Vance v. Ford

67 P.3d 412, 187 Or. App. 412, 2003 Ore. App. LEXIS 570
CourtCourt of Appeals of Oregon
DecidedApril 24, 2003
Docket0012-12355; A116812
StatusPublished
Cited by15 cases

This text of 67 P.3d 412 (Vance v. Ford) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Oregon primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Vance v. Ford, 67 P.3d 412, 187 Or. App. 412, 2003 Ore. App. LEXIS 570 (Or. Ct. App. 2003).

Opinion

*414 BREWER, J.

Defendants appeal from a declaratory judgment and injunction that, among other provisions, prohibits their use of a private road (the roadway) that abuts three parcels of property owned by plaintiffs Seay, Vance, and Wells. Defendants challenge the trial court’s rejection of their defenses that plaintiffs’ complaint failed to state a claim and that plaintiffs lacked standing to seek relief. They also assert that Seay and Vance failed to prove a necessary element of their claims, namely that defendants substantially interfered with their easement rights in the roadway. Further, defendants challenge the trial court’s determination that the roadway is located, in part, on the parcel owned by plaintiffs Wells; defendants contend that the court lacked authority to make that determination without joining as a party another property owner, Fahrer, who, defendants assert, owns the portion of the roadway abutting the Wells parcel. As a consequence, defendants assert that the trial court erred in declaring that they have no right to use the roadway and in enjoining them from using it. On de novo review, ORS 19.415(3), we reverse in part, vacate and remand in part, and otherwise affirm.

The parties each own parcels of land on Sauvie Island that adjoin the roadway. The roadway, in turn, connects to Gillihan Road, a public road. All of the parcels formerly were owned by a common grantor, Minoggie. Minoggie subdivided his property and periodically, between 1961 and 1986, deeded parcels to the predecessors of the current owners. The map set out below shows the locations of the various parcels, the roadway, and other relevant features.

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*415 Minoggie conveyed an appurtenant roadway easement to the grantee when he sold the first parcel, now owned by Seay, in 1961. The deed from Minoggie to Seay’s predecessor described the location of the easement by metes and bounds, beginning from a reference point at the western corner of what is now defendants’ property. The deed description then precisely denoted the point on Gillihan Road, 1084.68 feet to the northeast, where the centerline of the 30-foot wide 1 easement begins (point A on the map). From there, the roadway description continued as follows:

“[Tjhence south 62° 35' 30" east 405.8 feet [point B]; thence south 64° 10' 30" east 300.2 feet [point D]; thence south 10° 31' west 166.75 feet, more or less, to the northerly line of the herein described premises at a point 15 feet easterly of the northwesterly corner thereof; EXCEPTING the part of said easement that lies in Gillihan Road.”

The deed also reserved an easement over the entire length of the western 30 feet of the Seay parcel to Minoggie, effectively extending the roadway to the northern boundary of what became the Vance parcel. Later in 1961, Minoggie granted an identical appurtenant easement to Vance’s predecessor when he sold the Vance parcel. Minoggie granted an identical easement to Staleys predecessor when he sold the Staley parcel in 1970. 2

Minoggie also sold the Wells parcel in 1961. The deed description for that parcel began at the same beginning reference point used in the deed to Seay’s predecessor, that is, the western corner of defendants’ parcel. It established a point 915.45 feet northeast on Gillihan Road as the western corner of the Wells parcel. The northern corner of the parcel lies 169.20 feet further up Gillihan Road, at the same point where the roadway begins (point A on the map). The deed description continued:

“[Tjhence South 62° 35' 30" East 405.80 feet [point Bj; thence South 64° 10' 30" East 9.30 feet [point Cj; thence South 19° 20' 30" West 158.0 feet to an iron pipe; thence North 61° 44' 30" West 517.14 feet to the center of Gillihan *416 Road and the true place of beginning; EXCEPTING the portion lying within Gillihan Road; and FURTHER EXCEPTING the Northerly 15 feet of the herein said tract as the South one-half of a 30 foot easement heretofore established for ingress and egress and utility purposes over said strip and filed for record in Book 2073 page 166, Deed records.”

In 1962, Minoggie sold the parcel now owned by defendants. A 15-foot strip of land along the northern 60.32 feet of the easternmost boundary of defendants’ parcel underlies, and is subject to, the roadway easement. However, the deed did not grant an easement over the rest of the roadway.

In 1986, Minoggie sold the parcel now owned by Fahrer, which lies to the north of the Wells and Staley parcels. Unlike the earlier conveyances made by Minoggie, the legal description to the Fahrer parcel did not begin at the western corner of defendants’ property. It began instead at a different reference point, led to the northeastern corner of the Fahrer parcel and then followed the northern boundary of that parcel. The deed described the western boundary as running along Gillihan Road

“to a point on the North line of the [Wells property]; thence on the North line of said [Wells] property, South 62° 30' 30" East, 378.65 feet to an angle point [point B]; thence on the North line of said property, South 64° 19' 10" East, 300.23 feet to an angle point in said property line [point D]; thence South 77° 15' 15" East, 384.36 feet to the low water line of the Willamette River; thence downstream following the said low water line * * * to the true point of beginning, containing 7.3 acres, more or less.”

The deed then stated:

“The southerly 15 feet of the herein said tract is the South V2 of a 30 foot easement heretofore established for ingress and egress and utility purposes over said strip and filed for record in Deed Book 2073, Page 166,1961.”

To summarize, Minoggie conveyed nonexclusive appurtenant easements over the entire roadway to the predecessors of Vance, Seay, and Staley. Defendants, Fahrer, and the Wellses do not hold such an easement. 3

*417 Nevertheless, after acquiring their property, defendants used portions of the roadway crossing the Wells, Fahrer, Staley, and Seay parcels to gain access to Gillihan Road from a barn on the eastern portion of their parcel. Defendants also placed a mobile home near the barn and rented it to a farm hand who used those portions of the roadway to reach Gillihan Road. In 2000, defendants constructed a driveway onto their property from the roadway. They initially intended to begin the driveway from the part of the roadway on Seay’s property. However, Seay objected, and defendants then started the driveway further to the north, from the portion of the roadway located on their own property. Traffic on the roadway increased after defendants built the driveway.

Plaintiffs brought this action seeking a judicial declaration that defendants were not entitled to use the roadway and an injunction against such use.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
67 P.3d 412, 187 Or. App. 412, 2003 Ore. App. LEXIS 570, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/vance-v-ford-orctapp-2003.