Kristof v. Mealey ( 2023 )


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  •                                        817
    Argued and submitted on September 29, reversed and remanded
    November 1, 2023
    Jane KRISTOF,
    individually,
    and Nicholas Kristof
    and Sheryl Wudunn,
    husband and wife,
    Plaintiffs-Appellants,
    v.
    Matthew A. MEALEY
    and Rebecca Bowman-Mealey,
    husband and wife,
    Defendants-Respondents.
    Yamhill County Circuit Court
    21CV12195; A178517
    538 P3d 920
    In this declaratory judgment action, plaintiffs seek to establish the existence
    and location of what they contend is a 16-foot easement across defendants’ prop-
    erty. They appeal from a judgment for defendants, contending that the trial court
    erred in determining, on the parties’ cross-motions for summary judgment, that
    plaintiffs do not have an easement across defendants’ property but instead have
    a fee simple interest in a 16-foot strip along the western boundary of defendants’
    property. Held: The trial court erred in granting defendants’ motion for summary
    judgment and in denying plaintiffs’ motion based on the court’s determination
    that, consistent with the existence of a tax lot created by the county assessor, a
    1959 deed by defendants’ predecessor to plaintiffs’ predecessor describes a fee
    simple interest in a 16-foot strip along the western boundary of defendants’ prop-
    erty rather than an easement across defendants’ property. The trial court’s sum-
    mary judgment ruling is inconsistent with the deed’s statement that it grants a
    “right-of-way,” terminology generally descriptive of an easement rather than a
    fee interest. Additionally, although the 1959 deed used a preprinted form cap-
    tioned “Warranty Deed,” which would ordinarily be associated with the convey-
    ance of fee simple title, the terms of the deed control and reflect an intention to
    grant an easement rather than a fee interest, stating that the right-of-way runs
    from a location on plaintiffs’ parcel to a state highway, “over and across” prop-
    erty unambiguously described by metes and bounds as defendants’ parcel, rather
    than a 16-foot strip along its western edge. The exact location of the easement
    will be for the trial court to determine on remand based on the grantors’ and
    grantees’ intentions.
    Reversed and remanded.
    Jennifer K. Chapman, Judge.
    818                                      Kristof v. Mealey
    Elena M. Farley argued the cause for appellants. Also on
    the briefs were Martinis & Farley.
    Thomas A. Larkin argued the cause for respondents. Also
    on the brief were Tyler J. Storti and Sokol, Larkin, Wagner
    & Storti LLC.
    Before Egan, Presiding Judge, and Kamins, Judge, and
    Kistler, Senior Judge.
    KISTLER, S. J.
    Reversed and remanded.
    Cite as 
    328 Or App 817
     (2023)                                                 819
    KISTLER, S. J.
    The trial court ruled on summary judgment that a
    1959 deed did not grant plaintiffs an easement over defen-
    dants’ property and entered a judgment to that effect. On
    appeal, we conclude that the deed, read as a whole, unam-
    biguously grants plaintiffs an easement but does not spec-
    ify precisely where over defendants’ property the easement
    runs. We reverse the trial court’s judgment and remand this
    case for further proceedings.
    Defendants’ property lies immediately to the south
    of plaintiffs’ property. In 1959, the Delletiglies owned
    the property that defendants now own.1 In that year, the
    Delletiglies used a preprinted form for a warranty deed to
    grant the following interest to plaintiffs’ predecessors in
    interest:
    “A sixteen foot Right of Way running from the Northeast
    Quarter of the Northwest Quarter of Section 23, Township
    2 South, Range 4 West in a Southeasterly direction to a
    point on the Northerly line of the Tualatin Valley State
    Highway over and across the following described property:
    [a metes and bounds description that, as we discuss below,
    describes the Delletiglies’ property in 1959].”
    After a dispute arose between the parties about
    the “sixteen foot Right of Way” that the 1959 deed granted,
    plaintiffs brought this action to establish the existence and
    location of what they contend is a 16-foot easement across
    defendants’ property.
    Defendants counterclaimed and moved for sum-
    mary judgment on plaintiffs’ claims and their counter-
    claims. Defendants argued, in support of their summary
    judgment motion, that the 1959 deed gave plaintiffs fee sim-
    ple title to a 16-foot strip of land. In defendants’ view, the
    metes and bounds description set out in the deed identifies
    1
    In 1959, the Delletiglies owned more property than defendants now own.
    In this opinion, we use the phrase “the Delletiglies’ property” to refer to the par-
    cel of property that the Delletiglies owned in 1959 that is largely the same as
    defendants’ current property. The primary difference between the Delletiglies’
    property in 1959 and the property that defendants now own is that two small
    lots were carved out of the Delletiglies’ property before defendants purchased it.
    Those two small lots are not material to the issues this case presents.
    820                                          Kristof v. Mealey
    the boundaries of that 16-foot strip, which they contend runs
    along the western edge of their property.
    Plaintiffs responded by filing a cross-motion for par-
    tial summary judgment. They argued that the 1959 deed
    granted their predecessors in interest a 16-foot easement
    over and across defendants’ property but that the deed does
    not specify where over defendants’ property the easement
    runs. Plaintiffs reasoned that, in that respect, the deed is
    typical of many conveyances that grant an easement but
    leave the easement’s exact location to be determined under
    the “practical location” doctrine.
    At first blush, one might wonder why defendants
    are arguing that the 1959 deed gave plaintiffs fee simple
    title to a 16-foot strip of land rather than a 16-foot easement.
    After all, an easement is a lesser property interest than fee
    simple title. As we understand the parties’ positions, how-
    ever, they differ primarily over the location of the 16-foot
    right-of-way. Defendants argue that the location of the
    right-of-way is fixed by the metes and bounds description
    in the deed, which places the 16-foot strip of land immedi-
    ately to the west of their property and contiguous with their
    western boundary. Plaintiffs, for their part, read the metes
    and bounds description differently. They reason that the
    metes and bounds description defines the property that the
    Delletiglies owned in 1959 and over and across which plain-
    tiffs’ 16-foot easement runs. They necessarily disagree with
    defendants that the metes and bounds description identifies
    a 16-foot strip of land that runs along the western border of
    defendants’ property.
    The trial court essentially adopted defendants’
    arguments. It granted defendants’ summary judgment
    motion, denied plaintiffs’ cross-motion for partial summary
    judgment, and entered judgment accordingly. On appeal,
    both parties agree that the interpretation of the 1959 deed
    presents a question of law. They disagree, however, what
    the deed means. Their disagreement turns initially on the
    terms used in the deed. Defendants note that the preprinted
    form that the 1959 deed used is captioned “Warranty Deed”
    and that the preprinted part of that deed uses terms that
    ordinarily are associated with conveying fee simple title to
    Cite as 
    328 Or App 817
     (2023)                                               821
    property. Plaintiffs respond that the Delletiglies described
    the property interest that they conveyed to plaintiffs’ prede-
    cessors in interest as a “Right of Way,” a phrase that typi-
    cally identifies an easement.
    The Oregon Supreme Court considered a virtually
    identical issue in Cappelli v. Justice, 
    262 Or 120
    , 
    496 P2d 209
     (1972), and it dismissed out of hand essentially the same
    argument that defendants initially make here. The court
    explained:
    “We do not regard [the use of a warranty deed to convey a
    right of way] as having any significance. We are sure that
    many deeds denominated ‘Warranty Deed’ contain grants
    of easements described as rights of way.”
    
    Id. at 126
    . Although similar to this case, Cappelli differs
    in one critical respect. In Cappelli, the court was reviewing
    the trial court’s decree de novo. See Tipperman v. Tsiatsos,
    
    327 Or 539
    , 
    964 P2d 1015
     (1998) (identifying that stan-
    dard of review, which Tipperman and earlier cases applied).
    Employing that standard of review, the Supreme Court in
    Cappelli was free to resolve competing factual inferences
    and to do so differently from the trial court. This case, by
    contrast, arises on summary judgment. In that procedural
    posture, neither we nor the trial court can resolve the 1959
    deed’s jumbled use of terms associated with conveying fee
    simple title, on the one hand, and easements, on the other, to
    determine the nature of the interest that the deed conveyed.
    The conflicting inferences arising from the use of those com-
    peting terms do not point in only one direction.2
    2
    Defendants argue that that this case differs from Cappelli in one other
    respect. They contend that, unlike the deed at issue in Cappelli, the 1959 deed
    granting the right-of-way in this case did not expressly reserve the Delletiglies’
    right to use the underlying land. It follows, they argue, that the right-of-way
    granted by the 1959 deed should not be viewed as an easement. Defendants
    misperceive what Cappelli said. The passage from Cappelli on which defendants
    rely was discussing an earlier deed in which the grantor transferred fee simple
    title to property but reserved an easement for the grantor’s use. See 
    262 Or at 127
    . Cappelli did not say that a deed granting a right-of-way (as opposed to a
    deed reserving a right-of-way) must also reserve the grantor’s right to use the
    underlying land before the right-of-way may be considered an easement. Such a
    statement would have been contrary to longstanding law. See Miller v. Vaughn, 
    8 Or 333
    , 336 (1880) (rejecting the criterion that defendants erroneously argue that
    Cappelli established).
    822                                                       Kristof v. Mealey
    If those competing terms were all that the 1959
    deed contained, we would reverse the judgment and remand
    this case for trial so that the trial court could find what the
    Delletiglies had intended. Three other aspects of the deed,
    however, fix the Delletiglies’ intent and lead us to conclude,
    as a matter of law, that plaintiffs’ interpretation of the deed
    is correct. We identify those three aspects and then discuss
    them briefly. First, the 1959 deed describes where the 16-foot
    right-of-way runs. According to the deed, the right-of-way
    runs from an undefined point in a quarter-quarter section of
    plaintiffs’ property to an undefined point on a highway on the
    southeasterly border of defendant’s land. The deed does not say
    that the right-of-way runs along a specific location, and it cer-
    tainly does not say that the right of way runs along the west-
    ern border of defendants’ land, as defendants argue. Second,
    the deed states that the right-of-way runs “over and across”
    a parcel of land described by its metes and bounds—a prepo-
    sitional phrase that almost invariably is used to describe the
    grant of an easement, not the grant of fee simple title. Third,
    the parcel of land that the deed describes by its metes and
    bounds—namely, the parcel that the deed says the right-of-
    way runs “over and across”—is the property the Delletiglies
    owned in 1959. Contrary to defendants’ argument, the metes
    and bounds description set out in the 1959 deed does not
    define the boundaries of the 16-foot right-of-way.
    We discuss each of those points briefly. First,
    according to the 1959 deed, the right-of-way “run[s] from the
    Northeast Quarter of the Northwest Quarter of Section 23
    * * * in a Southeasterly direction to a point on the Northerly
    line of the Tualatin Valley State Highway.”3 Put differ-
    ently, the right-of-way runs from an unspecified point in
    an area owned by plaintiffs (the Northeast Quarter of the
    Northwest Quarter of Section 23) to an unspecified point on
    the Tualatin Valley State Highway, which forms the south-
    eastern border of defendants’ property.
    3
    For surveying purposes, land is divided into 640-acre sections. Each sec-
    tion is divided into four quarters: northwest, northeast, southwest, and south-
    east. Each quarter section is divided further into four quarters—for example,
    the Northeast Quarter of the Northwest Quarter of Section 23. The section or
    quarter section in which land is located can provide a reliable starting point for
    a metes and bounds description.
    Cite as 
    328 Or App 817
     (2023)                             823
    Some deeds granting an easement will specify the
    easement’s exact location; for example, they will describe
    the easement’s centerline. See Tipperman v. Tsiatsos, 
    140 Or App 282
    , 286, 
    915 P2d 446
     (1996) (illustrating that prop-
    osition), modified in part on other grounds by Tipperman,
    
    327 Or at 549-50
    . Other deeds, however, will identify a par-
    cel of land over and across which the easement runs but will
    not specify more particularly where the easement lies. 
    Id.
     In
    those situations, courts have looked for clues to the grant-
    or’s and grantee’s intent to determine the easement’s exact
    location. 
    Id.
     (discussing the practical location doctrine); see
    Powers v. Coos Bay Lumber Co., 
    200 Or 329
    , 391, 
    263 P2d 913
     (1953) (same). The absence of a specific location for the
    right-of-way cuts in favor of plaintiffs’ argument that the
    Delletiglies intended to grant an easement, not fee simple
    title.
    The second point is related to the first. The 1959
    deed does provide one clue as to where the right-of-way
    runs. It says that the 16-foot right-of-way “run[s] * * * over
    and across the following described property,” and, as we
    explain below, the metes and bounds description that follows
    describes the property that the Delletiglies owned in 1959.
    The prepositional phrase “over and across the grantors’
    property” is almost invariably used to describe the grant of
    an easement. See Cappelli, 252 Or at 126 (so recognizing but
    noting that the absence of that phrase does not necessar-
    ily mean that the grantor did not intend to convey an ease-
    ment). Given the deed’s use of the phrase “over and across
    the following described property,” we are hard pressed to
    conclude that the Delletiglies granted anything other than
    an easement.
    The third point removes any doubt about the
    Delletiglies’ intent. The metes and bounds description con-
    tained in the deed describes the property that the Delletiglies
    owned in 1959; that is, it makes clear that the right-of-way
    runs over and across the property that the Delletiglies
    owned in 1959 and that defendants now own. The metes
    and bounds description does not describe the boundaries of
    the 16-foot right of way, nor does it locate the 16-foot right
    824                                                       Kristof v. Mealey
    of way along the western border of defendants’ property, as
    defendants argue.
    The deed sets out the following metes and bounds
    description of a parcel of real property:
    “Beginning at a point on the North line of Lot 2 of Section
    23, Township 2 South, Range 4 West of the Willamette
    Meridian, 800 feet East of the Northwest corner of said
    lot; thence South 400 feet thence 46° 14’ East to a point on
    the Northerly line of the Tualatin Valley State Highway;
    thence following the Northerly line of said Highway in a
    Northeasterly direction to a point on the North line of the
    Southwest Quarter of the Northeast Quarter of Section 23,
    Township 2 South, Range 4 West; thence West following
    the legal subdivision line to the point of beginning.”
    The parties agree, and so do we, that the first part
    of the metes and bounds description—the part that starts
    “Beginning at a point on the North line of Lot 2” and that
    continues “to a point on the Northerly line of the Tualatin
    Valley State Highway”—identifies the western boundary of
    the Delletiglies’ property in 1959. They also agree that the
    Tualatin Valley State Highway formed the southeastern
    border of the Delletiglies’ property in 1959.
    From that point (the point on the northerly line of
    the Tualatin Valley State Highway), the metes and bounds
    description “follow[s] the Northerly line of said Highway in
    a Northeasterly direction to a point on the North line of the
    Southwest Quarter of the Northeast Quarter of Section 23.”
    The map of the property, on which both sides rely, shows
    that the Tualatin Valley State Highway curves in a large
    northeasterly arc until it reaches the northern border of
    the Delletiglies’ property in 1959 (the “North line of the
    Southwest Quarter of the Northeast Quarter of Section 23”).
    The Tualatin Valley State Highway does not reach “a point
    on the North line of the Southwest Quarter of the Northeast
    Quarter of Section 23” until it has traversed the majority of,
    if not all, the property that defendants now own.4
    4
    The metes and bounds description follows the Tualatin Valley State
    Highway for the length of defendants’ property—from the Northwest Quarter of
    Section 23 to the Northeast Quarter of Section 23. It does not follow the Tualatin
    Valley State Highway for a mere 16 feet and then turn north, as defendants’ argu-
    ment assumes.
    Cite as 
    328 Or App 817
     (2023)                                                825
    From that point, the metes and bounds description
    traces the northern boundary of defendants’ property, which
    it says runs “West following the legal subdivision line to the
    point of beginning.”
    The metes and bounds description is telling. It
    describes the metes and bounds of a three-sided piece of
    land, shaped like a fat slice of pie. It does not describe, as
    defendants argue, the boundaries of a skinny, four-sided
    right-of-way that runs along the western edge of their prop-
    erty. Instead, the metes and bounds description defines the
    Delletiglies’ property in 1959, which defendants now largely
    own. Not only is defendants’ interpretation of the metes
    and bounds mistaken, but their interpretation of the metes
    and bounds description is at odds with what the deed says.
    The deed says that the 16-foot right-of-way “run[s] * * * over
    and across the following described property.” It does not say
    that the “following described property” defines the bound-
    aries of the 16-foot right-of-way. Defendants err in arguing
    otherwise.
    Defendants advance two other arguments that
    warrant brief mention. As defendants note, the county tax
    assessor created tax lot 1600, which is identified on the
    assessor’s map as a narrow strip of land that runs along the
    western border of defendants’ property. Much of defendants’
    argument rests on the assumption that tax lot 1600, as
    depicted on the assessor’s map, represents the 16-foot right-
    of-way that the 1959 deed granted. The basis for defendants’
    assumption is not apparent, however. The record does not
    reveal when the county assessor created tax lot 1600, nor
    does it reveal whether the county assessor created that tax
    lot based on the 1959 deed, another deed, or some other
    source. And, as our preceding discussion makes clear, the
    easement appurtenant granted by the 1959 deed provides
    no basis for creating a tax lot, much less one that runs along
    the western border of defendants’ property.5 Put differently,
    5
    Ordinarily, easements appurtenant, as opposed to easements in gross,
    are not “specifically and separately assessed”; rather, the value of appurtenant
    easements is included in the assessment of the dominant estate. Rockwood
    Development Corp. v. Dept. of Rev., 
    10 OTR 95
    , 98 (1985); cf. Clackamas Cty
    Assessor v. Village at Main St. Phase II, 
    349 Or 330
    , 245 P3d 81 (2010) (explaining
    that site developments, such as roads, sidewalks, and water lines, were an inte-
    gral part of the land underlying an apartment complex development and should
    826                                                        Kristof v. Mealey
    whatever tax lot 1600 reflects, the unambiguous terms of
    the Delletiglies’ 1959 deed establish that it does not reflect
    the 16-foot easement that that deed granted.
    Defendants also rely on later events, such as what
    plaintiffs’ real estate agent told them when they were buy-
    ing their property and the initial positions that plaintiffs
    allegedly took, perhaps based on that advice, in their discus-
    sions with defendants. Defendants never explain, however,
    how a lay person’s understanding of the property interests at
    stake, made almost 60 years after the Delletiglies granted
    the easement, can trump what the terms of the 1959 deed
    unambiguously say.
    Considering all the terms in the 1959 deed, we con-
    clude that only one interpretation is reasonably permissible:
    As plaintiffs argue, the 1959 deed conveyed a 16-foot ease-
    ment to plaintiffs’ predecessors in interest over and across
    the property that the Delletiglies owned in 1959. The deed,
    however, does not specify where over that property the ease-
    ment runs, and plaintiffs properly did not move for sum-
    mary judgment on that issue. This case must go back to the
    trial court so that it can decide that issue.
    In considering that issue, the controlling question
    is what the Delletiglies and plaintiffs’ predecessors in inter-
    est intended when the Delletiglies granted the easement in
    1959. In similar situations, the courts have determined the
    grantor’s and grantee’s intent by looking to the grantee’s
    use of a road either at the time the easement was granted
    or shortly afterwards; that is, they have inferred an implied
    agreement to fix the location of the easement “arising out
    of the use of a particular way by the grantee and acquies-
    cence on the part of the grantor.” Cullison v. Hotel Seaside,
    Inc., 
    126 Or 18
    , 22-23, 
    268 P 758
     (1923); cf. Tipperman, 
    327 Or at 541-42, 549-50
     (declining to consider consistent usage
    that occurred 20 years after an easement was reserved
    to determine the grantors’ intent). They also have consid-
    ered the reason for granting the easement in the first place
    have been included in assessing the value of the land). It follows that the appurte-
    nant easement that the 1959 deed conveyed to plaintiffs’ predecessors in interest
    ordinarily would not (or should not) have resulted in the creation of a separate
    tax lot.
    Cite as 
    328 Or App 817
     (2023)                           827
    in determining what the grantor and grantee intended.
    Cullison, 126 Or at 22-23; cf. United States v. Oregon Elec.
    Ry. Co., 195 F Supp 182, 186-87 (D Or 1961) (looking to the
    negotiations between the parties to determine their intent).
    Finally, while the grantor and grantee may expressly agree
    on the location of an easement, neither party has offered
    any evidence to show that the Delletiglies and plaintiffs’
    predecessors in interest entered into an express agreement
    regarding the location of the 16-foot easement. For the rea-
    sons explained above, we reverse the trial court’s judgment
    and remand this case for further proceedings consistent
    with this decision.
    Reversed and remanded.
    

Document Info

Docket Number: A178517

Judges: Kistler, S. J.

Filed Date: 11/1/2023

Precedential Status: Precedential

Modified Date: 10/16/2024