Homeowners sue after neighbors block access road
Robert J. Bruss
July, 5
 In 2000, Richard and Lilia Aaron bought their residential
property. The only access to a public road over their land is a
one-half-mile-long, steep driveway, which is difficult to use, especially in
inclement weather.
Regular use of that driveway had been discontinued by
previous owners for about 20 years because there was a more convenient access
over a paved private road, known as Texaco Road, which crosses adjoining
property owned by Dallas and Patricia Dunham.
Purchase Bob Bruss reports online.
Not long before the Aarons' property purchase, the Dunhams
began to limit use of the road. Evidence shows the road was created in 1982 by
Texaco, which used it to reach nearby leased property.
The prior owners of the Aaron property used the Texaco Road
without asking or receiving permission. But in 1999 the Dunhams wrote a letter
to the prior owners, the Fullertons, revoking permission to use the road. The
Aarons were aware of the dispute when they bought their home in 2000.
Shortly after purchase, the Aarons brought this declaratory
relief lawsuit against the Dunhams, claiming a prescriptive easement to
continue using the private Texaco Road over the Dunham land. They argued the
previous owners' use of the road was adverse, open, notorious and continuous
without permission of the property owners, so a prescriptive easement was
thereby created.
If you were the judge would you rule the Aarons have a
prescriptive easement to continue using the Texaco Road?
The judge said yes!
To create a prescriptive easement, the judge began, the
nonpermissive use must be adverse, open, notorious and continuous for the time
period specified by state law. The evidence shows the use by the previous
owners of the Aaron property was without the express permission of the Dunhams,
he added.
If the past use had been permissive, that permission could
be revoked and there could be no prescriptive easement created because there
was no adverse or hostile use, he commented.
But the evidence shows the Aarons and the previous owners
used the Texaco Road over the Dunham property without express permission for
many years, the judge emphasized.
Because they have another route, although inconvenient, to
reach their property from the public road, the Aarons are not entitled to an
easement by necessity, he noted. However, they have proven all the elements and
are therefore entitled to be granted a prescriptive easement to use Texaco Road
across the Dunham property, the judge ruled.
Based on the 2006 California Court of Appeal decision in Aaron
v. Dunham, 41 Cal.Rptr.3d 32.
(For more information on Bob Bruss publications, visit his
Real Estate Center).
Copyright 2006 Inman News
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