Melanie J. Bryant v. Stephen R. Sandberg ( 2016 )


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  •                                                                          FILED
    JULY 19, 2016
    In the Office of the Clerk of Court
    WA State Court of Appeals, Division III
    IN THE COURT OF APPEALS OF THE STATE OF WASHINGTON
    DIVISION THREE
    MELANIE J. BRYANT, a single person,          )
    )        No. 33206-3-111
    Respondent,              )
    )
    v.                                     )
    )
    STEPHEN R. SANDBERG and ANNE D.              )        UNPUBLISHED OPINION
    SANDBERG, husband and wife,                  )
    )
    Appellants.              )
    FEARING, CJ. -    Melanie Bryant sued her neighbor, Stephen Sandberg, to gain
    use of a driveway that crosses Sandberg's land. She sought an implied easement or an
    easement by necessity. The trial court granted Bryant summary judgment. We reverse.
    FACTS
    Melanie Bryant and Stephen Sandberg own adjacent properties in the rich Grant
    County farmland, with Bryant owning lot 1 (Lot 1) and Sandberg owning lot 2 (Lot 2) of
    a short plat. Each lot comprises one acre. Bryant claims an implied easement for ingress
    and egress across Lot 2. Because the trial court resolved the dispute on summary
    judgment, we draw the facts from summary judgment declarations and distinguish
    between those facts forwarded by the respective parties.
    No. 33206-3-111
    Bryantv. Sandberg
    Stephen and Anne Sandberg, former husband and wife, and Stephen's aunt and
    uncle, Roberta and Gerald Trautman, originally owned both lots, and the lots were treated
    as one tax parcel. In 1999, Stephen Sandberg built an addition to a residence present on
    the property. In 2002, Sandberg built a 36-foot by 30-foot garage, with no plumbing,
    next to the residence.
    In April, 2003, the Grant County Assessor approved the Sandberg short plat,
    which separated the Sandberg and Trautman property into Lots 1 and 2. The county road
    acts as the southern border of Lot 1, but Lot 1 has no driveway connected to the road.
    Upon the division of land, Lot 1 contained the residence and garage. Lot 2 connected to
    the county road by a thirty-foot-wide driveway. The boundary line between the two lots
    lies ten feet from the garage and twenty feet from the residence on Lot 1. The garage
    door and home front door face the boundary line and driveway. Building permits .
    submitted for the house addition and garage may indicate access on Lot 1 is through the
    Lot 2 driveway.
    On May 8, 2003, Roberta and Gerald Trautman conveyed their interests in Lot 1 to
    Stephen and Anne Sandberg. By at least 2003, the Sandbergs resided in the home
    situated on Lot 1. Stephen Sandberg denies that the couple drove on the Lot 2 roadway
    for access to the couple's garage and home on Lot 1. He contends photos show
    overgrowth in the area between the Lot 2 driveway and the garage on Lot 1. Sandberg
    testifies that the couple used the garage as his wife's craft room, but he does not
    2
    No. 33206-3-111
    Bryantv. Sandberg
    expressly deny that the garage was also used as a garage. According to Sandberg, the
    couple entered the garage through a pedestrian, rather than a car, door. Sandberg did not
    disclose on his affidavit from where the couple accessed the Lot 1 home, while they lived
    in the Lot 1 residence.
    On May 3 1, 2007, Stephen and Anne Sandberg obtained a loan from M & I Bank,
    who recorded a deed of trust on Lot 1. The Sandbergs defaulted on the loan, and, on
    September 19, 2011, BMO Harris Bank purchased the property at the trustee's sale.
    Stephen and Anne Sandberg thereafter resided on the adjoining Lot 2.
    On April 8, 2013, Melanie Bryant purchased Lot 1 from BMO Harris Bank.
    Before she purchased the property, she reviewed the lot lines. On April 15, 2014,
    Stephen and Anne Sandberg divorced. Stephen Sandberg continued to live on Lot 2.
    PROCEDURE
    On September 5, 2014, Melanie Bryant sued Stephen Sandberg and requested that
    the court establish an implied easement over Sandberg's driveway so that she can drive a
    vehicle into her garage and more easily access the front of her house. She asked for an
    easement of ingress and egress over the Lot 2 roadway, whose width varies from twenty
    to thirty feet wide. Bryant claimed that Sandberg refused to allow her to access her
    property over the roadway, even though the Sandbergs employed the roadway to access
    the Lot 1 residence when the Sandbergs lived in the home.
    Melanie Bryant filed a summary judgment motion seeking a ruling that, as a
    3
    No. 33206-3-III
    Bryantv. Sandberg
    matter of law, she is entitled to an easement across the Lot 2 driveway. Bryant argued
    that she possesses no other reasonable access to Lot 1, because her garage door and
    residence front door face Lot 2 and the latter lot's driveway. She contended that any
    other access would be impractical, unreasonable, and economically infeasible. She
    attached to her declaration a photograph of the back of her garage and home. The photo
    shows terraced landscaping in that area of the property. Presumably, Bryant contends
    that she would need to move her landscaping in order to gain access to her home and
    garage from a source other than the Lot 2 driveway. She claimed that the arrangement of
    the Lot 1 home and garage with the Lot 2 drive compels a finding that the Sandbergs,
    when residing on Lot 1, employed the Lot 2 driveway to access the home.
    Stephen Sandberg filed a declaration in response to Melanie Bryant's summary
    judgment motion. Stephen Sandberg declared that the south end of Lot 1 borders the
    county road for one hundred and eighty-five feet. He impliedly argued that Melanie
    Bryant could construct a driveway from the county road to her garage. Sandberg noted
    that a photograph of the area in front of the garage shows an overgrowth of grass and
    weeds. Sandberg argued that Bryant can access her garage from the other side of the
    house and that she had already used this access for years. He contended that Melanie
    Bryant is not entitled to an implied easement from prior use or an easement by necessity.
    He testified that Melanie Bryant's boyfriend told him that the boyfriend or Bryant placed
    a car and boat in the garage without crossing Lot 2.
    4
    No. 33206-3-III
    Bryantv. Sandberg
    On summary judgment, the trial court granted Melanie Bryant the easement. The
    trial court reasoned that the elements for easements by necessity and implication "are not
    hard and fast rules." Report of Proceedings at 32. The court reasoned that the closeness
    of the garage and home to the boundary line of the properties shows an intent of the
    common grantor to allow the owner of Lot 1 to use the driveway across Lot 2.
    LAW AND ANALYSIS
    We review a trial court's order granting summary judgment de novo. Briggs v.
    Nova Servs., 
    166 Wn.2d 794
    ,801,
    213 P.3d 910
     (2009). Summary judgment is
    appropriate if the pleadings, depositions, answers to interrogatories, and admissions on
    file, together with the affidavits, if any, show that there is no genuine issue as to any
    material fact and that the moving party is entitled to a judgment as a matter of law. CR
    56(c). A material fact is one on which the outcome of the litigation depends in whole or
    in part. Ranger Ins. Co. v. Pierce County, 
    164 Wn.2d 545
    , 552, 
    192 P.3d 886
     (2008). In
    a summary judgment motion, the burden is on the moving party to demonstrate that there
    is no genuine issue as to a material fact and that, as a matter of law, summary judgment is
    proper. Hartley v. State, 
    103 Wn.2d 768
    , 774, 
    698 P.2d 77
     (1985). This court construes
    all facts and reasonable inferences in the light most favorable to the nonmoving party.
    Wilson v. Steinbach, 
    98 Wn.2d 434
    ,437,
    656 P.2d 1030
     (1982).
    Stephen Sandberg contends the trial court errantly resolved controverted facts at
    summary judgment. He argues the trial court weighed his credibility and settled factual
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    No. 33206-3-111
    Bryantv. Sandberg
    questions of prior conduct, accessibility and intent. He maintains that the trial court
    ignored his testimony that he and his ex-wife did not access the garage door from the
    driveway and this fact undermines the elements of prior use and reasonable necessity.
    Melanie Bryant responds that the trial court properly granted summary judgment
    because the easement was reasonably necessary and implied from prior use. She argues
    she established the necessity because constructing a substitute driveway to access the
    garage is not reasonable. According to Bryant, prior use must be implied because the
    location of the garage and home front door shows that the parties intended vehicle access
    to the garage by way of the driveway. She contends the trial court considered Sandberg's
    statement that he did not access the garage by vehicle across the driveway, but
    determined that the statement alone was not enough to overcome all the other evidence in
    the record.
    Melanie Bryant seeks an easement under two theories: (1) implied easement from
    prior use, and (2) easement by necessity. The names of the theories are misnomers since
    an implied easement requires proof of some degree of necessity and an easement by
    necessity is an implied easement. Visser v. Craig, 
    139 Wn. App. 152
    , 163, 
    159 P.3d 453
    (2007). The trial court must be affirmed if either theory applies as a matter of law. Thus
    we address each discrete theory separately. Melanie Bryant presents powerful
    arguments, but the arguments are best reserved for trial. Material issues of fact exist for
    both a claim of implied easement and easement by necessity.
    6
    No. 33206-3-III
    Bryant v. Sandberg
    Implied Easement
    The elements for establishing an implied easement are (1) unity of title and
    subsequent separation of title in real property, (2) apparent and continuous use of one part
    of the property to benefit the other, and (3) reasonable necessity that the use continue
    after severance of the property. Hellberg v. Coffin Sheep Co., 
    66 Wn.2d 664
    ,668,
    404 P.2d 770
     (1965). Unity of title is an absolute requirement. Hellberg v. Coffin Sheep Co.,
    
    66 Wn.2d at 668
    . One decision proclaims that the presence or absence of the second or
    third element is not necessarily conclusive. Rogers v. Cation, 
    9 Wn.2d 369
    , 376, 115
    P .2d 702 ( 1941 ). Another decision reads that the first and third factors, unity of title and
    reasonable necessity, are essential for the creation of an implied easement. Fossum
    Orchards v. Pugsley, 
    77 Wn. App. 447
    ,451,
    892 P.2d 1095
     (1995). One opinion
    declares that the three-element rule of an implied easement "is not a hard and fast one and
    the presence or absence of any or all of the stated requirements is not necessarily
    conclusive." Rogers v. Cation, 
    9 Wn.2d at 376
    .
    The second and third elements of an implied easement act as aids to determine the
    "presumed intention of the parties as disclosed by the extent and character of the user, the
    nature of the property, and the relation of the separated parts to each other." Hellberg v.
    Coffin Sheep Co., 
    66 Wn.2d at 668
    . An implied easement arises at the time of
    conveyance. Visser v. Craig, 139 Wn. App. at 161-62 (2007). Despite Washington
    decisional language questioning whether any one of the three elements are essential, we
    7
    No. 33206-3-111
    Bryantv. Sandberg
    find no decision that concludes the easement claimant may prevail on summary judgment
    when she only establishes, as a matter oflaw, one of the elements.
    Here, the parties agree that Melanie Bryant satisfies the first element because
    Stephen Sandberg owned both lots and subsequently separated title in the lots. Sandberg
    does not argue that an intervening foreclosure purchaser destroyed the presence of the
    first element.
    The party seeking the implied easement has the burden of presenting evidence of
    prior continuous use, the second element of an implied easement. McPhaden v. Scott, 
    95 Wn. App. 431
    ,438,
    975 P.2d 1033
     (1999). Stephen Sandberg testified that, as residents
    of Lot 1, he and his wife did not use the Lot 2 driveway, and Melanie Bryant presented
    no evidence of continuous use of the driveway for the benefit of Lot 1. We have no
    evidence of any use of Lot 2 by someone residing on Lot 1.
    Creation of an implied easement does not require absolute necessity to fulfill the
    third element of an implied easement, but reasonable necessity of the use of the easement
    by the dominant estate. Evich v. Kovacevich, 
    33 Wn.2d 151
    , 157,
    204 P.2d 839
     (1949).
    The test of necessity is whether the party claiming the right can, at reasonable cost, on his
    own estate, and without trespassing on his neighbors, create a substitute. Adams v.
    Cullen, 
    44 Wn.2d 502
    ,507,
    268 P.2d 451
     (1954). Although prior use is a circumstance
    contributing to the implication of an easement, if the land can be used without the
    easement only with disproportionate expense, an easement may be implied on the basis of
    8
    No. 33206-3-111
    Bryant v. Sandberg
    necessity alone. Fossum Orchards v. Pugsley, 
    77 Wn. App. at 451
     (1995). In reviewing
    whether an easement across a neighbor's property is needed, the harm to the aesthetics of
    the dominant estate may be considered. Bushy v. Weldon, 
    30 Wn.2d 266
    , 268, 191 P .2d
    302 (1948). Necessity must exist at the date the common parcel is severed. Visser v.
    Craig, 139 Wn. App. at 159 (2007).
    Melanie Bryant contends that she has no other reasonable access to her property
    than through the Lot 2 driveway. Nevertheless, she has frontage along a public street and
    may have other points of access. She provided no testimony of the cost to construct other
    access.
    Melanie Bryant argues that the present case most closely aligns with Bushy v.
    Weldon. In Bushy, the trial court acted as fact finder to determine that the construction of
    a substitute driveway was unreasonable. Here, the trial court determined the substitute
    garage access was unreasonable during summary judgment.
    In short, the use of an easement implied from prior use is a question of fact and
    depends on the parties' intent, the nature of the properties, and the manner in which the
    parties used the easement. Visser v. Craig, 139 Wn. App. at 161. The location of
    Melanie Bryant's front door and garage and building plans are strong indicators of an
    intent to permit the Lot 1 owner to use the Lot 2 driveway. Nevertheless, because we
    lack direct evidence of earlier use of the Lot 2 driveway by a Lot 1 resident, because
    Stephen Sandberg denies use of the garage for storing vehicles, and because of the
    9
    No. 33206-3-111
    Bryant v. Sandberg
    absence of testimony of the cost of an alternative driveway, we conclude that disputed
    material issues of fact preclude summary judgment on Melanie Bryant's claim for an
    implied easement.
    Easement by Necessity
    The elements required for an easement implied from necessity are: (1) a
    landowner conveys part of his land and (2) retains part, usually an adjoining parcel, and
    (3) after the severance of the parcels, it is necessary to pass over one of them to reach a
    public street or road from the other. Hellberg v. Coffin Sheep Co., 
    66 Wn.2d at 666-67
    ;
    17 WILLIAM B. STOEBUCK & JOHN W. WEA VER, WASHINGTON PRACTICE: REAL ESTATE:
    PROPERTY LAW§ 2.5, at 93 (2d ed. 2004). Necessity must exist at the date the property
    is severed. Visser v. Craig, 139 Wn. App. at 159 (2007). Most jurisdictions do not allow
    an easement by necessity to arise if there is clear evidence of the parties' contrary intent,
    and the majority view on easements by necessity militates against the conclusion that an
    easement by necessity can be imposed despite the parties' contrary intent. Visser v.
    Craig, 139 Wn. App. at 164-65. An easement by necessity is an expression of a public
    policy that will not permit property to be landlocked and rendered useless. Hellberg v.
    Coffin Sheep Co., 
    66 Wn.2d at 666
    .
    Although the first two elements of an easement by necessity are easily met in this
    case, Melanie Bryant failed to establish that the easement over Stephen Sandberg's
    property was necessary. Although she presented photos showing the convenient access
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    No. 33206-3-III
    Bryantv. Sandberg
    the easement would provide, she does not establish that the easement is necessary. She
    could not show that her property is landlocked when it runs adjacent to the county road
    for 185 lineal feet. Genuine issues of fact existed as to whether Bryant was entitled to an
    easement by necessity.
    CONCLUSION
    We reverse the summary judgment granted Melanie Bryant.
    A majority of the panel has determined this opinion will not be printed in the
    Washington Appellate Reports, but it will be filed for public record pursuant to RCW
    2.06.040.
    WE CONCUR:
    Pennell, J.
    j
    11
    [