Williams v. Fagnani

228 P.3d 71, 2010 Alas. LEXIS 21, 2010 WL 744250
CourtAlaska Supreme Court
DecidedMarch 5, 2010
DocketS-13294
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 228 P.3d 71 (Williams v. Fagnani) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Alaska Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Williams v. Fagnani, 228 P.3d 71, 2010 Alas. LEXIS 21, 2010 WL 744250 (Ala. 2010).

Opinion

OPINION

MATTHEWS, Senior Justice pro tem.

This case is before us for a second time. In our first decision we held that Lee Williams was entitled to an implied roadway easement over property owned by Larry Fagnani. 1 On remand the superior court ruled that Fagnani was entitled to maintain a locked gate across the roadway, so long as Williams was advised of the combination.

Williams's challenge to this ruling is the main issue now before us. We vacate the ruling and remand with instructions that the superior court determine the facts relevant to the inconvenience that the gate will cause Williams and to Fagnani's justification for the gate. When these facts are determined the court should decide whether the gate unreasonably interferes with Williams's use of the roadway easement.

Williams also argues that the superior court should have awarded him enhanced attorney's fees and that the amount actually awarded was miscalculated. We conclude that the court did not abuse its discretion in *73 declining to award enhanced fees, but that a minor calculation error was made that should be addressed on remand.

I. THE GATE ISSUE

On remand the superior court entered an order addressing the particulars of the roadway easement. At the outset the court noted that the seope of the easement was in dispute and had to be determined because it had not been considered during the trial. The court then ruled as follows:

All parties seem to agree that the existing road is a 30 foot gravel road. The widening and graveling of the road benefit-ted all of the users of the road including both the dominant and servient estates. The Court finds that the improvement of the road was a part of the normal development of the dominant estate. Although widened and improved, the road continued to be a private road and was never a public road.
Based on these facts, this Court finds that Williams is entitled to an implied easement over the disputed road. The easement is limited to 30 feet in width. The easement shall be maintained in its current nature, ie. a gravel road. Williams is not entitled to more intensive use than he now has. Both Williams and Fagnani have a joint obligation to contribute jointly to the costs reasonably incurred for repair and maintenance of the road. Because the road is a "private" road Fag-nani is entitled to post signs and to maintain a gated entrance with locks with combinations that allows Williams' access but prevents use by the general public to ere-ate a right of way.

Williams moved for reconsideration of this order. He argued that when he purchased the landlocked property there was no gate on the roadway. He argued further that no justification for a gate existed because Fag-nani's house is reached from a different driveway, the property crossed by the roadway is not fenced, and no buildings or personal property of value are accessible from the roadway. Williams also argued that he and his wife are seriously inconvenienced by the gate, noting that they are in their late fifties and Mrs. Williams has a bad knee. He described problems regarding the location of the gate as follows:

The approach of the subject road to Hollywood Road is up a steep embankment slope. After their entry onto Hollywood Road, the Williams must cross two lanes before they would be able to stop. There is no pull out and a very limited shoulder on which they may stop. One must exercise great care traveling down Hollywood Road. Frequently people travel the road at speeds of over 50 miles per hour.
To open and close the gate, it will be necessary to stop some fifty feet from the gate, walk up the steep slope, open the gate, walk back down the road, drive through the gate, stop on an arterial road and walk back across the road to shut and lock the gate. This creates a significant safety hazard. The gate provides no seeu-rity for any property owned by Mr. Fagna-ni. It only serves to inconvenience the Williams.[ 2 ]

Fagnani opposed Williams's motion for reconsideration. He argued that any burden imposed on Williams's use of the roadway by the gate was justified by the need to prevent others, primarily owners of neighboring homesteads, from using the roadway: "the Kutils, Boyd Connolly and even Williams have not yet internalized the distinction that 'this [road] is a private place....' A padlocked gate on Fagnani's private road is the only way to convey to the Kutils, Boyd Connolly and the general public this simple fact." (First alteration in original.) (Citation omitted.) In addition, Fagnani minimized the inconvenience that the gate would cause Williams: "With full access to the combination on the lock of the gate, the sole burden he faces is getting out of his vehicle, remembering the combination of the lock, opening the gate and driving through. Williams makes unsupported claims that stopping and opening the gate will expose him to 'dan *74 ger'" Fagnani also observed that Williams "uses the property primarily as a recreational home and lives in Anchorage full time." 3

The superior court denied Williams's motion for reconsideration in an order that provided: "The easement established is not a general public easement. Testimony at trial established that members of the public did and would use the easement although it is private. A gate as eurrently established does not impose an unreasonable burden on the Williams' right of passage." In accordance with this ruling, the court entered a final judgment granting Williams a thirty-foot easement across Fagnant's property, requiring Williams and Fagnani to mutually share the cost of maintaining the easement, and allowing Fagnani to maintain a locked gate.

On appeal the parties largely repeat the arguments they presented to the superior court. Williams contends that the gate unreasonably restricts his use of the easement while providing no significant benefit to Fagnani. 4 Fagnani argues that the gate is a minor burden on Williams's use and is justified by Fagnani's interest in preventing trespassers from using the easement.

The purpose of the implied roadway easement was to provide normal vehicular access to Williams's property. 5 Fagnani, as the owner of the servient estate, is entitled to make any use of the easement that does not unreasonably interfere with this purpose. 6 The Restatement (Third) of Property: Servi-tudes, section 4.9, provides: "Except as limited by the terms of the servitude ..., the holder of the servient estate is entitled to make any use of the servient estate that does not unreasonably interfere with enjoyment of the servitude."

The commentary to section 4.9 of the Restatement makes clear that section 4.9 serves as an aid to determining the intent or expectations of the parties in creating a servitude. 7 The commentary goes on to explain:

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Bluebook (online)
228 P.3d 71, 2010 Alas. LEXIS 21, 2010 WL 744250, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/williams-v-fagnani-alaska-2010.