Court Opinion

ID: 9404541
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2023-06-23 14:05:40.326071+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T17:20:15.098124
License: Public Domain

RENDERED: JUNE 16, 2023; 10:00 A.M.
                        NOT TO BE PUBLISHED

                Commonwealth of Kentucky
                         Court of Appeals
                            NO. 2022-CA-0522-MR

MICHAEL HONAKER AND NENA                                         APPELLANTS
HONAKER

                 APPEAL FROM CLARK CIRCUIT COURT
v.              HONORABLE COLE ADAMS MAIER, JUDGE
                       ACTION NO. 21-CI-00262

CITY OF WINCHESTER,                                                APPELLEES
KENTUCKY AND WINCHESTER
MUNICIPAL UTILITIES
COMMISSION

                                   OPINION
                                  AFFIRMING

                                 ** ** ** ** **

BEFORE: EASTON, LAMBERT, AND MCNEILL, JUDGES.

EASTON, JUDGE: The Appellants, Michael and Nena Honaker (the “Honakers”),

appeal Orders made final by the Clark Circuit Court granting partial summary

judgment to the Appellees, the City of Winchester (“City”) and Winchester

Municipal Utilities Commission (“WMU”). The City and WMU filed a Petition
for a Declaration of Rights regarding two easements for waterlines and related

facilities on and near the Honakers’ property. Upon review, we affirm.

                  FACTUAL AND PROCEDURAL HISTORY

             The Honakers own property located at 5010 Old Boonesboro Road in

Clark County (“Honaker Property”). The City is a municipality in Clark County.

WMU is an entity created to provide public utilities, specifically water, to residents

of Clark County. WMU’s predecessor was the Winchester Water Works Company

(“WWWC”). The City acquired all of WWWC’s assets in 1945. Sometime before

1900, WWWC constructed a water treatment plant and a system of water

distribution pipelines to provide water services for the residents of Clark County.

             Between 1921 and 1923, WWWC constructed a ten inch fresh

waterline (“10 Inch Fresh Waterline”) which ran along and then across Boonesboro

Turnpike (now Old Boonesboro Road) and to the WWWC’s water treatment plant.

To permit the construction of the 10 Inch Fresh Waterline, WWWC entered into an

agreement with the State Highway Commission. This agreement, dated June 21,

1922, granted WWWC the following:

             [A] perpetual right of way and easement in, on and over
             that portion of the Boonesboro Turnpike Road, in Clark
             County, Kentucky, from a point in said road at the
             entrance to the second party’s property, about 4 miles
             from Winchester; thence along the margin of said road to
             a point in said road at the intersection of the Hampton-
             Ford Turnpike Road in said county[.]

                                         -2-
The agreement stipulated this easement (“10 Inch Fresh Waterline Easement”) was

granted for the purpose of constructing and maintaining waterlines. This

agreement was duly recorded in the Clark County Clerk’s Office.

            In 1931, the Honakers’ predecessors-in-title (the “Castle family”),

conveyed a portion of their property to the Commonwealth of Kentucky through

the State Highway Commission for the purpose of relocating a section of what is

now Old Boonesboro Road so that a curve in the original Boonesboro Turnpike

Road could be straightened. As a result of this easement and subsequent road

construction, the 10 Inch Fresh Waterline was relocated from the western boundary

of Boonesboro Turnpike Road (the opposite side from the now Honaker property)

to the eastern boundary of the road. A section of this easement appears on a

detailed drawing as running on the Honaker property, but the easement and

waterline appear to leave the Honaker Property less than halfway along its frontage

with the road. The deed for this conveyance also was recorded in the Clark County

Clerk’s Office.

            In 1959, the Castle family conveyed to the City a thirty foot wide

easement and right of way (“30 Foot Raw Waterline Easement”) across the

Honaker Property to construct and maintain an eighteen inch raw waterline (“18

Inch Raw Waterline”). The 30 Foot Raw Waterline Easement also was recorded in

the Clark County Clerk’s Office. The City and WMU constructed the 18 Inch Raw

                                        -3-
Waterline in 1959 and have been maintaining the waterline ever since. In 1997,

the Castle family reiterated the existence of the 30 Foot Raw Waterline Easement

by recording a plat in the Clark County Clerk’s Office, memorializing the 30 foot

width of the easement within which the 18 Inch Raw Waterline is located.

             In 1992, the Castle family granted another easement (“Adjoining

Owners Easement”) across the now Honaker Property to install waterlines to

service properties to the east of the property across the new Boonesboro Road

(Highway 627). This line services three new residences on the other side of the

new Boonesboro Road. The Adjoining Owners Easement depicts the 30 Foot Raw

Waterline Easement as they intersect. The Adjoining Owners Easement was also

recorded in the Clark County Clerk’s Office.

             Pursuant to the Adjoining Owners Easement, WMU installed three

water meters within the area of the 10 Inch Fresh Waterline Easement with taps to

the 10 Inch Fresh Waterline to service the residences of three customers east of the

Honaker Property and across the new Boonesboro Road. These meters have been

continually utilized since the 1990s.

             The Honakers acquired their property relatively recently in 2019.

This property is clearly part of the former Castle property as may be seen from the

recorded plats and deeds. With no apparent forethought about the water lines, the

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Honakers employed contractors to grade a portion of their property. While grading

the property, appurtenances to the 18 Inch Raw Waterline were damaged.

             The Honakers then discovered the Adjoining Owners Easement across

their property. The Honakers demanded that WMU remove the water meters and

waterlines from the Honaker Property. WMU refused to do so. The Honakers

then unilaterally relocated the waterline access servicing the three residences on

the east side of Boonesboro Road to the southern end of the Honaker Property.

The Honakers asked WMU to install three new water meters to service the newly

installed waterlines. Faced with this fait accompli, WMU agreed. But then the

Honakers refused to allow WMU to remove the inactive meters and meter boxes

which had serviced the waterlines within the Adjoining Owners Easement.

             In the face of the numerous recorded easements, the Honakers

inexplicably denied the existence of any easements on their property. They

demanded WMU remove all waterlines allowed by the previous owners. The

Honakers sent a “cease-and-desist” letter to WMU, threatening criminal

prosecution if employees of WMU entered upon the Honaker Property. The

Honakers referred WMU to Kentucky Revised Statute (“KRS”) 503.080. This

may be seen as a veiled threat by the Honakers that they would feel justified in

using physical force to resist any WMU presence on their property.

                                         -5-
             The City and WMU filed a circuit court action for a declaration of

rights to establish their rights to the 10 Inch Fresh Waterline Easement with its

extensions and the 30 Foot Raw Waterline Easement. The City and WMU filed a

Motion for Temporary Injunction to prevent the Honakers from constructing a

driveway that would potentially damage the 10 Inch Fresh Waterline, or otherwise

inhibiting WMU from maintaining the waterlines and related facilities during the

pendency of the action. The circuit court granted the Temporary Injunction.

             The City and WMU filed a Motion for Partial Summary Judgment.

The Motion was granted. In multiple Orders, the circuit court observed the

following:

             (1) WMU has a valid easement for the 10 Inch Fresh
             Waterline, and that WMU may utilize fifteen feet on
             either side of the 10 Inch Fresh Waterline to install and
             maintain it;

             (2) WMU has the right to come across the Honaker
             Property at reasonable locations;

             (3) except in cases of emergency, WMU shall provide
             reasonable notice to the Honakers if WMU intends to do
             work in the easement area on the Honaker Property;

             (4) after work is completed, WMU and its agents shall be
             required to restore the Honaker Property to its previous
             condition to the extent reasonably possible;

             (5) if the Honakers act to grade and pave any areas that
             contain the 10 Inch Fresh Waterline, they must not
             excavate in excess of three feet above the waterline and

                                         -6-
             not allow equipment or materials weighing in excess of
             thirty-three tons;

             (6) WMU shall be permitted to remove the three inactive
             water meters which previously served the properties on
             the east side of Boonesboro Road, provided that WMU
             provides reasonable notice to the Honakers and that
             WMU restores the property to its previous condition once
             work is done; and

             (7) WMU has a valid 30 Foot Raw Waterline Easement
             across the Honaker Property, allowing WMU to use a
             fifteen-foot strip of land on either side of the 30 Foot
             Raw Waterline, provided that WMU provides reasonable
             notice to the Honakers and that WMU restores the
             property to its previous condition once work is done.

This appeal followed.

                            STANDARD OF REVIEW

             “The standard of review on appeal of a summary judgment is whether

the circuit judge correctly found that there were no issues as to any material fact

and that the moving party was entitled to a judgment as a matter of law.” Pearson

ex rel. Trent v. Nat’l Feeding Systems, Inc., 90 S.W.3d 46, 49 (Ky. 2002).

Summary judgment is only proper when “it would be impossible for the

respondent to produce evidence at the trial warranting a judgment in his favor.”

Steelvest, Inc. v. Scansteel Service Center, Inc., 807 S.W.2d 476, 480 (Ky. 1991).

In ruling on a motion for summary judgment, the Court is required to construe the

record “in a light most favorable to the party opposing the motion . . . and all

doubts are to be resolved in his favor.” Id. A party opposing a summary judgment

                                         -7-
motion cannot rely on the hope that the trier of fact will disbelieve the movant’s

denial of a disputed fact but must present affirmative evidence to defeat a properly

supported motion for summary judgment. Id. at 481. In Steelvest the word

“’impossible’ is used in a practical sense, not in an absolute sense.” Perkins v.

Hausladen, 828 S.W.2d 652, 654 (Ky. 1992).

                                 ARGUMENT

             “Easements are not favored and the party claiming the right to an

easement bears the burden of establishing all the requirements for recognizing the

easement.” Carroll v. Meredith, 59 S.W.3d 484, 489-90 (Ky. App. 2001). An

easement is generally created by express written grant, implication, prescription, or

estoppel. Id. at 489.

             The rights created by an easement depend upon its classification.

Sawyers v. Beller, 384 S.W.3d 107, 111 (Ky. 2012). An express easement is

created by a written grant with the formalities of a deed. Id. An easement confers

a right upon the dominant owner (the holder of the easement) to enjoy the right to

enter the servient owner’s (the owner of the land) property. Dukes v. Links, 315

S.W.3d 712, 716 (Ky. App. 2010). The rights and duties of the dominant and

servient owner are correlative, and neither may unreasonably exercise their rights

to the injury of the other. Blair v. City of Pikeville, 384 S.W.2d 65, 68 (Ky. 1964).

                                         -8-
             This case presents no genuine issues as to any material fact. It is

governed by documents, specifically deeds, the contents of which cannot be

disputed. While some may argue about what they mean, that presents legal

questions, not disputed facts, and these legal questions are properly answered in a

declaration of rights action. Another undisputed fact of significance is the

continuous existence of these lines where they have been placed for many decades.

             The Honakers argue the City and WMU never acquired a valid

easement for the 10 Inch Fresh Waterline. The 10 Inch Fresh Waterline Easement

was conveyed by the State Highway Commission to WWWC in 1922. This

easement was properly recorded in the Clark County Clerk’s Office, giving the

public notice thereof. WMU acquired WWWC’s rights to the 10 Inch Fresh

Waterline Easement. By virtue of the 1922 deed and the subsequent deeds in the

chain of title, the City and WMU have a valid 10 Inch Fresh Waterline Easement.

             The Honakers argue the 10 Inch Fresh Waterline Easement is invalid

because the State Highway Commission had no interest to convey to WWWC in

1922. The Honakers assert an individual named Tandy Quisenberry conveyed a

right of way over part of his large farm to the Winchester and Kentucky River

Turnpike Company back in 1857. They argue the purpose of this right of way was

to construct and repair the Winchester and Kentucky River Turnpike. This

turnpike was the predecessor to Old Boonesboro Road.

                                         -9-
            The Honakers insist this right of way expired on the deaths of Tandy

Quisenberry (in 1869) and his wife (in 1872). According to the Honakers, the

Winchester and Kentucky River Turnpike Company sold no rights regarding the

Turnpike to the Clark County Fiscal Court by a conveyance in 1898, because they

had no rights to sell. The Honakers also assert there is no evidence that the Clark

County Fiscal Court conveyed this property to the State Highway Commission

before conveyed back to them in 1922. This overlooks the recitations in the deeds

mentioned, against which the Honakers offer no contrary documentation other than

the ancient Quisenberry grant.

             The ostensible conveyance by Tandy Quisenberry with its reported

limitations for what would in effect be an inexplicable temporary turnpike is not

supported by the record. The Honakers have included as exhibits documents

purportedly showing this conveyance. However, no sworn proof has been

proffered to authenticate that exhibit. Even if we accept the unauthenticated

documents, there is no indication that Tandy Quisenberry owned the land where

the 10 Inch Fresh Waterline Easement is currently located on the Honakers’

property. The Honakers’ provide no clear description of where Tandy

Quisenberry’s property was in location to the 10 Inch Fresh Waterline Easement.

The turnpike constructed ran for miles and crossed any number of properties.

                                        -10-
             The Honakers offer no documentation to explain how the turnpike

continued for years after the deaths of the Quisenberrys. There is no offer of proof

in response to the well-supported summary judgment motion for any claim by the

Quisenberry heirs to reclaim the property. The turnpike continued to be

maintained for decades well after it became part of the state highway system.

             Ultimately, the discussion over the Quisenberry conveyance is

academic at best. With respect to the extent the 10 Inch Fresh Waterline is on the

Honaker Property, the express easement granted by the Honakers’ predecessors in

title (the Castles) render moot the title to the roadway.

             Even if the Quisenberry grant is in the chain of the Honakers’

property, this historical segue into how turnpikes were built over a hundred and

fifty years ago ignores the reality of the continuous placement of at least one of the

lines for over 100 years with later deeds clearly granting the continuing easement

to the extent any part of the lines is on the Honaker Property. The Honakers

hyperbolically describe their predicament as the “longest government trespass in

history.” Honaker Brief at 10. On the contrary, even without the clear record of

the easements granted, the existence of the 10 Inch Fresh Waterline and its

maintenance illustrate the right to the easement by prescription if nothing else.

See Farmer v. Kentucky Utilities Company, 642 S.W.2d 579 (Ky. 1984)

                                         -11-
(recognizing a utility company may obtain title to an easement by prescription,

which includes secondary rights to access for maintenance).

             The Honakers similarly argue the City and WMU do not have a 30

Foot Raw Waterline Easement to access the 18 Inch Raw Waterline. They argue

the language contained in the 1959 30 Foot Raw Waterline Easement states the

width of the easement is “temporary.” It is temporary, but the Honakers misapply

the term. The Honakers selectively quote the 30 Foot Raw Waterline Easement, in

part, as follows:

             It is understood and agreed that the strip of land
             hereinabove referred to, being 30 feet in width, is a
             temporary easement only for the purpose of construction
             and laying said pipe. A permanent easement is granted
             over said land for the strip of land actually occupied by
             said pipe line.

In other words, the Honakers argue the 30 Foot Raw Waterline Easement is only

eighteen inches in width. The Honakers, however, omit the following sentence

from the 30 Foot Raw Waterline Easement:

             A temporary easement is hereby granted over the above
             described land for the purposes of maintaining,
             inspecting, or repairing said line for the period of time
             actually needed for such operation, but no longer, the
             temporary easement in no event to exceed an area of 30
             foot in width, or 15 feet on either side of said water line.

             In the interpretation of deeds, the intention of the parties should be

effectuated. Bain v. Tye, 169 S.W. 843, 844 (Ky. 1914). Bain also states:

                                         -12-
             [E]ffect and meaning must be given to every part of a
             deed, each course being considered separately and being
             governed by the intent deducible from the entire
             instrument, and separate parts being viewed in the light
             of other parts, if the same can be done consistently with
             the rules of law.

Id.

             Taking the easement language quoted by the Honakers and the

subsequent sentence into consideration, the intent of the parties to the easement is

clear that a “temporary easement” exists until the end of operations for the 18 Inch

Raw Waterline. Frankly, the Honakers’ contention to the contrary is absurd. They

suggest that once the line is in place the easement shrinks to the dimensions of the

line. It can never be serviced. It could not even be removed without a trespass.

             The temporary easement is just that. When needed for the purpose of

maintaining the line, periodic yet temporary access to the line is allowed to be up

to thirty feet in width. There is no issue of material fact as to the width of the 30

Foot Raw Waterline Easement. Therefore, the City and WMU have a valid 30

Foot Raw Waterline Easement to access the 18 Inch Raw Waterline.

             The Honakers next argue the circuit court unilaterally determined the

requirements for paving areas within the 10 Inch Fresh Waterline Easement. The

circuit court held that, if the Honakers act to grade and pave any areas that contain

the 10 Inch Fresh Waterline, they must not excavate more than three feet above the

waterline and not allow equipment or materials weighing more than thirty-three

                                         -13-
tons, which could damage the water line. The Honakers assert there is no legal

rationale for the circuit court to make this determination.

             This argument ignores the dominant nature of the easement. For its

granted purpose, the placement and maintenance of the lines are paramount to the

rights of the landowner. The landowner’s use of the dirt above and around the

lines is servient or secondary to the water line. The circuit court correctly followed

this law in this declaration of rights action and properly declared the rights of the

parties in the circumstances presented.

             In their Motion for Partial Summary Judgment, the City and WMU

requested the circuit court to impose reasonable restrictions on the Honakers’

proposed driveway to protect the 10 Inch Fresh Waterline from damage. Included

in the Motion was the affidavit of Kenneth Dryden (“Dryden”), General Manager

of WMU. Dryden stated, “[I]t is reasonable for the Honakers to refrain from

excavating above [the 10 Inch Fresh Waterline] any deeper than 3 feet and to not

place trucks or equipment or materials on top of said line which weigh greater than

33 tons.” The Honakers provided no alternative proposed restrictions. The

Honakers’ Response to the Motion for Partial Summary Judgment did not address

the subject of proposed restrictions in paving, so it was reasonable for the circuit

court to adopt Dryden’s proposed restrictions in their entirety in this context of a

                                          -14-
declaration of rights, which proceeding is to be treated as a motion before the

court. See KRS 418.050.

             Finally, the Honakers argue the circuit court judgment should be

reversed as “WMU’s own engineers are having a difficult time determining what

property has been conveyed to the Honakers.” The Honakers allege this creates an

issue of material fact as to whether the Castle family owned the Honaker Property.

WMU did not provide testimony or opinion as to what property the Honakers own.

Further, this contention is a moot point as the circuit court and this Court have

determined that the City and WMU have rights to the 10 Inch Fresh Waterline

Easement and the 30 Foot Raw Waterline Easement to the extent any part of these

lines is on the Honaker property. If any part of the lines is on another’s property,

that is none of the Honakers’ concern.

             We note the position of the Honakers borders on the frivolous. We

decline to consider any sanctions, recognizing this case will remain pending in the

circuit court for further proceedings, which may be the more appropriate place for

consideration of CR 11 or other sanctions at the conclusion of that litigation.

                                 CONCLUSION

             The Clark Circuit Court’s Orders granting partial summary judgment

to the City and WMU are AFFIRMED.

                                         -15-
          ALL CONCUR.

BRIEF FOR APPELLANTS:     BRIEF FOR APPELLEES:
Brian N. Thomas           John H. Rompf, Jr.
Winchester, Kentucky      Winchester, Kentucky

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