Tungsten Holdings, Inc. v. Olson

2002 MT 158, 50 P.3d 1086, 310 Mont. 374, 2002 Mont. LEXIS 319
CourtMontana Supreme Court
DecidedJuly 16, 2002
Docket01-443
StatusPublished
Cited by8 cases

This text of 2002 MT 158 (Tungsten Holdings, Inc. v. Olson) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Montana Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Tungsten Holdings, Inc. v. Olson, 2002 MT 158, 50 P.3d 1086, 310 Mont. 374, 2002 Mont. LEXIS 319 (Mo. 2002).

Opinion

JUSTICE COTTER

delivered the Opinion of the Court.

¶1 Beginning in the early 1970s and extending over several years, Whispering Pines Development Inc. (Whispering Pines) bought substantial acreage in Lincoln County, Montana, from Thelma and Ross McKenzie (McKenzies) with an intention to subdivide the property into five-acre parcels for sale and development. To facilitate this development, it obtained from the McKenzies an easement allowing Whispering Pines to, among other things, use and expand existing roads to up to sixty feet in width and to cut and create new sixty-foot wide roads. Whispering Pines subsequently chose not to develop the property and began selling the property in twenty- and forty-acre parcels. In 1987, it sold a forty-acre parcel to Jerry and Sandra Olson (Olsons). Whispering Pines retained a fifteen-foot logging road easement (Road Easement) through the Olsons' property by which to access property Whispering Pines held by contract to the north of the Olson property. Whispering Pines subsequently bought the parcel north of the Olsons and then sold it to Tungsten Holdings, Inc. (Tungsten).

¶2 Tungsten sued the Olsons, claiming an implied or express right to use the Road Easement over the Olsons' property. The Olsons *376 countered that Tungsten had no easement right. The District Court held that Tungsten was not entitled to either an implied or actual easement over the Olsons' property. Tungsten filed a timely appeal. We affirm.

ISSUES

¶3 A restatement of the issue in this case is whether the District Court erred when it concluded that Tungsten did not have an implied or express easement over the Olsons' property.

FACTUAL BACKGROUND

¶4 The parties presented extensive facts pertaining to their dispute. This Opinion recites only those facts that are germane to our decision.

¶5 Beginning in October 1973 and extending over several years, Whispering Pines purchased twenty-one forty-acre parcels of contiguous property from the McKenzies under a Contract for Deed (Contract). Whispering Pines intended to subdivide each of the twenty-one parcels into five-acre parcels and sell them for development. The Contract granted an easement to Whispering Pines and obligated the McKenzies to allow Whispering Pines to use and expand all existing roads, to have a survey conducted, and to create any new roads warranted by the survey. Twenty-one deeds, numbered by parcel, were signed and placed into escrow and released to Whispering Pines at the time the corresponding parcel was paid off. None of the deeds referenced the easement arrangement included in the Contract.

¶6 After the Contract was executed, the Contract was recorded at the Clerk and Recorder's Office of Lincoln County. Also, a copy of the Contract, the signed Warranty Deeds for each parcel and a Quit Claim Deed for each parcel were placed in escrow. The McKenzies retained legal ownership of each parcel until Whispering Pines paid it off and did not assign their rights or obligations under the Contract to anyone else for the duration of the Contract.

¶7 The pertinent language in the Contract reads:

It is further understood and agreed that at the present time, there are existing roads on all of the property presently owned by the Sellers, and the Sellers herein grant an easement to the Buyer to use said existing roads and to enlarge said existing roads to sixty (60) feet in width.
It is further agreed that Buyer will be surveying the conveyed property and the Sellers herein grant an easement to Buyer herein to cut and to create new roads sixty (60) feet in width where the survey so warrants it. This covenant shall run with the *377 land herein described and said easements shall be appurtenant to all of the property herein conveyed by the Sellers at the time of the execution of this Contract.

¶8 At some time after executing the Contract, Whispering Pines decided not to subdivide the purchased property. It began to sell twenty- and forty-acre paid-off parcels.

¶9 In June 1987, Whispering Pines paid off one of the few remaining parcels under Contract and received the Warranty Deed for it. Whispering Pines immediately sold this forty-acre parcel to the Olsons. The Warranty Deed given to Whispering Pines by the McKenzies described the land as follows:

NW1/4SW1/4 of Section 32, Township 35 North, Range 26 West, M.P.M., Lincoln County, Montana. To have and to hold the same premises, with their appurtenances unto the said Grantee, its heirs and assigns, forever. And the said Grantors do hereby covenant to and with the said Grantee that they are the owners in fee simple of said premises; that they are free from all incumbrances, and that they will warrant and defend the same from all lawful claims whatsoever.

¶10 Again, as indicated above, this Warranty Deed to Whispering Pines from the McKenzies contained no reference to any easements granted or conveyed by the Contract but rather indicated that the property was free of any incumbrances. By contrast, the legal property description included in the Warranty Deed given to the Olsons by Whispering Pines on the same day, read:

The NW1/4SW1/4 of Section 32, Township 35 North, Range 26 West, M.P.M., Lincoln County, Montana.
EXCEPTING AND RESERVING all oil, gas, coal and mineral rights whatsoever in and wnder [sic] and that may be produced therefrom; Together with a 15 foot' private road and utility easement on and across the presently existing 15 foot private road running along the East boundary. (Emphasis provided).
TO HAVE AND TO HOLD the said premises, with their appurtenances unto the said Grantee, and the said Grantor does hereby covenant with the Grantee that it will warrant and defend the same from all lawful claims whatsoever.

¶11 At the time Whispering Pines conveyed this parcel of property to the Olsons, it had the parcel to the north of the Olsons' property reserved under the Contract but had not yet paid it off. It retained a utility and egress/ingress easement along the existing fifteen-foot Road Easement. Both the Olsons' property and the Road Easement retained *378 by Whispering Pines were accessed by a Forest Service road running through property owned by the Olsons' neighbor to the east, Jean Nordahl (Nordahl). Subsequent to the Olsons' purchase, the Forest Service abandoned the access road through Nordahl's property and Nordahl blocked continued use of the abandoned road by "dead-mounding" it at his property line with the Olsons. Shortly thereafter (in 1989 or 1990), the Olsons constructed a new driveway that was exclusively on their property. The Olsons' driveway thus became the only way to access the Road Easement. Additionally, after Nordahl blocked his end of the access road, the Olsons erected a fence in the same area to prevent the free movement of open range cattle. The fence was erected in 1993 or 1994.

¶12 In 1993, Tungsten purchased substantial acreage from Whispering Pines including the parcel to the north of the Olsons' property. Tungsten did not provide a deed nor a contract of sale to the District Court for review.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
2002 MT 158, 50 P.3d 1086, 310 Mont. 374, 2002 Mont. LEXIS 319, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/tungsten-holdings-inc-v-olson-mont-2002.