Romero v. Shih ( 2022 )


Menu:
  • Filed 5/5/22
    CERTIFIED FOR PUBLICATION
    IN THE COURT OF APPEAL OF THE STATE OF CALIFORNIA
    SECOND APPELLATE DISTRICT
    DIVISION EIGHT
    TATANA SPICAKOVA ROMERO                      B310069
    et al.,
    (Los Angeles County
    Plaintiffs, Cross-defendants            Super. Ct. No. EC064933)
    and Appellants,
    v.
    LI-CHUAN SHIH et al.,
    Defendants, Cross-
    complainants and Respondents;
    U.S. BANK NATIONAL
    ASSOCIATION,
    Cross-defendant and
    Respondent.
    APPEAL from a judgment of the Superior Court of Los
    Angeles County, Curtis A. Kin, Judge. Affirmed in part, and
    reversed in part.
    McCormick, Barstow, Sheppard, Wayte & Carruth and
    Scott M. Reddie for Plaintiffs, Cross-defendants and Appellants.
    Songstad Randall Coffee & Humphrey, Janet E. Humphrey
    and Elyn C. Holt for Defendants, Cross-complainants and
    Respondents.
    No appearance by Cross-defendant and Respondent.
    _________________________
    After a bench trial, the trial court resolved a property line
    dispute between two neighbors by creating an easement in favor
    of respondents, the encroaching property owners. It granted
    respondents an exclusive implied easement and, alternatively, an
    equitable easement over the entire 1,296-square-foot
    encroachment. Appellants appeal the judgment.
    We reverse the judgment on the cause of action for implied
    easement, and affirm the judgment on the cause of action for
    equitable easement.
    FACTUAL AND PROCEDURAL BACKGROUND
    A.    The Two Properties at Issue
    The two neighboring properties at issue are located next
    door to each other at 643 West Algeria Avenue (643 property) and
    651 West Algeria Avenue (651 property) in Sierra Madre,
    California.
    Tatana and Cesar Romero (appellants) own 651 property.
    Li-Chuan Shih and Tun-Jen Ko (respondents) own 643 property.
    At times we refer to the 651 address as appellants’ 651 property
    and the 643 address as respondents’ 643 property.
    B.    Prior Owners’ Application for a Lot Line Adjustment
    In 1941, Edwin and Ann Cutler (the Cutlers) purchased
    both properties. At the time of purchase, the 643 property was
    improved with a home, while 651 property was a vacant lot. The
    Cutlers resided in the house located at the 643 address with their
    son Bevon.1
    1
    When referring to Edwin, Ann, or Bevon Cutler
    individually, we use their first names to avoid confusion.
    2
    More than 40 years later, on February 4, 1985, Edwin
    submitted to the Planning Commission of the City of Sierra
    Madre (the City) an application for a variance, seeking a property
    lot line adjustment. The lot line adjustment would have
    increased the width of respondents’ 643 property from 50 to 58
    feet, and reduced the width of appellants’ 651 property (the
    vacant lot) from 63 to 55 feet. The application asked, “How are
    other owners able to use their property that cannot be done on
    this lot at present?”—to which Edwin provided, “Driveway and
    fence line.”
    On February 21, 1985, the City’s Planning Department
    recommended approval of the variance as requested. The
    minutes from the Planning Commission’s meeting held that day
    provide: “Mr. Cutler told the Commission that the driveway is
    extremely narrow and he intended at the time of purchase to
    divide the property and adjust the width of the driveway.” The
    minutes further provide: “In order to adjust the boundary line,
    Mr. Cutler will need an engineer-surveyed parcel map and must
    meet county regulations.” Finally, the minutes note Edwin’s
    application is “[a]pproved; subject to city engineer review of
    parcel map and boundary line adjustment.” (Some capitalization
    omitted.)
    Edwin thereafter retained the services of registered civil
    engineer John B. Abell (Abell) of John B. Abell, Inc., who
    prepared a survey and new legal description for the two
    properties, dated May 8, 1985.
    The new legal description for respondents’ 643 property,
    post lot line adjustment, included additional language: “The west
    50 feet of Lot 15 of Wheeler Heights, in the City of Sierra Madre,
    County of Los Angeles, State of California, as per Map recorded
    3
    in Book 8, page 5 of Maps, in the office of the county recorder of
    said County. [¶] Together with the easterly 8.00 feet of Lot ‘B’ of
    Gurhardy Heights, as per Map recorded in Book 13, page 188 of
    Maps, in the office of the county recorder of said County, lying
    south of the easterly prolongation of the north line of Lot 12 of
    said tract.” (Italics added; boldface and some capitalization
    omitted.)
    Similarly, the legal description for appellants’ 651 property,
    post lot line adjustment, contained additional language: “The
    east 35.2 feet of Lot 12 of Gurhardy Heights, in the City of Sierra
    Madre, as per Map recorded in Book 13, page 188 of Maps, in the
    office of the county recorder of said County, and all that portion of
    Lot ‘B’ of said tract lying south of the easterly prolongation of the
    north line of said Lot 12. [¶] Except therefrom the easterly 8.00
    feet, (measured at right angles to the easterly line), of said Lot
    ‘B.’ ” (Italics added; boldface and some capitalization omitted.)
    The problem at the root of the parties’ dispute is that there
    is no evidence the City ever reviewed or approved the survey and
    new legal description. A certificate of compliance was never
    executed by the City. Similarly, there is no evidence the lot line
    adjustment was ever recorded. But the Cutlers later acted as if
    the new legal description was operative.
    C.    Prior Owners’ Improvements on 651 Property
    Later that year, in 1985, the Cutlers’ son Bevon partnered
    with David Shewmake (Shewmake) to build a house on the
    vacant lot (appellants’ 651 property) and sell it for profit. During
    construction of the house, Bevon and Shewmake built a six-foot-
    tall block wall between the two properties, along the new legal
    boundary line surveyed and described by Abell, but never
    certified by the City.
    4
    In May 1986, a Notice of Completion was issued and
    recorded for construction of the house on appellants’ 651
    property. The Notice stated a legal description of 651 property
    identical to the original legal description for the 63-foot-wide lot
    and not the reduced 55-foot-wide lot proposed in Edwin’s
    application for variance. The legal description specified in the
    Notice did not include the additional language post lot line
    adjustment in the legal description/survey prepared by Abell:
    “Except therefrom the easterly 8.00 feet, (measured at right angles
    to the easterly line), of said Lot ‘B.’ ” (Italics added, boldface and
    some capitalization omitted.)
    D.    Transfers of Title from 1986 until 2014
    On May 9, 1986, the Cutlers recorded a grant deed
    transferring title to appellants’ 651 property to Bevon and
    Shewmake, each receiving an undivided ½ interest as tenants in
    common. The legal description provided in the grant deed did not
    contain the additional language per Abell’s legal description after
    the tentatively approved lot line adjustment. The legal
    description specified in the grant deed was again identical to the
    original legal description for the 63-foot-wide lot and not the
    reduced 55-foot-lot Edwin requested in his variance application.2
    That same date, on May 9, 1986, Bevon and Shewmake
    executed a grant deed transferring title to 651 property to
    2
    After conveying their interest in 651 property to Bevon and
    Shewmake in 1986, the Cutlers executed a series of wild deeds in
    1989, 1992, and 1998 as to the “easterly 8.00 feet of Lot ‘B’.”
    These wild deeds were ineffective and not within the chain of title
    as the Cutlers no longer owned the property when they executed
    the deeds.
    5
    Manfred and Elizabeth Leong (Leongs). The legal description on
    the grant deed again did not contain the additional language
    reflecting a lot line adjustment.
    Twenty years later, on January 20, 2006, a grant deed was
    recorded transferring the 651 property from the Leongs to Dawn
    Hicks. The legal description in the grant deed for the original
    63-foot-wide larger lot was used again.
    On April 9, 2014, a grant deed with the original lot
    dimensions was recorded transferring title of the 651 property to
    appellants.
    Before closing escrow on the 651 property, appellants
    executed the California Residential Purchase Agreement, which
    includes the following provisions. “Buyer acknowledges that the
    square footage of the Property has not been measured by Seller
    . . . (including the square footage of the lot and home) and the
    square footage quoted on any marketing tools . . . is deemed
    approximate and not guaranteed. . . . Buyer is buying the
    Property AS IS, . . . WITH ALL FAULTS AND LIMITATIONS
    and Buyer acknowledges Buyer’s responsibility to perform all due
    diligence and investigation regarding Buyer’s acquisition of the
    Property, including the measurement or confirmation of the
    square footage of the Property.”
    On July 1, 2014, a grant deed was recorded transferring
    title to the 643 property to respondents Tun-Jen Ko and Li-
    Chuan Shih. The legal description in the grant deed did not
    contain the additional language increasing their square footage
    as reflected in Edwin’s lot line adjustment application.
    The Seller Property Questionnaire—received, initialed, and
    signed by respondents on June 24, 2014—provided there are no
    “[s]urveys, easements, encroachments or boundary disputes”
    6
    regarding 643 property. The Buyer’s Inspection Advisory
    initialed and signed by respondents on May 20, 2014 provided:
    “The physical condition of the land and improvements being
    purchased is not guaranteed by either Seller or Brokers. For this
    reason, you should conduct thorough investigations of the
    Property personally and with professionals who should provide
    written reports of their investigations.” The Buyer’s Inspection
    Advisory further provides: “YOU ARE ADVISED TO CONDUCT
    INVESTIGATIONS OF THE ENTIRE PROPERTY, INCLUDING
    BUT NOT LIMITED TO . . . Square footage, room dimensions, lot
    size, age of improvements and boundaries. . . . Fences, hedges,
    walls, retaining walls and other natural or constructed barriers
    or markers do not necessarily identify true Property boundaries.
    (Professionals such as appraisers, architects, surveyors and civil
    engineers are best suited to determine square footage,
    dimensions and boundaries of the Property.)” (Boldface omitted.)
    E.    Appellants’ Civil Complaint
    On February 10, 2016, appellants initiated a civil action
    against respondents. The operative third amended complaint,
    filed on May 22, 2019, alleged causes of action for wrongful
    occupation of real property, quiet title, trespass, private nuisance,
    wrongful disparagement of title, and permanent injunction.
    The complaint alleged the following: “One of the main
    reasons [appellants] purchased [the 651] property was because it
    was advertised to have an approximately 10,000 square foot lot.”
    In June 2015, appellants retained licensed land surveyor James
    Kevorkian (Kevorkian) to prepare a survey of the boundaries of
    their property. Appellants were then made aware that
    respondents were “encroaching” onto their property. The total
    area encroached upon is a strip of land measuring approximately
    7
    8.25 feet by 157.14 feet, totaling 1,296 square feet, “or
    approximately 13% of [appellants’] total land area which they
    legally own and on which they have paid and continue to pay
    property taxes.” The encroaching area include the block wall
    between the two properties, respondents’ planters near the front
    sidewalk, and a portion of respondents’ driveway parallel to the
    misplaced wall. Respondents’ purchase of the neighboring 643
    property did not include any easement, as “the Seller’s Transfer
    Disclosure Statement and other sale documents . . . did not
    disclose any encroachments or easements.” In July 2015,
    appellants asked respondents to remove the encroachments and
    “share in the cost of building a new fence on the property line”
    but respondents “refused to do so.”
    Appellants argued respondents’ encroachments prevent
    them from entering or using approximately 1,296 square feet of
    their land; this “continuing trespass” continues to result in
    damage “on a daily basis” depriving appellants of their “right to
    exclusive possession and peaceful enjoyment” of their property.
    Respondents have “no right, title or interest” in or to appellants’
    property that “would lawfully allow them . . . to enter upon and
    use any portion of” appellants’ property. Appellants believed
    they “are entitled to a permanent injunction” requiring
    respondents to remove all encroachments. As a result of
    respondents’ actions, appellants have suffered and continue to
    suffer general, compensatory, and consequential damages in an
    amount no less than $300,000.
    8
    F.    Respondents’ Cross-Complaint
    On May 5, 2016, respondents filed a cross-complaint
    against appellants for implied easement, equitable easement,
    quiet title, and declaratory relief.3
    The cross-complaint alleged appellants’ and respondents’
    neighboring properties “were in the past owned by the same
    owner(s)” who “installed pavement and built a wall, planters and
    other improvements on the properties, which currently exist on
    the properties.” The prior “owner(s) made a variance request
    with the City of Sierra Madre to create two parcels and widen the
    driveway for [respondents’ property].” The improvements “have
    existed since 1985, and [respondents] and their predecessors in
    interest have used the [i]mprovements without complaint since at
    least that time.” Appellants “threaten to remove the
    [i]mprovements and build a new fence on the property line . . .
    which would impact [respondents’] use and enjoyment of [their
    property].” Respondents “will suffer irreparable harm if they are
    not granted an easement” over the improvements located on
    appellants’ property “because the value of [respondents’ property]
    would be significantly diminished and the driveway . . . would not
    be wide enough to access [respondents’ property].” Respondents
    argued this created an equitable easement over appellants’
    property in the area of the improvements.
    Respondents also argued the “acts of the prior owner[s]” of
    the properties “created an implied easement,” referring to the
    variance request, the separation of title to the properties, the
    3
    Respondents also named appellants’ lender, U.S. Bank
    National Association, as a cross-defendant so it would be bound
    by any judgment awarding an easement.
    9
    “obvious and permanent use of the [i]mprovements for the benefit
    of” respondents’ property, and “[r]easonable necessity of the use
    giving rise to the easement.”
    Respondents sought “to quiet title to an equitable easement
    and/or an implied easement” over appellants’ land; they
    requested the easement run with the land and be binding on all
    successors-in-interest. They requested “a judicial determination
    of their rights and remedies . . . relating to the parties’ claims.”
    In addition, respondents requested appellants pay for
    respondents’ “out-of-pocket expenses and other administrative,
    investigative, and ancillary expenses incurred.”
    G.    Trial
    A five-day bench trial took place on March 9, 10, 11, 12,
    2020 and June 30, 2020.
    An important exchange took place between the parties and
    the court on the second day of trial. The court stated: “It seems
    to me that everybody is in agreement that if the easement were
    either—if there were an easement in favor of the 643 property,
    that is essentially for exclusive use. [¶] . . . [¶] . . . I mean, it
    would be, with regard to an easement, an exclusive use. It’s not
    like the Romeros are going to every so often hop over the fence
    and walk along there because they own the property.” Counsel
    for respondents responded: “I agree with that statement, your
    honor.” The court further stated, “I’m not really thinking you are
    getting much pushback on the factual matter that if an easement
    were to arise by implication, generally speaking the use of that
    easement by the property owners of 643 have it for largely
    exclusive purposes.”
    The evidence at trial established no real dispute about the
    basic historical facts; the evidence fell into two categories.
    10
    Besides establishing the City’s zoning and variance requirements
    and the extent of the encroachment, the testimony focused on the
    effect of the encroachment on the parties. This was developed
    through the testimony of appellant and several expert witnesses.
    1.    Zoning and Variance Requirements and Extent of
    Encroachment
    Vincent Gonzalez (Gonzalez), the Director of Planning and
    Community Preservation for the City, described the procedure for
    obtaining a lot line variance in 1985: “[T]he matter would go
    before the Planning Commission. They would make the decision
    to deny or recommend. Once that is done, then the applicant
    submits for the lot line adjustment or subdivision. [¶] And the
    documents would include a recorded survey and, also, a legal
    description of the intended division of lots at the conclusion of the
    subdivision, and, also, a certificate of compliance would be
    required to be completed and signed by the property owner, the
    Director of Public Works, the Director of Planning and
    Community Preservation, and the city engineer.” “Usually what
    occurs is the property owner or city engineer, the public works
    director, and, in some cases, the planning director, will sign a
    certificate of compliance stating that everything—the legal
    description has been prepared, the plat map has been prepared,
    and has been reviewed and evaluated by the city [engineer],
    confirmed all those findings. [¶] The certificate of compliance is
    signed [and] given to the property owner for recordation of the
    county.”
    Gonzalez confirmed he found in the City’s files a copy of
    Edwin’s 1985 application for a variance request. He confirmed
    the application requested a lot line adjustment. He confirmed
    the Planning Commission recommended approval of the variance,
    11
    subject to conditions. “[B]efore the [variance], the granting of the
    lot line adjustment is the first step in the process, and then the
    property owner subsequently obtains a survey, a record of survey,
    legal description. And that would ultimately be reviewed by the
    city engineer.” The property owner “would need to obtain [a civil]
    engineer to survey the parcel.” The property owner “would have
    submitted [the record of survey and legal description], after it
    was prepared by the civil engineer, to the public works
    department to the city engineer for review.”
    Gonzalez did not know “whether the city engineer ever
    reviewed . . . the site plan and the legal description” prepared by
    Abell. He stated: “It appears that there was a survey completed.
    There is also that a legal description was prepared. But I see no
    evidence that the certificate of compliance was ever signed and
    recorded.” He confirmed no lot line adjustment was recorded;
    however, he also confirmed he did not see anything in the City’s
    files indicating Edwin had withdrawn his variance application.
    In 2014, the City required new construction to have a
    driveway width of 10 feet; this remains the driveway width
    requirement for the City. The City “consider[s] a 10-foot-wide
    driveway reasonable.”
    In terms of parking space requirements, this residential
    zone requires “[t]wo spaces per dwelling unit in a garage or
    carport.” Respondents’ 643 property, thus, must have two
    parking spaces in a garage or carport. In terms of parking,
    James Guerra, a building inspector for Building and Safety for
    the City for approximately 22 years, confirmed that the City’s
    overnight parking ordinance allows residents to obtain overnight
    parking permits for the annual fee of $97.
    12
    Yuchi David Tsai (Tsai) was respondents’ real estate agent
    in connection with their purchase and management of 643
    property. He showed the property to respondent Ms. Shih
    sometime in May 2014. He believed the property line was where
    the “block wall [was] up.” He also believed the front planter box
    was part of 643 property because “the planter box material [was]
    the same thing, consistent throughout the 643 [property].” Tsai
    recalled explaining the seller’s purchase agreement and real
    estate transfer disclosure agreement to respondents, and “after
    [he] explained, Ms. Shih sign[ed] the agreement.” Tsai confirmed
    reviewing the preliminary title report with respondents; he also
    confirmed the preliminary title report specified 643 property lot
    was 50 (not 58) feet wide. He was not aware of any
    encroachments or easements affecting either property at the time
    respondents finalized the transaction.
    Tsai discovered the property line issue when appellants
    came to his office in 2015 and informed him of the survey
    findings. The next day, Tsai went to the City and “learned the
    same owner owned the other side, and then there was a
    subdivider to build the other property.” He saw the Planning
    Commission’s meeting notes and recalled “it described the
    variance was approved” and thus, he concluded “the block [wall]
    was built on the new property line.” When he informed
    respondents of the circumstances, they were “surprised.”
    David Knell (Knell), a licensed land surveyor, researched
    the L.A. County Surveyor’s website, viewed the survey history
    and historical maps, reviewed Kevorkian’s record survey of 651
    property, and conducted a field survey of the two properties. He
    concluded the following improvements on respondents’ 643
    property encroach onto appellants’ 651 property: portion of the
    13
    driveway, the planter, and the air conditioner unit attached to
    the side of the garage located at the back end of the driveway
    behind the house. The width of the encroachment totals 8.7 feet,
    and the total square footage of the encroachment is 1,296. The
    distance from the side of the garage on 643 property to the true
    property line is 0.8 feet, i.e., about 10 inches. The air conditioner
    “sticks out from” the side of the garage “into the 651 property,
    and that dimension is 1.2 feet.” Should the property line reflect
    what is in the deeds, the width of the driveway on respondents’
    643 property at its narrowest point is 7.2 feet.
    Knell confirmed that the survey map prepared for Edwin
    by Abell did not have Abell’s stamp or seal on it. Every parcel
    map that Knell has ever prepared and recorded in any county
    recorder’s office in California “had to have the stamp or seal for
    the licensed surveyor or the civil engineer who is taking
    responsibility for that document,” as that is “clearly stated in the
    Subdivision Map Act.” A completed lot line adjustment requires
    a recorded parcel map/deed, and recordation requires the stamp
    or seal on the map/deed. Knell has never seen a parcel map or
    subdivision map without a stamp or seal for the licensed civil
    engineer or land surveyor who had signed it. He referred to
    Abell’s survey map as a “draft,” that is, “it just was not a finished
    product, so I think ‘draft’ is an appropriate word.”
    Catherine Connen (Connen), the president and principal
    civil engineer at John B. Abell, Inc., is a registered civil engineer
    and has worked with her father, John B. Abell, since 1982. Her
    father’s business maintained accounts receivable records in the
    ordinary course of business. It was the custom and practice of
    the company in 1985 to maintain records reflecting amounts
    billed, amounts owed, and amounts paid by customers.
    14
    Payments received from customers were recorded in the accounts
    receivable ledger.
    Connen brought with her to court “the actual original
    ledgers for the period of 1985.” A page from the ledger provided
    the job number (“2-1452”), the client (“Ed Cutler”), the site
    address or street (“Alegria Ave”), the amount billed (“$165”), and
    the date billed (“6-4-85”). It also provided space to specify the
    amount paid by the client and the date paid, but those areas were
    left blank next to Cutler’s name, possibly meaning the amount
    owed was not paid.
    2.    Effect of the Encroachment
    Then a battle of expert witnesses ensued.
    Steven McCormick (McCormick), a licensed commercial
    general contractor, analyzed the feasibility of the property line
    easement being vacated and its effects “on the viability of the
    home.”
    The City had enacted a 10-foot minimum driveway width
    for properties located in R1 zones in the City. The 643 property
    is located in an R1 zone. The City also had setback requirements
    for properties in R1 zones: “The front-yard setback is 25 feet, the
    side-yard setbacks are 5 feet, and the rear-yard setback is
    15 feet.” Additionally, zoning ordinances in R1 zones in the City
    required two covered parking spaces.
    McCormick gave his opinion on how respondents’ 643
    property would be impacted if it did not have use of the entire
    encroachment area: “Well, obviously, the width of the driveway
    would be reduced. The section going along the length of the home
    would be down to 7.2 feet,” which did not comply with the City’s
    current zoning codes. If the driveway width was 7.2 feet, “[y]ou
    would be very limited on the cars that can get through there. It
    15
    would really boil down to subcompacts and . . . a certain
    percentage of compact cars. But midsize and full size cars either
    [w]on’t fit or would be extremely tight getting through there.” He
    determined the foregoing by looking up car dimensions on the
    website automobiledimension.com. He concluded that a Toyota
    Prius would fit through a 7.2-feet-wide driveway, a Tesla Model S
    (the smaller Tesla) would just barely fit with the side-mirrors
    retracted, but the Tesla Model X (the largest Tesla) would not fit.
    Additionally, he believed one would be unable to open the doors
    and exit a car in a 7.2-feet-wide driveway. “[E]ven with a Toyota
    Prius, you could not get out of the car between the house and the
    wall, but . . . once you get back to the garage, there is room back
    there.”
    He opined on alternative ways to widen the driveway for
    respondents’ 643 property in the event the block wall was moved
    to reflect actual property lines. He came “up with the possibility
    of tearing off the side of the house and moving the footings and
    [to] reframe the house back about 4 feet from its existing
    position.” He believed respondents “certainly would be able to
    widen the driveway, but it creates a couple of problems. The first
    problem, besides cost, is the fact” that moving the wall over
    would cause the secondary bedroom to “shrink down to the point
    where it violated the L.A. County habitability requirements.” To
    constitute a bedroom, the room must be at least 100 square feet,
    but moving the wall over would cause the secondary bedroom to
    be less than 100 square feet. Per McCormick, the total cost of the
    demolition and rebuild was $99,120.27.
    McCormick also offered his opinion on how the garage on
    643 property would be impacted. “[I]f the easement area was
    removed and a new wall was put up along . . . the property line
    16
    that’s in contention here, essentially, you would have just a few
    inches between that fence and the left-side exterior wall of . . . the
    garage.” Thus, “two things would occur. One, there is an area for
    parking. [There] was a camper trailer unit there before. You
    would lose that [parking area].” Two, “[t]here is an air-
    conditioning unit that’s been mounted on the side of the [garage]
    wall, which you can see on the left-hand side, protrudes into that
    space. So the fact that there is only a few inches, you cannot
    repaint or maintain that exterior wall.” If the block wall was
    moved to the property line, the distance between the block wall
    and the garage wall would not comply with the City’s five-foot
    setback requirements.
    He performed a cost estimate to move the garage over to
    accommodate the five-foot setback requirement of the City and
    reached the total cost of $73,343. The garage would need to move
    “somewhere between 5 and 6 feet” to comply with the five-foot
    setback requirement. The effect of moving or shrinking the
    garage by five or six feet would result in the garage “being about
    like 12 to 14 feet wide,” which would be enough to comfortably fit
    one vehicle, but not two. He determined another alternative
    would be to “do a carport in front of the garage, but you end up
    essentially parking tandem. So one [parking spot] would be
    inside the garage and one [parking spot] would be outside in the
    carport.” Finally, he provided a cost estimate of $2500 for
    relocating the air-conditioning unit from the side of the garage.
    Next, licensed professional land surveyor Kevorkian
    determined the width of the encroachment area as 8.25 feet and
    the length as 157.13 feet from front to rear. The total square
    footage of the encroachment totaled 1,296.32 square feet.
    17
    He confirmed the land survey he prepared for appellants
    had his stamp on it. When asked why he put his stamp on it, he
    answered, “Because it’s legal. It makes it legal.” ~(RT 401; 4AA
    520)~
    Steve Helfrich (Helfrich), a licensed general contractor,
    civil engineer, and geotechnical engineer, also testified about the
    width of the driveway. The driveway width at its narrowest is
    7.2 feet for a length of about 27.5 feet—where the driveway
    borders respondents’ residence. The driveway gets wider as it
    approaches the back garage and is wider at the sidewalk near the
    planter box.
    Helfrich opined that a 2018 Toyota Prius (with a width of
    69.3 inches) would be able to make a multipoint turn in the
    20-foot-by-20-foot area in front of the garage and then go back
    down to the street via the driveway. If the property line were
    moved to reflect true lot lines, “the width of the driveway is 86
    inches, and the width of the Prius without the mirrors is 69
    inches. So you have—it depends on how wide the mirrors are,
    but I think that there’s more than a few inches on each side.”
    Besides the 20-by-20 area where a car may maneuver around, the
    only other way to get in and out of the garage would be to back
    out of the driveway. When asked why he chose only to
    concentrate on a 2018 Toyota Prius in his analysis, Helfrich
    answered: “That was, I felt, representative of a compact car.”
    Gidon Vardi (Vardi), a certified building inspector and
    construction and safety consultant with a general contractor’s
    license, reviewed McCormick’s cost estimate report. which
    essentially “calls for complete demolition and rebuilding of
    [respondents’] property and dwelling” as well as “the garage and
    18
    adjacent structure.” Vardi believed McCormick’s estimates were
    simply “excessive and unreasonable.”
    Daniel Poyourow (Poyourow), a licensed real estate
    appraiser and real estate broker, had prepared diminution in
    value appraisals, including in the Sierra Madre area.
    A diminution in value appraisal is based upon the before and
    after condition of a property.
    Poyourow analyzed and valued appellants’ 651 property
    “before, and then after, [he] considered the loss in land use, and
    valued the land separately. [He] [a]llocated a certain portion of
    the land to the easement area, and . . . diminished the value
    based upon a loss of certain rights and uses.” He collected
    comparable sales data on land and improved properties, prepared
    an adjustment grid, analyzed the data, and drew the following
    conclusions.
    Using the sales comparison approach, he set the value of
    appellants’ 651 property, including the area of the encroachment,
    at $1.310 million. He placed the land value of the property at
    $710,000. He calculated the diminution in value from losing the
    encroachment area measured at 1,224 square feet as $68,264.
    Relying on Kevorkian’s square footage of 1,296 square feet, the
    diminution in value increased to $71,000.
    Poyourow “examined what rights or uses would remain to
    [appellants’] 651 property.” He opined some uses do remain, even
    though the property is used primarily by respondents. He set the
    diminution in value as a result of the encroachment at $67,000;
    thus, the net value of appellants’ 651 property, after subtracting
    out the diminution in value, was $1.243 million. He added that
    appellants’ 651 property could support another 300 square feet of
    19
    structure which is “really important and a big value to the
    651 property.”
    As for respondents’ 643 property—with a lot size of
    7,853 square feet without the encroachment and 9,072 square
    feet with the encroachment—Poyourow used the sales
    comparison approach and set the value of the property with the
    encroaching area at $915,000. He calculated the value of the
    encroachment area itself at $67,000. He valued respondents’
    property without the encroachment area at $782,000, with a total
    diminution of $133,000 (or $137,000 for 1,296 square feet).
    Poyourow looked at the hardship or burdens that
    respondents’ 643 property would experience as a result of losing
    the encroachment. “[T]hey would lose some parking because the
    driveway would become so narrow.” “They would also lose that
    open third parking space.” He opined the cost to replace a second
    and third open parking space would be $19,000 each; he opined
    loss of the garage parking resulted in a $15,000 reduction in
    value for the two spaces, totaling $53,000 for loss of parking. He
    conceded a resident can park on the street overnight with an
    annual permit costing less than $200. He also conceded the loss
    of the planter box “is primarily an aesthetic issue, just the
    planter boxes themselves. [He was] more concerned with the
    driveway issues.” Finally, he estimated $2,500 as the cost of
    relocating the air conditioning unit on the side of the garage.
    In his appraisal, Poyourow stated the subject encroachment
    area is “effectively exclusive.” “The surface area is being
    exclusively used [by respondents] right now.” The potential for
    any remaining use by appellants “is remote.” He stated that the
    prospect of appellants installing new pipes underneath the
    encroachment area “would be remote, but it is possible to do.”
    20
    David Harding (Harding), a licensed real estate appraiser
    in central California, also calculated the diminution in value for
    each property. Using the sales comparison approach, he
    appraised appellants’ 651 property including the 1,296 square
    foot encroaching area at $1.375 million. Without the disputed
    area, his appraised value was $1,264,840. He attributed
    $110,160 as the value of the 1,296-square-foot encroachment
    area.
    Harding took his diminution in value calculation one step
    further by analyzing the “diminution of value to the property over
    and above the value of the land.” He calculated a diminution of
    value for appellants’ property of 15 percent, which amounted to
    an even lower total appraised value of $1.075 million. And the
    “total difference between the value in the before condition and
    the value in the after condition” is $300,000. When asked how he
    reached the figure of 15 percent, he stated: “This is too
    convoluted. I come across this type of thing a lot in my
    diminution of value analysis appraisals. They’re complicated
    issues, and admittedly there’s unfortunately no way to support
    them accurately with market data. [¶] So I thought about it a lot,
    and I came to—you know about 10 percent, that seems a little
    low. I think that’s more than that. 20 percent seemed high.
    15 percent is in the middle of that. It seemed like a comfortable
    figure. I calculated what that equated to in terms of a dollar
    value.”
    Finally, appellants Cesar and Tatana Romero testified
    about their damages. The advertised lot size for the 651 property
    was very close to 10,000 square feet. The lot size was appellants’
    main criteria and they would not have purchased the 651
    property if it had been advertised as an 8,500-square-foot lot.
    21
    The fact that there was an encroachment from the adjacent
    property was never disclosed to appellants when they purchased
    the 651 property.
    Before purchasing the property, Cesar noted the house was
    “in bad condition” so his inspection of the property and “main
    focus was on the house”; he did not look at the block wall or the
    neighboring property. A year after purchasing 651 property,
    Cesar “was doing some work in the front to improve [his] yard,
    and [had] to do some measurements to order some building
    materials.” “When [he took] the measurements, it didn’t seem
    like the right width of the yard.” Appellants hired James
    Kevorkian who prepared a survey and informed them of the
    encroachment. Appellants wanted to resolve the encroachment
    issue without court intervention. They contacted Tsai about the
    issue, but Tsai was “dismissive.” The next day, Tsai informed
    appellants of his findings from the Planning Commission
    meetings and the lot line adjustment request.
    Since appellants’ purchase of 651 property, they have paid
    property taxes on the property, including the nearly 1,300-
    square-foot disputed land. Since their purchase of the property,
    they have not been able to use that 1,300 square feet for any
    purpose; they are, in fact, physically prevented from using or
    accessing it because of the block wall. As things stand now,
    appellants have conceived no plans for use of the disputed area.
    However, they have ideas for use of the disputed land should they
    get it back. Cesar testified, “[W]e would like to be able to have
    more area there so that we can increase our privacy. We would
    like to plant . . . in the front. . . . My wife wants to plant an
    orchard. I would like to place a pool in the back.” Appellants
    have “been in this lawsuit for—going on almost five years now
    22
    and spent maybe close to $300,000 in order to actually be able to
    assert the rights of something that I’ve actually bought. [¶] I
    mean, I bought a lot of almost 10,000 square foot, and it was
    important to us to have a large lot, and it’s still important to us.
    Because it’s our land, and I believe in property rights.”
    Tatana echoed her husband’s testimony. She testified,
    “13 percent of [her] property” is being exclusively used by the
    occupants of 643 property. “I believe in our constitutionally
    protected property rights I have bought, paid for, and legally own
    the approximate 10,000-square-foot lot.” As it currently stands,
    she is “precluded” from utilizing the 1,296 square feet in any way.
    Yet, she and her husband would be exposed to the potential of
    unlimited and perpetual liability for “any injuries that might
    happen on an area over which I have no control.” She gave an
    example of how there are a lot of young children living on West
    Algeria Avenue between “the ages from zero, newborns, to 5, 6, 7
    years old, and they play a lot on West [Algeria] Avenue. They are
    running around, learning how to ride a bicycle, tricycle. They are
    using the sidewalk quite a bit.” “[W]hat could happen is that the
    young child could trip over a loose brick or something that the
    tenants of the 643 property would do, and if that child happens to
    trip and suffer, God forbid, a catastrophic brain injury or
    paralysis, I will be exclusively personally liable for being
    responsible for those injuries because I’m the legal owner of that
    particular strip of land, and that is a huge problem.”
    Appellants had title insurance with First American Title
    Insurance Company. After respondents filed their cross-
    complaint, First American Title Insurance Company paid
    appellants $95,000 for their loss of use of the encroachment area.
    23
    H.    Statement of Decision
    On August 24, 2020, the trial court issued its proposed
    statement of decision. Respondents requested one clarification,
    which the court adopted. Appellants raised 53 objections to the
    proposed statement of decision and requested additional and
    alternative findings. We note appellants’ Objection No. 22, where
    they objected to trial court’s granting of the easement as it is
    “essentially permanent” and “not narrowly drawn to promote
    justice.”
    On September 28, 2020, the trial court filed its statement of
    decision and concluded respondents “possess an implied
    easement over the eight-foot strip of land.” The court further
    concluded that if there were no such implied easement, an
    equitable easement should arise, which would entitle appellants
    to compensation of $69,000.
    The court’s lengthy statement of decision provided, in
    relevant part:
    Implied Easement
    The court found “all the conditions exist for an implied
    easement in favor of the 643 Property over the eight-foot strip of
    land.” The easement “shall run with the land, and, consistent
    with the original grantor and grantee’s intent in 1986, shall
    terminate if the 643 Property ceases its continued use of the
    easement for a driveway, planter, and wall/fence.”
    The court also found “the continued encroachment onto the
    disputed strip of land is reasonably necessary” and referred to the
    fact that the 643 property’s driveway would measure 7.2 feet at
    its narrowest point, which fell several feet short of the City’s
    minimum driveway width requirement of 10 feet.
    24
    The court found the implied easement “is not necessarily
    ‘exclusive,’ as various subsurface uses (e.g., running underground
    pipes or cables) are available to the 651 Property.”
    Equitable Easement
    The court found “all three factors for the creation of an
    equitable easement are present” and exercised its discretion to
    impose a “judicially created, equitable easement over the strip of
    land . . . for the 643 Property to maintain a driveway, planter and
    wall/fence [that] should run with the land, but should terminate
    if the 643 Property were to cease its continued use of that land
    for a driveway, planter and wall/fence.”
    The court found respondents were “innocent parties with no
    knowledge of the encroachments and no basis to know of them.”
    The court further found appellants “would not suffer any
    irreparable harm from such continued encroachment.” While
    appellant Cesar Romero “testified generally that removal of such
    encroachments would afford him greater privacy and the ability
    to plant trees and/or build a pool in his backyard, there was no
    evidence at trial of any actual plans [appellants] had to increase
    privacy, landscape, or construct a pool that their lot in its current
    state would prevent or adversely affect in some substantial
    manner.”
    While appellants argued “the continued encroachment . . .
    burdens them because they continue to pay property taxes for
    land being used by another”, there was “no evidence . . .
    concerning property taxes [appellants] actually pay for the 651
    Property and what, if any, unfair tax burden [they] assume for
    the strip of land they cannot fully use.” Regarding the “potential
    legal liability for the strip of land,” the court believed “any such
    liability (or pecuniary damage flowing therefrom) is too
    25
    speculative and uncertain to carry much weight.” “Largely, it
    appears to the Court that any harm to [appellants] is emotional
    or psychological. . . . [W]hile the hardship to [appellants] may be
    felt substantially by them, it is greatly outweighed by the actual
    harm [respondents] would suffer absent an easement over the
    strip of land.”
    The court referred to McCormick’s testimony about “the
    impracticality and great expense of alternatives to the easement”
    and found there is no “viable, reasonable alternatives to an
    easement.” The court “rejects the testimony of . . . Helfrich, who
    opined that the driveway on the 643 Property could continue to
    be used even if it were narrowed to the actual property line” as
    his opinion “was based solely on . . . one car—a 2018 Prius.” The
    court also “found unhelpful the testimony of . . . Vardi” as he “did
    not meaningfully explain how he arrived at [construction and
    repair] costs.” The court found Harding’s testimony about the
    diminution in value to the properties “wholly unreliable and
    entirely unconvincing” as he “had never previously appraised any
    property in Sierra Madre” and had “only conducted two
    diminution in value appraisals involving encroachments ever.”
    The court found Harding’s testimony “either should have been
    excluded or stricken in its entirety for lack of foundation and
    reliability or should be disregarded and afforded no weight to the
    extent it was admissible.”
    The court considered the diminution in value to the
    respective properties. The court viewed Poyourow’s testimony
    “the only competent evidence of such diminution in value.” The
    court referred to Poyourow’s conclusion that the “effect of an
    easement over the disputed area would be a diminution of value
    to the 651 Property of $67,000, or an additional $4,000 if using
    26
    the slightly greater square footage calculation of [appellants’]
    survey for the area of encroachment” and $133,000 as the
    diminution in value to the 643 property without the easement.
    “[T]he balance of hardships greatly favors [respondents].”
    The court found appellants entitled to compensation if
    subject to the equitable easement, and found “the best measure of
    damage . . . is the diminution in value to their property.” The
    court credited Poyourow’s calculations and split the $4,000
    additional amount based on the square footage difference, and
    “conclude[d] that $69,000 would constitute just compensation to
    [appellants] for the creation of an equitable easement.”
    Remaining Claims
    Having found an implied easement in favor of respondents’
    643 property, the court found the easement dispositive of the
    remaining claims in the third amended complaint and the cross-
    complaint.
    On October 26, 2020, the trial court filed its judgment and
    appellants timely appealed.
    DISCUSSION
    Appellants make three primary arguments on appeal.
    First, they argue the trial court’s judgment “should be reversed
    because, as a matter of law, the court cannot create an exclusive
    implied easement.” Second, appellants argue “[a]ssuming
    implied exclusive easements are permissible, the court erred in
    creating an implied easement.” Appellants believe substantial
    evidence does not support the court’s findings as to the elements
    for implied easement. Third, appellants contend the court
    abused its discretion and “erred in creating an equitable
    easement” which “is not narrowly tailored to promote justice and
    27
    is significantly greater in scope and duration than what is
    necessary to protect [respondents’] needs.”
    We address appellants’ first two contentions in part B and
    their third contention in part C.
    A.    Easements, Generally
    An easement is a “ ‘restricted right to specific, limited,
    definable use or activity upon another’s property, which right
    must be less than the right of ownership.’ ” (Scruby v. Vintage
    Grapevine, Inc. (1995) 
    37 Cal.App.4th 697
    , 702, first italics added
    (Scruby).) An easement gives a nonpossessory and restricted
    right to a specific use or activity upon another’s property.
    (McBride v. Smith (2018) 
    18 Cal.App.5th 1160
    , 1174.) An
    easement “is not a type of ownership, but rather an ‘incorporeal
    interest in land . . . “ ‘which confers a right upon the owner
    thereof to some profit, benefit, dominion, or lawful use out of or
    over the estate of another.’ ” ’ ” (Hansen v. Sandridge Partners,
    L.P. (2018) 
    22 Cal.App.5th 1020
    , 1032 (Hansen).) The key
    distinction between an ownership interest in land and an
    easement interest in land is that the former involves possession
    of land whereas the latter involves a limited use of land. (Ibid.)
    Civil Code section 801 provides a list of 18 types of “land
    burdens, or servitudes upon land . . . as incidents or
    appurtenances . . . called easements” including, among other
    things, the right of pasture; the right of fishing; the right of
    taking game; the right-of-way; the right of taking water, wood,
    minerals, and other things; and the right of using a wall as a
    party wall. (Civ. Code, § 801.)
    “The general rule is clearly established that, despite the
    granting of an easement, the owner of the servient tenement may
    make any use of the land that does not interfere unreasonably
    28
    with the easement.” (Pasadena v. California-Michigan etc. Co.
    (1941) 
    17 Cal.2d 576
    , 579 (Pasadena).) The owner of the
    dominant tenement must use his/her easements and rights in
    such a way so as to impose as slight burden as possible on the
    servient tenement. (Scruby, supra, 37 Cal.App.4th at p. 702.)
    B.    The Court Erred in Granting an Exclusive Implied
    Easement that Amounted to Fee Title.
    1.    Standard of Review
    The party claiming an implied easement has the burden of
    proving each element of the cause of action by a preponderance of
    the evidence, and the factual findings of the trial court are
    binding on the appellate court if supported by substantial
    evidence. (Thorstrom v. Thorstrom (2011) 
    196 Cal.App.4th 1406
    , 1419 (Thorstrom); Tusher v. Gabrielsen (1998)
    
    68 Cal.App.4th 131
    , 145; Orr v. Kirk (1950) 
    100 Cal.App.2d 678
    ,
    684 (Orr).) The court looks to all facts, the situation of the
    parties and the properties, and the circumstances surrounding
    the transaction to determine, as a question of fact, whether the
    parties intended to create the easement. (Tusher, at pp. 144–145;
    George v. Goshgarian (1983) 
    139 Cal.App.3d 856
    , 861–863;
    Piazza v. Schaefer (1967) 
    255 Cal.App.2d 328
    , 332.)
    2.    Applicable Law
    Under certain circumstances, the law implies that the
    parties intended to create or transfer an easement by a grant or
    reservation when there is no written document evidencing their
    intent and, in some cases, even when there is no oral agreement
    regarding the easement; thus, implied easements are “an
    exception to the general rule that interests in real property can
    29
    only be created by an express writing or prescription.” (Kytasty v.
    Godwin (1980) 
    102 Cal.App.3d 762
    , 768.)
    Implied easements are not favored. (Thorstrom, supra,
    196 Cal.App.4th at p. 1420; Horowitz v. Noble (1978)
    
    79 Cal.App.3d 120
    , 131 (Horowitz).) The factual circumstances
    that permit the creation of implied easements are fairly well
    established and the implication can only arise where certain facts
    are present. (County of Los Angeles v. Bartlett (1962)
    
    203 Cal.App.2d 523
    , 529–530; Orr, supra, 100 Cal.App.2d at
    p. 681; Navarro v. Paulley (1944) 
    66 Cal.App.2d 827
    , 829
    (Navarro).) The courts jealously guard against any unreasonable
    or inequitable extensions of these rules beyond their original
    objectives. (6 Miller & Starr, Cal. Real Estate (4th ed. 2021)
    § 15:19.)
    Civil Code section 1104 provides the circumstances under
    which the law implies the existence of an easement: “A transfer
    of real property passes all easements attached thereto, and
    creates in favor thereof an easement to use other real property of
    the person whose estate is transferred in the same manner and to
    the same extent as such property was obviously and permanently
    used by the person whose estate is transferred, for the benefit
    thereof, at the time when the transfer was agreed upon or
    completed.” (Civ. Code, § 1104.)
    In contrast to a non-exclusive easement, wherein the
    servient owner (in this case, appellants) may continue to use the
    easement area so long as such use does not unreasonably
    interfere with the use by the dominant owner (here,
    respondents), an exclusive easement only permits the dominant
    owner to use the easement area. (Scruby, supra, 37 Cal.App.4th
    at pp. 702–703.) Granting an exclusive easement in effect strips
    30
    the servient estate owner of the right to use the land for certain
    purposes, thus limiting the fee title; therefore, exclusive
    easements generally are not favored by the courts. Prior courts
    have referred to exclusive easements as “rare” (Hirshfield v.
    Schwartz (2001) 
    91 Cal.App.4th 749
    , 769, fn. 11 (Hirshfield)) and
    as “an unusual interest in land; it has been said to amount
    almost to a conveyance of the fee.” (Pasadena, supra, 17 Cal.2d
    at p. 578.)
    Until recently, exclusive easements were found principally
    in older utility easement cases. (See, e.g., Salvaty v. Falcon
    Cable Television (1985) 
    165 Cal.App.3d 798
    , 804.) However, more
    recent cases have upheld exclusive easements in situations where
    the express language of the granting instrument either uses the
    phrase “exclusive easement” (Gray v. McCormick (2008)
    
    167 Cal.App.4th 1019
    , 1025–1026 (Gray)) or the parties intend
    that the dominant owner’s use necessarily must be exclusive (e.g.,
    an easement “ ‘for parking and garage purposes’ ”). (Blackmore v.
    Powell (2007) 
    150 Cal.App.4th 1593
    , 1599–1600 (Blackmore).)
    Thus, so called “exclusive easements” are not prohibited under
    California law so long as the language of the creating instrument
    clearly expresses an intention that the use of the easement area
    shall be exclusive to the dominant owner. (Gray, at p. 1032.) In
    other words, an easement is nonexclusive unless it has been
    made exclusive by the express terms of the instrument creating it
    or the parties have evidenced their clear intent that it is
    exclusive. (Pasadena, supra, 17 Cal.2d at p. 578–579; Otay Water
    Dist. v. Beckwith (1991) 
    1 Cal.App.4th 1041
    , 1047 & fn. 4 (Otay);
    6 Miller & Starr, Cal. Real Estate (4th ed. 2021) § 15:65.)
    31
    3.    Analysis
    We note this is a case of first impression as we have found
    no case that permits or prohibits exclusive implied easements.
    We have reviewed case precedent regarding exclusive easements
    generally, and note the following.
    In most cases involving prescriptive easements, the courts
    have not allowed the easement owner exclusive use (equivalent to
    fee title) of the servient tenement. (See, e.g., Mehdizadeh v.
    Mincer (1996) 
    46 Cal.App.4th 1296
    , 1305–1307 (Mehdizadeh);
    Silacci v. Abramson (1996) 
    45 Cal.App.4th 558
    , 562–564 (Silacci);
    Hansen, supra, 22 Cal.App.5th at pp. 1033–1035; Raab v. Casper
    (1975) 
    51 Cal.App.3d 866
    , 876–877.) “The notion of an exclusive
    prescriptive easement, which as a practical matter completely
    prohibits the true owner from using his land, has no application
    to a simple backyard dispute . . . . An easement, after all, is
    merely the right to cross the land of another . . . is not an
    ownership interest, and certainly does not amount to a fee simple
    estate.” (Silacci, at p. 564, italics added; see Pasadena, supra,
    17 Cal.2d at pp. 578–579.) Similarly, an adjoining property
    owner cannot obtain the equivalent of adverse possession (and
    exclusive use of neighboring property) by alleging the elements of
    a prescriptive easement. (Hansen, at p. 1033.) “Unsurprisingly,
    claimants have often tried to obtain the fruits of adverse
    possession under the guise of a prescriptive easement to avoid
    having to satisfy the tax element. [Citations.] That is, they seek
    judgments ‘employing the nomenclature of easement but . . .
    creat[e] the practical equivalent of an estate.’ [Citation.] Such
    judgments ‘pervert[ ] the classical distinction in real property law
    between ownership and use.’ ” (Ibid.)
    32
    In Kapner v. Meadowlark Ranch Assn. (2004)
    
    116 Cal.App.4th 1182
    , a survey showed that some of Kapner’s
    improvements including portions of his driveway, gate, and
    perimeter fence encroached on another’s parcel. (Id. at p. 1186.)
    The Court of Appeal affirmed that Kapner could not acquire an
    exclusive prescriptive easement over neighboring land by
    enclosing that land with a fence. (Id. at pp. 1186–1187.) The
    court further found Kapner’s use of the neighboring land was not
    in the nature of an easement; instead, the landowner had
    enclosed and possessed the land. (Ibid.) The landowner could
    not establish adverse possession because he had not satisfied the
    necessary requirement of paying taxes for the enclosed land.
    (Id. at p. 1187.) “[A]dverse possession may not masquerade as a
    prescriptive easement.” (Id. at p. 1185.)
    Mehdizadeh is similar to the facts of the case before us, as
    it also involved a dispute between neighbors after discovery that
    a fence built many years earlier was not located on the legal
    boundary between their properties. In Mehdizadeh, a prior
    owner of property A built a fence between property A and
    property B in 1967. (Mehdizadeh, supra, 46 Cal.App.4th at
    p. 1301.) The owner of property B, who purchased the property
    after the fence was built, paid half of the cost, even though the
    parties did not know whether the fence was located on the
    property line. (Ibid.) Property A was sold in 1985 to the current
    owners, who “knew from plot maps” that the fence was not on the
    property line. (Ibid.) After property B was sold to the current
    owners in 1990, the owner of property A obtained a survey that
    showed the fence was 10 feet within the property line of
    property A. He constructed a new fence on the surveyed
    boundary. (Ibid.) The 10-foot area between the properties was
    33
    used by the owner of property B for vegetation, a
    sprinkler/irrigation system, and the owner’s dog. (Id. at
    pp. 1301–1302.) The owner of property B filed an action to
    establish a prescriptive easement over the 10-foot strip. (Id. at
    p. 1302.)
    The Court of Appeal held that the owner of property B
    could not establish title by adverse possession to the disputed
    parcel because he had not paid the taxes for the parcel.
    (Mehdizadeh, supra, 46 Cal.App.4th at p. 1305.) He could not
    acquire an easement by prescription if the easement were to be
    exclusive and would grant rights tantamount to a fee title. (Ibid
    [the easement granted by the trial court “would divest [property
    A owner] of nearly all rights that owners customarily have in
    residential property. A fence will bar [their] access to the
    property, and they cannot build on, cultivate, or otherwise use
    it.”].) The easement included a fence that barred the owner of
    property A from physical access and excluded his use of the
    property, except minimally for light and air. (Id. at p. 1308.)
    Owner of property B could not acquire a prescriptive easement
    which is substantially equivalent to a fee title, by satisfying the
    lesser requirements for prescription. “To affirm the creation of
    this novel ‘fencing easement’ would dispossess an unconsenting
    landowner of property while circumventing readily available,
    accurate legal descriptions.” (Ibid.)
    Prior decisions recognize two exceptions where exclusive
    prescriptive easements have been allowed. The first is an
    exception in cases involving utility services or important
    essential public health and safety purposes. (See Otay, supra,
    1 Cal.App.4th at p. 1046.) However, at least one court has
    declined to follow Otay, holding that the exclusive easement
    34
    found by the court “was the practical equivalent of an estate and
    should only have been permitted upon satisfaction of the
    elements of adverse possession.” (Hansen, supra, 22 Cal.App.5th
    at p. 1035.)
    The second involves the de minimis rule. In some cases,
    courts have denied a mandatory injunction to compel the removal
    of an encroachment by an adjoining landowner if the
    encroachment comes within the de minimis rule. For instance,
    where the encroachment of the wall of a building on the adjoining
    property was from one-half to five-eighths of an inch, the court in
    McKean v. Alliance Land Co. (1927) 
    200 Cal. 396
     (McKean),
    sustained a judgment denying a mandatory injunction and
    instead awarded damages of $10 where there was no direct
    evidence that the less-than-an-inch encroachment caused any
    actual damage to the plaintiff. (Id. at p. 399.) The court stated
    that where the injury was so slight as to bring it within the
    maxim “de minimis,” a mandatory injunction should not be
    issued. (Ibid.)
    We find the rationales for precluding exclusive prescriptive
    easements—based on the distinction between estates and
    easements— equally applicable to exclusive implied easements.
    Unless the language of the creating instrument expressly
    provides the intention that the easement be “exclusive” to the
    dominant owner (see Gray, supra, 167 Cal.App.4th at p. 1021
    [“[t]he express easement in question clearly provides that the
    easement is for the exclusive use of the owners of the dominant
    tenement”]), we are hard-pressed to infer the granting of an
    exclusive implied easement which precludes a property owner
    from any practical use and is nearly the equivalent of a fee
    interest. Based on the foregoing, we hold, in the first instance,
    35
    that an exclusive implied easement which, for all practical
    purposes, amounts to fee title cannot be justified or granted
    unless: 1) the encroachment is “de minimis” (see McKean, supra,
    200 Cal. at p. 399; see Rothaermel v. Amerige (1921) 
    55 Cal.App. 273
    , 275–276); or 2) the easement is necessary to protect the
    health or safety of the public or for essential utility purposes.
    (Mehdizadeh, supra, 46 Cal.App.4th at p. 1306).
    Here, there was no express grant of an exclusive easement.
    And the encroachment, totaling 1,296 square feet of appellants’
    9,815-square-foot property, cannot reasonably be qualified as de
    minimis as it amounts to approximately 13.2 percent of
    appellants’ property. Additionally, nothing in the record suggests
    the encroachment is necessary for essential utility purposes or to
    protect general public health or safety.
    Moving on to whether the implied easement was in fact
    exclusive, appellants argue the trial court’s decision awards
    respondents “exclusive use and possession of 13% of [appellants’]
    property [which] is not . . . legally permissible” and amounts to
    fee title. Whether an exclusive easement constitutes fee title or
    amounts to ownership in fee, rather than an easement, depends
    on the circumstances of the case, including the terms of any
    applicable conveyance. (Blackmore, supra, 150 Cal.App.4th at
    p. 1593.) In determining whether a conveyance creates easement
    or estate, courts look to the extent to which the conveyance limits
    the uses available to the grantor; an estate entitles the owner to
    the exclusive occupation of a portion of the earth’s surface; that
    is, the property owner “would not be able to use the [d]isputed
    [l]and for any ‘practical purpose.’ ” (Hansen, supra,
    22 Cal.App.5th at p. 1034, italics added; see also Silacci, supra,
    45 Cal.App.4th at p. 564 [“as a practical matter,” easement
    36
    completely prohibited true owner from using his land].) We
    review the relevant facts and evidence.
    First, we note that while the trial court’s statement of
    decision provides the implied easement “is not necessarily
    ‘exclusive,’ as various subsurface uses (e.g., running underground
    pipes or cables) are available to 651 property,” that is not what
    was stated and agreed-upon by the court and respondents’
    counsel during the second day of trial (“It seems to me that
    everybody is in agreement that if . . . there were an easement in
    favor of the 643 property, that is essentially for exclusive use.”)
    Second, the three cases cited by the court in the statement of
    decision are inapposite. Neither Horowitz, supra, 
    79 Cal.App.3d 120
    , nor Rosebrook v. Utz (1941) 
    45 Cal.App.2d 726
    , involve
    implied easements that were exclusive to the owner of the
    dominant tenement. And the facts in People v. Bowers (1964)
    
    226 Cal.App.2d 463
    , an eminent domain action to condemn
    property for state park purposes, are distinguishable from the
    case before us.
    Third, and most significant, there is no evidence in the
    record that appellants could utilize the subsurface of the 1,296
    square feet for any “practical purpose.” There is no evidence
    suggesting that appellants could run underground pipes or cables
    for any meaningful purpose or any conceivable use. The evidence
    at trial was that appellants’ property already has all the
    necessary utilities and water pipes, and appellants could not
    foresee any practical subsurface use. We agree with appellants
    that the theoretical possibility of running a pipe under the
    easement does not render the easement non-exclusive.
    37
    Respondents’ own expert Poyourow testified that the
    subject encroachment area is “effectively exclusive” and that the
    potential for any remaining use by appellants is remote.
    Poyourow also testified that the prospect of appellants installing
    new pipes underneath the encroachment area “would be remote,
    but it is possible to do so.”
    Similar to the fence in Mehdizadeh, supra, 46 Cal.App.4th
    at p. 1308, which barred the owner of property A from physical
    access and excluded his use of the property, except minimally for
    light and air, the block wall between the 651 and 643 properties
    completely precludes appellants from accessing 1,296 square feet
    of their land. The easement granted by the trial court essentially
    divests appellants of nearly all rights that owners customarily
    have in residential property, including access and practical
    usage. (See id. at p. 1305 [property owner cannot access, “build
    on, cultivate, or otherwise use” their land].) Though respondents
    label the 1,296-square-foot encroachment as a nonexclusive
    implied easement, the remedy they seek ousts appellants for all
    practical purposes.
    Respondents’ reliance on Dixon v. Eastown Realty Co.
    (1951) 
    105 Cal.App.2d 260
     is misplaced, as it involves a “slight
    encroachment of defendant’s garage building on plaintiffs’
    property.” (Id. at p. 261.) The garage wall encroached upon
    plaintiff’s property “a distance of 0.35 of a foot at its northwest
    corner and 0.15 of a foot at the northeast corner.” (Id. at p. 262.)
    Thus, it comes within the de minimis rule. Respondents’ reliance
    on Navarro is also misplaced, as the court found the defendant’s
    garage that extended “approximately five feet north into”
    another’s property was not reasonably necessary based on
    “testimony that it could be moved from its location straddling the
    38
    boundary line to a location entirely on defendant’s property.”
    (Navarro, supra, 66 Cal.App.2d at pp. 828, 830.) Nothing in that
    case suggests an implied easement can be exclusive.
    During oral argument, respondents emphasized that the
    focus of our analysis should be on what the parties intended, as
    the purpose of implied easements is to give effect to the actual
    intent of the parties involved with the creation/conveyance of the
    easement. (Thorstrom, supra, 196 Cal.App.4th at p. 1420.) We
    find, however, that this undercuts, rather than helps, their case
    because the evidence relied upon by respondents demonstrates
    the original grantor Edwin Cutler’s intent was not to create or
    convey an easement, but to effectuate a variance/lot line
    adjustment between the 643 and 651 properties. We cannot say
    an application for variance resulting in a change to fee
    title/ownership of a portion of property, demonstrates an intent to
    create an easement for use of a portion of property. To do so
    would be inappropriate given substantial case precedent
    differentiating between ownership interest in land and an
    easement interest in the limited use of another’s land (see
    Scruby, supra, 37 Cal.App.4th at p. 702; see Hansen, supra,
    22 Cal.App.5th at p. 1032) and the general constitutional
    prohibition against the taking of private property (see U.S.
    Const., 5th Amend.; Cal. Const., art. I, § 19, subd. (a)).
    Thus, we reverse that portion of the judgment awarding an
    exclusive implied easement to respondents. Because we reverse
    the trial court’s imposition of an exclusive implied easement, we
    find moot appellants’ second contention that the implied
    easement is not supported by substantial evidence.
    39
    C.    We Affirm the Trial Court’s Creation of an Equitable
    Easement.
    1.    Standard of Review
    We review a court’s decision whether to recognize an
    equitable easement under the abuse of discretion standard.
    (Nellie Gail Ranch Owners Assn. v. McMullin (2016)
    
    4 Cal.App.5th 982
    , 1005–1006 (Nellie Gail).) We defer to the trial
    court’s factual findings so long as they are supported by
    substantial evidence, and determine whether, under those facts,
    the court abused its discretion. (Id. at p. 1006.) Under that
    standard, we resolve all evidentiary conflicts in favor of the
    judgment and will not disturb the court’s decision so long as it is
    “fashioned on the evidence and equities presented, and [is]
    narrowly tailored to promote justice.” (Hirshfield, supra,
    91 Cal.App.4th at pp. 771–772.)
    2.    Applicable Law
    Where there has been an encroachment on land without
    any legal right to do so, the court may exercise its powers in
    equity to affirmatively fashion an interest in the owner’s land
    which will protect the encroacher’s use, namely, a judicially
    created easement sometimes referred to as an “equitable
    easement.” (Hirshfield, supra, 91 Cal.App.4th at pp. 764–765;
    Tashakori v. Lakis (2011) 
    196 Cal.App.4th 1003
    , 1008
    (Tashakori).) In making its determination, the court engages in
    equitable balancing to determine, on the one hand, whether to
    prevent such encroachment or, on the other hand, permit such
    encroachment and award damages to the property owner.
    (Hirshfield, at p. 759.)
    40
    California courts have “discretionary authority to deny a
    landowner’s request to eject a trespasser and instead force the
    landowner to accept damages as compensation for the judicial
    creation of an [equitable] easement over the trespassed-upon
    property in the trespasser’s favor, provided that the trespasser
    shows that (1) her trespass was ‘ “innocent” ’ rather than ‘ “willful
    or negligent,” ’ (2) the public or the property owner [seeking the
    injunction] will not be ‘ “ ‘irreparabl[y] injur[ed]’ ” ’ by the
    easement, and (3) the hardship to the trespasser from having to
    cease the trespass is ‘ “ ‘greatly disproportionate to the hardship
    caused [the owner] by the continuance of the encroachment.’ ” ’ ”
    (Shoen v. Zacarias (2015) 
    237 Cal.App.4th 16
    , 19 (Shoen); accord
    Tashakori, supra, 196 Cal.App.4th at pp. 1008–1009 [factors
    apply to both physical encroachments and disputed rights of
    access over neighbors’ properties].)
    Unless all three elements are established, a court lacks
    discretion to grant an equitable easement. (Shoen, supra,
    237 Cal.App.4th at p. 19; see Ranch at the Falls LLC v. O’Neal
    (2019) 
    38 Cal.App.5th 155
    , 184–185.) This is true even if the
    court believes the imposition of an equitable easement is fair and
    equitable under all circumstances. (Shoen, at pp. 19–21.) Thus,
    the court’s focus must be on the three elements, rather than “a
    more open-ended and free-floating inquiry into which party will
    make better use of the encroached-upon land, which values it
    more, and which will derive a greater benefit from its use.”
    (Id. at p. 21.)
    “ ‘Overarching the analysis’ ” is the importance of the legal
    owner’s property rights and “ ‘the principle that since the
    [encroacher] is the trespasser, he or she is the wrongdoer;
    therefore, “doubtful cases should be decided in favor of the
    41
    [property owner with legal title].” ’ ” (Nellie Gail, supra,
    4 Cal.App.5th at p. 1004; accord Shoen, supra, 237 Cal.App.4th at
    pp. 19, 21.) Equitable easements give the trespasser “what is, in
    effect, the right of eminent domain by permitting him to occupy
    property owned by another.” (Christensen v. Tucker (1952)
    
    114 Cal.App.2d 554
    , 560 (Christensen).) Such a right is in
    tension with the general constitutional prohibition against the
    taking of private property (U.S. Const., 5th Amend. [private
    property shall not be taken for public use, without just
    compensation]; Cal. Const., art. I, § 19, subd. (a) [same]). (Shoen,
    at p. 21.) “This is why courts approach the issuance of equitable
    easements with ‘an abundance of caution’ [citation], and resolve
    all doubts against their issuance.” (Ibid.) This also “explains
    why additional weight is given to the owner’s loss of the exclusive
    use of the property arising from her ownership, independent of
    any hardship caused by the owner’s loss of specific uses in a given
    case. And it elucidates why there must be a showing that the
    hardship on the trespasser be greatly disproportionate to these
    hardships on the owner. To allow a court to reassign property
    rights on a lesser showing is to dilute the sanctity of property
    rights enshrined in our Constitutions.” (Ibid.)
    3.    Analysis
    Appellants challenge the court’s ruling with respect to each
    element. We address each in turn.
    a.    Element #1: Trespass must be innocent and
    not willful or negligent.
    The encroaching party’s innocent intent is “paramount”—if
    the encroaching party is “willful, deliberate, or even negligent in
    42
    his or her trespass, the court will enjoin the encroachment.”
    (Hirshfield, supra, 91 Cal.App.4th at p. 769.)
    Substantial evidence supports the trial court’s finding that
    respondents were innocent and did not have knowledge of their
    encroachment on appellants’ 651 property. The Seller Property
    Questionnaire executed by respondents provides there are no
    “[s]urveys, easements, encroachments or boundary disputes”
    regarding respondents’ 643 property. In addition, their agent
    Tsai testified that neither he nor his clients knew of the
    encroachment at the time of purchase.
    Appellants argue documentary evidence established that
    respondents were negligent. They refer to the Buyer’s Inspection
    Advisory signed by respondents before close of escrow, advising
    respondents to conduct a thorough inspection of the entire
    property to make sure the lot size and boundaries were accurate.
    The document also warns that the square footage, lot size,
    boundaries, fences or walls “do not necessarily identify true
    property boundaries.” Appellants contend respondents “did not
    do what they were advised to do, that is investigate the true
    square footage and boundaries” and, as such, were negligent.
    Respondents, on the other hand, argue appellants’
    transactional documents “contained the same advisory, yet they
    too did not conduct an investigation.” Respondents contend
    appellants “cannot credibly argue that [respondents] should have
    verified lot size and boundaries [to discover] the existence of the
    encroachments when [appellants] themselves did no such
    investigation and did not discover the encroachments until a year
    after purchase.”
    43
    We agree. Case law provides that the court may refuse to
    enjoin a negligent encroachment “if there is corresponding
    contributory negligence by the landowner.” (Hirshfield, supra,
    91 Cal.App.4th at p. 769.)
    Thus, the first element is satisfied.
    b.    Element #2: Appellant must not be irreparably
    injured by the easement.
    If the party seeking an injunction of encroachments “will
    suffer irreparable injury by the encroachment, the injunction
    should be granted regardless of the injury to [the encroaching
    party], except, perhaps, where the rights of the public will be
    adversely affected.” (Christensen, supra, 114 Cal.App.2d at
    p. 563.) The phrase “irreparable injury” is interchangeable with
    “irremedial injury,” “unusual hardship,” and “substantial
    hardship.” (See Hirshfield, supra, 91 Cal.App.4th at p. 760.)
    The trial court found appellants “would not suffer any
    irreparable harm from such continued encroachment” because
    “the evidence . . . does not indicate [appellants] would suffer any
    concrete, serious harm.” Substantial evidence supports the trial
    court’s finding. Appellants’ use of the lot since their time of
    purchase has remained exactly the same before and after the
    discovery of the encroachment. While appellants testified that
    enjoining respondents’ encroachment would allow them to
    increase their privacy, plant an orchard in the front, and place a
    pool in the back, the record before us does not contain evidence of
    any actual plans to do so, either before or after the reveal.
    Appellants argue the continued encroachment causes them
    irreparable injury because they “will have to continue paying
    property taxes on property they cannot even use.” Appellants
    “will also be subject to potential civil liability to the extent
    44
    anyone gets hurt on the 1,296 square foot area because, even
    though they cannot use that area, [they] are still the legal owners
    of that area.” These are valid arguments indeed. However, they
    fail as the record before us contains no evidence, let alone
    substantial evidence, about the amount of property taxes
    appellants pay for their 9,815-square-foot property and what
    amount of their property tax payment is attributed to the 1,296-
    square-foot encroachment. Similarly, there is no substantial
    evidence indicating the likelihood or existence of premises
    liability in connection with the encroachment area other than
    appellants’ speculation about children possibly “trip[ping] over a
    loose brick.”
    Thus, the second element is also satisfied.
    c.    Element #3: The hardship to the trespasser
    from ceasing the trespass is greatly
    disproportionate to the hardship caused to the
    landowner by the continuing encroachment.
    Through the doctrine of “balancing conveniences” or
    “relative hardship,” courts may create equitable easements by
    refusing to enjoin what otherwise would be deemed an
    encroachment or nuisance. (Linthicum v. Butterfield (2009)
    
    175 Cal.App.4th 259
    , 265 (Linthicum); see also Christensen,
    supra, 114 Cal.App.2d at pp. 562–563.) “These labels suggest
    that an equitable easement may issue if the conveniences or
    hardships merely favor the trespasser, when the doctrine
    actually requires that they tip disproportionately in favor of the
    trespasser.” (Shoen, supra, 237 Cal.App.4th at p. 20.)
    In Shoen, for instance, the court found it was error to
    impose an equitable easement where the hardship to a neighbor
    in having to spend $300 to remove patio furniture from the
    45
    landowner’s property was not “greatly disproportionate” to the
    hardship on the landowner in losing the use of the property.
    (Shoen, supra, 237 Cal.App.4th at pp. 18, 21–22 [finding
    deprivation of substantial benefit falls short of imposing
    substantial hardship].) The typical hardship required to permit
    an equitable easement is where the trespasser “would be forced
    to move buildings or be airlifted to their landlocked property.”
    (Id. at p. 22.)
    Appellants contend respondents cannot demonstrate the
    disproportionality of their hardship because “there is no
    testimony from them about their trespass or hardship.”
    Appellants believe respondents’ “failure to testify is dispositive
    and therefore the court abused its discretion in finding an
    equitable easement.”
    Not so. The record contains substantial evidence
    supporting the inference that the hardship experienced by
    appellants is greatly outweighed by the actual harm respondents
    would suffer if the encroachments were enjoined. McCormick
    testified the driveway for respondents’ 643 property would be
    reduced to 7.2 feet at its narrowest point (for an approximate
    32-foot stretch between the actual property line and the side of
    the house on respondents’ property. This would result in a
    driveway width of less than 10 feet, the minimum required by the
    City. In addition, reducing the driveway width to 7.2 feet would
    severely limit most vehicles from using the driveway and would
    preclude individuals from opening car doors to exit or enter a
    vehicle. There was also expert testimony that the existence of
    the encroachment resulted in a diminution of value of $67,000 (or
    $4,000 more using 1,296 square footage) to appellants’
    46
    651 property, whereas the diminution of value to respondents’
    643 property without the easement is $133,000.
    Thus, the third element is also satisfied, and the trial court
    was within its power to grant an equitable easement.
    d.    The scope and duration of the equitable
    easement must be narrowly tailored.
    Finally, appellants challenge the terms and scope of the
    trial court’s equitable easement, arguing that it is not narrowly
    tailored.
    Courts limit the rights of the equitable easement holder
    both in duration and scope (Hirshfield, supra, 91 Cal.App.4th at
    pp. 753, 771 [the equitable easement interest would terminate
    when the defendants either “sell or fail to reside in their house”]);
    this aligns with “why courts approach the issuance of equitable
    easements with ‘[]an abundance of caution’ [citation], and resolve
    all doubts against their issuance.” (Shoen, supra,
    237 Cal.App.4th at p. 21.) The scope of an equitable easement
    should not be greater than is reasonably necessary to protect the
    use interest of the purported dominant tenement owner.
    (Christensen, supra, 114 Cal.App.2d at p. 563; Linthicum, supra,
    175 Cal.App.4th at pp. 267–269 [abundance of caution is
    warranted when imposing easement on unwilling landowner].)
    So long as the equitable easement is “fashioned on the evidence
    and equities presented, and narrowly tailored to promote justice,”
    the decision granting the equitable easement will not be
    disturbed. (Hirshfield, at p. 772.)
    Appellants contend most of the 1,296-square-foot easement
    has nothing to do with respondents’ use and interest in
    “reasonably necessary” ingress/egress and is far too
    encompassing in scope. They argue the equitable easement is not
    47
    narrowly tailored and is greater than reasonably necessary to
    protect respondents’ interest in reasonable ingress/egress via
    driveway use; they urged us to modify the equitable easement.
    At oral argument, respondents argued this court should not
    exercise equity and should not modify the easement.
    Respondents contend the evidence with respect to their equitable
    easement cause of action considered the entire 1,296 square-foot
    encroachment as a whole, and there was no evidence in the
    record to suggest a number less than 1,296 square feet. They
    cited to testimony from appellant Ms. Romero where she told the
    underlying court she did not want to give up any of the disputed
    1,296 square feet belonging to her. Respondents believe
    appellants have thus waived the issue, i.e., whether the scope of
    the easement could be more narrowly tailored to meet the “no
    greater than reasonably necessary use” standard.
    We agree with respondents.
    Although the trial court’s detailed 13-page statement of
    decision does not expressly specify the equitable easement is
    “narrowly tailored” and not greater than “reasonably necessary”
    to protect respondents’ use interest, it does however specify that
    the “equitable easement should run with the land, but should
    terminate if the 643 Property were to cease its continued use of
    that land for a driveway, planter and wall/fence.” (Italics added.)
    Thus, the trial court’s judicially crafted equitable easement is
    limited in scope and duration such that the current use of the
    easement area as a “driveway, planter and wall/fence” must
    continue, as is, or else the equitable easement is extinguished.
    In addition, appellants made this same argument via their
    September 8, 2020 objections to the trial court’s proposed
    statement of decision, claiming the equitable easement is “not
    48
    narrowly drawn to promote justice.” Thereafter, the trial court
    filed its final statement of decision on September 28, 2020; it
    “decline[d] to address every legal and factual issue raised by
    [appellants] or respond point by point to each issue and
    contention (however immaterial),” citing to Peak-Las Positas
    Partners v. Bollag (2009) 
    172 Cal.App.4th 101
    , 112 [“ ‘A
    statement of decision need not address all the legal and factual
    issues raised by the parties’ ”]. There is nothing in the record
    that leads us to conclude the trial court did not consider
    appellants’ objections when it crafted an easement that would
    extinguish when the area was no longer used for its present
    purposes.
    Finally, and most importantly, the trial court provided
    appellants multiple opportunities to provide evidence and
    argument as to how the easement could be more narrowly
    tailored. The court asked appellants during trial: “Let me ask,
    because I don’t think the number 1,200 is particularly magical.
    . . . So what would be less than this?” “[W]hat would be equitable
    under the circumstances. It could be greater or smaller than
    what is asked for by [respondents].” The court later asked
    appellants again: “If in equity I were to find that [respondents]
    were entitled to some measure of land so they could have a
    functional driveway, . . . do you have an alternative proposal that
    would be more narrowly tailored to their need?” The court
    repeated its question to appellants later: “Well, again, I asked
    you from zero to 1,296 [square feet,] what do you propose, and
    you have said zero or 1,296.” “So if there’s some other
    formulation of square footage that the Court could reasonably
    tailor an equitable easement, then I certainly will hear you out as
    to that.”
    49
    Despite the trial court’s repeated invitations, appellants
    instead doubled down and in the final moments of trial, appellant
    Tatana Romero stated: “I just wanted to clarify . . . I heard
    something about giving up to two feet. And I want to make sure
    I’m not authorizing anyone to give up anything, and we’re not
    going to give up any part of the disputed land. That’s it.”
    Appellants opted for an all-or-nothing approach; in this case, this
    strategy hurt them because they failed to include as part of the
    record any evidence about how the easement may have been
    more narrowly tailored and not greater than reasonably
    necessary for respondents’ use.
    We are hard pressed to find the trial court abused its
    discretion when it created an equitable easement that merely
    maintains the improvements on the disputed land that have been
    in use and existence for decades.
    50
    DISPOSITION
    The judgment is reversed as to the cause of action for
    implied easement. The judgment is affirmed as to the cause of
    action for equitable easement. Respondents shall recover their
    costs on appeal.
    CERTIFIED FOR PUBLICATION
    STRATTON, J.
    We concur:
    GRIMES, Acting P. J.
    HARUTUNIAN, J.*
    *
    Judge of the San Diego Superior Court, assigned by the
    Chief Justice pursuant to article VI, section 6 of the California
    Constitution.
    51
    

Document Info

Docket Number: B310069

Filed Date: 5/5/2022

Precedential Status: Precedential

Modified Date: 5/5/2022