Wels v. Hippe

385 P.3d 1028, 360 Or. 569
CourtOregon Supreme Court
DecidedFebruary 2, 2017
DocketCC 101215E3; CA A150238; SC S063486
StatusPublished
Cited by13 cases

This text of 385 P.3d 1028 (Wels v. Hippe) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Oregon Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Wels v. Hippe, 385 P.3d 1028, 360 Or. 569 (Or. 2017).

Opinion

LANDAU, J.

The decision of the Court of Appeals is reversed. The judgment of the circuit court is reversed, and the case is remanded to the circuit court for further proceedings.

[571]*571LANDAU, J.

Plaintiff seeks a prescriptive easement over an existing road that crosses defendants’ property. To establish a prescriptive easement, the law requires (among other things) that plaintiffs use of the road was adverse to the rights of the owners of the property. The dispute in this case is whether plaintiff satisfied the requirement to prove such adverse use. The trial court found that plaintiff did establish adverse use of the road in either of two ways. First, it found that plaintiff showed that his use of the road interfered with defendants’ rights, in that defendants could see vehicles passing in close proximity to their house. Second, and in the alternative, the court found that plaintiff established adversity through testimony that he believed — although without communicating that belief to defendants — that he had the right to use the road without defendants’ permission. The Court of Appeals affirmed. Wels v. Hippe, 269 Or App 785, 347 P3d 788 (2015).

We conclude that the trial court and the Court of Appeals erred. To establish that the use of an existing road is adverse, a plaintiff must show that the use of the road interfered with the owners’ use of the road or that the use of the road was undertaken under a claim of right of which the owners were aware. In this case, there is a complete absence of evidence in the record of either of those things. We therefore reverse the decision of the Court of Appeals and the judgment of the trial court.

The relevant facts are not in dispute. Plaintiff owns three contiguous parcels of rural property near the Rogue River. He purchased the parcels in 1998. The nearest state highway, the Crater Lake Highway, is located some distance away. In between plaintiffs property and the highway lie federally owned forest lands and a number of private parcels. Defendants own one of those private parcels, a 20-acre lot, where they have lived since 1973.

A private dirt road, known as “Lewis Creek Road,” runs from plaintiffs property across the federally owned forest land and the intervening private parcels, eventually connecting to another private road and, ultimately, the highway. [572]*572Lewis Creek Road crosses defendants’ property and passes within 60 to 80 feet of their house. No one knows who built Lewis Creek Road or when it was first constructed, but old records indicate that it has been in existence since at least 1932. Plaintiff and the other private property owners in the area have used it to access the Crater Lake Highway.

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[573]*573At some point, defendants erected a chain across Lewis Creek Road where it entered their property. But they left the chain unlocked and provided keys to neighbors, including plaintiff. Plaintiff sometimes performed general maintenance of the road, including dragging an iron bar behind his truck to level the road. On one occasion, he asked defendants for permission to trim the brush alongside the road, and defendants agreed. Plaintiffs use of Lewis Creek Road across defendants’ property caused some dust and vehicle noise, but defendants did not believe that it interfered with their use of the road or of their land.

In 2008, plaintiff decided to build a cabin on his property. The county, however, would not issue the necessary permits unless he obtained written confirmation of his right to use Lewis Creek Road for access to the Crater Lake Highway. Plaintiff tried to obtain written easements from each of the private property owners over whose property Lewis Creek Road ran. He succeeded in obtaining easements from some of the private property owners, but not from defendants. Plaintiff then initiated this action for a declaration that he had acquired a prescriptive easement to use the part of Lewis Creek Road on defendants’ property. Plaintiff advanced no other theory in support of his right to use the road.

In his trial memorandum, plaintiff asserted that he had used Lewis Creek Road for access to his property openly, notoriously, and continuously from the time he purchased the property in 1998. He further asserted that he thought he had the right to do so without defendants’ permission and thus had acquired an easement to use the road by prescription.

In response, defendants’ trial memorandum “concede [d] that plaintiff has used the roadway open and notoriously. Defendants dispute[d] that plaintiffs use ha[d] been adverse.” Defendants argued that, in other words, although plaintiffs use of the road may have been obvious, it was permissive. In support, defendants asserted that, when a prescriptive easement claim involves the nonexclusive use of an existing road, such use is presumed to have been permissive, and anyone claiming otherwise must establish that [574]*574their use of the existing road interfered with the owner’s use of it. In this case, defendants argued, there was no evidence that plaintiffs use of Lewis Creek Road interfered with their own use of the same road.

In their opening statement, defendants elaborated on that line of argument:

“And it’s presumed if he used open and notoriously then it was adverse. And so we think that he’s got that presumption going in. If that presumption exists, it’s up to the defendants to rebut that with — by showing that his use was of an existing road, did not interfere with defendants’ use of the road and — and it was not exclusive. His use was not exclusive if others used the road, like the defendants or others. And if defendants can rebut those three pieces, [plaintiff] still has to come up with some other way to prove adversity by clear and convincing evidence. And I don’t think he’s got that.”

In his opening statement, plaintiff acknowledged that what was in dispute was whether, in light of his nonexclusive use of Lewis Creek Road, his use nevertheless was “open and notorious and hostile or adverse.” His position was that he had satisfied all those requirements because, during the years that he used the road, he “never received anything like permission,” that he “always assumed that [Lewis Creek Road] was his access,” and that “[h]e had a right to use it.”

At trial, two witnesses testified — plaintiff and defendant Douglas Hippe — establishing the foregoing facts. Following the trial, the court issued a written opinion ruling for plaintiff. The court explained that, in cases involving the use of an existing road, there is a presumption that such use was not adverse, but instead was permissive. Nevertheless, the court explained, that presumption could be rebutted with evidence either that plaintiffs use “interfered with [d] efendant’s right on his property” or that plaintiff mistakenly thought that he had the right to use the road without defendants’ permission. In this case, the court concluded, plaintiff established both. As the trial court saw it, evidence that plaintiffs vehicles passed in “close proximity” to defendants’ house interfered with defendants’ rights to use their [575]*575property, and, in any event, it was undisputed that plaintiff mistakenly thought that he had the right to use the road.

Defendants appealed. They argued that the trial court erred in concluding that plaintiff had rebutted the presumption of permissive use for two reasons.

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Wels v. Hippe
Oregon Supreme Court, 2017

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Bluebook (online)
385 P.3d 1028, 360 Or. 569, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/wels-v-hippe-or-2017.