Wallace v. Snider

204 S.W.3d 299, 2006 Mo. App. LEXIS 1450, 2006 WL 2795656
CourtMissouri Court of Appeals
DecidedOctober 2, 2006
Docket27422
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 204 S.W.3d 299 (Wallace v. Snider) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Missouri Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Wallace v. Snider, 204 S.W.3d 299, 2006 Mo. App. LEXIS 1450, 2006 WL 2795656 (Mo. Ct. App. 2006).

Opinion

JOHN E. PARRISH, Judge.

Jack Wallace (plaintiff) brought an action against Jack Snider (defendant) in *301 which he sought an injunction prohibiting defendant from denying him use of a roadway across property owned by defendant. Plaintiff sought a determination that he was entitled to use the roadway by reason of a provision in the warranty deed by which defendant acquired the real estate across which the road traverses (Count I) or, alternatively, that plaintiff had acquired a prescriptive easement to use the roadway (Count II).

Defendant filed a two-count counterclaim in which he sought damages for a breach of a contract he alleged had been entered into between the parties whereby they were to share the cost of constructing a fence on a boundary line to be established by a survey (Count I) and damages for trespass allegedly committed by plaintiff as a result of destruction done to a fence that was under construction in accordance with the agreement to which counterclaim Count I was directed (Count II).

The trial court entered judgment for defendant, denying plaintiffs request for an injunction. It entered judgment on Count I of defendant’s counterclaim in favor of defendant in the amount of $1,895 and on Count II of the counterclaim “in the bond amount of $5,000.00” and directed payment of the bond amount to counsel for defendant.

Plaintiff appeals contending the trial court erred in finding he had not obtained an easement by prescription to use the road in controversy (Points I and II) and in finding that a contract existed that entitled defendant to relief for breach of contract asserted in Count I of defendant’s counterclaim (Point III). This court affirms.

Defendant owns real estate in Christian County that adjoins T Highway. Plaintiff owns an 8.592-acre parcel of land that adjoins the west boundary of the northern part of defendant’s land.

Dale Wallace, plaintiffs father, also owns real estate that adjoins defendant’s property on its western side. Plaintiffs father’s property lies southwesterly from plaintiffs property. Plaintiffs property and his father’s property have a common corner. The corner is plaintiffs property’s southwesterly corner and his father’s property’s northeasterly corner. Dale Wallace has owned his property since 1947. Plaintiff is “buying” the property from his father. He has farmed it, together with his parcel of land, for several years.

Defendant bought the property he presently owns from Glenn and Violet Cockroft in two transactions. He and his then wife, Villene, bought the 54.419 acres that adjoins T Highway in 1991. Villene subsequently conveyed her interest in the land to defendant. The warranty deed by which the Sniders acquired the 54.419-acre parcel provides that the land conveyed thereby is “[sjubjeet to all public and private roads and easements including a 25 foot easement for ingress and egress across this property to the 80 acres which joins directly on the South end.” Defendant later acquired the 80-acre tract referred to in the deed.

The road across the 54.419-acre tract runs from T Highway in a southwesterly direction to the southern boundary of that parcel. The road continues onto the 80-acre tract to which it provides the right of ingress and egress. It crosses the 80-acre tract to a location on its western boundary where it adjoins Dale Wallace’s land. An access also exists from the southern boundary of the 54.419-acre parcel that crosses onto the 80-acre parcel and curves westerly and northerly to an entry point to plaintiffs 8.592-acre tract.

Dale Wallace owned the 80-acre tract that defendant presently owns from “September '47 up until ... April of [sic] 14th, *302 '82.” When Mr. Wallace first bought the 80 acres, Cyrs Moody owned the 54.419-acre tract now owned by defendant. The 54.419-acre tract was later owned by Fred Heyn. Mr. Wallace was asked if he had permission from Cyrs and Heyn to cross the 54.419-acre tract to enter the 80 acres during the time they owned the property. He answered that he did.

Defendant purchased the 80-acre tract from the Cockrofts “a couple [of] years” after he bought the 54.419 acres. Defendant rented the 80 acres before he purchased it. It was serviced by the 25-foot road easement set forth in the deed by which defendant bought the first tract. Defendant presently owns both parcels of property.

Defendant was asked the following questions and gave the following answers:

Q. Did anybody ever use [the road that is the subject of this appeal] until someone came and asked you permission to use it?
A. No.
Q. Who came and asked you permission to use it?
A. Mr. Dale Wallace.
Q. And what did he say he wanted permission to do?
A. To haul his hay through there, through my property.
Q. Did he mention that sometimes he had other family members that would — that would be involved?
A. No, sir.
Q. Did he indicate that it would be specifically for use of that hayfield?
A. Yes.
Q. Did you give him permission?
A. Yes, I did.

Defendant said there came a time when the permission he had granted was being abused. He explained that plaintiffs son came over with a tractor and a four-wheel ATV a time or two. Defendant told the court, “And he cut a — cut the fence and made a little gap gate back on the south side of 9 acres, like he was — he was going to haul wood through there through-through my property back around, instead of going back out to — back through the 8 acres to the highway.” Defendant told plaintiff he did not want him driving through his property with a wood truck or an ATV. The boy quit coming through defendant’s property after that.

Dale Wallace was asked whether he sought permission to use the property defendant now owns from the people who owned the property before defendant acquired it. He said he had asked permission to use the property to get to his hayfield whenever- ownership of the property defendant now owns changed. He was then asked, “You would ask each person who became owner of that property if it was all right for you to use that; is that right, sir?” He answered, “That’s right.” Mr. Wallace said that included defendant; that he had the same conversation with defendant shortly after defendant bought the property, Mr. Wallace said he had always been able to get permission for him and his family “to have access back there.”

The evidence was that a dispute developed over construction of a.fence on a surveyed property line that was at a different location than a previous fence line. Dale Wallace was asked, “So up until the time that there came to be a dispute over this building a new fence everybody that had owned [defendant’s] property, including [defendant], from 1947 had always been asked and had always given permission to use that?” He answered, “That’s right.”

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
204 S.W.3d 299, 2006 Mo. App. LEXIS 1450, 2006 WL 2795656, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/wallace-v-snider-moctapp-2006.