Court Opinion

ID: 9405498
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2023-06-28 18:03:51.98978+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T17:20:22.468861
License: Public Domain

Filed 6/27/23
                      CERTIFIED FOR PUBLICATION

        IN THE COURT OF APPEAL OF THE STATE OF CALIFORNIA

                        FIRST APPELLATE DISTRICT

                                DIVISION TWO

 VISITACION INVESTMENT,
 LLC,
      Plaintiff, Cross-
 defendant and Appellant,
                                       A163550
 v.
 424 JESSIE HISTORIC                   (San Francisco
 PROPERTIES, LLC,                      Super. Ct. No. CGC-19579667)
      Defendant, Cross-
 complainant and Respondent.

        Appellant Visitacion Investment, LLC (Visitacion) owns a large plot of
land in San Francisco. A portion of the land is subject to an easement
reserved when a railroad sold that portion to Visitacion’s predecessor-in-
interest. The dominant tenement of the easement, a plot of land adjacent to
Visitacion’s property, is now owned by respondent 424 Jessie Historic
Properties, LLC (JHP). In preparing to develop its property, Visitacion
brought this action to quiet title to the easement on grounds of abandonment.
        Visitacion and JHP filed cross-motions for summary judgment. The
trial court found no material triable issues of fact and rendered judgment in
favor of JHP, holding there had been no abandonment as a matter of law.

                                        1
Concluding that disputed issues of fact preclude any definitive finding on the
issue of abandonment, we reverse the grant of summary judgment to JHP.1
                               BACKGROUND
                                        I.
                       General Factual Background
       Visitacion owns a plot of land in the Visitacion Valley neighborhood of
San Francisco (Visitacion property). A portion of the Visitacion property
(servient parcel) was formerly owned by the Southern Pacific Transportation
Company (Southern Pacific). The servient parcel was bounded on the east by
the right-of-way for a series of mainline railroad tracks that are still in active
use.
       When Southern Pacific conveyed the servient parcel to Visitacion’s
predecessor-in-interest in 1990, Southern Pacific was conducting railroad-
related business operations on a parcel across the northern border of the
servient parcel. In support of these operations, the deed of conveyance
reserved an easement with respect to several separately described portions of
the servient parcel (the easement). As relevant here, the easement
encumbered a strip of land curving diagonally across the servient parcel from
its northeast corner, which was bordered to the north by the Southern Pacific
parcel and to the east by the railroad right-of-way. Southern Pacific’s parcel
became the dominant tenement of the easement.2

       1 Visitacion does not appear to appeal the trial court’s denial of its own
motion for summary judgment. We nonetheless briefly address the issue and
find no error in the denial.
      2 An easement is an incorporeal interest in the land of another that

gives its owner the right to use another’s property. The land to which the
easement attaches is called the dominant tenement; the land on which the
burden is imposed is called the servient tenement. (Tract Development
Services, Inc. v. Kepler (1988) 199 Cal.App.3d 1374, 1384.)
                                        2
      Southern Pacific merged with the Union Pacific Railroad (Union
Pacific) in 1997. At some point, railroad activities on the dominant tenement
ceased, although the date of cessation is unclear from the appellate record.
In 2015, Union Pacific sold the dominant tenement and an adjacent parcel
(together, JHP property) to the predecessor-in-interest of JHP.3 As part of
the sale, Union Pacific expressly conveyed to JHP its rights under the
easement in the diagonal strip described above, although the deed contained
no warranty regarding the continued existence of such rights.
      Visitacion is planning a large, mixed-use residential development on
the Visitacion property. As part of that development, Visitacion hopes to use
the portion of its land that was encumbered by the easement. To that end,
Visitacion brought this quiet title action against JHP, alleging that the
easement has been extinguished under the doctrine of abandonment. JHP
responded with a cross-complaint, denying abandonment and seeking to
establish its “full and complete legal and equitable ownership of
the . . . easements.”
      Following discovery, the parties filed cross-motions for summary
judgment on the issue of abandonment.
                                     II.
                         Evidence of Abandonment
      Visitacion’s claim of abandonment is premised on the cessation of
railroad activities on the JHP property and its sale to JHP, a real estate
development company with no proven intent to use the easement for railroad
purposes.

      3JHP’s predecessor-in-interest, Patrick McNerney, is still involved
with JHP’s activities. For convenience, we will hereafter refer to McNerney
and JHP jointly as “JHP.”
                                       3
      In relevant part, the easement, as set forth in the deed by which
Southern Pacific conveyed the Visitation property to Visitation’s predecessor,
was described as follows, with critical language bolded:
                     “FORM OF RAILROAD EASEMENT
      “Grantor excepts from the Property hereby conveyed and reserves unto
itself, its successors and assigns:
      “A perpetual, exclusive easement in, on, under, over and through the
locations described in Schedule l (Railroad Main Line Easement), Schedule 2
(Drill & Spur Track Easement), and Schedule 3 (Access Roadway Easement)
attached hereto, in which areas Grantor . . . shall have the right to
own, operate, maintain, repair, lease, license, and/or remove existing
and/or future railroad, rail and railroad related equipment and
facilities and communications lines and facilities of every kind and
nature including but not limited to all existing facilities, telephone,
telegraph, television and fiber optic lines and related equipment. . . .
Upon abandonment or termination of the easement, or any portion thereof,
Grantor shall be obligated to execute and deliver to Grantee or its successors
and assigns an instrument in form and substance satisfactory to Grantee, or
its successors and assigns, relinquishing the easement described in this
paragraph.” (Bolding added.)
      The three schedules referred to in the easement deed describe seven
separate encumbered parcels, two referred to as “Main Line Easement,” three
referred to as “Drill & Spur Track Easement,” and two referred to as “Access
Roadway Easement.”
      The quitclaim deed by which Union Pacific conveyed the JHP property
included the easement rights to four of the seven parcels described in the
original deed schedules: one of the main line parcels, designated in the

                                       4
quitclaim deed as the “signal cabinet area,” two of the drill & spur track
parcels, and one of the access roadway parcels. Easements over the parcels
relating to operation of the mainline right-of-way were not included in the
rights conveyed to JHP. To the contrary, the quitclaim deed required JHP to
construct a fence preventing access to the railroad right of way.
      Visitacion provided little information about the easement’s use over the
more than 30 years since its creation, perhaps because such information is no
longer available. Because a portion of the Visitacion property formerly
hosted a factory, Visitacion reasonably speculates that a spur track in the
easement could have served the factory, connecting it to the mainline tracks
that run to the east.
      The tracks and other rail-related equipment in the easement were
removed no later than 2008.4 Although the easement permitted its use for
communications equipment, there were no records indicating that Southern
Pacific or Union Pacific had ever placed such equipment in the easement. By
the time of this litigation, there was no railroad or communications
equipment in the easement.
      Union Pacific sold the JHP property only after determining that the
property qualified as “excess property,” meaning that Union Pacific no longer
used it for “operating railroad purposes.” Further, prior to the sale, Union
Pacific conducted a “very formal and extensive” internal review confirming
that none of a dozen different Union Pacific departments had a further use
for the JHP property or the easement. At the time of the sale, Union Pacific

      4 Although the record leaves the date of removal uncertain, a
Visitacion declarant stated that “since I first visited the [servient parcel] in
2008 I have not seen any rail or railroad related equipment or facilities in the
Easements,” except for “two or three” deteriorated sheds that were later
removed.
                                       5
understood that JHP intended to use the JHP property for residential or
commercial development. JHP and Union Pacific discussed use of the
easement for vehicular and pedestrian access to the JHP property, rather
than for railroad-related activities. JHP has since submitted a proposal to
the City of San Francisco for the construction of two new residential
buildings on the JHP property.
                                      III.
                               JHP’s Evidence
      JHP argued that the easement had not been abandoned because it
continues to allow vehicular and pedestrian access to the JHP property and
can be used for the installation of communications equipment or for activities
associated with the active mainline rail service on its eastern boundary.
      Without denying its exploration of the construction of buildings on the
JHP property, JHP provided evidence that the JHP property is zoned to allow
a variety of activities authorized under the easement, including activities
associated with the mainline tracks or other “freight storage or transfer,
loading and unloading of rail cars, and railroad maintenance, construction or
repair” and a data center or other telecommunication facilities. Since JHP
acquired the property, it has licensed its temporary use to a railroad
maintenance and construction contractor working on a railroad electrification
project for CalTrain. Further, JHP argued, use of the easement for an access
roadway and the installation of communications lines will be necessary for
any future development on the JHP property. Because, JHP contended, such
uses are authorized under the easement, it cannot be found to have been
abandoned.

                                       6
                                       IV.
                          The Trial Court’s Ruling
      The trial court denied Visitacion’s motion for summary judgment and
granted JHP’s motion. In granting judgment, the trial court was persuaded
that the scope of the easement extends beyond railroad-related activities,
citing the broad language relating to communications equipment and the
testimony of a former Southern Pacific employee that the company’s business
at one time included the installation of commercial fiber optic cables in some
of its railroad rights-of-way. The court rejected Visitacion’s claim that Union
Pacific’s conduct evidenced an intent to abandon the easement, relying on
evidence that (1) the railroad “actively marketed the [JHP] property,” (2) JHP
had entered into agreements with Visitacion in 2016 and the construction
company in 2019 granting access to the JHP property, and (3) the JHP
property would be “effectively landlocked” without access over the easement.
                                DISCUSSION
      As explained below, we conclude that the trial court erred in granting
summary judgment to JHP for three independent reasons. First, resolution
of this matter will likely turn on the interpretation of the easement deed.
Although that interpretation is ultimately an issue of law for the court, the
trial court erred in construing the easement in the context of the summary
judgment motions, given the ambiguity in the language of the deed and the
conflicting evidence regarding the context and use of the easement. Second,
the evidence submitted by Visitacion could, if accepted by the trier of fact,
support a finding of abandonment, notwithstanding the contrary evidence
submitted by JHP. It therefore creates triable issues of fact that preclude
summary judgment. Finally, the trial court’s finding that, as a matter of law,

                                        7
Union Pacific did not intend to abandon the easement was based on a
misunderstanding of the law governing such intent.5
                                       I.
                               Governing Law
      A. Abandonment
      Abandonment of an easement created by grant, as here, requires proof
of (1) the cessation of use of the easement by the owner of the dominant
tenement and (2) “ ‘ “unequivocal and decisive acts on the part of the
[dominant tenant], clearly showing an intention to abandon.” ’ ” (Gerhard v.
Stephens (1968) 68 Cal.2d 864, 890 (Gerhard); Smith v. Worn (1892) 93 Cal.
206, 212.)6 An easement that is found to be abandoned “does not ‘revert’ to
the grantor[;] it is simply extinguished.” (Concord & Bay Point Land Co. v.
City of Concord (1991) 229 Cal.App.3d 289, 295.)
      Abandonment, and in particular the intent to abandon, are issues of
fact. (People v. Ocean Shore Railroad, Inc. (1948) 32 Cal.2d 406, 417;
Buechner v. Jonas (1964) 228 Cal.App.2d 127, 131.) With respect to this
inquiry, California has adopted the view of the original Restatement of

      5  The parties raise several arguments that we find unnecessary to
address, such as the trial court’s rulings on Visitacion’s objections to the
admission of the deposition testimony of Union Pacific’s designated corporate
representative. We decline to address these issues because triable issues of
fact would preclude summary judgment, regardless of the correctness of the
trial court’s rulings. We do not mean to express an opinion about any issues
other than those expressly addressed below.
      6 Some older decisions hold that a finding of abandonment also
requires proof of acts taken by the owner of the servient tenement in reliance
on the abandonment. (E.g., Smith v. Worn, supra, 93 Cal. at p. 212.) More
recent decisions have persuasively rejected that element. (See Gerhard,
supra, 68 Cal.2d at p. 890 [not mentioning reliance element]; Lake Merced
Golf & Country Club v. Ocean Shore R.R. Co. (1962) 206 Cal.App.2d 421,
436–437 [explaining rejection of reliance element].)
                                       8
Property that “ ‘[t]he intention required in the abandonment of an easement
is the intention not to make in the future the uses authorized by it. The
benefit of an easement lies in the privilege of use of the land subject to it.
There is no abandonment unless there is a giving up of that use.’ ” (Faus v.
City of Los Angeles (1967) 67 Cal.2d 350, 363 (Faus); see similarly Tract
Development Services, Inc. v. Kepler, supra, 199 Cal.App.3d at p. 1385
[“Abandonment hinges upon the intent of the owner to forego all future
conforming uses of the property”]; Ocean Shore, at p. 418 [trier of fact must
“determine whether there was a bona fide intent to preserve the right of
way for actual railroad use”].) Although mere nonuse is insufficient to
demonstrate an intent to abandon, a long period of nonuse may be considered
as evidence of the necessary intent. (Gerhard, supra, 68 Cal.2d at p. 891.)
      In determining the “conforming” or “authorized” uses of an easement,
the touchstone is the language of the document creating the easement.7 (Civ.
Code, § 806 [“The extent of a servitude is determined by the terms of the
grant”].) “Deeds are interpreted in the same manner as contracts. [Citation.]
. . . In interpreting a deed, our primary objective is to determine and carry
out the intent of the parties by looking at the deed’s plain language, ‘as
construed in light of any extrinsic evidence which may prove a meaning [of]
which the language of the instrument is reasonably susceptible.’ ” (Pear v.
City and County of San Francisco (2021) 67 Cal.App.5th 61, 70.) In
determining the uses permitted by an easement, the court must also consider
the “ ‘purpose and character’ ” of the easement (Langazo v. San Joaquin

      7Civil Code section 806 refers to an easement created by grant, but the
same rule applies to an easement created by reservation. (City of Los Angeles
v. Howard (1966) 244 Cal.App.2d 538, 542.)
                                        9
Light & Power Corp. (1939) 32 Cal.App.2d 678, 686 and its historic use (see
Atchison, T. & S.F. Ry. Co. v. Abar (1969) 275 Cal.App.2d 456, 465 (Abar)).
      The terms of the easement constrain the uses permitted to the
dominant tenement. “ ‘Where the easement is founded upon a grant . . . only
those interests expressed in the grant and those necessarily incident thereto
pass from the owner of the fee.’ ” (Rye v. Tahoe Truckee Sierra Disposal Co.,
Inc. (2013) 222 Cal.App.4th 84, 92 (Rye).) “[I]t is well settled that ‘both
parties have the right to insist that so long as the easement is enjoyed it shall
remain substantially the same as it was at the time the right accrued,
entirely regardless of the question as to the relative benefit and damage that
would ensue to the parties by reason of a change in the mode and manner of
its enjoyment.’ ” (Whalen v. Ruiz (1953) 40 Cal.2d 294, 302.)
      B. Summary Judgment
      “The standard pursuant to which we review an appeal from an entry of
summary judgment is well established. We summarized it in Nazir v. United
Airlines Inc. (2009) 178 Cal.App.4th 243 (Nazir), as follows:
      “ ‘Code of Civil Procedure section 437c, subdivision (c) provides that
summary judgment is properly granted when there is no triable issue of
material fact and the moving party is entitled to judgment as a matter of law.
[Citation.] As applicable here, moving defendants can meet their burden by
demonstrating that “a cause of action has no merit,” which they can do by
showing that “[o]ne or more elements of the cause of action cannot be
separately established . . . .” [Citations.] Once defendants meet this burden,
the burden shifts to plaintiff to show the existence of a triable issue of
material fact. [Citation.]
      “ ‘On appeal “[w]e review a grant of summary judgment de novo; we
must decide independently whether the facts not subject to triable dispute

                                        10
warrant judgment for the moving party as a matter of law. [Citations.]”
[Citation.] Put another way, we exercise our independent judgment, and
decide whether undisputed facts have been established that negate plaintiff’s
claims. [Citation.] . . . “[W]e exercise an independent review to determine if
the defendant moving for summary judgment met its burden of establishing a
complete defense or of negating each of the plaintiff’s theories and
establishing that the action was without merit.” [Citation.]
      “ ‘But other principles guide us as well, including that “[w]e accept as
true the facts . . . in the evidence of the party opposing summary judgment
and the reasonable inferences that can be drawn from them.” [Citation.]
And we must “ ‘view the evidence in the light most favorable to . . . the losing
part[y]’ and ‘liberally construe [his] evidentiary submissions and strictly
scrutinize [the moving party’s] own evidence, in order to resolve any
evidentiary doubts or ambiguities in [the losing party’s] favor.’ ” ’ ” (Wright v.
State of California (2015) 233 Cal.App. 1218, 1228.)
                                       II.
     The Trial Court Erred in Interpreting the Deed Reserving the
                  Easement on Summary Judgment.
      As discussed below, we accept JHP’s argument that a sale by Union
Pacific to a party that intended to make authorized use of the easement could
weigh against a finding of abandonment. JHP contends that its purchase
qualified as such because any anticipated development on the JHP property
would use the easement for (1) vehicular and pedestrian access to the
buildings and (2) the installation of communications equipment serving the
buildings. Although the trial court’s order did not expressly address whether
use of the easement to provide access to a commercial or residential
development is authorized under the easement, it did construe the easement
to permit the installation of any type of communications equipment,

                                       11
implicitly rejecting Visitacion’s argument that the installation of such
equipment is not an authorized use unless the equipment is related to
railroad operations. We conclude that the trial court’s interpretation of the
easement deed on summary judgment was premature.
        “When the terms of an insurance policy are clear and unambiguous, the
interpretation of the policy presents an issue of law which may be resolved by
summary judgment. [Citation.] However, when the terms of a contract are
ambiguous or uncertain, ‘it is the duty of the trial court to construe it after
the parties are given a full opportunity to produce evidence of the facts,
circumstances and conditions surrounding its execution as well as the
conduct of the parties to the contract [citation],’ and the interpretation of the
policy presents a question of fact which is inappropriate for summary
judgment.” (Rogers v. Prudential Insurance Co. (1990) 218 Cal.App.3d
1132, 1136–1137.) Although Rogers specifically addressed an insurance
policy, the same rule of law applies to the interpretation of any ambiguous
contract. (Daugherty Co. v. Kimberly-Clark Corp. (1971) 14 Cal.App.3d 151,
157.)
        There is little question that the terms of the deed containing the
easement are ambiguous. The easement is referred to as a “railroad
easement,” but its authorized uses include the installation of communications
equipment as well as railroad equipment. Further, the deed’s descriptions of
the various tracts subject to the easement refer specifically to the creation of
a “drill & spur track” and an “access roadway.” Based on this language,
Visitacion and JHP posit reasonable but conflicting interpretations, with
Visitacion contending the easement permits only railroad-related uses
(including railroad-related communications and access) and JHP arguing
that any use for the purposes of communications and access is authorized.

                                        12
      Determining the proper weight to be given the various provisions in the
easement bearing on its use will require consideration not only of the
language of the easement, but also its “ ‘purpose and character’ ” (Langazo v.
San Joaquin Light & Power Corp., supra, 32 Cal.App.2d at p. 686), its
historic use (see Abar, supra, 275 Cal.App.2d at p. 465), and any other
evidence bearing on the original parties’ intent. “[E]vidence showing the
conduct of the parties and the practical construction placed on [the easement]
by them . . . afforded the most reliable means of ascertaining the intention of
the parties.” (City of Los Angeles v. Savage (1958) 165 Cal.App.2d 1, 7.)
      The trial court’s interpretation was based largely on the language of
the easement deed, with little consideration of the circumstances of its
creation or the original parties’ use of the easement. Although the trial court
was correct that the deed’s language authorizing the installation of
communications equipment is broad, that language is potentially subject to
limitation by other provisions of the easement deed and the history of its use.
The deed is entitled “Railroad Easement,” arguably suggesting that the
parties intended the easement to be used solely for railroad purposes.
Further, one of the easement parcels transferred to JHP was described as a
“signal cabinet area” in the quitclaim deed, suggesting it had been used for
communications related to the railroad’s operations.8 The original parties
could have chosen to use broad language to describe the allowable
communications equipment simply to accommodate changing technology for

      8  The original easement deed referred collectively to two of the parcels
over which an easement was granted as “Main Line Easement.” In the
quitclaim deed transferring the second of these parcels to JHP, it is referred
to as “signal cabinet area.” This suggests that Union Pacific had reason to
believe the parcel was used for installation of a signal cabinet, a term of art
used to refer to a structure housing electronics involved in the operation of
the railroad.
                                      13
railroad communications, rather than to permit the installation of equipment
serving other communications purposes.
      In adopting a broader interpretation, the trial court relied on evidence
that Southern Pacific had, at one time, installed fiber optic cable in some
easements at other, unspecified locations. That type of use might have been
appropriate for the easement parcels relating to operation of the mainline
tracks, since those parcels are presumably part of a railroad right-of-way
connecting distant locations. It seems unlikely that the parties anticipated a
similar use for the easement parcels transferred to JHP because those
easements merely cross the servient parcel, terminating at the property line.
      In presenting these arguments, we do not mean to suggest that any of
them is conclusive in the interpretation of the easement deed. We simply
note that the issue is more complex, and more dependent on the evidence of
the historical background, than is suggested by the trial court’s analysis of
the deed’s language. Given the ambiguity of the easement deed and the
uncertain state of the evidence bearing on its origination and use, the trial
court erred in construing the deed in the context of these cross-motions for
summary judgment.
                                      III.
    Visitation’s Evidence, if Accepted, Could Support a Finding of
                             Abandonment.
      The trial court’s decision did not address the evidence submitted by
Visitacion in support of its contention that Union Pacific had abandoned the
easement. Because that evidence was sufficient, under long-established case
law, to support a finding by a trier of fact that the easement was abandoned,
Visitacion’s submission created triable issues of fact precluding a grant of
summary judgment to JHP.

                                       14
      Visitacion’s evidence, which was largely uncontradicted, demonstrated
that all of Union Pacific’s easement-related activities on the servient parcel
ceased several years prior to the sale to JHP. All tracks, buildings, and other
equipment necessary for use of the properties for railroad purposes had been
removed, and there was no evidence that communications equipment had
ever been present in the easement, other than, perhaps, a signal cabinet.
Before selling the property, Union Pacific determined that it was no longer
using the dominant tenement or the easement for operating railroad
purposes and conducted an extensive internal review confirming that no
department of the railroad had a further use for them. It was only after this
period of nonuse and Union Pacific’s determination that it had no further use
for the property that Union Pacific marketed the JHP property.
      On this evidence, a trier of fact could conclude that Union Pacific, prior
to the sale to JHP, had formed an intent “ ‘not to make in the future the uses
authorized by’ ” the easement. (Faus, supra, 67 Cal.2d at p. 363.) A
reasonable inference of such intent could be made from the removal of all
conforming equipment and the significant period of nonuse, which the
internal review confirmed. Similar evidence has repeatedly been found
sufficient to support a finding of abandonment of a railroad easement in
California and other jurisdictions. (E.g., People v. Ocean Shore Railroad,
Inc., supra, 32 Cal.2d at pp. 415–419; Home Real Estate Co. v. Los Angeles
Pacific Co. (1912) 163 Cal. 710, 714–716; Lake Merced Golf & Country Club v.
Ocean Shore R.R. Co., supra, 206 Cal.App.2d at pp. 438–442; Ocean Shore
R.R. Co. v. Doelger (1960) 179 Cal.App.2d 222, 229 (Doelger); see also
Brewster and Taylor Co. v. Wall (1989) 299 Ark. 18 [769 S.W.2d 753, 756]
[railroad easement abandoned when railroad ceased operations and conveyed
the easement for non-railroad use]; Lawson v. State (1986) 107 Wash.2d 444

                                       15
[730 P.2d 1308, 1313] [same]; Schnabel v. County of DuPage (1981)
101 Ill.App.3d 553, 57 Ill.Dec. 121 [428 N.E.2d 671, 678–679] [same]; Pollnow
v. State Dept. of Natural Resources (1979) 88 Wis.2d 350 [276 N.W.2d 738,
746] [same].)
      JHP’s argument for non-abandonment is largely premised on its
interpretation of the easement as authorizing a wider variety of uses than a
typical railroad easement. As explained above, we hold that a definitive
interpretation of the easement cannot be made on summary judgment.
Further and in any event, JHP’s arguments about the interpretation of the
easement are also largely irrelevant, given Union Pacific’s conduct prior to its
sale of the property. Union Pacific had ceased railroad-related uses of the
easement, could find no records that it had ever taken advantage of
communications or access uses beyond those necessary for railroad
operations, and determined that it had no intent to make other authorized
uses of the easement. Even if the easement permitted non-railroad uses,
Union Pacific could be found to have formed an intent not to take advantage
of them. For this reason, Visitacion’s evidence necessarily created triable
issues of fact that prevented a grant of summary judgment to JHP.
      Although Visitacion’s evidence is sufficient to support a finding of
abandonment, it did not demonstrate an entitlement to summary judgment.
As we have noted, abandonment, and in particular intent to abandon, are
issues of fact. Issues of intent in this context as in others often turn on
circumstantial evidence and inferences that, when conflicting, are not
amenable to summary judgment. (Code Civ. Proc. §437c, subd. (c) [“summary
judgment shall not be granted by the court based on inferences reasonably
deducible from the evidence if contradicted by other inferences or evidence
that raise a triable issue as to any material fact”].)

                                        16
      Further, although a trier of fact could find abandonment on Visitacion’s
evidence, that finding is not compelled as a matter of law. A judge or jury
could also conclude that Union Pacific’s conduct was neither unequivocal nor
decisive in demonstrating an intent to forgo all further authorized uses of the
easement. (Gerhard, supra, 68 Cal.2d at p. 890.) In addition, JHP provided
evidence that could be found to refute an intent to abandon. We assume that
sale of the JHP property by Union Pacific to a buyer who intended to make
authorized use of the easement could constitute evidence that Union Pacific
lacked the intent to abandon. Although JHP’s claim that it intends to make
such use of the easement will depend on subsequent interpretation of the
easement, JHP’s evidence is sufficient at this stage of the proceedings to
create a triable issue of fact that precluded a grant of summary judgment for
Visitacion.
                                      IV.
 The Trial Court’s Finding That Union Pacific Lacked the Intent to
Abandon as a Matter of Law Was Based on a Misunderstanding of the
                         Legal Standard.
      The trial court’s conclusion that, as a matter of law, Union Pacific
lacked the intent to abandon appears to have been based on a
misunderstanding of the law governing such intent. The court did not
expressly identify the legal standard it applied in finding no intent to
abandon, but it reasoned that Union Pacific could not be found to have
intended to abandon the easement because it “actively marketed” the
easement as part of the JHP property.9 Although this suggests that Union

      9  The trial court also cited as evidence of no intent to abandon JHP’s
licensing of access to the property after it purchased the JHP property.
Although that licensing may support a finding that JHP has not abandoned
the easement, it does not bear on Union Pacific’s intent (or its conduct) before
or at the time of the sale.
                                       17
Pacific did not intend to voluntarily relinquish the easement at the time of
the sale to JHP, the intent to abandon an easement does not require or
depend upon an intent to relinquish it.
      “ ‘The intention required in the abandonment of an easement is the
intention not to make in the future the uses authorized by it.’ ” (Faus, supra,
67 Cal.2d at p. 363.) As this suggests, abandonment occurs when an owner
no longer intends to engage in the uses authorized by the easement; it does
not require a subjective intent to give up the easement. (See Doelger, supra,
179 Cal.App.2d at p. 232 [“The intent to abandon congeals into
the relinquishment of the purpose for which the easement has been conveyed,
and this renunciation works a termination of the easement. [Citations.] Nor
will a desire to utilize the property for other purposes prevent such
extinguishment”].) In part because it does not depend upon subjective intent,
intent to abandon is generally inferred from the owner’s conduct, rather than
premised on direct evidence of intent.
      As the Restatement of Property explains, a finding of abandonment is
normally based on circumstantial evidence because the owner of a dominant
tenement who “deliberately sets about divesting him or herself” of an
easement “normally uses a release.” (Rest. 3d Property, Servitudes, § 7.4,
com. a, p. 352.) Even when the owner of a dominant tenement no longer
intends to exercise the rights granted under the easement, the owner may be
unwilling to voluntarily relinquish the easement because of “the possibility of
exacting a payment from the servient owner for its release.” (Id., § 7.4,
com. c, p. 354.) In such circumstances, “abandonment may be more readily
found than if the servitude continues to enhance the utility of the dominant
estate.” (Ibid.) In other words, a finding of intent to abandon is appropriate
when the uses authorized by the easement have no further practical value to

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the dominant tenement. Abandonment can then occur even though the
easement continues to have economic value, if only by virtue of the burden it
imposes on the servient tenement. Although Union Pacific’s marketing of the
JHP property with the easement demonstrates that the railroad did not
intend to relinquish the easement, it has little bearing on Union Pacific’s
intent to abandon.
      Cases in other jurisdictions have consistently found an intent to
abandon a railroad easement, notwithstanding the railroad’s subjective
intent, when the railroad ceases operations in the easement and conveys the
property to a buyer who does not intend to use the easement for authorized
purposes. (E.g., Brewster and Taylor v. Wall, supra, 769 S.W.2d at p. 756;
Lawson v. State, supra, 730 P.2d at p. 1313; Schnabel v. County of DuPage,
supra, 428 N.E.2d at pp. 678–679; Pollnow v. State Dept. of Natural
Resources, supra, 276 N.W.2d at p. 746.) One California court has similarly
cited the sale of portions of a railroad right-of-way to non-railroad users as
evidence of abandonment. (Doelger, supra, 179 Cal.App.2d at pp. 229, 232.)
      The trial court separately justified its finding of no intent to abandon
on the ground that the JHP property would be “effectively” landlocked
without access over the easement. Visitacion presented evidence refuting
JHP’s claim that the property would be landlocked without access through
the easement, including the admission by a JHP witness that the easement is
merely “currently the most economically feasible access to the JHP property.”
The issue whether the property was landlocked thus presented a triable issue
of disputed fact, and the court erred in premising a grant of summary
judgment on JHP’s claim. Further, although the landlocked nature of the
parcel might justify a finding of an easement by necessity (see Murphy v.
Burch (2009) 46 Cal.4th 157, 162–163), an issue the court did not expressly

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consider, it does not bear on the issue of abandonment. JHP has presented
no authority suggesting that the need for access, standing alone, makes
roadway access an authorized use under the easement. Whether access to
the JHP property was an authorized use of the easement or was permitted
only to the extent such access was “ ‘necessarily incident’ ” to the expressly
authorized uses (Rye, supra, 222 Cal.App.4th 84, 92), must be resolved by
interpretation of the easement.
                                DISPOSITION
      The trial court’s grant of summary judgment to JHP is reversed. The
trial court is directed, on remand, to vacate the judgment and its order of
July 15, 2021, granting summary judgment. Visitacion is awarded its costs
on appeal.

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                                          STEWART, P.J.

We concur.

RICHMAN, J.

MILLER, J.

Visitacion Investment, LLC v. 424 Jessie Historic Properties, LLC (A163550)

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Trial Court:     San Francisco County Superior Court

Trial Judge:     Hon. Vedica Puri

Counsel:

Katzoff & Riggs, Kenneth S. Katzoff, Robert R. Riggs, Stephen G. Preonas,
for Plaintiff, Cross-defendant and Appellant.

Steyer Lowenthal Boodrookas Alvarez & Smith, Jeffrey H. Lowenthal and
Dana M. Andreoli, for Defendant, Cross-complainant and Respondent.

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