Stroda v. Joice Holdings, LLC

207 P.3d 223, 288 Kan. 718, 2009 Kan. LEXIS 96
CourtSupreme Court of Kansas
DecidedMay 15, 2009
Docket100,733
StatusPublished
Cited by17 cases

This text of 207 P.3d 223 (Stroda v. Joice Holdings, LLC) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Kansas primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Stroda v. Joice Holdings, LLC, 207 P.3d 223, 288 Kan. 718, 2009 Kan. LEXIS 96 (kan 2009).

Opinion

The opinion of the court was delivered by

Nuss, J.:

This case requires us to determine the extent of an easement that the parties agree had been created by implication. The trial court held that the easement could be used for access across the servient tenement to a future residence on the dominant tenement and for utilities to that residence. The owner of the servient tenement appeals both rulings. We affirm.

FACTS

In 1952, Lawrence and Etta Stroda, grandparents of Ed Stroda, purchased Douglas County farmground containing an occupied *719 residence: the Northwest Quarter (NW Vi). They were allowed an easement across neighboring farmground, the Southwest Quarter (SW Vi), to gain access to their land. In 1957, Lawrence and Etta in turn bought the SW Vi. This purchase joined both tracts under single ownership, and by the doctrine of merger, extinguished the easement.

Upon Etta’s death in 1985, the property ownership unity was severed, with ownership of the SW Vi passing to her daughter, Marie Jarboe, and the NW Vi to her son, Edmond Stroda, Sr. The severance allowed an easement across Marie’s SW Vi to again be created through implication, allowing Edmond access to his NW Vi. From 1985 onward, both tracts were farmed by the same agricultural tenant.

In 2001, ownership of the NW Vi passed from Edmond to his trust, the appellee, with his son, Ed Stroda, serving as a trustee (Stroda). In 2003, ownership of the SW Vi passed from Marie to Charles Joice and then to the appellant, Joice Holdings, LLC (Joice).

In October 2006, Stroda sought to sell the NW Vi for use as a single residence, claiming that the easement across the SW Vi could support both residential access and utility use. As owner of the SW Vi, Joice admitted the existence of an implied easement but contended that its use was limited to strictly agricultural purposes. The residence on the NW Vi had ceased to be occupied in 1957, and no one had lived on the tract since that time. However, during the time that Etta had owned both tracts, i.e., before 1985, she and her son Edmond had discussed building a new house on the NW Vi. At that time he had looked into the requirements to obtain a building permit and the costs to put in electricity and water. These plans were never fully executed.

After Joice’s objection, Stroda filed an action requesting a judicial declaration that an easement existed allowing access across Joice’s tract for residential and agricultural purposes. Joice then filed a motion for summary judgment, which was partially granted in holding that the earlier easement was extinguished by the doctrine of merger. The motion was also partially denied, with the trial *720 court citing the Restatement (Third) of Property to hold that future use of the easement for residential purposes was also appropriate.

The trial court was unable to rule on the related utility easement issue because of the lack of evidence on the type of utilities to be placed and the damage, if any, they would cause Joice’s tract. After a bench trial later that month to determine the extent of the utilities’ impact, the court then determined that utility use was reasonable and therefore appropriate. Per the journal entry, the court made an express finding that “Plaintiff [Stroda] further has the right to install such utilities as Plaintiff may desire, as long as it is underground and within the confines of the area currendy used for the access easement.”

Joice appealed, and the case was transferred to this court pursuant to K.S.A. 20-3018(c).

Other facts will be added as necessary to the analysis.

ANALYSIS

Issue 1: The trial court correctly held that the implied easement allowed for residential access.

The material facts are undisputed. Both parties agree that an implied easement exists over the SW 74 (the servient tenement) for the benefit of the NW 74 (the dominant tenement). Accordingly, the issue is the appropriate scope of that easement Under these circumstances, this court’s review is unlimited. Botkin v. Security State Bank, 281 Kan. 243, 130 P.3d 92 (2006) (When facts are undisputed, appellate review of the district court’s grant of summary judgment is de novo.).

In arguing that the easement is limited to agricultural purposes, Joice first cites to decisions of this court involving express easements. See, e.g., City of Arkansas City v. Bruton, 284 Kan. 815, 166 P.3d 992 (2007). Joice acknowledges Bruton involved an express easement but argues it should apply to implied easements: “[A]n easement should not be expanded beyond the purpose for which it was created and the use made of the dominant tenement at the time of the grant.” Joice argues that the purpose and use of the easement at the time of creation was solely for agricultural purposes; accordingly, it should not be expanded to include resi *721 dential use. In support of this same proposition, Joice also cites to decisions of other jurisdictions involving easements by prescription. See, e.g., Crane v. Hayes, 187 W. Va. 198, 417 S.E.2d 117 (1992); Burns v. Goff, 164 W. Va. 301, 262 S.E.2d 772 (1980).

On these facts, we disagree with Joice’s reliance upon these cases. Express easements and prescriptive easements contain fundamental differences from those that are implied. The scope of an express easement is much more ascertainable; one essentially looks at the language employed by the parties. Parties to an instrument know that document is to be the final expression of their intentions, and there is little, if any, need to give much weight to circumstantial evidence of their intent. By contrast, an implied easement obviously has no express language and external evidence of intent becomes much more important. While we acknowledge that a prescriptive easement is similar to an implied easement in that neither has express language to interpret for determining the intent of the parties, prescriptive easements are interpreted narrowly because they are created by the adverse use of the property, with the use during the prescriptive period defining the scope of the easement. See Dotson v. Railway Co., 81 Kan. 816, 106 P. 1045 (1910).

Wisely, Joice relies primarily upon an implied easement case in Kansas: Van Sandt v. Royster, 148 Kan. 495, 83 P.2d 698 (1938).

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
207 P.3d 223, 288 Kan. 718, 2009 Kan. LEXIS 96, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/stroda-v-joice-holdings-llc-kan-2009.