counsel for both parties that they could submit further legal authority on the motion to dismiss to the court. The Stegners submitted amended suggestions in opposition to the motion to dismiss in which they argued that their present claim was not the same as their claim in the 2014 lawsuit and involved new facts that occurred after the judgment in the 2014 lawsuit.

The court subsequently entered its judgment sustaining the Milligans’ motion to dismiss. Citing the petition and judgment from the 2014 lawsuit, as well as evidence presented during the trial in the 2014 lawsuit, the court found that res judicata and collateral estoppel barred the Stegners’ present suit. The court dismissed the Steg-ners’ petition with prejudice. The Stegners appeal.

Whether Dismissal Motion was Properly Treated as Summary Judgment Motion

In Point I, the Stegners contend the circuit court’s judgment dismissing their petition was actually a summary judgment against them that was entered without notice and in violation of Rule 74.04(c)’s requirements. The Stegners assert that the court’s failure to demand compliance with Rule 74.04(c) requires reversal.

Although denominated a motion to dismiss, the Milligans’ motion was actually a motion for summary judgment because the Milligans attached the petition and judgment from the 2014 lawsuit to the motion and relied upon them in arguing that res judicata barred the Stegners’ present suit. “ ‘Under Rule 55.27(a), when the judgment and pleadings from another case are presented to and not excluded by the court, a motion to dismiss on res judi-cata or related grounds should be treated as one for summary judgment.’ ” Dunn v. Bd. of Curators of Univ. of Mo., 413 S.W.3d 375, 376 (Mo. App. 2013) (citation omitted). The petition and judgment in the 2014 lawsuit were presented and not excluded by the court, so the Milligans’ motion should have been treated as one for summary judgment.

Rule 74.04(c)(1) requires that motions for summary judgment include a statement of uncontroverted material facts stated with particularity in separately numbered paragraphs; a copy of all discovery, exhibits, or affidavits on which the motion relies; and a separate legal memorandum explaining why summary judgment should be granted.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
523 S.W.3d 538, 2017 WL 2640089, 2017 Mo. App. LEXIS 631, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/stegner-v-milligan-moctapp-2017.