White v. Ruth R. Millington Living Trust

785 S.W.2d 782, 1990 Mo. App. LEXIS 343, 1990 WL 20380
CourtMissouri Court of Appeals
DecidedMarch 5, 1990
Docket16260
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 785 S.W.2d 782 (White v. Ruth R. Millington Living Trust) 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
White v. Ruth R. Millington Living Trust, 785 S.W.2d 782, 1990 Mo. App. LEXIS 343, 1990 WL 20380 (Mo. Ct. App. 1990).

Opinion

MAUS, Judge.

The plaintiffs by Count I seek a declaration they have acquired an easement for ingress and egress by prescription. By *783 Count II, in the alternative, they seek the establishment of a private road of necessity under § 228.340. The defendant tendered to the plaintiffs an easement in the south eighteen feet of her property for the construction of a road. The judgment of the trial court declared the plaintiffs shall be entitled to the tendered easement and denied relief upon the petition. The plaintiffs appeal.

The following is a summary of the facts. The plaintiffs’ tract is the south half (except two acres in the southwest corner) of Section 24, Township 28 North, Range 7 East in Wayne County, Missouri. The defendant’s tract is the south half of Section 23 of said township and range. Obviously, the plaintiffs’ 318 acres joins the defendant’s 320 acres on the east. Neither tract is fenced. Except for a machine shed and cabin constructed by plaintiffs, neither tract is improved. The tracts are located in a wooded, sparsely settled area of Wayne County.

The earliest history and description of the tracts and roads involved were given by witnesses Peck West and Dee West, his wife. They lived in the area for approximately thirty years. The later history and description of the area and road were also related by the parties and other witnesses.

At all relevant times, an improved county road has extended generally north and south along the west side of the defendant’s tract. An unimproved dirt road (road A) meanders through the woods, west to east, from the county road across the defendant’s tract to the plaintiffs’ tract. Road A varies in width and is bordered by trees, many of substantial size. The plaintiffs claim an easement by prescription in road A across the defendant’s tract.

At one time, road A extended east through and beyond the plaintiffs’ tract, approximately two and one-half miles to the McGee store, which is located on County Highway TT. When road A, beyond the plaintiffs’ property, was abandoned is not clear. Witness Martin White was over that portion of the road in a four-wheel drive vehicle around 1972. Subsequently, a ditch was cut across that road just east of the plaintiffs’ tract. Peck West testified that in recent years that portion of the road had become so “plugged up” that he couldn’t ride a horse on the road beyond the plaintiffs’ property.

There is a cemetery in the two acres excepted from the southwest corner of the plaintiffs’ tract. When Peck West moved to the area, he learned that a congregation of the Seventh-Day Adventist faith had maintained a church and school on the two acres. There was also the remnant of a stone house on road A.

Road B, also an unimproved dirt road, runs northeast from a point on the county road, well south of the defendant’s tract. Road B extends northeast to the southwest corner of the plaintiffs’ tract, the cemetery area. Presumably, road B at one time extended north to road A to place the cemetery two acres on a loop from the county road.

The plaintiffs bought their tract by a contract for deed on October 16, 1972. They subsequently received a warranty deed. The plaintiffs, and members of their family, used the tract for recreational purposes. Plaintiff Willis White was 70 years old at the time of trial, December 20, 1988. The plaintiffs have five sons. The plaintiffs and/or members of their family came to the tract to spend most weekends since the plaintiffs bought the tract. Initially, the plaintiffs placed a travel trailer on the tract. The five brothers built a machine shed on plaintiffs’ tract using road A to haul materials. They later converted a portion of the machine shed into living quarters, or a cabin. The plaintiffs thought road A was a public road. They primarily used road A in going to and coming from their property. From time to time they graded and filled holes on that road. In the earlier years, when it was wet, they used road B, to avoid causing ruts in road A. At the time of trial, road B had become impassible by vehicle.

The plaintiffs bought their tract subject to a “timber deed” in favor of John E. Haggett. The timber deed sold all timber ten inches in diameter and above to Hag-gett and granted him eighteen months in *784 which to remove that timber. He used road A in removing the timber. In an unexplained manner, the defendant learned of his use and directed that he stop using road A unless he paid her $50 per month for the privilege. To avoid delay, Haggett made the payments for several months. When he quit cutting timber, Haggett repaired the road at defendant’s request. He said he “hauled gavel [sic] back in there and I had my bulldozer down there, you know, to level and so forth.”

The defendant lived in Advance, Missouri. She bought her tract in 1968. She knew of the existence of road A at that time. She considered it a logging road, a type of road commonly found in the area. She did collect $50 per month from Hag-gett for his use of the road through March 1974. It was difficult for her to estimate how often she saw the tract. She surmised that she had been there once a year since she bought it. Some of her family and friends used the tract for hunting. On more than one occasion in the 1970’s she caused barbed wire to be placed across road A at its junction with the county road to bar unauthorized use of the road. The wire was removed. At one time she caused a cable to be placed across road A for that purpose. It, too, was removed. She did not know the plaintiffs were using road A. No one, including her family members, reported to her that the plaintiffs were using road A.

Defendant acknowledged that exhibits D through S (photographs) showed road A in substantially the condition it had been in through the time she owned her tract. Those photographs unmistakably show a well-defined dirt road through the woods.

On July 12, 1983, plaintiff Willis White called the defendant and asked permission to cut some trees along road A. Defendant testified this was the first she knew plaintiffs were using the road. Negotiations between the plaintiffs and the defendant to establish the plaintiffs’ right to use the road were futile. On March 19, 1987, the defendant wrote to Willis White. That letter included the following two paragraphs.

“Under no circumstances will your continued use of the logging road which crosses our property be tolerated unless you acknowledge in writing, within ten days of the date of this letter, that your use of the road has been and will be with our express permission only.
As previously indicated, I would be willing to enter into an agreement with you providing for your occasional permissive use of the road for a period of time. However, should you fail to acknowledge in writing that your use has been and will continue to be permissive, an appropriate legal action will be instituted in Wayne County, Missouri, to obtain a court order prohibiting your further use.”

The plaintiffs did not terminate their use of road A. They filed this action on August 10, 1987.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
785 S.W.2d 782, 1990 Mo. App. LEXIS 343, 1990 WL 20380, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/white-v-ruth-r-millington-living-trust-moctapp-1990.