Tadlock v. Otterbine

767 S.W.2d 366, 1989 Mo. App. LEXIS 451, 1989 WL 30762
CourtMissouri Court of Appeals
DecidedApril 3, 1989
Docket15936
StatusPublished
Cited by13 cases

This text of 767 S.W.2d 366 (Tadlock v. Otterbine) 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
Tadlock v. Otterbine, 767 S.W.2d 366, 1989 Mo. App. LEXIS 451, 1989 WL 30762 (Mo. Ct. App. 1989).

Opinion

HOLSTEIN, Chief Judge.

Defendants Jim Otterbine and Juanita Otterbine appeal from a judgment entered on the first count of a six-count petition filed by plaintiffs Jo Tadlock and Bonnie Lehman seeking to establish a prescriptive easement across defendants’ property. Following a trial to the court, the judge found the allegations of Count I of plaintiffs’ petition to be true and entered judgment in favor of plaintiffs establishing an easement twenty feet wide across defendants’ property.

On appeal defendants raise four points. The first point suggests that the judgment granting the easement is not supported by the evidence and that the factual findings by the court are inconsistent with its judgment. The second and third points assert that the evidence established an easement in favor of plaintiffs across defendants’ property by necessity, which as a matter of law cannot give rise to a prescriptive easement. In point four defendants argue that plaintiffs’ use of the easement was permissive and not adverse to defendants’ title.

Plaintiffs are the owners of a forty-acre tract located in section 8, township 21 north, range 33 west in McDonald County. Jo Tadlock, one of the present owners of the property, first acquired an interest in the land in July of 1975 from the Steven- *368 sons. The Stevensons obtained title from people by the name of Eyster. The Ey-sters received ownership from Tony and Ruth Henderson. >

The tract is located about a quarter of a mile south of Road TT, an east-west public roadway. The roadway which is the subject of this litigation is a north-south road. It terminates at TT on the north. Following the road in a southerly direction, it first enters and crosses property owned by a couple by the name of Nichols before traversing the Otterbine property. Its southern terminus is the Tadlock property. Plaintiffs have a deeded easement for that portion of the road which crosses the Nichols’ property.

The Hendersons purchased the property in April of 1950 and owned it until 1970. Tony Henderson was not available at trial. However, Ruth Henderson testified regarding their use of the roadway across defendants’ property prior to 1970. According to Mrs. Henderson, she and her husband used the road crossing defendants’ land to reach their property. She had no recollection of the road ever being blocked, although she recalls that one of the defendants’ predecessors in title placed a cord and some sacks across the roadway to obstruct it. That owner ultimately removed the obstruction. She denied that she sought permission to use the road from defendants or their predecessors in title. She said the road had been in existence for over fifty years.

Jo Lee Tadlock testified that after she acquired the property in 1975, there were no obstructions on the road. Ms. Tadlock paid to have the road maintained and in 1985 installed a “whistle” in the road to stop the road from washing. In May of 1985 the whistle was tom out by Mr. Otter-bine, and he installed an “okie type” gate (two posts with barbed wire strung between) four feet north of a preexisting entry gate. Ms. Tadlock took it down, and Mr. Otterbine put it back up. It was apparently this activity that precipitated the present litigation.

Ms. Tadlock denied that her use of the road was ever permissive. She also denied that she ever had to obtain a key from the Otterbines to open any gates. She admitted that from time to time gates had been placed on the roadway by her to prevent the escape of cattle on the Nichols’ property or the Otterbine property, and that a cattle guard and gate had been placed on the roadway where it first leaves TT and enters the Nichols’ property.

The defendants presented evidence that for many years locked gates have been placed at the point where the road enters their property on the north and that a gate has existed where the road terminates at the Tadlock property on the south. Defendants also claim Tadlock and her predecessors in title always sought and obtained permission to use the roadway.

The first part of defendants’ first point correctly asserts that the grant of a twenty-foofc-wide easement was not supported by the evidence. A survey of the existing roadway admitted in evidence without objection described it as “a strip of land 14' in width for purposes of ingress and egress, 7' each side of the following described line.” The only other evidence of the road width was the testimony of Mr. Otterbine that the roadway was about twelve feet in width. The character and extent of a prescriptive easement is determined by the character and extent of use during the prescriptive period. Stickle v. Link, 511 S.W.2d 848, 854 (Mo.1974); Meyer v. Pierce, 753 S.W.2d 79, 80 (Mo.App.1988). Absent some evidence showing use of a roadway twenty feet in width, the entry of a judgment granting an easement of such width is erroneous. However, we do not believe that error requires an outright reversal or remand for a new trial. Such error only necessitates correction of the judgment limiting the width of the easement to that supported by the evidence. See Meyer v. Pierce, supra.

The second part of the argument under Point I suggests that the trial court made inconsistent findings when it found that plaintiffs acquired the easement by prescription and also found that plaintiffs acquired title to the easement by deed. Defendants argue that these inconsistent *369 findings do not support the judgment establishing the easement.

To understand this convoluted argument requires a recital of portions of the pleading contained in Count I of plaintiffs’ petition and the wording of the trial court’s judgment. In Count I plaintiffs allege:

1. That your plaintiffs are the owners in fee simple to title to the following-described real estate located in the County of McDonald, State of Missouri:
See Attached Exhibit “A”
2. That the ownership of the aforesaid property was acquired by General Warranty Deed ... recorded in Book 170, at Page 408 in the office of the Recorder of Deeds of McDonald County, Missouri.

The petition further alleged:

[Tjhere was established an easement for a private passway for road purposes running ... the whole length of certain property owned by Defendants immediately North of the Plaintiff’s property, which easement has been in the open[,] continuous, hostile and adverse possession of Plaintiffs’ and their predecessors in title for more than (10) ten years....

Evidence at trial established that the Exhibit “A” attached to the petition is not a legal description of plaintiffs’ real estate, but is a survey of the roadway in question. After the trial judgment was entered which included the following statement: “The Court finds the allegations contained in Count I of Plaintiff’s Petition are true and finds on behalf of the Plaintiffs and against the Defendants in Count I...."

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Bluebook (online)
767 S.W.2d 366, 1989 Mo. App. LEXIS 451, 1989 WL 30762, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/tadlock-v-otterbine-moctapp-1989.