Superlube Inc. of Camdenton v. Innovative Real Estate, Inc.

94 S.W.3d 480, 2003 WL 164491
CourtMissouri Court of Appeals
DecidedJanuary 24, 2003
Docket24940, 24963
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 94 S.W.3d 480 (Superlube Inc. of Camdenton v. Innovative Real Estate, Inc.) 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
Superlube Inc. of Camdenton v. Innovative Real Estate, Inc., 94 S.W.3d 480, 2003 WL 164491 (Mo. Ct. App. 2003).

Opinion

KENNETH W. SHRUM, Judge.

This case arises from a dispute over a road easement that Ronald E. Adamson (“Ronald”) claims across land owned by Innovative Real Estate, Inc. (“Innovative”). The easement serves real estate in which Ronald has an ownership interest and is used by customers of Superlube Incorporated of Camdenton (“Superlube”). Ronald is the sole shareholder of Super-lube. 1 The trial court enjoined Innovative from “blocking Plaintiffs’ use of the easement along the existing driveway as described in the Amended Driveway Easement of record[,]” but denied Plaintiffs’ claims for damages and attorney fees.

In No. 24940, Plaintiffs appeal and claim the trial court erred by not awarding them *482 damages and attorney fees. In No. 24963, Innovative appeals and alleges the trial court erred by granting Plaintiffs injunc-tive relief.

We dismiss both appeals. We do so because a final, appealable judgment has not been entered due to a fatal imprecision and indefiniteness in the injunctive language.

On March 16, 1998, Ronald and Marylin Adamson bought land (“tract B”) from Thomas A. and Wanda J. Mathis (“Mathis”). Tract B fronts highway 54 in Camden County and lies on the north side of the highway. At the time, Mathis owned adjoining land (“tract A.”) which also fronts on highway 54 and lies northeast of tract B.

On the day Mathis conveyed tract B to the Adamsons by warranty deed, they used a separate document entitled “driveway easement” to grant the Adamsons a “right of ingress and egress ... across a certain existing driveway and parking area [located on tract A].” This March 1998 easement recited that “[t]he size, location and a general description of the said easement is shown in the attached Exhibit C.” Exhibit C is a plat of a survey made of the perimeter of the Mathis and Adamson properties. The “existing driveway and parking lot” alluded to in the easement are drawn on the plat in “free-hand” fashion without courses, distances, point of origin, point of termination, width, or other description.

When Ronald bought tract B, he erected a building and began operating a business on the site via the separate entity, Super-lube. He put “bay” doors on both the highway side of the structure and the opposite side. The intent was to have vehicles enter one side for servicing and leave through the doors on the other side. Because of hilly terrain on the west side of the site, the rear doors could only be used as intended by driving motor vehicles around the end of the building nearest the boundary line between tract A and B, i.e., around the northeast end of the structure. At the closest point, the northeast wall of the building was within seven feet of the boundary line between these tracts; consequently, customers going to or from the rear of the Superlube building necessarily left the Adamson land (tract B) and drove across part of tract A.

To prepare tract B as a building site, Ronald had to use fill dirt. Even with the fill in place, the only “reasonable” access to the rear of the Superlube building required the use of part of tract A. Consequently, when Ronald filled and paved part of tract B, he also filled and paved that part of tract A needed to get to the rear of his building. At trial, Ronald claimed the intended purpose of the easement was twofold, i.e., grant him use of tract A as needed for access to the back of his building and provide a driveway access from highway 54 across tract A to the east boundary of tract B.

In August 1998, Innovative negotiated to buy tract A from Mathis, but balked at the closing because it interpreted the March 1998 easement as covering “20 to 25 percent of the usable land[ ]” on tract A. After Ronald and Marylin Adamson agreed to sign an “amended easement,” Innovative completed its purchase of tract A.

The amended easement was recorded on August 21, 1998. 2 Unlike the earlier easement, the amended one said nothing about *483 ingress and egress across the “parking area.” However, it did grant the Adam-sons “a right of ingress and egress along and across a certain existing driveway by common motor vehicles.” It also provided that the “[ljocation of access to Adamson’s [sic] land shall be determined by Innovative[;]” that the easement “as granted herein shall be personal to the parties, and ... not run with the lands[;]” and that the easement would automatically terminate if “either Adamsons or Innovative shall sell, transfer or convey their described lands, or any part thereof.” 3 Like the original easement, the amended one sheds no light on the location or width of the intended easement.

Later, (apparently early 1999), Ronald and Marylin divorced. This resulted in Marylin conveying her interest in the Su-perlube site to Ronald on April 6, 1999. 4

After Ronald and Marylin divorced, he married Sheryl Adamson (“Sheryl”). On January 26, 2000, Ronald and Sheryl signed and recorded a deed that changed ownership of the Superlube tract to Ronald and Sheryl. Again, this deed did not describe or mention the subject easements nor is there any other document filed purporting to transfer the same. See n. 4.

On Thanksgiving Day 2001, Innovative positioned concrete barriers along part of its west property line so as to block Super-lube’s customers from driving to the back of the Superlube building. From photographic exhibits and testimonial evidence, it appears the driveway connecting Highway 54 with the east boundary of tract B was not blocked; that Innovative only blocked the part of the common boundary line between tracts A and B that lies immediately east of the Superlube building and north of said building for approximately sixty feet. Placement of these barriers led Superlube to sue for their removal and damages for lost profits. Later, Ronald joined as a party plaintiff. 5

Innovative’s responsive pleadings alleged, inter alia, that the easement, was “personal” to Ronald and Marylin, and it terminated when Marylin conveyed her interest to Ronald, or when Ronald signed and recorded a deed transferring an interest to Sheryl. Innovative also alleged the amended easement empowered it to choose the easement location; consequently, it could partially barricade the boundary line as it did.

The trial court permanently enjoined Innovative from “blocking Plaintiffs’ use of the easement along the existing driveway as described in the Amended Driveway Easement of record.” It did so after finding that

“[Ronald] and Innovative ... entered into an Amended Driveway easement ... with the intent to allow [Superlube and Ronald] to access the rear of [tract “B”] via said easement.
“Further, that [Innovative] does not have the right to change the location of the access once said access was determined.
“Further, that the transfers of the property by [Ronald] due to a subsequent dissolution and remarriage have no affect [sic] on the existence of the easement granted.”

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City of Portage Des Sioux v. Klaus Lambert
323 S.W.3d 462 (Missouri Court of Appeals, 2010)
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280 S.W.3d 752 (Missouri Court of Appeals, 2009)
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Superlube, Inc. of Camdenton v. Innovative Real Estate, Inc.
147 S.W.3d 880 (Missouri Court of Appeals, 2004)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
94 S.W.3d 480, 2003 WL 164491, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/superlube-inc-of-camdenton-v-innovative-real-estate-inc-moctapp-2003.