Verzeano v. Carpenter

815 P.2d 1275, 108 Or. App. 258, 1991 Ore. App. LEXIS 1175
CourtCourt of Appeals of Oregon
DecidedJuly 24, 1991
Docket88-3358-L-2; CA A63060
StatusPublished
Cited by17 cases

This text of 815 P.2d 1275 (Verzeano v. Carpenter) 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
Verzeano v. Carpenter, 815 P.2d 1275, 108 Or. App. 258, 1991 Ore. App. LEXIS 1175 (Or. Ct. App. 1991).

Opinion

*260 DEITS, J.

Plaintiff brought this declaratory judgment action seeking declarations that she has an easement allowing ingress and egress across defendants’ property and that a public easement exists across defendants’ property. Plaintiff also seeks to enjoin defendants from interfering with the use of the easements by plaintiff and the public. The trial court granted the relief sought.

In 1947, defendants purchased lot 500 from plaintiff s predecessor in interest, Phillips. It is adjacent to the Southern Pacific railroad and Old Pacific Highway (also called Talent Avenue and Old Highway 99). Phillips’ son-in-law drafted the deed conveying lot 500 to defendants. He recorded it in 1949 and delivered it to defendants two months later. Apparently, defendants did not read it until 1960. The deed reserved an easement across defendants’ land:

“[A] strip of land 30 feet wide along the southerly line of the above described tract is reserved for road purposes for access & egress to and from lands belonging to the grantor.”

Phillips died three months after the deed was delivered. Four parcels of land in the immediate area, lots 400, 1600, 1800 and a 30-foot strip of lot 300, were distributed under her will. There were no residences or other occupied buildings on Phillips’ properties. Plaintiff now owns all of the property owned by Phillips at the time of her death, as well as lots 200 and 300.

Maps A and B, which are attached as appendices, will assist in an understanding of the facts. As shown in Map A, lots 400 and 500 are contiguous but lots 200 and 300 separate them from lots 1600 and 1800. The 30-foot strip of lot 300 abuts lot 400 but does not terminate at either lot 1600 or lot 1800. To reach lots 1600 or 1800 from lot 400, it is necessary to cross land that Phillips did not own at the time of the conveyance. A private ditch road runs along the west side of lot 300, becoming a trail as it approaches lot 1600.

A county road, known as the Oregon-California Stage Road, was established in the' area in 1867. It ran adjacent to the railroad tracks, crossing them from the north just east of lot 400 and crossing back at the west boundary of lot 500. Map A shows a portion of the 1867 road that crossed *261 defendants’ property. Except for a short access strip, shown in Map B, defendants’ driveway roughly follows the same route as the 1867 road and the easement.

During the 1920’s, Old Pacific Highway was constructed immediately north of the railroad tracks, parallel to or overlapping the 1867 road. Although the 1867 road was never formally vacated, the county stopped maintenance and abandoned it and the old railroad crossings as soon as Old Pacific Highway was constructed. Except for defendants’ driveway, there is little evidence of the 1867 road today. After Old Pacific Highway opened, an occasional car still drove across the remnants of the old road. Plaintiff went over it a few times as a child in the 1930’s and 1940’s for picnics and to visit a mercury mine on the south end of lot 1600. In recent years, persons crossing lot 500 have used defendants’ driveway and then passed through a locked gate to enter lot 400. Several people testified that they had used the driveway. Some testified that they had plaintiffs express permission or had an easement. Others testified that they had assumed that it was public.

Defendants assign error to the trial court’s holding that the easement reserved in their deed was appurtenant to lots 400, 1600, 1800 and to a 30-foot strip of lot 300. They argue that only an easement in gross, not an easement appurtenant, was reserved in the 1949 conveyance. In the alternative, they contend that, if an easement appurtenant was created, it is only appurtenant to lot 400.

The language reserving the easement provides that it is for access to “lands belonging to the grantor.” There is a strong preference for finding that an easement is appurtenant, especially where the deed specifically refers to property that could be the dominant estate. Hall v. Meyer, 270 Or 335, 527 P2d 722 (1974); Powell, Real Property 34-22, ¶ 405 (1989). Although the property is not precisely defined, it is clear from the language of the conveyance that the “lands belonging to grantor” were intended to be the dominant estate, and we conclude that the easement is appurtenant.

The critical question here is what lands are included within the dominant estate. When property described in a conveyance is ascertainable by examining extrinsic evidence, *262 it is appropriate to consider such evidence. Powell, Real Property 81A-93, ¶ 899[1] (1989). The focus of the inquiry should be on the circumstances and the parties’ intent at the time of the conveyance. Tusi v. Jacobson, 134 Or 505, 293 P 587, 293 P 939 (1930); Thompson, Real Property § 3022 (1962).

After reviewing the evidence of the circumstances at the time of the conveyance, there is no question but that “lands belonging to the grantor” includes lot 400. It is adjacent to defendants’ property and the easement provides direct access to it. Phillips owned lot 400 at the time of the conveyance and her ownership was recorded. The parties must have intended that it be part of the dominant estate.

The more difficult question is whether the easement is appurtenant to lots 1600 and 1800. Defendants concede that Phillips owned lots 1600 and 1800 at the time of the conveyance. However, those lots were separated from lots 400 and 500 by lands owned at that time by other members of the Phillips family. There is a conflict of authority whether an easement of way may be appurtenant to land when the servient tenement is not adjacent to the dominant estate. Some cases hold that there can be no easement of way unless it is contiguous to the dominant tenement. Powell, Real Property 34-193, ¶ 415[2]. However, we agree with the majority view that an easement may be appurtenant to noncontiguous property if both tenements are clearly defined and it was the parties’ intent that it be appurtenant. Thompson, Real Property § 322 (1980).

The terms “lands belonging to grantor” do not clearly define the dominant estate. Although it may be inferred from the use of the word “lands” that it includes more than one parcel of property, it is unclear what is included in that description. There is little evidence of what the parties to the reservation of the easement intended to include in the dominant estate. Apparently, the parties never discussed the easement at the time that it was created. Although the road across defendants’ property was used occasionally for access to lots 1600 and 1800, it is unclear whether defendants knew that Phillips owned that property. Neither lot had been recorded in plaintiffs name.

*263 When there is an ambiguity in a deed, the general rule is to construe it against the grantor. Thompson, Real Property § 3023 (1981). Because we are dealing with a reservation of an easement, defendants as owners of the servient estate are the grantors. There are, however, exceptions to the general rule of construing language against the grantor.

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Bluebook (online)
815 P.2d 1275, 108 Or. App. 258, 1991 Ore. App. LEXIS 1175, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/verzeano-v-carpenter-orctapp-1991.