IN THE COURT OF APPEALS OF NORTH CAROLINA
2021-NCCOA-503
No. COA20-322
Filed 21 September 2021
Alamance County, No. 17 CVS 1429
BRUCE TAYLOR AND SUSAN TAYLOR, Plaintiffs-Appellants,
v.
THOMAS HIATT, THOMAS R. HIATT and JEWEL HOLLARS, Defendants- Appellees.
Appeal by Plaintiffs from judgment entered 24 October 2019 by Judge D.
Thomas Lambeth, Jr., in Alamance County Superior Court. Heard in the Court of
Appeals 12 May 2021.
Geoffrey K. Oertel for the Plaintiffs-Appellants.
Timothy W. Gray for the Defendants-Appellees.
DILLON, Judge.
I. Background
¶1 Plaintiffs, Bruce and Susan Taylor, own a tract of land in Alamance County.
Defendants, Thomas Hiatt, his son Thomas R. Hiatt, and his son’s partner Jewel
Hollars, own a tract of land adjacent to Plaintiffs’ tract.
¶2 Defendants have easement rights to a gravel road that extends across
Plaintiffs’ tract from Defendants’ tract to a public road. A dispute arose between the TAYLOR V. HIATT
Opinion of the Court
parties regarding the rights of the parties to the gravel road after Plaintiffs erected
gates across the gravel road.
¶3 The present appeal is the second appeal of this matter to our Court.
¶4 Prior to the first appeal, the trial court granted Defendants’ summary
judgment, concluding that Plaintiffs were prohibited “from having any gates, bars,
fences and the like upon [the easement].” Plaintiffs appealed that judgment. Our
opinion in the first appeal is reported at Taylor v. Hiatt, 265 N.C. App. 665, 829 S.E.2d
670 (2019). There, we recognized that a portion of the easement was created in 1986
and that another portion of the easement was created in 2000. We further recognized
that, based on the language used in the instruments granting the easement rights:
(1) Plaintiffs have no right to erect any gate over the portion created in 1986, as that grant contained language that the easement was to stay open; and
(2) Plaintiffs have the right to erect gates across the portion of the easement created in 2000, as that grant contained no language requiring that the easement remain “open.” However, Plaintiffs’ right is limited to erect gates on this portion “when necessary to the reasonable enjoyment of” their tract and provided that said gates “are not of such nature as to materially impair or unreasonably interfere” with the purpose of Defendants’ easement rights. Chesson v. Jordan, 244 N.C. 289, 293, 29 S.E.2d 906, 909 (1944).
We held that summary judgment was not appropriate, as there was no evidence
before the trial court showing where along the gravel road Plaintiffs had erected their
gates. That is, there was no evidence showing whether the gates were erected on the
portion created in 1986 or whether they were erected on the portion created in 2000. TAYLOR V. HIATT
We remanded for further proceedings.
¶5 On remand, the trial court conducted a bench trial. At the trial’s conclusion,
the trial court entered its judgment, ordering Plaintiffs to remove the gates, declaring
that “Plaintiffs are prohibited from installing gates across the road used by the
Defendants[.]” Plaintiffs appeal from that judgment.
II. Analysis
¶6 When the trial court sits without a jury, the standard of review on appeal is
whether there was competent evidence to support the trial court’s findings of fact and
whether its conclusions of law are supported by those findings. Sharpe v. Park
Newspapers of Lumberton, 317 N.C. 579, 583, 347 S.E.2d 25, 28 (1986).
¶7 The trial court found that the gates were erected on the portion of the easement
that was created in 2000, where the instruments creating those easements do not
contain a requirement that the easements remain “open.” This finding is not
challenged on appeal. Notwithstanding, the trial court ordered Plaintiffs to remove
the gates, concluding that Plaintiffs did not have the right to erect gates on any part
of the easement. We address each part of the trial court’s order.
A. Removal of Existing Gates
¶8 We affirm the portion of the trial court’s order directing Plaintiffs to remove
the existing gates. The seminal case upon which we rely is Chesson v. Jordan, 224
N.C. 289, 29 S.E.2d 906 (1944). In that case, our Supreme Court explained that a TAYLOR V. HIATT
private easement “carries with it no implication of a right to deprive the owner of the
servient estate of the full enjoyment of his property” and “it is subject only to the right
of passage.” Id. at 293, 29 S.E.2d at 909. Accordingly, the estate owner “may erect
gates across the way when [1] necessary to the reasonable enjoyment of his estate,
[2] provided they are not of such nature as to materially impair or unreasonably
interfere with the use of the lane as a private way for the purposes for which it has
theretofore been used.” Id. at 293, 29 S.E.2d at 909.
¶9 In its judgment, the trial court determined that Plaintiffs did not satisfy either
of the two prongs necessary to establish a servient tract owner’s right to erect gates
on an easement created for the benefit of another. We address each prong below.
1. Reasonable Use and Enjoyment
¶ 10 As to the first prong, the trial court determined that “the gates erected by the
Plaintiffs are not necessary to the Plaintiffs’ reasonable enjoyment of their estate.”
Plaintiffs argue that the gates are an integral component of their fencing system
necessary to contain horses on their agricultural land. We agree with Plaintiffs.
¶ 11 The undisputed facts in this case include that Plaintiffs use their tract for
agricultural purposes (for keeping horses) that the Plaintiffs have fenced in their
tract, and that the Plaintiffs have erected the gates to prevent their horses from
escaping. Our Supreme Court has recognized that this type of use is reasonable:
Plaintiff uses his land for agricultural purposes which TAYLOR V. HIATT
requires fencing. To prohibit the erection of gates would deprive him of the reasonable use of his land.
Id. at 293, 29 S.E.2d at 909. Other jurisdictions have likewise determined that a
reasonable use of property includes the installation of gates on an easement by the
owners of the servient estate for the purpose of containing their grazing animals.1
¶ 12 It may be, as Defendants argue, that Plaintiffs could reasonably contain their
horses without fencing in the easement portion of their land. However, this argument
misses the point that Plaintiffs are the fee simple owners of the easement land, and
as such, have the right to make reasonable use of that land so long as said use does
not unreasonably interfere with Defendants’ easement rights. Accordingly, we hold
that the trial court erred in determining that Plaintiffs’ erection of gates would not
deprive Plaintiffs of the reasonable use of their tract.
2. Material Impairment or Unreasonable Interference
¶ 13 As to the second prong, the trial court determined that “[t]he gates erected by
Plaintiffs are of a nature to materially impair and unreasonably interfere with the
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IN THE COURT OF APPEALS OF NORTH CAROLINA
2021-NCCOA-503
No. COA20-322
Filed 21 September 2021
Alamance County, No. 17 CVS 1429
BRUCE TAYLOR AND SUSAN TAYLOR, Plaintiffs-Appellants,
v.
THOMAS HIATT, THOMAS R. HIATT and JEWEL HOLLARS, Defendants- Appellees.
Appeal by Plaintiffs from judgment entered 24 October 2019 by Judge D.
Thomas Lambeth, Jr., in Alamance County Superior Court. Heard in the Court of
Appeals 12 May 2021.
Geoffrey K. Oertel for the Plaintiffs-Appellants.
Timothy W. Gray for the Defendants-Appellees.
DILLON, Judge.
I. Background
¶1 Plaintiffs, Bruce and Susan Taylor, own a tract of land in Alamance County.
Defendants, Thomas Hiatt, his son Thomas R. Hiatt, and his son’s partner Jewel
Hollars, own a tract of land adjacent to Plaintiffs’ tract.
¶2 Defendants have easement rights to a gravel road that extends across
Plaintiffs’ tract from Defendants’ tract to a public road. A dispute arose between the TAYLOR V. HIATT
Opinion of the Court
parties regarding the rights of the parties to the gravel road after Plaintiffs erected
gates across the gravel road.
¶3 The present appeal is the second appeal of this matter to our Court.
¶4 Prior to the first appeal, the trial court granted Defendants’ summary
judgment, concluding that Plaintiffs were prohibited “from having any gates, bars,
fences and the like upon [the easement].” Plaintiffs appealed that judgment. Our
opinion in the first appeal is reported at Taylor v. Hiatt, 265 N.C. App. 665, 829 S.E.2d
670 (2019). There, we recognized that a portion of the easement was created in 1986
and that another portion of the easement was created in 2000. We further recognized
that, based on the language used in the instruments granting the easement rights:
(1) Plaintiffs have no right to erect any gate over the portion created in 1986, as that grant contained language that the easement was to stay open; and
(2) Plaintiffs have the right to erect gates across the portion of the easement created in 2000, as that grant contained no language requiring that the easement remain “open.” However, Plaintiffs’ right is limited to erect gates on this portion “when necessary to the reasonable enjoyment of” their tract and provided that said gates “are not of such nature as to materially impair or unreasonably interfere” with the purpose of Defendants’ easement rights. Chesson v. Jordan, 244 N.C. 289, 293, 29 S.E.2d 906, 909 (1944).
We held that summary judgment was not appropriate, as there was no evidence
before the trial court showing where along the gravel road Plaintiffs had erected their
gates. That is, there was no evidence showing whether the gates were erected on the
portion created in 1986 or whether they were erected on the portion created in 2000. TAYLOR V. HIATT
We remanded for further proceedings.
¶5 On remand, the trial court conducted a bench trial. At the trial’s conclusion,
the trial court entered its judgment, ordering Plaintiffs to remove the gates, declaring
that “Plaintiffs are prohibited from installing gates across the road used by the
Defendants[.]” Plaintiffs appeal from that judgment.
II. Analysis
¶6 When the trial court sits without a jury, the standard of review on appeal is
whether there was competent evidence to support the trial court’s findings of fact and
whether its conclusions of law are supported by those findings. Sharpe v. Park
Newspapers of Lumberton, 317 N.C. 579, 583, 347 S.E.2d 25, 28 (1986).
¶7 The trial court found that the gates were erected on the portion of the easement
that was created in 2000, where the instruments creating those easements do not
contain a requirement that the easements remain “open.” This finding is not
challenged on appeal. Notwithstanding, the trial court ordered Plaintiffs to remove
the gates, concluding that Plaintiffs did not have the right to erect gates on any part
of the easement. We address each part of the trial court’s order.
A. Removal of Existing Gates
¶8 We affirm the portion of the trial court’s order directing Plaintiffs to remove
the existing gates. The seminal case upon which we rely is Chesson v. Jordan, 224
N.C. 289, 29 S.E.2d 906 (1944). In that case, our Supreme Court explained that a TAYLOR V. HIATT
private easement “carries with it no implication of a right to deprive the owner of the
servient estate of the full enjoyment of his property” and “it is subject only to the right
of passage.” Id. at 293, 29 S.E.2d at 909. Accordingly, the estate owner “may erect
gates across the way when [1] necessary to the reasonable enjoyment of his estate,
[2] provided they are not of such nature as to materially impair or unreasonably
interfere with the use of the lane as a private way for the purposes for which it has
theretofore been used.” Id. at 293, 29 S.E.2d at 909.
¶9 In its judgment, the trial court determined that Plaintiffs did not satisfy either
of the two prongs necessary to establish a servient tract owner’s right to erect gates
on an easement created for the benefit of another. We address each prong below.
1. Reasonable Use and Enjoyment
¶ 10 As to the first prong, the trial court determined that “the gates erected by the
Plaintiffs are not necessary to the Plaintiffs’ reasonable enjoyment of their estate.”
Plaintiffs argue that the gates are an integral component of their fencing system
necessary to contain horses on their agricultural land. We agree with Plaintiffs.
¶ 11 The undisputed facts in this case include that Plaintiffs use their tract for
agricultural purposes (for keeping horses) that the Plaintiffs have fenced in their
tract, and that the Plaintiffs have erected the gates to prevent their horses from
escaping. Our Supreme Court has recognized that this type of use is reasonable:
Plaintiff uses his land for agricultural purposes which TAYLOR V. HIATT
requires fencing. To prohibit the erection of gates would deprive him of the reasonable use of his land.
Id. at 293, 29 S.E.2d at 909. Other jurisdictions have likewise determined that a
reasonable use of property includes the installation of gates on an easement by the
owners of the servient estate for the purpose of containing their grazing animals.1
¶ 12 It may be, as Defendants argue, that Plaintiffs could reasonably contain their
horses without fencing in the easement portion of their land. However, this argument
misses the point that Plaintiffs are the fee simple owners of the easement land, and
as such, have the right to make reasonable use of that land so long as said use does
not unreasonably interfere with Defendants’ easement rights. Accordingly, we hold
that the trial court erred in determining that Plaintiffs’ erection of gates would not
deprive Plaintiffs of the reasonable use of their tract.
2. Material Impairment or Unreasonable Interference
¶ 13 As to the second prong, the trial court determined that “[t]he gates erected by
Plaintiffs are of a nature to materially impair and unreasonably interfere with the
Defendants’ right of egress and ingress over the road.” Plaintiffs argue that
1 Ford v. Rice, 195 Ky. 185, 241 S.W. 835 (1922) (finding two gates across an easement
erected by servient estate to be reasonable and necessary to contain grazing animals); Wille v. Bartz, 88 Wis. 424, 60 N.W. 789 (1894) (allowing a servient estate owner’s gate that prevented the dominant estate owner’s livestock from encroaching); Board of Trustees v. Gotten, 119 Miss. 246, 80 So. 522 (1919) (ruling that that the trivial labor and trouble incident to the opening and closing of the gate did not in any way interfere with the full enjoyment of the easement); Watson v. Hoke, 73 S.C. 361, 364, 53 S.E. 537, 538 (1906) (“To require the defendant to throw his pasture lands open would deprive him of their use[.]”). TAYLOR V. HIATT
competent evidence does not support this determination. We disagree and conclude
that the trial court’s findings as to this prong are supported by the evidence and, in
turn, support this determination.
¶ 14 Our Supreme Court has instructed that when “the question of unreasonable
obstruction is at issue[, it] should be determined by the jury.” Chesson, 224 N.C. at
293, 29 S.E.2d at 909.
¶ 15 Here, the trial court, as the fact-finder, found that there were many issues with
the gates erected by Plaintiffs, some of which are as follows: The key boxes, where a
code had to be entered to open the gate, were located well off the road, requiring
Defendants to get out of their car to enter the code. Plaintiffs refused to provide
Defendants a remote control. The keypads were temperamental in that a single
mistype of the code sometimes locked Defendants out from trying again. The gates
would sometimes not function in the cold weather. Plaintiffs’ horses sometimes
congregated around the gates, making it difficult for Defendants to open the gates
while keeping the horses from escaping.
¶ 16 These and the other findings of the trial court, sitting as the fact-finder,
support the trial court’s determination that the gates, as constructed by Plaintiffs,
constituted an unreasonable obstruction. As such, the trial court did not err in
ordering Plaintiffs to remove the gates.
B. Plaintiffs’ Right to Erect Gates TAYLOR V. HIATT
¶ 17 In addition to ordering Plaintiffs to remove the existing gates, the trial court
declared, “Plaintiffs are prohibited from installing gates across the road used by the
Defendants to access their property as shown in [the 2000 map].” In other words, the
trial court declared that Plaintiffs have no right to erect gates at all on the section of
the easement created in 2000, notwithstanding that nothing in the documents
creating that section of the easement requires the easement to remain “open.” This
portion of the trial court order is error. Plaintiffs may erect gates, provided that the
gates do not unreasonably interfere with Defendants’ use of the easement.
¶ 18 The trial court did not err in determining that Plaintiffs’ current gates
interfere with Defendants’ use of the easement. However, this determination does
not prevent Plaintiffs from erecting different gates in the future, so long as those
gates do not unreasonably interfere with Defendants’ use of the easement. In other
terms, as there is no express requirement that the easement remain “open,” and as
the erection of gates is consistent with Plaintiffs’ reasonable enjoyment of their fee
simple interest in the easement, Plaintiffs have the right to erect gates across the
easement. The only limitation is that the gates cannot be erected in a way that
interferes with Defendants’ easement rights.
III. Conclusion
¶ 19 The portion of the trial court’s judgment directing Plaintiffs to remove the
existing gates is affirmed. The trial court’s finding that the current gates TAYLOR V. HIATT
unreasonably interfere with Defendants’ use of the easement is supported by the
evidence.
¶ 20 The portion of the trial court’s judgment declaring that Plaintiffs have no right
at all to erect gates across the portion of the easement created in 2000 is modified to
allow the erection of gates by Plaintiffs, provided that the gates would not
unreasonably interfere with Defendants’ easement rights.
AFFIRMED, AS MODIFIED.
Judge GRIFFIN and JACKSON concur.