Thomas J. Bunting and Lori A. Bunting v. Mark W. Koehn

CourtCourt of Appeals of Iowa
DecidedDecember 16, 2020
Docket20-0069
StatusPublished

This text of Thomas J. Bunting and Lori A. Bunting v. Mark W. Koehn (Thomas J. Bunting and Lori A. Bunting v. Mark W. Koehn) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Iowa primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Thomas J. Bunting and Lori A. Bunting v. Mark W. Koehn, (iowactapp 2020).

Opinion

IN THE COURT OF APPEALS OF IOWA

No. 20-0069 Filed December 16, 2020

THOMAS J. BUNTING and LORI A. BUNTING, Plaintiffs-Appellants,

vs.

MARK W. KOEHN, Defendant-Appellee. ________________________________________________________________

Appeal from the Iowa District Court for Clayton County, Richard D. Stochl,

Judge.

Thomas and Lori Bunting appeal the district court’s ruling on their

application to enforce a written easement. AFFIRMED AS MODIFIED.

John C. Compton of John C. Compton, P.C., Strawberry Point, for

appellants.

Daniel M. Key of The Key Law Firm, LLC, Prairie du Chien, Wisconsin, for

appellee.

Considered by Bower, C.J., and May and Ahlers, JJ. 2

BOWER, Chief Judge.

Thomas and Lori Bunting appeal the district court’s ruling on their

application to enforce the terms of a written easement. With one slight

modification, we affirm the court’s equitable decree.

I. Background Facts.

In 2006, Thomas and Lori Bunting purchased about 400 acres outside of

Elkader, Iowa, from the University of Iowa Foundation. They transferred all but

190 acres to others. The Buntings also obtained title to a thirty-two foot lane

through a neighboring property. The lane allows access to the Bunting property

from Grandview Road to the south and ends at Mark Koehn’s property

approximately three-quarters of a mile to the north.

Koehn owns an acreage abutting Bunting’s property. Koehn purchased his

property on contract in 1982 from the party who owned the Bunting property prior

to the University of Iowa Foundation. As part of Koehn’s purchase agreement, he

was granted a permanent easement for “the present roadway fourteen (14) feet in

width to allow access to the premises.” The roadway lies within the thirty-two foot

lane now owned by Bunting. Additional terms of Koehn’s easement agreement

include:

[Koehn] shall have the right to use dirt and fill obtained within twenty (20) feet from either side of the centerline of the roadway to maintain and repair the lane. [Koehn] shall have the responsibility for maintaining the lane. In the event the lane is damaged by the Seller, said damage shall be repaired at Seller’s expense. The Seller shall have the right to use the lane for access to farm fields adjacent to the property. The Seller shall also have the right to farm the land up to the shoulder of the fourteen (14) foot right of way granted herein. [Koehn] shall have the responsibility to maintain all fences bordering Seller’s property. In the event the Seller or successors put 3

cattle on the premises, then the Seller or his successors will pay for one-half of any new fences required. .... There is a shed on the boundary line between [Koehn’s] and Seller’s property. [Koehn] shall have the right to use the shed for his lifetime. If the shed is ever destroyed, a new structure may be built only on [Koehn’s] property. If the present access road is blocked in the winter, [Koehn] shall have the right to cross Seller’s field to provide access to the property. [Koehn] shall also have the right to erect snow fences on Seller’s property to minimize drifting on the land. The lane currently contains a creek crossing. Any repairs to said crossing shall be shared 50/50 by [Koehn] and Seller. All of the provisions of this contract including the easement shall be binding upon the parties hereto and their heirs, successors and assigns.

In the spring of 2015, Bunting was dissatisfied with the maintenance on the

lane and hired Curt Bockenstedt, who farms and owns an excavation firm, to blade

the road. Bockenstedt “brought in [a dozer] and proceeded to go down through

[about 1000 feet of lane down the hill] and put a crown back on the road.” Koehn

asked Bockenstedt if he was going to take care of the rest of the lane, and

Bockenstedt responded he was only hired to do the hill.

Bunting also asked Bockenstedt to look at the culvert in the creek crossing.

Bockenstedt noted there was a drain pipe running through the culvert that was

partially filled in with timbers.1 He did not “know why [the timbers] are in there” and

suggested Bunting remove them. Over the next couple of years, Bunting did

remove the timbers and Koehn replaced them.

In 2016, Jason Sullivan rented and farmed Bunting’s acres. On one or two

occasions, Sullivan found horses belonging to Koehn in the fields he was working.

1 The parties referred to these obstructions as bridge timbers or planks—the timbers have been cut to fit horizontally inside the lower portion of the opening of the drainage pipe. 4

After learning of the horses’ presence, Bunting contacted fence viewers in October

2016, who determined “an accurate property line needs to be established via

survey” and “a partition fence needs to be built to maintain Koehn’s livestock”;

“[t]he assessed cost to erect the partition fence will be 50/50 assessed equally to

each party.” Bunting had the survey completed and then contacted a fencing

company to erect 1500 feet of fencing. The company would not erect the fence

because Koehn was not in agreement. Koehn erected an electric fence along the

portions of his property abutting Bunting’s land and around the shed at his own

expense. The horses did not again go into Bunting’s fields.

On December 30, 2016, Bunting filed this suit in equity asserting Koehn

(1) failed to maintain the lane, (2) failed to maintain and construct fences bordering

Bunting’s property, (3) improperly rebuilt the shed in its original site after it had

been destroyed, and (4) must help pay for needed repairs to the creek crossing on

Bunting’s land. Bunting asked the court to order Koehn to comply with the terms

of the easement. Bunting also asked for compensatory damages and attorney

fees.

Koehn answered and counterclaimed for damages to the lane caused by

Bockenstedt’s blading of a portion of the roadway, which Koehn asserted was done

improperly. He also asserted Bunting had damaged the creek crossing and had

failed to share in the repair and maintenance of the crossing.

Trial was held October 24, 2019. After hearing testimony from Bunting,

Bockenstedt, Sullivan, and Koehn, the court made these findings:

The agreement provides that “In the event the lane is damaged by the seller, said damage shall be repaired at seller’s expense.” Bunting leases the farm to Jason Sullivan. He uses the lane every 5

time he accesses the property. He drives heavy equipment on the lane including combines, semis, and tractors. Some damage to the lane can be assumed to have occurred as a result of the use of the machinery. There was an old shed on the property when Koehn bought the property that infringed onto the parcel now owned by Bunting. Koehn’s contract allows him to leave that shed despite the fact it is partially on the Bunting land. The shed is still there but has been repaired. Part of the shed collapsed within the last several years and Koehn made repairs. The building is in poor shape but still standing. Bunting claims when the shed collapsed it was essentially torn down and a new building installed and that the new building now infringes on his property and must be moved. The evidence does not support that claim. Koehn did repair the building, but the old shed was never “destroyed” and no “new structure” has been built. Repairs of that shed do not constitute replacing the shed but simply were repairs. . . . .... As to fencing, Koehn’s contract provides: “The buyer (Koehn) shall have the responsibility to maintain all fences bordering Seller’s property.

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Thomas J. Bunting and Lori A. Bunting v. Mark W. Koehn, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/thomas-j-bunting-and-lori-a-bunting-v-mark-w-koehn-iowactapp-2020.