Court Opinion

ID: 2741889
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2014-10-13 19:11:54.44818+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T08:39:45.925135
License: Public Domain

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      IN THE COURT OF APPEALS OF THE STATE OF WASHINGTON

R. LANCE HADDON and CAROL A.
PUTNAM, husband and wife,                         DIVISION ONE

              Appellants,                         No. 70454-1-1
                                                  (consol. with No. 70550-4-1)

JOOST R. CLAEYS and AMY K.                        UNPUBLISHED OPINION
PREZBINDOWSKI, husband and wife;
and SHELDON HAY, an individual of
unknown marital status,

              Respondents.                        FILED: October 13, 2014

       Dwyer, J. — We are presented with the question of whether a grantor who

conveyed title to real property "subject to" an invalid easement, in doing so,

exhibited the requisite intent to create a valid easement in the statutory warranty

deed. In this case, we conclude that the grantor did not intend to create an

easement but, rather, intended to exclude that which she mistakenly believed to

be a valid easement from the warranty against encumbrances. Because the trial

court, in granting partial summary judgment, ruled that a valid easement came

into existence by virtue of the conveyance made "subject to" the invalid

easement, the grant of partial summary judgment is reversed and this matter is

remanded to the trial court for further proceedings.
No. 70454-1-1 (consol. with No. 70550-4-l)/2

                                           I

         In 1981, a short plat of a property in Carnation, Washington created four

separate lots. Lots 1 and 2 are bordered by a county road. Lots 3 and 4 are

located behind Lots 1 and 2. However, Lots 3 and 4 are provided legal access to

the public road abutting Lots 1 and 2 by "Tract X"—a tract that traverses Lots 1

and 2.

         In 2005, Dorothy Church, a non-party, acquired title to Lots 1, 3, and 4.

Lot 1 contained an on-site sewage system (OSS). Certain obligations with

regard to the OSS were imposed upon the owner of Lot 1, including an obligation

to "Protect the OSS area including the reserve area from: (a) Cover by structures

or impervious material; (b) Surface Drainage; (c) Soil compaction, for example,

by vehicular traffic or livestock; (d) Damage by soil removal and grade change."

         On August 14, 2006, Church purported to grant to herself an easement

across Lot 1 for the benefit of Lots 3 and 4. This easement, as granted, ran

directly over a portion of the septic drain field that was located on Lot 1.

Church's attempt to create an access easement is recreated, in pertinent part,

below:

                         ACCESS and UTILITY EASEMENT

                                          and

                        JOINT MAINTENANCE AGREEMENT

         The Grantor, Dorothy Church, as owner of the Lot 1 of King
         County Short Plat No. 980005R, Recording No. 8106190609, in
         King County, Washington, tax parcel no. 272505-9049, does
         hereby grant to Dorothy Church, her heirs, successors and
         assigns,
No. 70454-1-1 (consol. with No. 70550-4-l)/3

      an easement for ingress, egress and utilities over, under, and
      across the following described property:

      The West thirty (30) feet of said Lot 1.

      for the use and benefit of the following described property and/or
      any portion thereof: Lots 3 and 4 of said King County Short Plat
      No. 980005R, Recording No. 8106190609, tax parcel nos.
      272505-9050 and 272605-9051.

      Six months later, Church conveyed Lot 1 to R. Lance Haddon and Carol

Putnam (collectively "appellants") by statutory warranty deed. The conveyance

was made subject to "ATTACHED EXHIBIT 'A.'" Exhibit "A" made reference,

among other things, to the easement that Church had purported to create on

August 14, 2006.

                                   Exhibit "A"

       Subject to:

       Easement and the terms and conditions thereof:
       Grantee:                 Dorothy Church
       Purpose:                   Access, utility, and joint maintenance
       Area affected:             the west 30 feet of Lot 1
       Recorded:                  August 21, 2006
       Recording No.:             20060821000487

       On December 2, 2010, Joost Claeys and Amy Prezbindowski took title to

Lots 3 and 4 by quit claim deed in lieu offoreclosure. The quit claim deed made
no mention of Church's easement.

       Thereafter, the appellants filed a complaint against Claeys,

Prezbindowski, and Sheldon Hay (collectively "respondents") in King County

Superior Court. The appellants contended that the easement that Church had
recorded over Lot 1 was invalid and they requested that the trial court declare the
No. 70454-1-1 (consol. with No. 70550-4-l)/4

easement to be void and to quiet title in them. They also sought an award of

damages and a permanent injunction prohibiting the respondents from using the

easement.

       The respondents counterclaimed in an effort to have the easement

enforced.

       Subsequently, both parties moved for partial summary judgment. On

February 6, 2012, the trial court denied the appellants' motion, granted the

respondents' motion, and ruled that the easement was valid. In doing so, the trial

court held, in pertinent part, that although Church had failed initially in her

attempt to create a valid easement, the easement had become valid when

Church conveyed Lot 1 "subject to" the invalid easement.

       [T]he Court concludes that the Access and Utility and Joint
       Maintenance Agreement executed by Dorothy Church and
       recorded August 21, 2006 under King County recording number
       20060821000487 (The Easement) is valid. Although the easement
       was not valid when recorded in August 2006 because Ms. Church
       owned both Lot 1 and Lot 3, the easement became valid when Ms.
       Church conveyed Lot 1 to the Plaintiffs "subject to" the easement.
       This act constituted a valid reservation of rights in the easement to
       Ms. Church, who then owned Lot 3.

       The matter then proceeded to trial where issues regarding the scope of

the easement were resolved. In entering final judgment, the trial court made

findings of fact and drew conclusions of law. Several of its findings are relevant

to the resolution of this appeal.

       The first pertinent finding was that Lots 3 and 4 were provided with legal

access to a public road when the original property was subdivided in 1981.

       Short Plat 980005 was recorded in 1981 .... It created 4 Lots; Lots
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      1 and 2 fronting the public road and Lots 3 and 4 behind. Legal
      access to Lots 3 and 4 was provided through "Tract X" identified on
      the plat map, 30 feet in width and running between Lots 1 and 2 to
      the intersection with Lots 3 and 4. Lots 3 and 4 are delineated on
      the plat as "Nonbuilding Lots."

Findings of Fact 2.

      The second pertinent finding was that the easement that Church had

attempted to create had never been used as such.

      There was no apparent use of the Easement area at the time it was
      granted or at any time since. No vehicular traffic has ever crossed
      the Easement area.

Findings of Fact 12.

      The appellants appeal from the trial court's grant of partial summary

judgment and from entry of its final order and judgment. On appeal, however,

the central issue is whether the trial court, in granting partial summary judgment,

erred by ruling that a valid easement emerged from the conveyance made

"subject to" the invalid easement.

                                          II

       While the trial court concluded that Church's conveyance of Lot 1 "subject

to" the invalid easement resulted in a valid easement, it explicitly rejected the

respondents' position that Church's initial attempt to record an easement was

successful. Nevertheless, on appeal, the respondents contend that the trial

court's grant of partial summary judgment may be affirmed by holding, contrary to

the trial court's conclusion, that Church's initial attempt to create an easement

was successful. We disagree.

       We review an order of partial summary judgment de novo and engage in

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the same inquiry as the trial court. Woo v. Fireman's Fund Ins. Co., 161 Wn.2d

43, 52, 164 P.3d 454 (2007). Summary judgment is proper when there are no

genuine issues of material fact and the moving party is entitled to judgment as a

matter of law. CR 56(c).

      As a general rule, "[o]ne cannot have an easement in his own property."

Coast Storage Co. v. Schwartz, 55 Wn.2d 848, 853, 351 P.2d 520 (1960).

Nevertheless, the respondents argue that a valid easement comes into existence

when granted over separate lots in common ownership, so long as the easement

is granted "in anticipation of sale" of one of the lots. The respondents invoke the

doctrine of merger, along with its well-established exceptions, in an effort to

support their novel theory. However, the doctrine of merger is inapt.

       The doctrine of merger directs that when a dominant and a servient estate

come into common ownership any easements affecting the estates are

extinguished. Radovich v. Nuzhat, 104 Wn. App. 800, 805, 16 P.3d 687 (2001)
(citing Restatement (First) of Property § 497 cmt. a (1944)). As explained in

the Restatement, in order for the doctrine of merger to be implicated, there must

be two tracts of land in separate ownership that subsequently come into common

ownership.

       To assume the existence of an easement appurtenant to land there
       must be presupposed two tracts of land in separate ownerships, a
       dominant and a servient tenement. If the two tracts come into
       common ownership they cannot continue to be dominant and
       servient, and the easement appurtenant ceases to exist because,
       though the privileges of use once authorized by it still exist, they are
       no longer incidental to the ownership of the dominant tenement but
       have become incidents of the ownership of what was formerly the
       servient tenement. By virtue of such ownership, the uses which
No. 70454-1-1 (consol. with No. 70550-4-l)/7

       were authorized by the easement may still be made, but the
       easement, as such, is extinguished.

Restatement (First) of Property § 497 cmt. a (emphasis added).

       However, because the doctrine of merger is disfavored, exceptions to its

application have been created. Radovich, 104 Wn. App. at 805. These include

the following:

       "[T]he courts will not compel a merger of estates where the party in
       whom the two interests are vested does not intend such a merger
       to take place, or where it would be inimical to the interest of the
       party in whom the several estates have united, nor will they
       recognize a claim of merger where to do so would prejudice the
       rights of innocent third persons."

Radovich, 104 Wn. App. at 805 (quoting Moblev v. Harkins, 14 Wn.2d

276, 282, 128 P.2d 289 (1942)).

       Radovich, as well as the authorities upon which it relies, recognizes an

order of events. Two tracts of land in separate ownership—one burdened and

one benefited by an easement—are united in common ownership. Those facts

are not present here. Instead, two tracts in common ownership were decoupled.

Consequently, the doctrine of merger—including the exceptions to its

application—is inapposite and, hence, we decline to affirm the trial court's grant

of partial summary judgment on the basis of the respondents' novel theory.

                                          Ill

       Turning to the appellants' first and only contention on appeal, they

contend that the trial court erred by concluding that Church reserved to herself a

valid easement in the deed by which she conveyed Lot 1. This is so, they assert,

because Church's conveyance made "subject to" her invalid easement was an

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attempt to exclude that which she mistakenly believed to be a valid easement

from the warranty against encumbrances. We agree.

       "Generally, when construing a deed, the intent of the parties is of

paramount importance and courts must ascertain and enforce such intent."

Wash. State Grange v. Brandt, 136 Wn. App. 138, 145, 148 P.3d 1069 (2006).

"[A]ny words which clearly show the intention to give an easement... are

sufficient to effect that purpose, providing the language is sufficiently definite and

certain in its terms." Beebe v. Swerda, 58 Wn. App. 375, 379, 793 P.2d 442

(1990). A grantor may create an express easement by including in the statutory

warranty deed what is known as a "reservation" of rights: "'A reservation is the

creation in behalf of the grantor of a new right issuing out of the thing granted,

something which did not exist as an independent right before the grant.'" Duus v.

Town of Ephrata, 14 Wn.2d 426, 430, 128 P.2d 510, 134 P.2d 722 (1942)

(emphasis added) (quoting 16 Am. Jur. Deeds § 298, at 607 (1938)).

       Usually, the words "subject to" are included in a deed to denote

restrictions of record that the grantor intends to exclude from warranty of title.

See 7 Thompson on Real Property § 60.03(a)(7) (2d Thomas ed. 2006); see

also von Meding v. Strahl, 319 Mich. 598, 609, 30 N.W. 2d 363 (1948) ("subject

to all easements" in a conveyance means "subject to all valid easements"). But

see Beebe, 58 Wn. App. at 379-82 (holding that the words "subject to," when

accompanied by additional relevant language and circumstances, may indicate

an intent to create an express easement in the deed).

       As part of a conveyance of real property by statutory warranty deed, a

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grantor must covenant that, among other things, title is free of encumbrances.

Mastro v. Kumakichi Corp., 90 Wn. App. 157, 162,951 P.2d 817 (1998); cf. Hebb

v. Severson, 32 Wn.2d 159, 167, 201 P.2d 156 (1948) (identifying an easement

as a type of encumbrance on real property).

      The language of the deed and the circumstances surrounding the

conveyance of Lot 1 disclose that Church intended to exclude that which she

mistakenly believed to be a valid easement from the warranty against

encumbrances. Church conveyed Lot 1 "subject to" an easement that carried the

same recording number, date, and description as the invalid easement recorded

by Church in August 2006. This alone is potent evidence of Church's intent.

Additionally, the respondents fail to identify any surrounding circumstances-

such as evidence that Church was aware that her initial attempt to grant to

herself an easement over her own property was ineffectual—that would suggest

an intent by Church—contrary to the language of the deed—to reserve to herself
an easement in the deed. Considered in concert, the language of the deed and

the circumstances surrounding the conveyance indicate that Church was

attempting to exclude that which she mistakenly believed to be a valid easement

from the warranty against encumbrances—not that she was attempting to create

a "new right" in the parcel. Cf, Duus, 14 Wn.2d at 431. The trial court erred by

ruling otherwise.

                                        IV

       Notwithstanding the trial court's error, the respondents next contend that

we may affirm the trial court's grant of partial summary judgment on the basis of
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there being established respondents' right to an "implied easement" over the

area in dispute. Where, as here—according to the respondents—there was unity

of title, a subsequent separation, and a reasonable degree of necessity for the

easement after the separation, an implied easement should be found. We

disagree.

      "Easements by implication arise by intent of the parties, which is shown by

facts and circumstances surrounding the conveyance." Roberts v. Smith, 41 Wn.

App. 861, 864, 707 P.2d 143 (1985). The factors relevant to establishing an

implied easement are (1) former unity of title and subsequent separation, (2) prior

apparent and continuous quasi easement for the benefit of one part of the estate

to the detriment of another, and (3) a certain degree of necessity for the

continuation of the easement. Adams v. Cullen, 44 Wn.2d 502, 505, 268 P.2d

451 (1954): MacMeekin v. Low Income Hous. Inst., Inc., 111 Wn. App. 188, 195,

45 P.3d 570 (2002). Unity of title and subsequent separation is the only absolute

requirement. Roberts. 41 Wn. App. at 865. The other two factors are "aids in

determining intent to create an implied easement." Roberts, 41 Wn. App. at 865.
       Here, there was unity of title and a subsequent separation. Hence, the

first factor is satisfied. However, analysis of the second and third factors militate

against the respondents' contention.

       With regard to the second factor, the respondents do not even assert that
a "quasi easement" exists. A"quasi easement" refers to the situation "which may
arise between two pieces of land owned by the same person, when the

enjoyment by one piece of a right in the other would be a legal easement, were

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the pieces owned by different persons." Adams, 44 Wn.2d at 504. Even had the

respondents asserted the existence of a "quasi easement," however, the trial

court's factual finding that "[tjhere was no apparent use of the Easement area at

the time it was granted or at any time since,"1 forecloses a conclusion in favor of

the respondents on this question.

       With regard to the third factor, the respondents contend that a certain

degree of necessity exists for the easement. This is so, they maintain, because

Lots 3 and 4 are landlocked. To the contrary, the trial court's finding that "Tract

X" provides Lots 3 and 4 with legal access to a public road forecloses adoption of

the respondents' position. In view of the trial court's factual finding, the

respondents have failed to establish the requisite necessity for an additional

easement.2

        Considering that the invalid easement had never been used and that Lots

3 and 4 had been granted legal access to a public road, we reject the suggestion

that the parties intended for an easement to be created by implication and

decline to affirm the trial court's grant of partial summary judgment on this basis.

        The grant of partial summary judgment is reversed and this matter is

remanded to the trial court. On remand, a determination with regard to the

appropriate relief, including damages (if any), to be granted to the appellants

should be made.

        1 Findings of Fact 12.
        2Moreover, the third factor calls for an evaluation of the necessity for the continuation of
the easement. This plainly refers to a continuation of the use of the easement. Here, where no
such use ever took place, the "use" could not be "continued."

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      Reversed.

                                             *   )   i-^lsiS),

We concur:

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