Court Opinion

ID: 4019511
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2016-07-27 22:02:33.801886+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T14:28:17.414563
License: Public Domain

Filed 7/27/16
                          CERTIFIED FOR PUBLICATION

                IN THE COURT OF APPEAL OF THE STATE OF CALIFORNIA

                           SECOND APPELLATE DISTRICT

                                      DIVISION ONE

FRIENDS OF THE HASTAIN TRAIL                    B249841, B251814
et al.,
                                                (Los Angeles County
        Plaintiffs and Respondents,             Super. Ct. No. BC469573)

        v.

COLDWATER DEVELOPMENT LLC
et al.,

        Defendants and Appellants;

MOUNTAINS RECREATION AND
CONSERVATION AUTHORITY,

        Intervener and Respondent.

        APPEALS from a judgment and order of the Superior Court of Los Angeles
County, Yvette M. Palazuelos, Judge. Reversed with directions.
        Lewis Brisbois Bisgaard & Smith, Roy G. Weatherup, Sheldon H. Sloan,
Wesley G. Beverlin and Raymond R. Barrera for Defendants and Appellants.
        Overton, Lyman & Prince and Stephen L. Jones for Plaintiffs and Respondents.
        Blank Rome; Finestone & Richter; Law Offices of Eric F. Edmunds, Jr., and
Eric F. Edmunds, Jr., for Intervener and Respondent.
                                 ——————————
       Defendants Lydda Lud, LLC (Lydda Lud) and Coldwater Development LLC
(Coldwater) appeal from a judgment declaring a public trail easement was established by
public dedication through defendants’ property for hiking, jogging, and dog-walking.
Defendants contend the trial court erred in finding a public dedication of such an
easement. We conclude no substantial evidence supports the court’s finding that the
public acquired an easement through defendants’ property by implied dedication as
provided for under Gion v. City of Santa Cruz (consolidated with Dietz v. King) (1970) 2
Cal. 3d 29 (Gion). We therefore reverse the judgment and the subsequent award of
attorney fees to plaintiffs.
                     FACTUAL AND PROCEDURAL SUMMARY
A.     The Peak Trail
       In the early part of the last century, the Beverly Hills and Los Angeles fire
departments constructed and maintained fire roads in the cities’ wilderness areas to
facilitate prevention and suppression of wildfires. In mountainous areas the fire roads
were originally situated atop ridgelines, but by 1940 new roads had been constructed at
lower elevations for ease of use and to mitigate erosion. The new fire roads ran near to
and roughly parallel with the ridgelines, and the original roads were abandoned.
       This litigation involves two parallel fire roads, an older one and its newer
replacement. The older road climbed to and ran along an approximately 400-foot-long
ridgeline running roughly north and south in a steep, narrow, canyon-type area of
chaparral and oakwood in Los Angeles, approximately half a mile west of Coldwater
Canyon Drive and a mile east of Lake Drive. By 1940, this road had been abandoned in
favor of a new fire road that ran immediately to the west of the ridgeline and roughly
parallel to it, but at a lesser elevation. Some hikers continued to use the abandoned road,
and it came to be called the “Peak Trail” by some because it led to a high point in the
terrain that afforded a 360 degree view of Los Angeles. A permanent survey marker was
installed at the summit of the Peak Trail in 1952, becoming a hiking destination. The
Peak Trail was situated wholly on private property.

                                             2
B.     The Hastain/Coldwater Trail
       By 1940, the older fire road had been replaced by the Hastain Fire Road, which
began at Coldwater Canyon Drive and ran south southwest for a time before meandering
generally west to Lake Drive, like a backwards lazy-L. The northeastern half of the
Hastain Fire Road ran through undeveloped private property, some of it owned by
defendants’ predecessors, and the southwestern half ran through Franklin Canyon Park,
which is public property.
       The Hastain Fire Road was used by hikers, bicyclists, equestrians and dog
walkers, some of whom called it the Hastain Trail and some the Coldwater Trail. These
users could access the road either from the northeast at Coldwater Canyon Drive or
southwest at Lake Drive.
       Before 2004, a hiker on the Hastain Trail could transition to the roughly parallel
Peak Trail by climbing a moderately steep embankment. In 2004, grading reduced this
climb, making the Peak Trail more accessible.
C.     Development Along the Trails
       In the early 1990’s, residential construction began where the Hastain Fire Road
started at Coldwater Canyon Drive and moved southward, roughly following the road.
By the time of trial, approximately 17 private residences existed in a gated community
along the road, and that portion of it taken over by the development was rededicated as
Beverly Ridge Terrace, a private road. This development also eliminated the Peak Trail
north of its summit, such that by the time of trial both the Hastain Fire Road and Peak
Trail were roughly half their original lengths, their northern halves having been either
rededicated or eliminated. Both now began independently at the southern border of the
Beverly Ridge community, proceeded in parallel roughly southwestward, and “joined”
(via an embankment) after roughly 230 feet, after which the Hastain Fire Road continued
generally southwestward to Franklin Canyon Park and on to Lake Drive.
       The next four lots running south from the Beverly Ridge community were
purchased by Coldwater in 2011, and the two south from those were purchased by Lydda
Lud in 2006. Franklin Canyon Park begins after the southernmost of these six lots, which

                                             3
remain undeveloped except for the previously mentioned 2004 grading. The Hastain Fire
Road runs through these lots and through Franklin Canyon Park to Lake Drive, with a
momentary emergence from the park into a noncontiguous lot owned by Lydda Lud.
Mohamed Hadid, the managing member of both Coldwater and Lydda Lud, planned to
build large homes on the parcels, believing this development too would result in
relocation and rededication of a portion of the Hastain Fire Road. Hadid obtained the
required permits and, in 2011, recommenced grading.
D.     Litigation
       Plaintiff Ellen Scott, who often used the Hastain Trail, observed the 2011 grading
activity on defendants’ property and organized six or seven fellow users into an
association called the “Friends of the Hastain Trail,” the purpose of which was to prove
the trail had been dedicated to the public by operation of law as a result of its use by the
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public for a prescriptive period of at least five continuous years prior to March 1972.
Scott created a Web site and sent emails and distributed fliers seeking “legacy hikers,”
i.e., those who had hiked the trail prior to 1972.
       In September 2011, Scott and the Friends of the Hastain Trail filed a complaint to
quiet title to a public recreational trail easement through defendants’ property. They
alleged the Hastain Trail had been impliedly dedicated to the public as a result of 50
years of public use, including five years of open and continuous use immediately prior to
March 1972. Plaintiffs sought injunctive relief preventing defendants from blocking or
eliminating the trail.
       In April 2012, the Mountains Recreation and Conservation Authority (the
MRCA), a partnership between the Santa Monica Mountains Conservancy and two park
districts, joined the litigation by filing a complaint in intervention. We will refer to Scott,
the Friends of the Hastain Trail and the MRCA as “plaintiffs.”

       1
       As will be discussed, post, the prescriptive period runs from March 1967 to
March 1972.

                                               4
       Defendants answered the complaints and asserted affirmative defenses, including
laches, unclean hands, waiver, and the “Lack of a Basis for Injunctive Relief.”
According to defendants, the Hastain Trail was actually a fire road of the sort that is
routinely relocated or rededicated to accommodate land development. Defendants
disputed the existence of the Peak Trail entirely, and alleged the easement plaintiffs
sought would render their property “undevelopable” and “utterly useless.”
       A court trial took place over eight days, at the outset of which the trial judge,
counsel for both sides, Hadid, and two park rangers walked and drove the length of the
trail from Franklin Canyon Park to the survey marker at the summit of the Peak Trail.
       1.      Plaintiffs’ Evidence
               a.       The Trails
       Plaintiffs showed the area surrounding the Hastain and Peak Trails is unimproved
and scenic, and has long been used by hikers and others. At trial, Brian Bradshaw,
plaintiffs’ expert on aerial photography, testified aerial photos taken from 1960 to 1971
showed the trails to be well established. Bradshaw testified, “the main trail is the Hastain
Trail which has also been referred to as a fire road.” Paul Edelman, who worked for
MRCA, testified MRCA patrolled and maintained the resources inside Franklin Canyon
Park, which he described as “world-class.” He characterized the Hastain Trail as one of
the park’s main trails. Although the summit (with its survey marker) was on private land
(and not on the park map), Edelman believed it was a key resource because it allowed for
a longer hike to a higher elevation with a good view. MRCA’s rangers patrolled the
trails, and MRCA felt obligated to protect the summit, which hikers had long visited.
Edelman had been on all parts of the trails at various times, including in the fall of 1972,
and remembered yellow posts at the Hastain Trail trailhead connected by a chain or cable
to keep cars out. He thought the barrier had been installed by the fire department and
indicated the trail was a public fire road. In 2011, he became aware that Hadid had
fenced off the trail.

                                              5
              b.     Hastain Trail Legacy Hikers
       Plaintiffs identified the prescriptive time frame as March 1967 to March 1972,
during which the Hastain Trail was used by seven legacy hikers who testified at trial:
James Goller, Larry Harrow, Joan Carl, Frederic Harris, Carole Hemingway, Cynthia
Foran, and Richard Saul.2
       Goller testified he hiked the Hastain Trail on Sundays approximately 40 times per
year from 1967 (and prior), when he was 10 years old, to 1972 (and beyond), at first with
his father, then six times with his 12-member cub scout den, and later, as a teenager, with
friends.
       Harrow hiked the trail from approximately 1963 to recently. During the
prescriptive period, he hiked the trail approximately every other weekend in 1967 and
1968, and from 1970 to 1972, sometimes with friends and sometimes by himself.
       Carl, a sculptor, testified she hiked the trail with her dog in the mornings or late
afternoons from October to April beginning in 1968. She would start from Coldwater
Canyon Drive and hike southward, usually turning around after passing the peak, using
the trail “[s]ometimes twice a week, sometimes twice a month. Sometimes maybe not at
all.” She eschewed hiking from May to September to avoid heat and rattlesnakes. Carl
believed the trail was public property because it was “totally open,” with a garbage can
for dog waste. Until shortly before trial she thought it was called the “Coldwater Trail.”
       Harris and Hemingway hiked the trail together four or five times a week in the late
afternoon or early evening during the summers of 1970 and 1971, plus an occasional
                                                         3
Thanksgiving or Christmas holiday during those years. Harris would park his car at the
trailhead on Lake Drive (west of defendants’ property) and hike a circuit of the trail in

       2
         An eighth legacy hiker, Keith Lehrer, testified he used the Hastain Trail with his
friend and the friend’s father about 15 times in 1965, which the trial court found to be
before the relevant time period. He sometimes went to the peak. He always saw four to
six other people on the trail.
       3
         Harris and Hemingway also hiked the trail in the summer of 1972, which is after
the relevant time period.

                                              6
two different directions. He testified the Hastain Trail “dumped out” on Coldwater
Canyon Drive (north and east of defendants’ property). An average hike lasted from one
to two hours.
       Foran hiked the trail six or seven times in 1971, when she was 11 years old, half
the time with an older brother and the other half with some friends.
       Saul hiked the trail once in 1971, alone.
       The legacy hikers saw others on the Hastain Trail. Goller testified he saw 8 to 20
people over the course of each of his hikes. Harrow saw between 2 and 12 people on the
trail every time he was on it. Carl occasionally saw others in one’s and two’s, sometimes
in groups of 2 to 4, including equestrians and dog walkers. Harris and Hemingway
always saw 6 to 12 cars parked at the trailhead on Lake Drive, and between 6 and 20
people on the trail during their hikes. Foran would see 1 or 2 other hikers during each of
her 7 hikes. Saul saw no one else during his one time on the trail.
       Plaintiffs estimated the trail took about two hours to hike. Assuming a hiking day
is six hours long (because most people don’t hike in the midday sun), plaintiffs calculated
that approximately 12 people used the trail per day, which amounted to approximately
4,000 per year.
                c.   Peak Trail Legacy Hikers
       Only Goller, Harris, Hemingway and Foran testified they used the Peak Trail
during the relevant time period. Goller used it approximately forty Sundays a year from
1967 to 1972 (and before and after that time), Harris and Hemingway used the trail once
or twice a week in the summers of 1970 and 1971, and Foran used it seven times in 1971.
       Goller testified the Peak Trail was “really steep,” “very narrow,” “arduous,” and a
“challenge.” Harris testified the trail was “pretty treacherous,” and Hemingway said it
was “steep, had “cliffs on both sides,” and Harris had to “push” her to climb it. Foran
testified the Peak Trail could not be reached on a minibike because the embankment
between it and the Hastain Trail was too steep.
       No one testified to seeing anyone else specifically on the Peak Trail. Harris
testified he saw people “all over the trail,” which could mean both the Hastain and Peak

                                             7
Trails, but the context indicates he meant the “trail” from Lake Drive to Coldwater
Canyon, which is the Hastain Trail. He testified about the Peak Trail separately, and
never said he saw anyone on it.
       Only Harris testified to using either of the trails on any weekday, always
accompanied by Hemingway.
              d.     Extrapolated Usage
       Because the legacy hikers testified they almost always saw others on the Hastain
Trail, from two to possibly a dozen or more each time, the trial court inferred many more
must also have used both the Hastain and Peak Trails. “The average was about three to
four other hikers,” the court found, which “[w]hen extrapolated over the hours of the day
and days of the year [amounted] to thousands of hikers over the relevant period.”
       2.     Defendants’ Evidence
       For the defense, Robert Pope, an expert on aerial photography, testified he had
examined three-dimensional photographs depicting the Hastain Fire Road and its
surrounding area beginning in the mid-1920’s, but found no definitive evidence the Peak
Trail ever existed. He did not dispute, however, that a variety of people could have hiked
to the peak between 1967 and 1972. Frank Haselton, a viewshed analysis expert, testified
the Hastain Trail was visible from some public vantage points but not from others. Ken
Shank, a surveying and grading expert who had prepared defendants’ building plans,
testified homes could not be constructed on defendants’ lots if the requested public
easement was established, but it might be possible to reroute the Hastain Trail to make
room for the construction. He testified defendants’ building plans called for relocation of
the Hastain Fire Road.
       Hadid testified he had been a global real estate developer for 40 years. He first
visited the subject property in 2001 or 2002 and was aware that a fire road passed through
it but believed it could be relocated and rededicated. Before buying the property, Hadid
inspected the land and performed a title check to discover if any easement or right-of-way
existed, finding none. If there had been an easement or restriction he would not have
purchased the property.

                                             8
       3.     Statement of Decision and Judgment
       In October 2012, the trial court issued a tentative decision and judgment in favor
of plaintiffs. Plaintiffs thereafter filed a proposed statement of decision, to which
defendants objected on the grounds, among others, that it failed to address: (1) “whether
the court made an equitable balancing of the hardship on the Property Owners that would
be imposed by granting the proposed implied easement on Defendants’ property”; and (2)
“whether the court is required to or even attempted to fashion the proposed easement as
narrowly as possible to avoid prejudice to the [Defendants] with regards to the scope and
location of the proposed easement on Defendants’ property relative to the Property
Owner’s ability to develop his property as planned and to evaluate any hardship and/or
balancing hardships between the parties.” In support of the objections, Shank, the
surveying and grading expert, proposed that an alternative easement be created, one that
allowed for residential development of the area while preserving the public’s hiking
experience.
       On April 17, 2013, the court overruled most of defendants’ objections and filed its
judgment and amended statement of decision.
       The judgment created an easement designated as the Hastain Trail but which we
will call the “Judgment Trail” to distinguish it from the historical Hastain Trail. The
Judgment Trail is set out in three segments. The first, tracking the Peak Trail, begins at
the summit and proceeds southwestward for 233.72 feet, where it meets the Hastain Fire
Road, and thence atop the fire road for 620.86 feet to the border between Coldwater
Canyon’s and Lydda Lud’s parcels. The easement is described in metes and bounds, as
follows: “COMMENCING AT THE NORTHWEST CORNER OF [LOT 1; defendants’
northernmost parcel], THENCE ALONG THE NORTHERLY LINE OF LOT 1, SOUTH
8822’30 EAST, 674.66 FEET TO THE POINT OF BEGINNING, SAID POINT
BEING THE CENTERLINE OF A 5.00 FOOT WIDE TRAIL, KNOWN AS THE
HASTAIN TRAIL, THENCE ALONG THE HASTAIN TRAIL BEING 5.00 FEET
WIDE AND LYING 2.50 FEET ON EACH SIDE OF THE FOLLOWING DESCRIBED
CENTERLINE THE FOLLOWING COURSES:

                                              9
      “1ST   SOUTH 0.453’25” WEST, 16.24 FEET THENCE;
      “2ND SOUTH 0.315’56” EAST, 19.22 FEET THENCE;
      “3RD SOUTH 1629’43” WEST, 71.72 FEET THENCE;
      “4TH SOUTH 2021’13” WEST, 71.72 FEET THENCE;
      “5TH SOUTH 1145’02” WEST, 54.82 FEET TO A POINT, SAID POINT
HEREINAFTER REFERRED TO AS POINT ‘A’. SAID POINT BEING THE
TERMINATION OF THE 5.00 FOOT WIDE TRAIL AND THE BEGINNING OF THE
15.00 FOOT WIDE TRAIL;
      “THENCE, CONTINUING ALONG HASTAIN TRAIL BEING 15.00 FEET
WIDE AND LYING 7.50 FEET ON EACH SIDE OF THE FOLLOWING DESCRIBED
CENTERLINE THE FOLLOWING COURSES:
      “6TH SOUTH 1.546’35” WEST, 138.25 FEET THENCE;
      “7TH SOUTH 3107’10” EAST, 99.68 FEET THENCE;
      “8TH SOUTH 3804’10” WEST, 98.16 FEET THENCE;
      “9TH SOUTH 4645’46” WEST, 92.28 FEET THENCE;
      “10TH SOUTH 4909’09” WEST, 15.98 FEET THENCE;
      “11TH SOUTH 1857’00” WEST, 15.45 FEET THENCE;
      “12TH SOUTH 0844’01” EAST, 59.10 FEET THENCE;
      “13TH SOUTH 0349’45” EAST, 95.96 FEET THENCE.”
      The second segment begins at the border between Franklin Park and Lydda Lud’s
southernmost parcel and proceeds 740.79 feet northeastward until it meets up with the
first segment. This segment is described in metes and bounds also, for example as
follows:
      “COMMENCING AT THE NORTHWEST CORNER OF [LYDDA LUD’S LOT
6], THENCE SOUTH 0016’16” WEST, A DISTANCE OF 278.89 FEET TO THE
TRUE POINT OF BEGINNING;

                                           10
       “THENCE . . . ALONG SAID HASTAIN TRAIL BEING 15.00 FEET WIDE
       AND LYING 7.50 FEET ON EACH SIDE OF THE FOLLOWING DESCRIBED
       CENTERLINE THE FOLLOWING COURSES:
       “1ST   SOUTH 7000’33” EAST, 13.62 FEET THENCE;
       “2ND NORTH 8249’32” EAST, 40.82 FEET THENCE; [¶] . . . [¶]
       “11TH NORTH 4019’01” EAST, 62.00 FEET TO A POINT THAT IS DISTANT
SOUTH 7951’34” EAST, 383.30 FEET FROM THE NORTHWEST CORNER OF
[LYDDA LUD’S LOT 5].”
       The third segment of the easement describes, also in metes and bounds, a 158.68
inverted “U” where a portion of the Hastain Fire Road departs from Franklin Park into
Lydda Lud’s property but quickly returns to the park.
       The judgment is silent as to that portion of the Hastain Trail running north from
the junction with the Peak Trail to the Beverly Ridge community. The judgment is also
silent as to those portions of the Hastain and Peak Trails that were either rededicated in or
eliminated by the Beverly Ridge development.
       In its statement of decision, the trial court found the Judgment Trail was “an old
fire road leading from Lake Drive up the hill until very near the peak. At that point, the
Trail veers east from the fire road up to the peak.” The “general public knew of and used
the trail for five continuous years prior to March 4, 1972.” The public’s use was
“substantial,” i.e., by more than a limited and definable number of persons. The court
found “the public used the trail without objection and as if it were a public trail,” and no
user was told he or she was on private property or warned not to hike the trail, and no
fences or signs impeded hiking. The public use was open and obvious, and the then
owners had either actual or constructive notice of it. Further, most of the hikers testified
they saw other hikers throughout the length of the trail, from two to a dozen or more, and
“a substantial number of the other hikers were hiking to the peak” during the relevant
period. The court found that photographs and testimony demonstrated the public used the
Hastain Fire Road to get to the Peak Trail, and used the Peak Trail to get to the summit.

                                             11
In 2011, grading had slightly modified the junction of the two trails, but the court found
this modification too insubstantial to affect the easement. In sum, the court found
defendants’ predecessors had impliedly dedicated an easement for “public recreational
uses of hiking, jogging, and dog-walking.” The easement is 5 feet wide on the Peak Trail
portion and 15 feet wide on the Hastain Trail portion.
       The judgment provides that defendants “hold no legal or equitable right, title,
estate, lien or interest in and to the Trail” and have no obligation to maintain it, and
enjoins defendants from interfering with public recreational uses and reasonable
maintenance of the trail and orders them to remove from it all items they own or control.
       Regarding defendants’ objections, the court stated defendants’ inability to develop
the property was “irrelevant. When Defendants acquired the property, they took subject
to whatever easements and encumbrances had been created by prior owners.” In
response to the argument that the court should fashion the easement so as to avoid
prejudice to defendants’ right to develop the property, the court stated that it “fashioned
nothing. The easement is as described in the surveys attached to the pleadings and
stipulated at trial.” The court also refused to “‘balance the equities’ . . . because
Defendants’ claim of hardship and balancing the equities is not an element of an implied
dedication at law for public recreational purposes.” Moreover, the court stated, there was
no “hardship” to defendants because they “acquired their property interests decades after
the public had already [become] vested in its right to use the Trail.” Finally, the court
stated that defendants “are simply not in an equitable position,” because “the due
diligence [Hadid] performed on the property was inadequate and insufficient.” Hadid,
the court explained, ignored evidence of the public’s use of the trail, and the testimony of
his belief that all claims must be recorded was not credible.
       4.     Post-trial Motions
       In motions for new trial and to vacate the judgment, defendants renewed their
arguments that the court should consider the hardship to them and “balance the equities in
determining the scope or location of the [easement].” Defendants’ proposed an
“Alternative Trail Easement” that they represented provided “panoramic views that are

                                              12
far superior to the view available at the top of the ‘Peak Trail’ portion of the [easement
defined in the judgment] which has an impaired view looking north due to a fence built
by the owner of the property to the north and his placement of tall trees along the fence
line.” The Alternative Trail Easement would also connect to other trails managed by
MRCA, and be safer and longer than the “Judgment Trail.” Hadid represented he would
grade the Alternative Trail Easement and add a viewing deck and other related
improvements for the benefit of the hiking public so as to make the Alternative Trail
Easement a better hiking experience than that afforded by the Judgment Trail. Hadid
stated he offered the plans so the court under its equitable powers could “consider and
balance the equities of an alternative location for placement of the public trail for hiking
purposes and for entry of a new judgment.”
       In their opposition to defendants’ motion to vacate the judgment, plaintiffs argued
the court had previously addressed and rejected defendants’ arguments. They did not,
however, dispute Hadid’s presentation about the benefits of the proposed Alternative
Trail Easement.
       In denying the motions for new trial and to vacate the judgment, the court rejected
defendants’ arguments by referencing its statement of decision.
       Defendants filed a timely appeal. The trial court thereafter granted Scott’s and
Friends of the Hastain Trail’s motion for attorney fees, awarding $330,696.60.
Defendants filed a timely appeal from the fee award as well. We consolidated the two
appeals. After oral argument, we requested further briefing on issues discussed in this
opinion, which both sides provided. Defendants submitted along with their letter brief
requests for judicial notice of a title report, a 1936 deed, certain portions of the 2013
California Fire Code, a document published by the Los Angeles Fire Department, a
publication issued by the United States Government, and portions of the Los Angeles
Municipal Code. Defendants’ requests for judicial notice are denied because the
documents are either irrelevant, lack foundation, or attempt to introduce new evidence.

                                              13
                                       DISCUSSION
       Defendants argue: The trial court applied the wrong law; the judgment is
unsupported by substantial evidence; the Judgment Trail is not the same as was used by
the public during the prescriptive period; the trial court should have relocated the trail to
serve equity; and the judgment improperly granted the public a fee interest in the
easement.
I.     The Trial Court Properly Applied Gion.
       Defendants argue the doctrine of implied dedication set forth in Gion applies only
to beachfront or shoreline property and roads, not to inland wilderness property or
recreational hiking trails. We disagree.
       A “dedication” is an uncompensated transfer of an interest in private property to
the public, and “may occur pursuant to statute or the common law.” (Friends of the
Trails v. Blasius (2000) 78 Cal. App. 4th 810, 820 (Blasius).) “‘Dedication has been
defined as an appropriation of land for some public use, made by the fee owner, and
accepted by the public. By virtue of this offer which the fee owner has made, he is
precluded from reasserting an exclusive right over the land now used for public purposes.
American courts have freely applied this common law doctrine, not only to streets, parks,
squares, and commons, but to other places subject to public use. California has been no
exception to the general approach of wide application of the doctrine.’” (Id. at p. 820.)
       “Express dedication arises where the owner’s intent to dedicate is manifested in
the overt acts of the owner, e.g., by execution of a deed. An implied dedication arises
when the evidence supports an attribution of intent to dedicate without the presence of
such acts,” such as “when the public use is adverse and exceeds the period for
prescription.” (Blasius, supra, 78 Cal.App.4th at p. 821; see Union Transp. Co. v.
Sacramento County (1954) 42 Cal. 2d 235, 243, abrogated in part on other grounds by Sts.
& Hy. Code, §§ 941, 1806 [intent on the part of the owner to dedicate land to the public
may be shown expressly or by implication].) An owner’s offer to dedicate can thus be
inferred from factual circumstances in the same general manner as prescriptive rights are
established, i.e., circumstances that show “the public has used the land ‘for a period of

                                              14
more than five years with full knowledge of the owner, without asking or receiving
permission to do so and without objection being made by anyone.’ [Citation.] . . . [T]he
question is whether the public has engaged in ‘long-continued adverse use’ of the land
sufficient to raise the ‘conclusive and undisputable presumption of knowledge and
acquiescence, while at the same time it negatives the idea of a mere license.’” (Gion,
supra, 2 Cal.3d at p. 38.)
       “What must be shown is that persons used the property believing the public had a
right to such use.” (Gion, supra, 2 Cal.3d at p. 39.) A litigant claiming implied
dedication must establish “that persons have used the land as they would have used
public land,” in the case of a beach or shoreline, “as if it were a public recreation area,”
and if “a road is involved, the litigants must show that it was used as if it were a public
road.” (Ibid.; Bess v. County of Humboldt (1992) 3 Cal. App. 4th 1544, 1550, 1551.) The
evidence must also demonstrate that “various groups of persons,” not a “limited and
definable number of persons,” have used the land “‘when they wished to do so without
asking permission and without protest from the land owners.’” (Gion, supra, at p. 39.)
The “‘issue is ordinarily one of fact, giving consideration to all the circumstances and the
inferences that may be drawn therefrom. The use may be such that the trier of fact is
justified in inferring an adverse claim and user and imputing constructive knowledge
thereof to the owner.’” (Id. at pp. 40-41, quoting O’Banion v. Borba (1948) 32 Cal. 2d
145, 148-149.) Each inquiry depends on “‘the facts and circumstances attending the
use.’” (County of Los Angeles v. Berk (1980) 26 Cal. 3d 201, 214 (Berk), citation omitted;
Mulch v. Nagle (1921) 51 Cal. App. 559, 567 [“Whether a particular strip of land has been
dedicated or abandoned to the public for highway purposes depends upon the
circumstances of each case”].)
       An owner may avoid dedication by affirmatively proving the public was granted a
license to use the property. (Gion, supra, 2 Cal.3d at p. 41.) Even if the present fee
owners make it clear that they do not approve of the public use of the property,
“[p]revious owners . . . by ignoring the wide-spread public use of the land for more than
five years [may] have impliedly dedicated the property to the public.” (Id. at p. 44.) For

                                              15
example, in Gion, our Supreme Court concluded that an implied dedication of private
land (three parcels of land on a shoreline, and a beach and the road leading to it) for
public use occurred when the public had made use of the land for more than five years
without objection by the owners. (Ibid.)
       The Gion decision resulted in “soaring sales of chain link fences,” a “spate” of
critical legal commentary, and the Legislature’s enactment of Civil Code section 1009.
(County of Orange v. Chandler-Sherman Corp. (1976) 54 Cal. App. 3d 561, 564; 12
Witkin, Summary of Cal. Law (10th ed. 2005) Real Property, § 249, p. 303.) The statute,
enacted on March 4, 1972, provides that “no use of [private real property] by the public
after the effective date of this section shall ever ripen to confer upon the public . . . a
vested right to continue to make such use permanently” without an express dedication by
the owner. (Civ. Code, § 1009, subd. (b); see Blasius, supra, 78 Cal.App.4th at p. 823.)
Civil Code section 1009 abrogated the Gion decision, but only prospectively, affecting no
rights that had vested prior to its enactment. (Blasius, at p. 823.)
       Defendants argue Gion does not apply here because their property consists of
inland wildlands, not beachfront or shoreline property or a road. In Gion, however, the
court explained no different rules exist for roadways or other areas, noting that prior
cases had found implied dedication in parkland, beaches and athletic fields. (Id. at pp.
41-42.)
       Defendants argue we should follow Richmond Ramblers Motorcycle Club v.
Western Title Guaranty Co. (1975) 47 Cal. App. 3d 747, in which the majority stated in
dicta that the rules and rationale of Gion apply only to roads, beaches, and shoreline
areas, not remote wilderness areas. (Id. at pp. 754, 758-759.) But the Supreme Court
later disavowed such a limitation in Berk reiterating Gion’s holding that the doctrine of
implied public dedication is not limited to any specific kind of real property. (Berk,
supra, 26 Cal.3d at pp. 214-215; see Burch v. Gombos (2000) 82 Cal. App. 4th 352, 355,
356-358 [upholding a finding of implied public dedication of a one-lane dirt road in the
Santa Cruz Mountains]; Blasius, supra, 78 Cal.App.4th at pp. 822, 824 [“there is no
difference between dedication of shoreline property and other property”; “Well within the

                                               16
ancient reach of the common law of dedication is the establishment of a public
footway”]; County of Orange v. Chandler-Sherman Corp., supra, 54 Cal.App.3d at p.
564 [Gion applies to noncoastal property “such as roads, passageways and paths”].)
       We conclude the trial court correctly applied Gion to plaintiffs’ implied dedication
claim. Although it “may require more circumstances to establish” dedication in the case
of uncultivated and unenclosed land, “the test is ultimately the same.” (O’Banion v.
Borba, supra, 32 Cal.2d at p. 150; see Union Transp. Co. v. Sacramento County, supra,
42 Cal.2d at pp. 240-241 [“Whether the user was adverse is a question of fact to be
determined from all of the circumstances of a case”]; Hays v. Vanek (1989) 217
Cal. App. 3d 271, 282 [“Whether an owner has made an offer is a question of fact
requiring an examination of all the pertinent circumstances”].)
II.    No Substantial Evidence Supports The Implied Dedication Of A Public Trail
Easement.
       Having concluded the trial court applied the proper legal test, we must determine
whether substantial evidence supports the finding of an implied-in-law dedication. In
doing so, we accept as true all evidence tending to establish the correctness of the trial
court’s findings, take into account all reasonable inferences that could lead to the same
conclusion, and resolve every substantial conflict in the evidence in favor of the findings.
(Ermoian v. Desert Hospital (2007) 152 Cal. App. 4th 475, 501.)
       There is little if any evidence in the record about who owned the subject property
during the prescriptive period or whether the owners actually knew hikers were using
their land. The issue is therefore whether, under all the circumstances, public use of the
subject property between 1967 and 1972 sufficed to put defendants’ predecessors on
constructive notice that their property was in danger of public dedication. Plaintiffs must
show the public “used the land as they would have used public land,” and in the case of a
road, “as if it were a public road.” (Gion, supra, 2 Cal.3d at p. 39.)

                                             17
       A.     Use of a Fire Road Easement does not Constitute Use of, or Grant
       Prescriptive Rights to, the Servient Tenement
       Use sufficient for implied public dedication must “clearly indicate to the owner
that his property is in danger of being dedicated.” (County of Orange v. Chandler-
Sherman Corporation, supra, 54 Cal.App.3d at p. 565.) No public use of the Hastain
Fire Road could have put defendants’ predecessors on actual or constructive notice that
their property was in danger of public dedication because the fire road was not their
property, it was a public easement on their property, and once granted, the scope of a
public easement cannot be materially changed without notice. (Civ. Code, § 806 [“The
extent of a servitude is determined by the terms of the grant, or the nature of the
enjoyment by which it was acquired”].)
       The Public Resources Code instructs the State Board of Forestry and Fire
Protection to adopt regulations implementing minimum fire safety standards applicable to
lands for which the state bears responsibility, including regulations pertaining to fire
roads. (Pub. Resources Code, §§ 4002, 4290.) The purpose of a fire road is to “provide
for safe access for emergency wildland fire equipment and civilian evacuation
concurrently, and . . . provide unobstructed traffic circulation during a wildfire
emergency.” (Cal. Code Regs., tit. 14, § 1273.00.) The Los Angeles Municipal Code
(LAMC) authorizes the Los Angeles Fire Chief to enforce fire regulations adopted by the
state. (LAMC, § 57.103.1.4.) For example, LAMC section 57.4908.3 authorizes the fire
chief “to construct fire roads and firebreaks in or upon any undeveloped lands in any
mountain or hill area, whether or not such lands are public or private, with the consent of
the owner thereof, and to maintain the same on a permanent basis when the Chief
determines that such fire roads and firebreak are necessary for the protection of life and
property against fire or panic.” Where such fire roads exist, they are “granted to the City
without cost as easements from a public street or alley to the required terminal point.”
(LAMC, § 57.503.1.6, italics added.) The fire department has the right to pass over fire
roads by easement, license, city ownership, “or otherwise.” (LAMC, § 57.4908.3.1.)
The right of an agency to use a fire road is a “reserved easement.” (Walsh v. Macaire

                                             18
(1951) 102 Cal. App. 2d 435, 436.) A fire road may also become a public easement by the
implied dedication process. (See, e.g., Brumbaugh v. County of Imperial (1982) 134
Cal. App. 3d 556, 563.)
       A wilderness fire road is thus a conditional, temporary public easement, existing
only for so long as and to the extent needed to help protect against fire. (See Jones v.
Deeter (1984) 152 Cal. App. 3d 798, 802 [“A dedication is legally equivalent to the
granting of an easement”; Walsh v. Macaire, supra, 102 Cal.App.2d at p. 436.) When
land burdened by a fire road easement is developed, the road is replaced with an
approved fire apparatus access road extending to within 150 feet of all portions of the
exterior walls of the first story of every building. (See LAMC § 57.503, adopting the
Intl. Fire Code, § 503.1.1; see also Cal. Fire Code, tit. 24, § 503.1.1.) These access roads
are commonly public and private streets.
       An easement is an interest in the land of another that entitles the owner of the
easement to limited use or enjoyment of the servient tenement. (City of Long Beach v.
Daugherty (1977) 75 Cal. App. 3d 972, 977.) The circumstances existing at the time of
and giving rise to the conveyance determine the nature and extent of the easement. (Civ.
Code, § 806; Southern Pacific Co. v. San Francisco (1964) 62 Cal. 2d 50, 54; Burch v.
Gombos, supra, 82 Cal.App.4th at p. 362.) The use may change or increase, but only so
long as the change does not materially increase the burden on the servient tenement. (Rye
v. Tahoe Truckee Sierra Disposal Co., Inc. (2013) 222 Cal. App. 4th 84, 92.) Any
permissible change would be limited “to such uses as the facts and circumstances show
were within the reasonable contemplation of the parties at the time of the conveyance.”
(Fristoe v. Drapeau (1950) 35 Cal. 2d 5, 10; see Camp Meeker Water System, Inc. v.
Public Utilities Com. (1990) 51 Cal. 3d 845, 866-867.)
       Here, it was undisputed the Hastain Trail ran atop the Hastain Fire Road. Maps
from the 1920’s to the present showed and labeled the fire road, lawyers from both sides
described it as a fire road during the site visit, experts from both sides stated the trail ran
atop the fire road, several hikers identified it as a “road,” and the judgment itself refers to
it as a fire road and states the “Fire Road is that portion of the survey, attached as

                                               19
Exhibits A and B, of the Trail which is 15 feet wide,” which includes all of the Hastain
Trail.
         At the time the Hastain Fire Road was created the property owners and public
could reasonably contemplate it would be used by hikers and, as such would not
materially increase the burden on the servient tenement. “Road easements can be used
for all reasonable purposes.” (6 Miller & Starr, Cal. Real Estate (4th ed. 2015) § 15:59,
p. 15-212.) But the parties could not reasonably contemplate the hikers’ use would
become permanent, because transforming a temporary, mutable easement into one that is
permanent and immovable would substantially increase the burden on the servient
tenement by restricting its future development. In “ascertaining whether a particular use
is permissible under an easement created by prescription, the needs which result from a
normal evolution in the use of the dominant tenement and the extent to which the
satisfaction of those needs increases the burden on the servient tenement must be
considered. The increase must be a normal development, reasonably foretold, and
consistent with the pattern formed by the adverse use by which the prescriptive easement
was created.” (Applegate v. Ota (1983) 146 Cal. App. 3d 702, 711.) Permissible use by
the public of an easement the public already owns would not foretell a drastically
expanded use, inconsistent with the pattern under which the easement was created, much
less that the servient tenement would itself be in danger of permanent, unconditional
public dedication, as occurred here.
         The trial court implicitly recognized these principles, finding that “[w]hen
Defendants acquired the property, they took subject to whatever easements and
encumbrances had been created by prior owners. . . . “[T]he public easement must be
respected.” But the court failed to recognize that the same was true as to the public itself,
which likewise took the fire road subject to the preexisting easement.
         “If a landowner’s intent to dedicate property to public use is to be implied, that
purpose must clearly appear from the surrounding circumstances. [Citations.] The
rationale underlying the strict requirements which must be satisfied to establish a
dedication is to avoid potential detriment to persons who, through inattention to legal

                                               20
detail or motivated by decency permit others to use their land.” (Hays v. Vanek, supra,
217 Cal.App.3d at pp. 281-282.) The “idea of a dedication to the public of a use of land
for a public road, must rest on the clear assent of the owner, in some way, to such
dedication.” (Harding & Loftin v. Jasper (1860) 14 Cal. 642, 649.) The “bare fact that a
farmer opens a lane through his farm, and allows the public to use it for fifteen years,
does not authorize the inference of a dedication to the public. The intent to dedicate must
be obvious. . . . ‘Persons who have, from mere kindness, suffered others to enjoy
privileges in their lands, have been eventually coerced into parting with them entirely,
without compensation, and to yield up as rights what they had previously suffered or
allowed as favors, and the simple expression of an intention, has often been distorted into
a positive promise, and occasionally to those who have no distinct interest in its
performance. Our title to our lands is too important to be lightly lost, upon slight
presumptions. Before the owner should be deprived of his property, his intention to part
with it should be clearly and unequivocally expressed.’” (Id. at pp. 648-649, citation
omitted.)
       The trial court erred in establishing a permanent and fixed public easement that
drastically expanded on the existing temporary and mutable public easement. The
judgment gave the public rights not only to use the fire road for so long as its existence
was necessary for fire protection, but also to burden the underlying fee estate in
perpetuity, as set forth in the metes and bounds description of the new easement. Those
rights were neither conditional nor temporary, as was the fire road easement itself, but
unlimited and permanent. But “‘[n]othing can be clearer than that if the grant is made for
a specified, limited and defined purpose, the subject of the grant cannot be used for
another, and the grantor retains still such an interest therein as entitles him, in a court of
equity, to insist upon the execution of the trust as originally declared and accepted.’”
(Marshall v. Standard Oil Co. (1936) 17 Cal. App. 2d 19, 27.) It is a “‘universally
accepted rule of law that land which has been dedicated for a definite and specific
purpose must be used in conformity with the terms of the dedication, and not diverted to
any other purpose or use.’” (Ibid.; Roberts v. Palos Verdes Estates (1949) 93 Cal. App. 2d
21
545, 547 [“where a grant deed is for a specified, limited and definite purpose, the subject
of the grant cannot be used for another and different purpose”].)
       Blasius, upon which plaintiffs chiefly rely and the facts of which are somewhat
analogous to those here, is not to the contrary. There, the public had for many years used
a canal road alongside the Rattlesnake Canal—which together (road and canal)
comprised an easement owned by the Nevada Irrigation District over property owned by
private landowners—for walking, jogging, riding bicycles or horses, and fishing, as well
as a means to get from one place to another. Based on this use, the trial court recognized
the landowners had impliedly dedicated to the public an easement consisting of “the
width of the Rattlesnake Canal plus its westerly berm, which is nine feet wide, more or
less.” (Blasius, supra, 78 Cal.App.4th at p. 819.) The appellate court affirmed the
finding. In dicta the court also stated that “a long history of continued passage by a
diverse group of occasional hikers across a well defined privately owned trail segment
leading to a network of trails, say on a public wilderness area, might suffice” for implied
public dedication. (Id. at p. 825, fn. 7.)
       The instant facts are distinguishable from those both existing and hypothesized in
Blasius. There, the trial court identified a dedicated trail easement in relation to the
preexisting public easement it overlapped, the Rattlesnake Canal, not, as here, in a metes-
and-bounds legal description of the subservient tenement. As such, the overlapping
easement in Blasius was bound to the underlying easement, and if the latter were to
change course or disappear altogether, the former would follow. Here, as plaintiffs
admitted in their letter brief, the Judgment Trail is independent of and would survive
relocation or removal of the Hastain Fire Road. It may well be, as the Blasius court
stated in dictum, that continued passage by a diverse group of occasional hikers across a
well defined privately owned trail segment will suffice for public dedication of the trail
segment, but passage across a contingent and temporary road does not suffice for
permanent dedication of the privately owned subservient tenement.
       Plaintiffs argue no evidence was adduced at trial that the fire department had an
actual easement, license, or any right at all to use the Hastain Fire Road.

                                              22
       To the contrary, the only reasonable inference from maps admitted at trial,
multiple witness statements, plaintiffs’ repeated admissions, and the judgment itself—all
indicating the Hastain Trail was indeed a fire road—was that the fire department at least
had a right to use it, if not an easement or license. In any event the point is irrelevant, as
we do not hold that a preexisting fire road—whether an easement or not—cannot be
publicly dedicated so long as the dedication is limited to the fire road. But here, the trial
court found the servient tenement, not the fire road, was dedicated to the public. As we
discussed, nothing about public use of a fire road as a hiking trail would put a reasonable
owner on notice that the servient tenement was in danger of dedication.
       Plaintiffs have identified no authority from any jurisdiction holding that use of a
fire road (or anything similar) by a private party or the public may result in either a
prescriptive easement or public dedication burdening the servient tenement and outlasting
                                               4
the road itself, and we have discovered none. Some of the cases hold an owner cannot
restrict use of a dedicated road running over his property, but none holds the owner
cannot remove the road altogether. In the case of a fire road, an owner can remove it
when it is no longer needed for fire protection. Under these circumstances, no reasonable
owner could anticipate that a fire road running over his or her property might become a
permanent hiking trail.

       4
         Burch v. Gombos, upon which the dissent relies, is not dispositive. There,
property owners sued a logging company to enjoin use of a fire road running across their
property for transporting logs. (Burch v. Gombos, supra, 82 Cal.App.4th at p. 355.) The
trial court found the road had been impliedly dedicated to the public as a result of
longtime public recreational use, and further found the owners could not restrict the
logging company’s use of what now amounted to a public road. (Id. at p. 363.) Although
the appellate court affirmed these findings, the property owners on appeal made “no real
argument” regarding the prior public dedication, but argued only that the evidence did not
support expansion of the dedication to logging purposes. (Id. at p. 362, fn. 14.) The
court therefore had no occasion to discuss whether public recreational use of a fire road
suffices to convey notice to the owner that even the road is in danger of public
dedication, much less, as here, that the subservient tenement is. A case is no authority for
a proposition not discussed. (People v. Barragan (2004) 32 Cal. 4th 236, 243.)

                                              23
       The judgment here grants permanent rights to the servient tenement, land
burdened by a preexisting, conditional, temporary public easement, notwithstanding
temporal limitations on the easement itself. No such rights could have ripened by way of
public dedication no matter how extensive the public use of the Hastain Fire Road
because the owner could not have known more than the temporary road itself was at risk.
       B.     No Substantial Use of the Peak Trail
       The same cannot be said of the Peak Trail, because the fire road beneath it had
been abandoned by the 1940’s, and any public rights to it were therefore extinguished
long before the prescriptive period. (Civ. Code, § 811(4) [a servitude is extinguished by
disuse].) But under even the most generous view of the evidence, public use of the Peak
Trail was miniscule.
       Under Gion, a plaintiff asserting implied public dedication must present evidence
that “the public has engaged in ‘long continued adverse use’ that “negatives the idea of
mere license” or neighborly accommodation. (Gion, supra, 2 Cal.3d at p. 38; Blasius,
supra, 78 Cal.App.4th at p. 825 [the question is “whether the use in issue should be
characterized as prescriptive or attributed to neighborly accommodation”]; Aptos
Seascape Corp. v. County of Santa Cruz (1982) 138 Cal. App. 3d 484, 501.)5 To counter
the idea of license a plaintiff must show open, substantial use of private property. (Gion,

       5
          The “idea of license” is the idea that owners of wildlands might permit
occasional hikers to enter their property with no thought on either side that sparse,
harmless use will ripen into prescriptive rights or public dedication. (See Boyden v.
Achenbach (1878) 79 N.C. 539, 541 [footpaths “are understood to be used by leave, and
they are closed when the owners of the lands desire to put them under cultivation or to
enclose them”]; Behrens v. Richards (1905) 2 Ch. (Eng.) 614 [“In permitting persons to
stray along the cliff edge or wander down the cliff face or stroll along the foreshore the
owner of the land was permitting that which was no injury to him, and whose refusal
would have been a churlish and unreasonable act on his part. From such user nothing . . .
is to be inferred”]; Schwinge v. Dowell (1862) 175 Eng.Rep. 1314 [permission to travel at
will in an ancient forest does not show a right to the foothpath]; United Kingdom
Countryside Code [“Leave gates and property as you find them and follow paths unless
wider access is available”].) This is not a presumption, but a burden of proof. (See Berk,
supra, 26 Cal.3d at p. 215 [cases are “to be decided not from the standpoint of
presumptions but from that of ‘the sufficiency of the evidence’”].)

                                            24
at p. 39.) In Gion, which found a public dedication, members of the public had for
decades “made continuous and uninterrupted use” of beachfront property “in substantial
numbers,” with full knowledge of the owners, for fishing, swimming, picnicking, and
viewing the ocean. (Id. at pp. 34, 35, 36.)
       Here, the trial court’s finding that “[s]everal of the legacy hikers hiked the Trail
during each of the years from 1962 to 1972” is unsupported in the record. The only
legacy hiker to have used either the Hastain or Peak Trail every pertinent year—1967 to
1972—was Goller, who used the trails only on Sundays, beginning when he was 10 years
old and continuing until he was approximately 15. Further, the trial court’s findings that
“[m]ost of the legacy hikers regularly hiked from the bottom of the Trail at Lake Drive all
the way to the peak,” that “the peak, with its survey marker, is the logical and obvious
destination for any hiker on the Trail,” and that “a substantial number of the other hikers
were hiking to the peak too” are all unsupported. Of the seven legacy hikers who used
the trails in the relevant time period, only four testified they ever hiked to the peak, and
only one, Goller, testified he did so regularly (on Sundays). Harris and Hemingway, who
hiked the Hastain Trail four to five times a week in the summers of 1970 and 1971, hiked
to the peak only once or twice a week in those two summers. Foran went to the peak a
total of six or seven times in 1971. The trial court’s finding that “most of the hikers” saw
other hikers “throughout the length of the trail” is also unsupported. None of the legacy
hikers testified he or she ever saw anyone else on the Peak Trail. Five of the six legacy
hikers who saw others testified only that they saw them on “the trail,” which in context
meant the Hastain Trail, not the Peak Trail. Only Harris testified he saw people “all over
the trail,” which could be taken to mean also on the Peak Trail, but in context he was
speaking of the trail from Lake Boulevard to Coldwater Canyon, which is the Hastain
Trail. Harris testified about the Peak Trail separately, and did not say he ever saw anyone
else on it.

                                              25
       Thus in 1967, 1968, 1969 and 1972, and most of 1970 and 1971, the only legacy
hiker on the Peak Trail was Goller, who hiked only on Sundays. The trial court could not
fairly infer solely from his example that others used the Peak Trail any other day.6
       Even were we to assume Goller, Harris, Hemingway and Foran saw others on the
Peak Trail, their own use was so sparse—Sundays for Goller, one or two days a week
during two summers for Harris and Hemingway, and six or seven trips in 1971 for
Foran—that their experience does not reasonably imply a substantial number of other
hikers used the trail at other times or on other days. Therefore, no reasonable owner
could have been put on notice that the Peak Trail was in danger of public dedication. The
court found additional evidence of substantial use of the Peak Trail from the fact it had
not become overgrown, which it would if unused. But no evidence suggested how much
or what kind of use was necessary to prevent the trail from becoming overgrown. For all
we know, the Sunday use by Goller and his friends would have sufficed. The issue is not
whether the trail was used enough to retain its character as a trail, but whether the use
was substantial enough to indicate to the owner that his property was in danger of being
dedicated.
III.   Defendants’ Other Arguments
       In light of our conclusion that the Judgment Trail was improperly dedicated, we
need not address defendants’ arguments concerning the scope of the trail, the equities
involved in relocating it, or the extent of the interest dedicated.

       6
         For a statistical inference from a sample (the legacy hikers) to a population (a
substantial number of hikers) to be justified, the “sample must be sufficiently large to
provide reliable information about the larger group. ‘How many cases need to be
sampled? This depends in large part on the variability of the population. The more
diverse the population, the larger the sample must be in order to reflect the population
accurately.’” (Duran v. U.S. Bank National Assn. (2014) 59 Cal. 4th 1, 42.) “Sampling is
a methodology based on inferential statistics and probability theory. ‘The essence of the
science of inferential statistics is that one may confidently draw inferences about the
whole from a representative sample of the whole.’ [Citation.] Whether such inferences
are supportable, however, depends on how representative the sample is. ‘[I]nferences
from the part to the whole are justified [only] when the sample is representative.’” (Id. at
p. 38.) Here, Goller is a sample of one.

                                              26
IV.   Attorneys’ Fees
      Defendants appealed from the order awarding attorneys fees to Scott and the
Friends of the Hastain Trail. Because the judgment is reversed, the award of fees is also
reversed. (Samples v. Brown (2007) 146 Cal. App. 4th 787, 811.)
                                     DISPOSITION
      The judgment and attorney fee award are reversed. The trial court is ordered to
enter a new judgment in favor of defendants consistent with this opinion. Costs on
appeal are awarded to defendants and appellants.
      CERTIFIED FOR PUBLICATION.

                                                 CHANEY, J.

I CONCUR:

             ROTHSCHILD, P. J.

                                            27
ROTHSCHILD, P. J., Concurring
       I would make one further point. Although the defendants may have raised
equitable arguments and proposed their Alterative Trail Easement too late in the
proceedings below, the court was mistaken when it expressed its belief that it did not
have the power to consider equitable arguments in deciding where to locate the easement.
Because the causes of action and relief plaintiffs prayed for were equitable, the court had
the power to consider an equitable resolution—the defendants’ proposed Alternative Trail
Easement.
       In determining whether an action is legal or equitable, we look at the substance
of the complaint; “i.e., to the nature of the right involved and the remedy sought.”
(3 Witkin, Cal. Procedure (5th ed. 2008) Actions, § 123, p. 202.) Here, plaintiffs alleged
causes of action for quiet title and requested injunctive relief. In particular, they sought
a judicial determination that defendants’ predecessors had impliedly dedicated a trail
for public recreational use, “as well as a determination of the location and dimensions
of the public easement.” They also sought injunctive relief to prevent defendants from
interfering with the public’s use of the trail. Plaintiffs did not seek damages.
       The claims and remedies are entirely equitable in nature. (See Aguayo v. Amaro
(2013) 213 Cal. App. 4th 1102, 1109 [quiet title is ordinarily equitable]; Sherwood v.
Ahart (1917) 35 Cal. App. 84, 87 [claim for an implied-in-law dedication of land for
public use as a road was “not an action at law but one in equity”]; Mesa Shopping
Center-East, LLC v. O. Hill (2014) 232 Cal. App. 4th 890, 901 [injunctive relief is an
equitable remedy, not a cause of action].) Therefore, these claims are governed by
equitable principles, and the court had the power to consider defendants’ proposed
Alternative Trail Easement.
       In addition to considering the equities between the parties, a court may also
consider the public policy favoring the productive use of land. (See, e.g., Daywalt v.
Walker (1963) 217 Cal. App. 2d 669, 672 [referring to the “sound public policy that lands
should not be rendered unfit for occupancy”].) Here, the property was zoned for housing,
and defendants had obtained permits to proceed with the project.
       Where a fee owner can make a showing that an alternative route will result in
an equal or better hiking trail and at the same time allow productive use of the remaining
land, it makes no sense not to consider the claim. Precluding such consideration not only
deprives a fee owner of the most economically viable use of the land but also deprives
future, prospective homeowners of the opportunity to enjoy a home on that land.
An alternative trail, on the other hand, which meets the criteria I describe, would
accommodate the interests of both the current fee owner and future homeowners, as well
as the public’s interest in a trail; a win-win situation.
       Nothing in Gion v. City of Santa Cruz (1970) 2 Cal. 3d 29, or its progeny precludes
a court’s evaluation of equitable considerations in deciding issues concerning implied
dedication and the location of an implied easement. Indeed, in County of Los Angeles v.
Berk (1980) 26 Cal. 3d 201, the defendant property owners asserted equitable
arguments—estoppel and laches—as defenses to the plaintiffs’ implied dedication claims.
Both the trial court and the Supreme Court considered these defenses on the merits.
(Id. at pp. 221-222.) Although the owners’ arguments were rejected, the Supreme Court
did not hold or suggest that equitable defenses had no place in an implied dedication case
or that the trial court was powerless to consider an equitable resolution. Likewise,
nothing in the court’s opinion in this case should be construed as precluding courts from
considering such an equitable resolution.

                                                      ROTHSCHILD, P. J.

                                                2
CHANEY, J., Concurring
       I concur with the opinion in order to express an individual view on two issues.
       First, even if substantial use of a fire road could ripen into public dedication of the
servient tenement, no substantial evidence supports the trial court’s finding that the
Hastain Fire Road experienced such use.
       “[W]here an intent to dedicate is implied as a legal fiction from the nature of
public usage, the caselaw requires a high standard of usage, lest private property rights be
too easily diminished.” (Hanshaw v. Long Valley Road Assn. (2004) 116 Cal. App. 4th
471, 482.) “The use must be substantial, diverse, and sufficient, considering all the
circumstances, to convey to the owner notice that the public is using the passage as if it
had a right so to do.” (Friends of the Trails v. Blasius (2000) 78 Cal. App. 4th 810, 826,
fn. 7.) Factors to consider include the nature of the property, its physical condition, the
owner’s knowledge (actual or imputed) of public use of the property, and the frequency
and nature of the use. (See, e.g., Union Transp. Co. v. Sacramento County (1954) 42
Cal. 2d 235, 241 [“general appearance, location and evident purpose of” property, the
nature of the public’s use of it, and the owners’ knowledge of the use are considered
when determining whether dedication occurred].)
       Here, the only legacy hiker to have used the Hastain Trail every pertinent year was
Goller, beginning when he was 10 years old, who used the trails only on Sundays.
Harrow used the trail during only four of the five prescriptive years, having been away at
college in 1969. Carl used the trail only after October 1968, and never hiked during the
summer months. Harris and Hemingway hiked only six months, in the summers of 1970
and 1971. And Foran and Saul used the trail eight times between them in 1971. Thus for
21 months of the prescriptive period, from March 1967 to September 1968 and from
January to March 1972, only Goller and Harrow used the Hastain Trail, and only on
weekends. Carl began hiking the trail in October 1968, using it between zero and eight
days per month for seven months out of the year. In 1969, Harrow went off to college,
leaving Goller as the only hiker (and only on Sundays) from May to September 1969,
joined by Carl during the other seven months. In 1970, Harrow returned, and Harris and
Hemmingway began hiking in the summer, when Carl was absent. In 1971, with the
addition of Foran and Saul, all seven legacy hikers used the trails.
         I recognize the real issue is not how much the legacy hikers used the trail but how
much usage may fairly be inferred from their observations while using it. (E.g., Burch v.
Gombos (2000) 82 Cal. App. 4th 352, 357 [three legacy users testified about other users].)
Here, Goller testified he observed 8 to 20 people over the course of each of his hikes, and
Harrow saw between 2 and 12 people each day he was on the trail. Carl’s experience was
similar, as she occasionally saw groups of 2 to 4 on the trail. And this roughly matches
the experiences of Harris and Hemingway, who saw between 6 and 20 people during
their hikes, and to a lesser extent Foran, who would see 1 or 2 others. (Saul saw no one
else.)
         These observations support the trial court’s finding that the legacy hikers saw an
average of “about three to four other hikers” on the Hastain Trail.
         When it extrapolated the legacy hikers’ experience “over the hours of the day and
days of the year” to conclude that “thousands”1 of hikers used the Hastain Trail during
the prescriptive period, the court drew at least two reasonable inferences from the legacy
hikers’ observations. First, the court reasonably inferred use of the trail was basically
uniform over the hiking hours of any given day. Because the Legacy hikers testified to
using the trail for one or two hours per trip and to seeing other hikers each trip,2 it is
reasonable to infer that others used the trail at other times on those days. The alternative
hypothesis—that on every trip those encountered on the trail were the trail’s only other
users that day—would be highly unlikely. In a similar vein, it was also reasonable, with
an exception we will discuss below, for the court to assume that usage was basically
uniform from one day to the next. Legacy hikers used the Hastain Trail approximately

         1
        “Thousands” of hikers over the prescriptive period is not necessarily substantial.
Because the prescriptive period contained 1,827 days, “thousands” could mean as few as
one to two users per day. We assume the trial court used the term in its nonspecific
sense.
         2
             I discount Saul’s experience as an outlier.

                                                  2
one day out of three. That other users were encountered on each trip suggests even more
hikers were there on days no legacy hiker went. Again, the alternative hypothesis, that
visitors used the trail only on the days they were encountered by legacy hikers, is
unlikely.
       But the court could not reasonably infer from the legacy hikers’ observations that
the Hastain Trail saw substantial weekday use throughout the year, because for 54 out of
60 prescriptive months there is no evidence any legacy hiker used the trail on any
weekday. Goller and Harrow used it only on weekends, and neither Carl, Foran nor Saul
specified which days they hiked. Even taking into account the experience of Harris and
Hemingway, the summer, weekday hikers, there would still be no reason to infer several
individuals used the trail on any non-summer weekday. The alternative hypothesis, that
the trail was not much used during weekdays in the nonsummer months, is reasonable,
because days are shorter and people have jobs and school.
       True, plaintiffs were not required to prove the public used the Hastain Trail every
day, as the standard is only that the use be substantial. The “‘thing of significance is that
whoever wanted to use [the land] did so . . . when they wished to do so without asking
permission and without protest from the land owners.’” (Gion v. City of Santa Cruz
(1970) 2 Cal. 3d 29, 40, quoting Seaway Co. v. Attorney General (Tex.Civ.App. 1964)
375 S.W.2d 923, 936.) But the use here does not qualify as substantial. It necessarily
follows from the legacy hikers’ experience of encountering “three to four” others on the
trail that a reasonable owner on the trail would have a similar experience, and would be
put on notice that the property was used only by a handful of persons on weekends, and
perhaps also on summer weekdays. This use can be described only as casual, exactly the
sort an owner would permit because it does no harm and to refuse would be churlish and
unreasonable. Such limited use would not put the owner on notice that the land was in
danger of public dedication. Plaintiffs therefore made no showing that contradicted the
idea of license, and therefore failed to satisfy Gion.

                                              3
       I would also hold that as a matter of law use of the Peak Trail by minors neither
demonstrated a reasonable belief by the public that it had a right to use the property nor
put defendants on notice the property was subject to public dedication.
       Public dedication requires that “the public demonstrate through its actions that its
members believed that they had a right to use the property.” (County of Los Angeles v.
Berk (1980) 26 Cal. 3d 201, 216.) The belief must be reasonable. (Ibid.) But minors
generally have a limited understanding of the rights attendant to ownership of real
property and restrictions on its use by non-owners, and are as like to believe they may
enter any property at will. They are born trespassers, and it would be unreasonable for an
adult to believe a minor’s entering onto private property reflects even the minor’s right to
do so, much less a public right. Therefore, use of private property by children neither
demonstrates the public’s reasonable belief that it has a right to use the property nor
affords notice to the owner that the property is subject to dedication to the public.
       Here, the only users of the Peak Trail for four of the five prescriptive years, 1967,
1968, 1969 and 1972, and the nonsummer months of 1970 and 1971, were Goller and his
companions. Most of the time these users were minors. Goller went with his father when
he was 10 years old and with his cub scout den—with an adult leader—when he was 11,
but when he was 12, 13, 14, and perhaps 15, he visited the Peak Trail exclusively with his
friends, who presumably were minors like him. Foran, another user in 1971, was also a
minor. Neither testified to seeing anyone else specifically on the Peak Trail.
       This use of the Peak Trail was insufficient to support a finding of public
dedication.

       CHANEY, J.

                                              4
JOHNSON, J., Dissenting.
       I respectfully dissent.
       The majority opinion not only distorts but also changes the law of implied
dedication to reverse the trial court’s judgment in favor of Friends of the Hastain Trail
and Mountains Recreation and Conservation Authority (MCRA) (collectively, Friends).
The opinion bases its conclusions on factual assumptions not supported by the record,
decides issues Coldwater Development LLC and Lydda Lud, LLC (collectively, Hadid)
did not raise at trial or on appeal, and gets our standard of review backward, all to reach a
result precluded by proper application of established law and unsupported by the trial
court’s findings of fact. The result of the majority’s revisionist approach to this case is
that much of the Hastain Trail, which has been used by the public for more than 50 years
and which I believe the trial court correctly found was impliedly dedicated to the public
at least 44 years ago, will now be lost forever to public use.
       In Gion v. City of Santa Cruz (1970) 2 Cal. 3d 29 (Gion), the California Supreme
Court concluded that an implied dedication of private land (three parcels of land on a
shoreline, and a beach and the road leading to it) for public use occurred when the public
had made use of the land for more than five years without objection by the owners.
“[U]se by the public for the prescriptive period without asking or receiving permission
from the fee owner [and] no evidence that the respective fee owners attempted to prevent
or halt this use” meant “as a matter of law that a dedication to the public took place.” (Id.
at p. 44.) “What must be shown is that persons used the property believing the public had
a right to such use. This public use may not be ‘adverse’ to the interests of the owner in
the sense that the word is used in adverse possession cases. If a trial court finds that the
public has used land without objection or interference for more than five years, it need
not make a separate finding of “‘adversity’” to support a declaration of implied
dedication.” (Id. at p. 39.) “Litigants . . . seeking to show that land has been dedicated to
the public need only produce evidence that persons have used the land as they would
have used public land,” in the case of a beach or shoreline, “as if it were a public
recreation area,” and if a road, “as if it were a public road.” (Ibid.) The evidence must
demonstrate that various groups of persons, “not a limited and definable number of
persons,” have used the land “‘when they wished to do so without asking permission and
without protest from the land owners.’” (Id. at pp. 39–40.) “If the fee owner proves that
use of the land fluctuated seasonally, on the other hand, such a showing does not negate
evidence of adverse user.” (Id. at p. 40.)
       “For a fee owner [during the five-year prescriptive period] to negate a finding of
intent to dedicate based on uninterrupted public use for more than five years . . . he must
either affirmatively prove that he has granted the public a license to use his property or
demonstrate that he has made a bona fide attempt to prevent public use. Whether an
owner’s efforts to halt public use are adequate in a particular case will turn on the means
the owner uses in relation to the character of the property and the extent of public use.
Although ‘No Trespassing’ signs may be sufficient when only an occasional hiker
traverses an isolated property, the same action cannot reasonably be expected to halt a
continuous influx of beach users to an attractive seashore property. . . . If the owner has
not attempted to halt public use in any significant way, however, it will be held as a
matter of law that he intended to dedicate the property or an easement therein to the
public, and evidence that the public used the property for the prescriptive period is
sufficient to establish dedication.” (Gion, supra, 2 Cal.3d at p. 41.)
       “Most of the case law involving dedication in this state has concerned roads and
land bordering roads. [Citations.] This emphasis on roadways arises from the ease with
which one can define a road, the frequent need for roadways through private property,
and perhaps also the relative frequency with which express dedications of roadways are
made.” (Gion, supra, 2 Cal.3d at p. 41.) Implied dedication rules apply with equal force,
however, to purposes other than a roadway, such as park land, athletic fields, and
beaches. (Ibid.) “This court has in the past been less receptive to arguments of implied
dedication when open beach lands were involved than it has [been] when well-defined
roadways are at issue,” but increased urbanization, the intensification of land use, and the
public policy in favor of expanding public access to shoreline areas “leads us to the

                                              2
conclusion that the courts of this state must be as receptive to a finding of implied
dedication of shoreline areas as they are to a finding of implied dedication of roadways.”
(Id. at p. 43.)
       “The present fee owners of the lands in question have of course made it clear that
they do not approve of the public use of the property. Previous owners, however, by
ignoring the wide-spread public use of the land for more than five years have impliedly
dedicated the property to the public. Nothing can be done by the present owners to take
back that which was previously given away. In each case the trial court found the
elements necessary to implied dedication were present—use by the public for the
prescriptive period without asking or receiving permission from the fee owner. There is
no evidence that the respective fee owners attempted to prevent or halt this use. It
follows as a matter of law that a dedication to the public took place.” (Gion, supra, 2
Cal.3d at p. 44.)
       After its partial abrogation by the enactment of Civil Code section 1009, Gion,
supra, 2 Cal. 3d 29 continues to apply to implied dedication claims preceding March 4,
1972. (Friends of the Trails v. Blasius (2000) 78 Cal. App. 4th 810, 822 (Blasius).)
       The majority opinion purports to follow Gion, supra, 2 Cal. 3d 29, but in reversing
the trial court’s judgment in favor of judgment in favor of Friends the majority reinvents
the law of implied dedication.
I.     No “fire road” easement prevents implied dedication.
       The majority concludes that the lower portion of the Hastain Trail (Trail) runs
over a fire road (the intended meaning of that term is undefined in the record),1 and
therefore that portion of the Trail cannot be subject to implied dedication to the public.
(Maj. opn. ante, at p. 23.) But “[m]ost of the case law involving dedication in this state
has concerned roads and land bordering roads.” (Gion, supra, 2 Cal.3d at p. 41.) In
Burch v. Gombos (2000) 82 Cal. App. 4th 352, the trial court found implied dedication to

       1As I explain below, nothing in the record indicates when or if the road has been
under the auspices or control of any public agency.
                                              3
the public of a one-lane dirt fire road constructed in the 1930’s under licenses between
the original landowners and the California Department of Forestry (which stopped
maintaining the fire road sometime in the early 1970’s), based on three witnesses’
testimony of public recreational use of the fire road before 1972. (Id. at pp. 356, 358.)
The landowners at the time of trial appealed, arguing that the trial court erred in admitting
evidence of the public use of the fire road, and contending that the evidence did not
support dedication sufficient to permit the respondent’s logging operations. (Id. at
p. 355.) The appellate court applied Gion, supra, 2 Cal. 3d 29, concluded “substantial
evidence supports the finding of an implied dedication,” and remanded to the trial court
to determine whether logging operations were within the scope of the resulting public
easement over the fire road. (Burch, at pp. 355, 361, 362–363.) An existing fire road—
even one that was under license with a public agency during the dedication period—is not
an obstacle to establishing implied dedication, and public recreational use of a fire road
may result in dedication to the public outlasting the fire road itself.
       Further, the majority’s factual statement gives the existence of a fire road
unjustified prominence and a certainty unsupported by any substantial evidence in the
record. Throughout the trial, witnesses (including the legacy hikers and experts on aerial
photography) described the Trail as running in large part on a fire road with no definition
of the term. Some witnesses used the terms fire road and Hastain Trail interchangeably.
Where the trail coincided with a fire road, the wider path meant better defined images of
that portion of the trail on aerial photographs. Additional testimony focused on a
narrower peak trail that ran from the lower portion of the trail to a medallion at the
summit. The trial court’s statement of decision includes these factual findings: “The
Trail consists of an old fire road leading from Lake Drive up the hill until very near the
peak. At that point, the Trail veers east from the fire road up to the peak. The fire road is
to the west of the peak. To avoid confusion, the term ‘Trail’ shall refer to the entire trail
from Lake Drive to the peak. The term ‘Fire Road’ shall refer to that portion of the Trail
which is the old fire road. The Fire Road is that portion of the survey, attached as

                                               4
exhibits A and B, of the Trail which is 15 feet wide.” (I will use the terms “Trail,” “Fire
Road,” and “Peak Trail” as did the trial court.) The Fire Road was constructed by 1940
to replace a fire road or fire break that went over the peaks of several hills and was
abandoned, becoming overgrown where not used by hikers. The court found: “[T]he
public use of the Trail was open and obvious. The existence of the Fire Road by itself
across the properties should have put any prudent owner or purchaser on inquiry as to the
use of the Fire Road, and any reasonable inquiry or observation would have disclosed the
public use of the Trail.” “Near the summit, the Peak Trail branches off east from the Fire
Road. Based on the aerial photographs and the testimony of the legacy hikers, it is clear
that the public hiked to the peak along the Peak Trail and therefore had to use the Fire
Road to get there.” Hadid’s 2004 grading created a slight modification to the peak trail
which meant “hikers must now travel a little further up along the Fire Road” to access the
peak trail.
       The majority makes unsupported appellate findings of fact regarding the Fire
Road. “Absent exceptional circumstances, no such findings should be made. [Citation.]
There are no exceptional circumstances in the instant case.” (Tyrone v. Kelley (1973) 9
Cal. 3d 1, 13.) The record does not contain any legal description of the Fire Road, any
recorded easement related to the Fire Road, or any testimony from a fire department or
from an expert on fire roads. No evidence whatsoever establishes which fire department
created the Fire Road, or the status of the Fire Road during the five-year implied
dedication period from March 1967 to March 1972. Hadid had the burden to present
evidence at trial of any preexisting easement on the Hastain Trail that would defend
against implied dedication, but he presented none. Hadid did not request factual findings
regarding the Fire Road or argue at trial or on appeal that the presence of the Fire Road
was dispositive of the status of the Trail. When invited to submit supplemental briefing
on the issue, Hadid provided no evidence suitable for judicial notice regarding the Fire
Road. Just as there is no evidence that there was a fire road easement in place on the Fire

                                              5
Road during the dedication period, there is no evidence regarding if and when any such
easement was created or abandoned.
       Despite this complete dearth of evidence, the majority inexplicably concludes that
there was a “public easement” on the Fire Road throughout the five-year implied
dedication period and therefore the legacy hikers’ use of the Fire Road could not have put
the property owners on notice of possible dedication of the Trail to the public for
recreational use. This edict must be seen and highlighted for what it is—judicial fiat; it is
legally wrong and unsupported by facts in the record.
       The majority cites Los Angeles Municipal Code (LAMC) sections providing that
the fire chief can create and maintain fire roads when necessary to protect life and
property, and such roads are “granted to the City without cost as easements from a public
street or alley to the required terminal point.” (LAMC § 57.503.1.6.) (Maj. opn. ante, at
pp. 18–19.) The majority can point to no evidence that the Fire Road was created
pursuant to the LAMC, or that the Fire Road continued to be such a fire road during the
dedication period. Even if such evidence existed, by the terms of the LAMC any
resulting easement would have been granted to the city, not to the general public, for the
purpose of allowing the city access to fight fires. The majority also errs in stating,
without factual or legal support, that a fire road easement granted to the city would allow
the underlying property owners to reasonably contemplate that the general public would
use the fire road for hiking and dog-walking. (Maj. opn. ante, at p. 20.) As far as I can
tell, there is no basis for this conclusion other than the mere prestidigitation of a justice’s
pen. There was no testimony to this effect. Consistent passage by hikers on a fire road
would serve as notice to a landowner that the road was being used as a hiking trail, and as
I explain more fully below, would be adverse to the private landowner for the purposes of
implied dedication. (See Burch v. Gombos, supra, 82 Cal.App.4th at p. 355.)
       Even if the record contained evidence that the city had been granted an easement
over the Fire Road that was in place during the five-year dedication period, the hikers’
use of the Fire Road was adverse to the owners of the private property underlying the Fire

                                               6
Road and continuous use would have given the owners notice that the Fire Road was
being used as a hiking trail.2 “It is established law that one, while recognizing a superior
title or right in a governmental entity, may nevertheless adversely possess land as against
others,” including those holding the private fee interest underlying a government
easement. (Abar v. Rogers (1972) 23 Cal. App. 3d 506, 513–514.) And as any easement
for fire control purposes would be the city’s, not the general public’s, the use the legacy
hikers and others made of the Trail could not and did not constitute increased use by the
holder (a public agency or public entity) of a fire road easement.
       In Blasius, supra, 78 Cal. App. 4th 810, private landowners appealed from a
judgment concluding that under Gion, supra, 2 Cal. 3d 29 the public acquired by implied
dedication an easement on a road for “walking, jogging, riding bicycles and horses, and
fishing in the Rattlesnake Canal,” subordinate to an existing written easement of record in
favor of the Nevada Irrigation District, which maintained and operated the canal area for
irrigation purposes. The canal consisted of a ditch 16 feet wide and an adjacent berm.
Atop the berm was a nine-foot-wide road used and maintained by the irrigation district
for canal access, maintenance, and repair. The landowners holding the underlying fee
interest blocked the canal road with a locked gate at each end of the section of the road on
their land, allowing access only to themselves and the irrigation district, and Friends of
the Trails filed a complaint against the landowners and the district to quiet title to a public
easement for recreational purposes. At trial, witnesses testified that “‘various people,
young and old’” used the canal road from the 1940’s to 1971 for jogging, walking, riding
bicycles or horses, fishing, and walking to and from school and other places, all believing
(as did the hikers in this case) that it was a public right of way. (Blasius, at pp. 817–819.)
The appellate court approved the trial court’s application of Gion to a claim of implied
public “dedication of rights-of-way for pedestrian, equestrian, and bicycle travel” on the

       2No fire department is a party, and there is no evidence of any public entity
seeking to prevent the public from hiking on the fire road. The two legacy hikers asked
whether they ever saw fire vehicles on the fire road testified that they saw none.
                                              7
road, as “[w]ell within the . . . reach of the common law of dedication is the
establishment of a public footway. [Citations.] There is no principled basis for not
applying the rule of implied dedication to any ‘highway,’ within the generic usage of that
term, to all sorts of public ways, e.g. to a bridle-way, bicycle path, or any combination of
such use as a right-of-way.” (Blasius, at p. 824.) Characterizing “‘adversity’” in implied
dedication cases as “whether ‘persons have used the land as they would have used public
land,’” Blasius concluded that Gion “plainly contemplates that ‘adversity’ for purposes of
implied dedication may arise as to recreational pedestrians in rural areas.” (Blasius, at
pp. 824–825.) While “‘an occasional hiker travers[ing] an isolated property’” might not
be sufficient for implied dedication, “a long history of continued passage by a diverse
group of occasional hikers across a well defined privately owned trail segment leading to
a network of trails, say on a public wilderness area, might suffice.” (Id. at p. 825 &
fn. 7.) The court also rejected the argument that a public easement established by implied
dedication was precluded by the preexisting easement in a public entity (the irrigation
district), as the district did not show the easements were incompatible. (Id. at p. 826.)
       Blasius, supra, 78 Cal. App. 4th 810 affirmed a judgment finding implied
dedication to the public for recreational purposes over privately owned property, on an
access road governed by a written easement belonging to a public entity that used and
maintained the road for the purpose of repairing and maintaining an adjacent canal. Even
if the evidence had shown an existing easement on the Fire Road belonging to a public
entity who maintained the road for fire control purposes, the long history of use of the
well-defined Fire Road by a diverse group of hikers entering and leaving a network of
trails on a public wilderness area would be sufficiently adverse to establish a public trail
easement by implied dedication.3 As I explain below, substantial evidence established
that public easement over the entire trail.

       3  The majority’s conclusion that Blasius, supra, 78 Cal. App. 4th 810 does not
apply because the description of the Hastain Trail easement (as stipulated to by the
parties) in an exhibit to the judgment included the metes and bounds is puzzling. (Maj.
opn. ante, at p. 22.) A metes and bounds description in a judgment does not change the
                                              8
       Contrary to the majority’s assertion (maj. opn. ante, at p. 23), we are aware of no
case (and the majority cites none) which holds that an owner can remove a road that has
been impliedly dedicated to the public. This dualism is another example of the
arbitrariness of the majority decision. No principled basis exists for the majority’s
conclusion that no matter how substantial the public use of the Trail during the dedication
period, the existence of the Fire Road prevents implied dedication to the public of the
lower portion of the Trail. This conclusion is a glaring departure from existing precedent.
II.    Substantial evidence supports public dedication of the Peak Trail.
       To conclude that the use of the Peak Trail was “miniscule” and therefore
insufficient to establish implied dedication, the majority states: “The issue is not whether
the trail was used enough to retain its character as a trail, but whether the use was
substantial enough to indicate to the owner that his property was in danger of being
dedicated.” (Maj. opn. ante, at pp. 24, 25–26.) The majority requires more of
respondents and the trial court than the law demands. As Gion, supra, 2 Cal. 3d 29
explained, litigants seeking to show implied dedication must show only that the public
has used the land as they would have used public land for the use the litigants seek to
establish, in the case of a beach or shoreline, “as if it were a public recreation area,” and
in the case of a road, “as if it were a public road.” (Id. at p. 39.) Friends needed to show

nature of the easement, but rather determines the exact contours of the public right of
way. In Western Aggregates, Inc. v. County of Yuba (2002) 101 Cal. App. 4th 278, 289,
307, the court affirmed the trial court’s finding of a historical public road on private
property, but remanded for a determination of the metes and bounds to establish the exact
route and width of the public road “as . . . necessary to define the public road now
running” through the private property. The majority’s conclusion is also speculative.
The appellate opinion in Blasius does not include the entire judgment, which very well
may have included a precise description of the easement in metes and bounds. (Blasius,
supra, 78 Cal.App.4th at pp. 819–820.)
        Further, if the irrigation district in Blasius constructed another canal elsewhere
there is no reason why the public could not continue to use the impliedly dedicated public
easement on the road adjacent to the former canal after the district no longer maintained
the road.
                                              9
that the public used the Peak Trail as if it were a public hiking trail, not, as the majority
would require, that the use met some otherwise unspecified standard. Testimony
established that during the dedication period hikers regularly traversed the Peak Trail as
if it were a public hiking trail, and historical aerial photographs showed the hikers’ use
made the Peak Trail visible. Under the majority’s standard, even if (as here) a trail was
used sufficiently “to retain its character as a trail,” (maj. opn. ante, at p. 26) that use could
not establish public dedication. As Blasius, supra, 78 Cal. App. 4th 810 pointed out, the
inference of public use is available “as to recreational pedestrians in rural areas,”
including when the evidence shows hiking on an isolated property: “‘“No Trespassing”
signs may be sufficient [to demonstrate a bona fide attempt by the landowner to prevent
public use] when only an occasional hiker traverses an isolated property. . . .’ (Gion-
Dietz, supra, 2 Cal.3d at p. 41.) The owner would have no occasion to rebut the finding
of ‘adverse’ public use unless that inference were available.” (Blasius, at p. 825.)
       The majority’s conclusion that sufficient evidence did not establish use of the peak
trail also violates the fundamental substantial evidence rule. When an appellant attacks a
court’s finding as not sustained by the evidence, “the power of an appellate court begins
and ends with the determination whether there is any substantial evidence, contradicted
or uncontradicted, which will support the verdict. Questions of credibility must be
resolved in favor of the factfinder’s determination, and when two or more inferences can
reasonably be drawn from the evidence, a reviewing court may not substitute its
deductions for those of the trier of fact. If on any material point the evidence is in
conflict, it must be assumed that the court . . . resolved the conflict in favor of the
prevailing party.” (Abar v. Rogers, supra, 23 Cal.App.3d at p. 510.) By analogy, where
the law of implied dedication would only require proof that for the prescriptive period
various sandlot baseball games occurred regularly and frequently on private property, the
majority seemingly requires proof of team rosters (with a full team of at least nine players
on each side), uniform colors, and evidence of games year-round with no off-season and
no rainouts.

                                               10
        At every turn, the majority construes the evidence against Friends, the prevailing
party, belittles and minimizes the uncontradicted testimony of the legacy hikers, and fails
to mention other evidence in the record supporting the trial court’s findings. I begin with
the majority’s statement that a number of the trial court’s specific findings are
unsupported in the record. (Maj. opn. ante, at p. 25.) To the contrary, each of the
findings is supported by substantial evidence.
        First, the trial court found: “Several of the legacy hikers hiked the Trail during
each of the years from 1962 to 1972.” The majority asserts that this is wrong because
only one legacy hiker testified he hiked the Trail every year from 1967 to 1972. (The
relevant time period is March 4, 1967 to March 4,1972.) The trial court stated only that
in each year, several hikers hiked the Trail, not that several hikers hiked the Trail every
year.
        Second, the trial court found: “Most of the legacy hikers regularly hiked from the
bottom of the Trail at Lake Drive all the way to the peak.” Four legacy hikers testified
they regularly hiked all the way to the peak. James Goller stated he and his father “[just
about] all the time” went up to the medallion at the peak, and when he hiked with the Cub
Scouts they would go all the way to the top too. Frederic Harris and Carole Hemingway
hiked to the peak once or twice a week in the summers of 1971 and 1972. Cynthia Foran
hiked to the medallion at the peak in 1971 six or seven times with her brothers and with
friends. The trial court’s conclusion is amply supported by the testimony of four of the
seven legacy hikers.
        Third, the trial court found: “From the testimony and the court’s own observation
of the Trail, the peak, with its survey marker, is the logical and obvious destination for
any hiker on the Trail.” It is undisputed that at the time of the trial court’s visit to the site
of the Trail and during the years from 1967 to 1972, a medallion marked the top of the
Peak Trail. Harris testified that there was a marker at the peak of the trail. Hemingway
testified that she and Harris often hiked up to the medallion, and the medallion was “a
place where we would say, okay, let’s go back down again.” Goller testified he

                                               11
remembered finding the medallion unusual and asking his father about it, and reaching
the medallion was the challenge of hiking the trail. Foran testified that at the highest
point of the trail there was a medallion in the ground. Paul Edelman, who worked as
chief of natural resources and planning for the Santa Monica Mountain Conservancy and
also worked for the MCRA, testified that the peak of the Trail was a “key resource[]” of
Franklin Canyon Park because it allowed the public to hike up high enough to get the
view. Keith Lehrer, who hiked the trail in 1965, testified that he, his friend, and his
friend’s father would hike all the way up for the 360-degree view at the medallion, which
his friend’s father “jokingly referred to it as something from the space
aliens . . . . [¶] . . . [¶] It was a big event when we went to the space marker.” A marker
at the peak of a trail is a logical and obvious destination for hikers, as it was for the
majority of the legacy hikers testifying at trial.
       Fourth, the trial court found: “Most legacy hikers testified . . . that the other hikers
were seen throughout the trail,” and “a substantial number of the other hikers were hiking
to the peak too.” Harris testified that he saw half a dozen to a dozen people when he
hiked the Trail, and he saw the same number of people on the Peak Trail. Hemingway
testified she consistently encountered between a dozen to 15 or 20 other people on the
trail (including groups with a leader) on the course of her entire hike and “going all the
way up.” Goller testified he almost always saw eight to 20 people on his entire trip going
up and down, including groups of six people. On direct and cross-examination, Foran
testified she saw “two to four” others on the entire area of the Trail each time she hiked.
       Additional substantial evidence supported travel over the Peak Trail. The trial
court concluded that Friends’ aerial photography expert, Brian Bradshaw, was credible
when he testified that aerial photography during the implied dedication period showed a
trail leaving the Fire Road and heading north to the peak and that the lack of vegetation
showed usage of the Peak Trail. The majority’s complaint that “no evidence suggested
how much or what kind of use was necessary to prevent the trail from becoming
overgrown” (maj. opn. ante, at p. 26) refuses to credit the trial court’s factual finding

                                               12
because Hadid did not meet his burden to challenge it. Although Robert Pope, Hadid’s
aerial photography expert, testified that he did not see a defined trail, I defer as I must to
the trial court’s finding that Bradshaw was credible, and the trial court was entitled to
resolve conflicts in the evidence. Even Pope did not dispute that a variety of people
could have hiked up to the peak and the medallion in 1968 to 1971 or thereabouts.
       The majority opinion misapplies the law, jettisons its obligation to construe the
evidence in favor of the prevailing party, and misconstrues the record. Strong precedent
and sufficient evidence support the trial court’s findings regarding the Peak Trail.
III.   Substantial evidence supported the public dedication of the Fire Road.
       Justice Chaney’s concurrence requires evidence of uniform use of the Fire Road,
in direct conflict with Gion, supra, 2 Cal. 3d 29. The concurrence admits that it was
reasonable for the trial court to infer substantial use of the Fire Road on the weekends,
but concludes that the court could not infer similar use during the week. (Conc. opn. of
Chaney, J. ante, at p. 3.) This approach would require that testimony establish that the
same number of hikers were on the Fire Road every day of the year regardless of the
season. Evidence of uniform and uninterrupted use by the public is not required to
establish implied dedication. In Gion, the court described evidence showing large
numbers of people on Navarro Beach “at times,” and visits by schoolchildren “during
good weather,” and expressly rejected the concurrence’s approach: “If the fee owner
proves that use of the land fluctuated seasonally, on the other hand, such a showing does
not negate evidence of adverse user. ‘[The] thing of significance is that whoever wanted
to use [the land] did so . . . when they wished to do so without asking permission and
without protest from the land owners.’” (Id. at pp. 37, 40.) While Justice Chaney admits
that weekday use of the Trail would naturally be lower, the concurrence errs in drawing
that inference against the trial court’s finding. (Conc. opn. of Chaney, J. ante, at p. 3.) A
landowner may have constructive notice of public use of his or her property when that
public use ebbs and flows with the rhythms of daily life and the seasons, and the evidence
need not establish that the amount of use never varied.

                                              13
       Blasius, supra, 78 Cal. App. 4th 810 described testimony by witnesses that the
canal access road was used “‘by various people, young and old, families and single
persons, friends, guests, visitors and strangers’” including school age children, without
specifying days of the week, time of day, seasons, or the number of people on the road.
(Id. at p. 819.) Similarly, the Fire Road was hiked by various people, young and old,
families and single persons, friends, guests from out of town, and visitors, including Cub
Scouts and children hiking with their siblings and with parents. Blasius explained that
“[t]he central question concerns ‘adversity’—whether ‘persons have used the land as they
would have used public land.’” (Id. at p. 824.) The testimony here showed that the
hikers used the Fire Road as they would have used a public trail, for hiking and
dogwalking. In reviewing the landowners’ argument that “there is not sufficient evidence
to satisfy the Gion-Dietz[, supra, 2 Cal. 3d 29] criteria,” the Blasius court explained:
“[T]he critical question of fact [is] whether the use shown to have been made of the
property by the public is ‘“such that the trier of fact is justified in inferring an adverse
claim and user and imputing constructive knowledge thereof to the owner.”’” (Blasius, at
pp. 824–825.) Emphasizing that the testimony showed (as it did in this case) that the
public used the road in the belief they had the right to do so, the court observed: “While
the anecdotal evidence of such use is inherently difficult to reduce to a precise traffic
count, the testimony of the witnesses of their use and observation of others’ use affords
an inference that such use was far from rare; in the words of the trial court it was
‘continuous, regular and open use.’” (Id. at p. 825.) Here, no precise traffic count must
be calculated from the hikers’ testimony to conclude that the trial court could infer the
hikers’ use of the Fire Road was “open, visible, and notorious.”
       Blasius, supra, 78 Cal. App. 4th 810 also cautioned that “fact patterns are myriad
and the question often imbued with overtones of local norms, customs, and expectations.
That is one reason why such cases, unless clearly outside the range of discretion,
generally warrant deference to the local finder of fact. [¶] The Gion-Dietz[, supra, 2
Cal. 3d 29] opinion plainly contemplates that ‘adversity’ for purposes of implied

                                              14
dedication may arise as to recreational pedestrians in rural areas.” (Blasius, at p. 825,
italics added.) Testimony established “a long history of continued passage by a diverse
group of occasional hikers across a well defined privately owned trail segment,” the Fire
Road. (Id. at p. 825, fn. 7.) As in Blasius, the trial court herein did not abuse its
discretion when it found that the level of use was sufficient to convey to the landowners
during the relevant time that the use was adverse within the meaning of Gion. (Blasius,
at pp. 825–826.)
       The concurrence also misapplies the rule of substantial evidence. “[W]e ‘must
accept as true all evidence tending to establish the correctness of the finding as made,
taking into account, as well, all inferences which might reasonably have been thought by
the trial court to lead to the same conclusion. Every substantial conflict in the testimony
is . . . to be resolved in favor of the finding.” (Hanshaw v. Long Valley Road Assn.
(2004) 116 Cal. App. 4th 471, 481.) Justice Chaney minimizes the hikers’ testimony and
makes every inference against the finding of the trial court that use of the Fire Road was
sufficient for implied dedication. Goller testified that he hiked the Trail on Sunday
mornings with his father, and he also testified that he hiked the Trail six times with the
Cub Scouts and later, when he was in his early teens, he hiked the Trail many times in the
afternoons with friends. The reasonable inference is that Goller did not hike only on
Sundays, and the trial court could infer that he hiked the Trail during the week. Justice
Chaney acknowledges that Harris and Hemingway hiked during the week, but states that
Joan Carl, Foran, and Richard Saul did not specify which days they hiked, and then infers
that they did not use the Trail on weekdays, making an impermissible inference against
the trial court’s findings. (Conc. opn. of Chaney, J. ante, at p. 3.) Justice Chaney fails to
mention that that on weekdays Harris and Hemingway saw between six to 12 parked cars
at the trailhead and that Foran also saw cars parked at the bottom, as the trial court noted
in its statement of decision.
       Finally, Justice Chaney discounts the testimony of the hikers regarding their
experiences as minors, because minors are “born trespassers” and would not have a

                                              15
reasonable belief that they had a right to walk on the Peak Trail. (Conc. opn. of Chaney,
J. ante, at p. 4.) This is an unsupported assumption, and ignores that the hikers who
hiked the Trail when they were minors testified that they believed the Trail was public
property and that they had a right to hike it. Evidence of use by minors is relevant to
establish implied dedication. In Burch v. Gombos, supra, 82 Cal.App.4th, one of the
three witnesses who testified used the fire road only as a teenager. (Id. at p. 357.)
Testimony of use by children also was in evidence in Gion, supra, 2 Cal.3d at p. 37 and
in Blasius, supra, 78 Cal.App.4th at p. 819. On behalf of all young people, I object to
this dismissive and broad characterization. Clearly, if our courts have determined that
minors may be competent witnesses in the most sensitive of cases, it is reasonable to
assume that they can possess the awareness to form an opinion as to whether they have a
right to occupy a particular space. Make no mistake, Justice Chaney’s concurrence
would make a new credibility finding—contrary to that of the trial court—based solely
upon a stereotype having no basis in the record or the law. That is not the province of
appellate review.
IV.    The trial court did not have the power to relocate the trail easement.
       Presiding Justice Rothschild’s conclusion that the trial court had the power to
consider an equitable relocation of the Trail has no support in California law or evidence
in the record. (Conc. opn. of Rothschild, P. J. ante, at p. 1.) The trial court properly
recognized that under our Supreme Court precedent, once the Trail was established by
implied dedication, the court had no power or obligation to allow Hadid not to respect the
easement established by implied dedication. Further, Hadid did not request relocation of
the Trail during trial, and no evidence at trial supported relocation of the Trail easement.
As the trial court explained in its statement of decision: “Defendants . . . request a
finding as to whether the easement would ‘deprive Defendants [of] the ability to develop
[the property].’ That is not an element of a cause of action for implied dedication and is
irrelevant. When Defendants acquired the property, they took subject to whatever
easements and encumbrances had been created by prior owners. The court makes no

                                             16
ruling on Defendants’ development plans, except that the public easement must be
respected.” The court addressed the merits of Hadid’s affirmative defense of laches (the
only affirmative defense for which he presented evidence), and after thoughtful
discussion, rejected it. The trial court continued: “Even if Defendants had alleged the
equitable affirmative defenses (and assuming the defenses apply in the implied public
dedication context), Defendants are simply not in an equitable position. Defendants’
alleged ‘hardship’ did not arise until the 21st century. Plaintiffs’ rights to a public
recreational easement accrued in 1972. Defendants’ claim is 40 years too late. As stated
in Gion, supra, [2 Cal.3d] at [p.] 44: ‘Nothing can be done by the present owners to take
back that which was previously given away.’ Nor is compensation part of the analysis,”
which in this case was not required by equity.
       The trial court was correct. Our Supreme Court has not hesitated to apply Gion,
supra, 2 Cal. 3d 29 even when implied dedication to the public deprived the owners of
any possibility of developing the property. In County of Los Angeles v. Berk (1980) 26
Cal. 3d 201 (Berk), quoted by the trial court, the county and the City of Torrance brought
separate actions to establish a “‘public beach recreation easement’” on oceanfront
property owned by Oscar and Shirley Berk. (Id. at p. 206.) After Berk drew up plans for
an apartment complex, the cities of Torrance and Redondo Beach each advised him that
his plan would require no variances. Berk purchased the property, and with a permit
from Redondo Beach, he began construction in February 1971. When he applied for a
building permit in Torrance, however, the city filed an action to quiet title to public
recreational easements, and the county filed its own action regarding the Redondo Beach
portion of the property. (Id. at pp. 208–209.) Gion had been filed more than six months
before he opened escrow on the property, but Berk learned of it only after escrow had
closed, and no one in either city had advised him of the decision or its effect. (Berk, at
pp. 209–210.)
       The trial court found an easement arising out of implied dedication for public
recreational purposes over the entire property, rejected the affirmative defenses of laches

                                              17
and estoppel, and denied Berk’s cross-complaint for damages. (Berk, supra, 26 Cal.3d at
pp. 210–211). Before the California Supreme Court, Berk argued (among other
arguments) that fundamental fairness (including laches and estoppel) barred the result
reached in the trial court. (Id. at p. 212.) In rejecting the application of estoppel and
laches, the court explained: “[A]ny reliance by the Berks on the actions of the
governmental entities here involved was clearly unreasonable. It simply cannot be
maintained that an existing or prospective property owner, upon being advised by
planning and building officials that a given project complies with applicable local codes,
thereby gains the right to proceed with that project regardless of the rights of third parties
or the public in the property on which it is proposed to be built.” (Id. at p. 221.) Further,
“the owner of property or one proposing to acquire it cannot justify his ignorance of the
true state of the facts and the law affecting it by pointing to similar ignorance in
government bodies. Negligence . . . cannot be so easily excused in one whose interest is
focused upon a particular piece of property.” (Ibid.)
       “As prospective purchasers of the subject property, [the Berks] had at their
disposal ample means of informing themselves of all the considerations, legal and
otherwise, which might have had an effect on the wisdom of their decision. Rather than
availing themselves of the full range of these means, however, they apparently chose to
limit their inquiry to those considerations relating to the feasibility of proceeding with
their plans in light of applicable zoning and building codes. In so doing they wholly
neglected to inform themselves on the current state of the common law and its possible
effect on the property they proposed to purchase.” (Berk, supra, 26 Cal.3d at p. 223.)
Like Berk, Hadid had ample means of informing himself of all the considerations
relevant to his purchase of the property, but limited his inquiry to examining the title and
making physical inspection of the property. Hadid stated that until this lawsuit, he had
never heard of a public recreational easement, thus showing that he neglected to inform
himself on the common law’s possible effect on the property.

                                              18
       In Gion, supra, 2 Cal. 3d 29, as in this case, “[t]he present fee owners of the lands
in question have of course made it clear that they do not approve of the public use of the
property. Previous owners, however, by ignoring the wide-spread public use of the land
for more than five years have impliedly dedicated the property to the public. Nothing can
be done by the present owners to take back that which was previously given away.” (Id.
at p. 44, italics added.) “Nothing” means the trial court could not move the Trail to suit
Hadid, just as the trial court would be without power to move the Trail to make the route
better for hikers. Berk, supra, 26 Cal. 3d 201 makes clear that prospective purchasers
must inform themselves not only of what appears on recorded instruments and in local
codes but also of the possible effect of the common law.
       Presiding Justice Rothschild’s suggestion that public policy favors development of
the land is irrelevant, and flies in the face of the entire history of implied dedication to the
public. (Conc. opn. of Rothschild, P. J. ante, at p. 1.) I take exception to Presiding
Justice Rothschild’s contention that an alternative trail combined with home development
would be a “win-win situation” for all parties. (Conc. opn. of Rothschild, P. J. ante, at
p. 2.) Under her scenario, the public would still lose the extant historical Trail. The
equities in this case do not balance equally. The interests of a few buyers of Hadid-
constructed homes4 and of Hadid himself are not equivalent to the public’s interest in
preserving the historical Trail for future use by generations to come.
       As Presiding Justice Rothschild concedes, no evidence supported a relocation of
the Trail. (Conc. opn. of Rothschild, P. J. ante, at p. 1.) Hadid did not allege a hardship
defense, and offered no evidence at trial regarding the relocation of the Trail. Hadid did
not testify that he could not develop his land if the Trail remained, and did not testify
regarding any other hardship or relocation.

       4
       Hadid testified that he had been a developer world-wide for 40 years, and after
moving to Southern California in 1991 he had developed commercial buildings and
mega-mansions (homes from 15,000 to 60,000 square feet).
                                              19
        Contrary to the majority’s assertion on page 8 of the majority opinion, the defense
expert in surveying and grading, Ken Shank, testified that he had never been asked by
Hadid to reroute the Trail, and even if it were rerouted “there’s really no practical place
to put it if you’re going to develop land over in this area.” The only evidence at trial was
that the Trail could not be relocated to minimize its effect on development. Hadid first
raised the issue of relocation in his objections to the court’s proposed statement of
decision, attaching a declaration from Shank proposing an alternative easement (and
contradicting Shank’s trial testimony that no alternate route was practical). The trial
court sustained Friends’ objection to the declaration. After entry of judgment, Hadid’s
declaration attached to his motion for new trial stated that he had proposed an alternative
easement to Friends during settlement discussions. The evidence of a settlement offer
was inadmissible in the trial court under Evidence Code section 1152, subdivision (b).
Just as the record contains no competent evidence regarding the status or provenance of
the fire road, the record contains no competent evidence supporting relocation of the
Trail. Moreover, Presiding Justice Rothschild’s insistence that the trial court had the
power to alter a trail whose public dedication vested more than 44 years ago reflects a
troubling disregard for the permanence of public dedication once it has occurred. There
are no do-overs 44 years later. Hadid no more had a leg to stand on when he belatedly
requested equitable re-routing of the Trail than the trial court had the legal basis to
contemplate such relief, once she had determined that implied dedication had vested by
1972.
        The majority and the concurrences have done for Hadid what he and his lawyers
could not do in the trial court, by minimizing and disregarding the detailed and credible
testimony of civic-minded citizens who knew and enjoyed the Trail at least three decades
before Hadid saw the land as ripe for development and profit, and by disregarding settled
precedent and creating new law.

                                              20
                                      CONCLUSION
       The late Senator and statesman from New York, Daniel Patrick Moynihan,
frequently observed: “[Y]ou are entitled to your own opinion, but you are not entitled to
your own facts.” (Timothy J. Penny, Facts Are Facts (Sept. 4, 2003) National Review, at
p. 1.) I would humbly add to that: And not your own law either.
       This axiom, which applies equally to kitchen table discussions, academic and
political discourse, and appellate review, is part of our societal fabric and underlies our
faith in the judicial process.
       I, therefore, must respectfully dissent. I would affirm the judgment and the order
awarding attorney fees to Friends of the Hastain Trail and Mountains Recreation and
Conservation Authority.

                                                  JOHNSON, J.

                                             21