Eric M. Kress v. Linda Dixon ( 2021 )


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  •                    RENDERED: APRIL 9, 2021; 10:00 A.M.
    NOT TO BE PUBLISHED
    Commonwealth of Kentucky
    Court of Appeals
    NO. 2019-CA-1674-MR
    ERIC M. KRESS AND REBECCA S.                                      APPELLANTS
    KRESS
    APPEAL FROM BOYD CIRCUIT COURT
    v.              HONORABLE JOHNNY RAY HARRIS, JUDGE
    ACTION NO. 16-CI-00683
    LINDA DIXON                                                          APPELLEE
    OPINION
    AFFIRMING
    ** ** ** ** **
    BEFORE: ACREE, DIXON, AND K. THOMPSON, JUDGES.
    ACREE, JUDGE: Eric M. Kress and Rebecca S. Kress appeal the Boyd Circuit
    Court’s October 10, 2019 findings of facts, conclusions of law, and judgment
    enforcing an express easement in favor of Linda Dixon across their property. For
    the following reasons, we affirm.
    BACKGROUND
    This case arises from the Kresses’ refusal to allow Dixon the use of an
    express easement to access Shelton Cemetery. Dixon is 78 years old and her
    family has several family members buried in Shelton Cemetery. According to
    Dixon, she visited the cemetery regularly since she was five or six years old and
    used the same road each time. She testified that the challenged easement has been
    in use in its current location since 1945.
    The easement is recorded as a reservation in a deed from Grover
    Hatfield to Elmo Shelton and Lillian Shelton, found in Deed Book 196, page 396.
    Specifically, the deed “reserve[es] out of the above described tract of land, the
    family cemetery lot, consisting of one-half (1/2) acre of land, and right of ingress
    and egress to same for funeral purposes only, where the entrance now is.” The
    Sheltons eventually deeded the land, with the reservation and easement, to the
    Grayson family, who subsequently deeded the land to the current owners, the
    Kress family, in 1997.
    The Kresses did not interfere with the use of the easement until Mrs.
    Kress became ill and her family began using the driveway daily for parking. To
    facilitate the parking, the Kresses erected a barricade across the easement, denying
    Dixon and her family access. The Kresses state the cemetery was not landlocked
    and there are other potential routes to access it. This prompted Dixon to file an
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    action for judicial recognition of the easement and for a permanent injunction
    enjoining the Kresses and their successors from interfering with her use of the
    easement.
    The case came before the circuit court for a final hearing without a
    jury on August 20, 2019. The court heard testimony from the parties, as well as
    multiple witnesses who use the easement to access the cemetery. However, the
    Kresses testified there are other ways to access the cemetery than to drive on their
    property. After the close of testimony, the circuit court found there was an express
    easement on the Kresses’ property. The court noted that although there were easier
    access points for Dixon, the easement specifically states that the ingress and egress
    is “where the entrance is now” – “at the corner of East Johnson Road and Suncrest
    Drive across the Kress property.” This appeal followed.
    APPELLATE PROCEDURE DEFICIENCIES
    To begin, we note that the Kresses’ brief substantially fails to comply
    with CR1 76.12. An appellant will not be heard to complain that the trial court
    failed to follow rules of law, unless he himself reasonably follows the rules of this
    Court. See Hallis v. Hallis, 
    328 S.W.3d 694
    , 696 (Ky. App. 2010); Louisville and
    Jefferson County Metropolitan Sewer Dist. v. Bischoff, 
    248 S.W.3d 533
    , 536 (Ky.
    2007) (emphasizing that procedural rules “do not exist for the mere sake of form
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    Kentucky Rules of Civil Procedure.
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    and style” and thus their “importance simply cannot be disdained or denigrated”).
    Dixon filed a motion to strike the brief because of these procedural errors. That
    motion was denied by order entered March 12, 2021. However, the Court will
    review the Kresses’ appeal for manifest injustice only. 
    Hallis, 328 S.W.3d at 698
    .
    The Kresses present three arguments: (1) the circuit court erred by
    finding an express easement without consideration of convenience; (2) the
    easement should be at another location; and (3) Dixon did not prove any ownership
    interest. Significantly, the preservation statement for each of these arguments fails
    to satisfy CR 76.12(4)(c)(v). The technical defect is that there is no citation to the
    record where the preservation can be found. The substantive defect is Kresses’
    assertion that the arguments they present to this Court were preserved by their
    denial of the complaint allegations and by filing the notice of appeal. Such things
    necessarily exist in every appeal; if this sufficed, there would be no need for CR
    76.12(4)(c)(v). Where can this Court find assurance that the circuit court was
    previously given the opportunity to address the Kresses’ arguments? The Kresses
    do not tell us. That constitutes substantial noncompliance with CR 76.12.
    STANDARD OF REVIEW
    When a case is tried before the circuit court without a jury, fact-
    finding will not be disturbed unless clearly erroneous. CR 52.01. Notwithstanding
    our deference to the circuit court’s fact-finding, we review its conclusions of law
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    de novo. Hoskins v. Beatty, 
    343 S.W.3d 639
    , 641 (Ky. App. 2011). These rules
    apply even when the review is for manifest injustice.
    ANALYSIS
    The Kresses first argue that the circuit court “erred when it granted
    Ms. Dixon an easement over the Kresses’ driveway without regard to the relative
    convenience and inconvenience of the dominant and servient estates.”2
    (Appellants’ brief, p. 10.) The premise of the argument is false. The circuit court
    did not grant an easement. The easement exists and has been lodged in the public
    record and has obligated the owner of the dominant estate, including the Kresses,
    as title passed over three quarters of a century. If the argument is that the circuit
    court erred by finding as fact the existence of this easement, the argument fails.
    The Kresses claim alternate routes exist that are more convenient to
    Dixon and less burdensome to them. The circuit court did not find to the contrary.
    However, such facts do not compel the result the Kresses want. They seek to
    extinguish real property rights represented by the easement. There is no evidence
    in the record to justify that outcome. Certainly, the Kresses direct us to none.
    What was said in Hicks v. Johnson, 
    232 Ky. 659
    , 
    24 S.W.2d 574
    (1930), applies here.
    While there is evidence that the passway in question is
    over ground that is rocky and muddy, and that appellee
    2
    Capitalized argument heading modified to lowercase for ease of reading.
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    now has a much more convenient way to reach her
    premises, this fact has no bearing on the case, inasmuch as
    the easement is not one of mere necessity, but was
    acquired by deed.
    Id. at 575.
    Furthermore, “[i]n order to extinguish an easement by grant, there must
    be some conduct on the part of the owner of the servient estate adverse to and in
    defiance of the easement . . . . A right of way is not extinguished by the habitual
    use by its owner of another way in its place . . . . The testimony, at most, only
    conduces to show, that [use of an alternate route is preferred] as a matter of
    convenience to appellant . . . .” Johnson v. Clark, 
    57 S.W. 474
    , 475 (Ky. 1900)
    (citations omitted). The Kresses’ effort to counter this common law falls woefully
    short.
    In their entire brief, the Kresses cite but three legal authorities, one of
    which says nothing more than that easements are not favored by the courts. Carroll
    v. Meredith, 
    59 S.W.3d 484
    , 489-90 (Ky. App. 2001). However, that case stands for
    the proposition that implied easements and prescriptive easements are not favored
    by the courts. Express easements, publicly recorded with the county clerk, are no
    less favored than any other express grant of an interest in real property. To the
    contrary, “[f]orfeiture of easements is not favored in the law . . . .” Dukes v. Link,
    
    315 S.W.3d 712
    , 718 (Ky. App. 2010).
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    Within their first argument, the Kresses claim the easement is “not
    specific or definite and could be located anywhere on the larger tract.”
    (Appellant’s brief, p. 12.) That assertion is not supported by the record.
    The circuit court found both parties to this appeal knew the general
    boundaries of the easement from where it began “at the corner of East Johnson
    Road and Suncrest Drive across the Kress property” to the cemetery. Such a
    finding on this record is supported by substantial evidence and, therefore, is not
    clearly erroneous. The law is well settled that mutual recognition of, and
    acquiescence in, the parameters of real property affords a conclusive presumption
    of their location. See Bishop v. Brock, 
    610 S.W.3d 347
    , 352 (Ky. App. 2020).
    The Kresses also cite Potter v. Colvin, 
    303 S.W.2d 552
    (Ky. 1957).
    This case expresses the proposition that when words of an express easement do not
    identify its location or route, “[t]he reasonable convenience of both parties is of
    prime importance, and the court . . . must proceed with due regard for the rights of
    both parties.”
    Id. at 553.
    That is certainly still the law and applicable when the
    passway has yet to be determined in the first instance. That is not the case here.
    Significantly, the Kresses take the quotation from Potter out of
    context. It is the very next sentence in that case that decides the issue in this case.
    It has been said that if not otherwise fixed, the location of
    an easement is determined by the practical location and
    use by the grantee, acquiesced in by the grantor at the time
    of the grant and for a long time subsequent thereto.
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    Id. (quoting 17 AM.
    JUR., Easements, page 987, and noting Kentucky adopted this
    rule in Louisville & N.R. Co. v. Pierce, 
    254 S.W.2d 943
    , 944 (Ky. 1953)).
    The easement in question was acquiesced in by the grantor at the time
    of the grant, and by the grantor and successors-in-interest for a long time
    subsequent thereto. The circuit court’s decision in this case is fully supported by
    Potter v. Colvin, the Kresses’ primary authority for criticizing it.
    The last case the Kresses urge us to consider is Gabbard v. Campbell,
    
    296 Ky. 216
    , 
    176 S.W.2d 411
    (1943). Like the instant case, Gabbard addressed an
    express easement that did not identify the location or route of the easement.
    Id. at 411.
    But the similarities end there.
    The case is distinguishable on its facts. Unlike the instant case, in
    Gabbard “there was never any definite or agreed upon location of the reserved
    passway.”
    Id. at 412.
    As just noted, the applicable rule under the facts of the
    instant case is better expressed in Potter. When Kentucky’s high court applied this
    rule in Potter, it could have been describing the fact pattern in this case. The Court
    said:
    It appears from this record . . . that the owners of the
    servient estate had generally defined the easement
    ultimately granted, by their own use, prior to the time of
    sale. But if that is not true and the owners of the servient
    estate (the Potters) had not designated the location,
    certainly the appellees, who were entitled to use the
    easement, had selected it and used it for a long period
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    before any objection was made by appellants. In any
    event, the court has power, in case of a dispute about
    location, to fix the location of the servitude, and this he did
    affirmatively and specifically. We find no error in his
    judgment.
    
    Potter, 303 S.W.2d at 553
    . As the former Court of Appeals found in Potter, this
    Court of Appeals finds no error in the judgment of the circuit court in this case.
    The Kresses present two more arguments. Both lack even a single
    citation to legal authority. That is, the Kresses direct this Court to no legal
    justification for setting aside the circuit court’s judgment, and we will not research
    the issue to find one.
    CONCLUSION
    For the foregoing reasons, we affirm the Boyd Circuit Court’s
    findings of fact and conclusions of law.
    ALL CONCUR.
    BRIEFS FOR APPELLANTS:                     BRIEF FOR APPELLEE:
    Tracy D. Frye                              Luke Vincent
    Russell, Kentucky                          Ashland, Kentucky
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