Winkel v. Miller

205 P.3d 688, 288 Kan. 455, 2009 Kan. LEXIS 55
CourtSupreme Court of Kansas
DecidedMarch 27, 2009
Docket99,768
StatusPublished
Cited by12 cases

This text of 205 P.3d 688 (Winkel v. Miller) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Kansas primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Winkel v. Miller, 205 P.3d 688, 288 Kan. 455, 2009 Kan. LEXIS 55 (kan 2009).

Opinion

*456 The opinion of the court was delivered by

Johnson, J.:

Karl P. Winkel, Sr., and Karen S. Winkel, Trustees of the Karl P. Winkel, Sr., Trust No. 1, dated July 1, 2004, (Winkel) appeal the summary judgment granted to Debra L. Miller, Secretary of Transportation of the State of Kansas (KDOT), on a petition for injunctive relief and damages. This appeal is a continuation of Winkel’s persistent efforts, commencing in 1994, to stop KDOT’s operation of an asphalt mixing strip near Winkel’s farmstead. Two prior actions were appealed to the Kansas Court of Appeals. See Winkel v. Kansas Dept. of Transp., No. 73,289, unpublished opinion filed March 15, 1996 (Winkel I); and Winkel v. Kansas Dept. of Transp., No. 94,088, unpublished opinion filed April 7, 2006 (Winkel II). In this latest litigation, we affirm the district court’s summary judgment denying any relief to Winkel.

FACTUAL OVERVIEW

Winkel is the current owner of an 80-acre tract of farmland (farm) in Mitchell County that contains a farmstead on the east side of the tract. In 1952, the north/south road on the east side of the farm was rebuilt and a new curve in the road left a triangular-shaped tract of 1.52 acres (“triangle tract”) on the east side of the highway, separated from the remaining acreage on the west side of the highway. The old north/south road on the east side of the triangle tract remained open.

In connection widi the 1952 highway project, a condemnation action established an easement on the triangle tract for a “highway right of way.” However, the owner of the farm continued to conduct farming operations on the triangle tract for decades, until KDOT ordered Winkel to vacate the premises in 1994. That action was prompted by KDOT’s fee simple acquisition of a strip of land adjacent to the triangle tract, on the east side of the old road, to be used as an asphalt mixing strip. KDOT intended to, and subsequendy did, use the triangle tract to support the mixing strip operations, e.g., to store raw materials and park trucks. The old road was used to access the triangle tract and the mixing strip. Unbeknown to the parties, Mitchell County had vacated the old road as a public right of way in 1993, reverting ownership of the *457 west half of the roadway to Winkel. We will refer to the reverted portion of the road as the “access tract.”

In the first lawsuit, Winkel sought to permanently enjoin the operation of the mixing strip and to recover damages. Winkel proceeded on the theories that the mixing strip operations created a nuisance in the form of noise, dust, and odor which interfered with Winkel’s use of the farmstead; that the noise, dust, and odor from the operation were trespassing upon his farmstead; and that an action for inverse condemnation was created by the reduction in value of the farm caused by the adjacent mixing strip.

The district court granted KDOT summary judgment. The Court of Appeals agreed with the district court’s finding “that the interference with [Winkel’s] use of his property was trivial at best and that it did not, as a matter of law, cause substantial and unreasonable interference with the use of his property.” Winkel I, slip op. at 8. Referencing the Notes on Use for PIK Civ. 2d 3.05, Winkel I found that the trial court should not permit a nuisance case to go to the jury, if the evidence shows no more than trivial harm. Further, the Winkel I court agreed with the finding that Winkel had failed to support his trespass claim with any evidence of a direct or tangible invasion of his property by pollutants or dust. Slip op. at 19-20. Finally, Winkel I rejected the inverse condemnation claim because there was simply no evidence of a taking of the remaining acreage by the State of Kansas. Slip op. at 22.

Winkel let the matter rest for several years, during which KDOT continued to operate the mixing strip. In 2003, Winkel filed an action, again seeking to permanently enjoin the mixing strip operation, and asking for a declaratory judgment that KDOT’s use of the property exceeded tire scope of the original highway right of way easement. During discovery, the parties learned that the old road had been vacated, i.e., that Winkel .owned the west half. KDOT acknowledged that it had no easement to use the access tract. Nevertheless, the district court again granted summary judgment to KDOT, finding the use of the triangle tract and access tract to be consistent with the originally condemned easement.

On appeal, Winkel II rejected Winkel’s claim that KDOT’s non-use of the easement for 42 years, from 1952 to 1994, effected an *458 abandonment of the triangle tract easement. Slip op. at 5. Likewise, the Court of Appeals found that G.S. 1949, 68-413 (1951 Supp.) did not require KDOT to obtain a fee simple absolute interest in the triangle tract, contrary to Winkel’s proffered statutory interpretation. Slip op. at 8.

However, given KDOT’s concession that it had no legal interest in the access tract and that it owed Winkel compensation for its use of that land, Winkel II found the district court had erred in finding KDOT’s use of the access tract to be consistent with the original easement. Slip op. at 6. Likewise, the Court of Appeals opined that the applicable statutes differentiated an easement providing access to the materials necessary for highway construction from an easement for the actual roadway; and that KDOT’s mixing strip use placed an additional burden on the servient estate. Therefore, the original highway right of way did not contemplate or include an easement to access or support a mixing strip which provided materials for highways in general. Slip op. at 11-12. Therefore, the district court’s declaratory judgment on those issues was reversed. However, Winkel II affirmed the district court’s denial of injunctive relief, finding that any harm that Winkel had suffered did not outweigh the adverse impact an injunction would have on the public interest and that Winkel had an adequate remedy at law. Slip op. at 14.

Thereafter, failing in its attempt to negotiate a resolution on Winkel’s damages, KDOT filed an eminent domain action to condemn an appropriate easement in both the access tract and the triangle tract. The condemnation petition provided a metes and bounds description of each tract, i.e., it did not purport to condemn the entire farm. The appointed appraisers’ report set the value of the two tracts at $1,773 before the taking and at no value after the taking. Winkel appealed the award, but that action was stayed after Winkel filed a separate action, again seeking an injunction and damages under the recycled theories of nuisance and inverse condemnation.

The district court rejected Winkel’s argument that the current version of K.S.A. 68-413 did not authorize KDOT to condemn an easement, but rather required it to condemn a fee simple absolute *459 interest. Consistent with Winkel

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Bluebook (online)
205 P.3d 688, 288 Kan. 455, 2009 Kan. LEXIS 55, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/winkel-v-miller-kan-2009.