Lead Opinion
delivered the Opinion of the Court.
¶1 Lyle Wall, as trustee of the Sugar Shack Land Trust, Elaine Comfort-Waldher, and Kevin Waldher (collectively, “the Waldhers”) appeal from the final judgment entered by the District Court for the Eleventh Judicial District, Flathead County, in favor of Harry Blazer. We reverse.
I. The Properties
¶2 The properties at issue in this case are located along Whitefish Stage Road between Kalispell and Whitefish, Montana. They formerly were part of a larger parcel of land purchased by Jack L. Davis and James McCready in 1972. In 1979, Davis and McCready subdivided a portion of the land into seven tracts as described and depicted on Certificate of Survey No. 4446 (“COS 4446”), which was filed January 12,1979, as Instrument No. 620, records of Flathead County, Montana. Davis assumed ownership of the two westernmost tracts (Tracts 1 and 4), and McCready assumed ownership of the remaining five tracts. An excerpt of COS 4446, depicting Tracts 1, 2, 3, and 4, is attached as an appendix to this Opinion.
¶3 Tract 1 lies directly north of Tract 4. A dotted line is depicted on COS 4446 30 feet south of the northern boundary of Tract 1 and running parallel thereto. Thirty feet from the western boundary of Tract 1, the dotted line turns south and runs parallel to the western boundaries of Tracts 1 and 4. The dotted line continues to a point 30 feet south of Tract 4 and then turns west. The area between the dotted line and the aforementioned boundaries of Tracts 1 and 4 is labeled “30' EASEMENT ROAD.”
¶4 The seven tracts and the dotted line depicted on COS 4446 are arranged as follows (not to scale):
[[Image here]]
¶5 Historically, Davis used the 30-foot-wide strip of land as a farming road for accessing the western part of Tract 4 and other property he owned to the south and west of Tract 4. He preferred this route due to the sandy soil and steep grade of Tract 4. However, the historical road has since become overgrown. The portion of the road traversing Tract 4 is presently being farmed; and, with a number of exceptions noted below, the portion of the road traversing Tract 1 has pine trees and
II. The Conveyances
¶6 In October 1987, Davis conveyed Tract 1 of COS 4446 to Robert H. and Connie L. Lockman. The face of the Davis-Lockman deed contains the following description of the real property being conveyed:
A tract of land located in Government Lot 4, Section 33, Township 30 North, Range 21 West, Principal Meridian, Montana, Flathead County, Montana, and more particularly described as follows: [Description in metes and bounds.]
Tract 1 of Certificate of Survey No. 4446.
SUBJECT TO 30 foot road easement as shown on Certificate of Survey No. 4446, records of Flathead County, Montana.
No other property and no explicit reservations are recited in the deed.
¶7 Through a series of subsequent conveyances, title to Tract 1 passed to Elaine Comfort-Waldher in April 1999 and, ultimately, to Lyle Wall, as trustee of the Sugar Shack Land Trust, in April 2001.
¶8 In March 1989, Davis conveyed Tract 4 of COS 4446 to Ronald E. and Lavera M. Foster. In May 2003, the Fosters conveyed the western five acres of Tract 4 to Blazer in exchange for five acres owned by Blazer to the south of Tract 4. Both the Davis-Foster deed and the Foster-Blazer deed refer to COS 4446.
¶9 Davis also owned property located to the south and west of, and contiguous to, Tract 4. This “southwest property” is not depicted or identified on COS 4446. Davis conveyed the southwest property to Blazer in August 1989. The Davis-Blazer deed refers to Certificate of Survey No. 4268 and Certificate of Survey No. 2078.
¶10 The properties purchased by Blazer from Davis and the Fosters are arranged as follows (not to scale):
*178 [[Image here]]
III. The Instant Action
¶11 Shortly after purchasing Tract 1 in 1999, the Waldhers placed a manufactured home near the southwest comer of the property. Then, over the next two years, they constructed a large metal shop and two retaining walls just west of their home. They also built a gravel driveway from Whitefish Stage Road to their home and shop. (The course of this driveway roughly tracks the dotted line depicted on
¶12 Blazer initiated the instant action on September 23,2003, seeking a declaration that he has an express easement for ingress and egress purposes along the northern and western boundaries of Tract 1. He also requested an injunction requiring the Waldhers to remove all obstructions interfering with his use of the easement. The Waldhers answered the complaint and denied that such an easement exists. They also raised estoppel, waiver, statute of limitations, laches, acquiescence, and unclean hands as defenses, alleging that Blazer and his predecessors in interest (the Fosters) had watched and observed the construction of the shop in the vicinity of the alleged easement. Finally, the Waldhers asserted a counterclaim based on adverse possession.
¶13 Blazer filed a motion for summary judgment, arguing that under this Court’s decisions in Bache v. Owens,
¶14 The Waldhers responded that, “looking at COS 4446, it is
¶15 The District Court ruled that the Davis-Lockman deed and COS 4446 “createfd] the easement alleged by [Blazer].” The court reasoned that “[t]he COS was properly recorded, and it identifies the easement clearly and specifically.” However, the court concluded that there were genuine issues of material fact as to whether the easement had been extinguished by adverse possession. Accordingly, the court denied Blazer’s motion.
¶16 The case proceeded to a nonjury trial on September 28, 2004, at which time the District Court heard testimony from Davis, the Fosters, Blazer, the Waldhers, and the surveyor who had created the December 2003 encroachment survey. Davis testified that he had intended to create an easement across Tract 1 and Tract 4 to provide access, “predominately for farming [purposes],” to “the top of the hill” (which he explained was at or about the southwest corner of Tract 4) and his property to the south and west of Tract 4. He further testified that he had entrusted his attorneys to prepare documents using the language appropriate under the law to accomplish this result. Blazer testified, among other things, as to his use of the easement road depicted on COS 4446. He stated that in the past, he was able to walk, ride a mountain bike or a motorcycle, and drive a vehicle on this route from Whitefish Stage Road to the upper portion of Tract 4, but that he no longer could drive a vehicle along the western boundary of Tract 1 due to the Waldhers’ shop and the other obstructions. He indicated, however, that he can still drive a vehicle up to Tract 4 from the other direction, i.e., he comes up from the southwest property. On the matter of farming Tract 4 in recent years, the Fosters both testified that the farmer has accessed Tract 4 using the Fosters’ driveway off Whitefish Stage Road and that the farming equipment is able to go up and down the hill on Tract 4.
¶17 At the conclusion of the testimony, the court expressed uncertainty as to whether the easement road depicted over Tract 1 of COS 4446 could legally benefit Blazer’s off-survey property to the south and west of Tract 4. Thus, the parties submitted post-trial briefs on this issue. Blazer asserted that “the only logical conclusion is that the easement is for the benefit of and appurtenant to the real property owned by Blazer to the south and west of Tract 4.” He reasoned that
¶18 The District Court entered its findings of fact and conclusions of law on February 14,2005. The court found that Davis had intended to create an easement along the north and west boundaries of Tract 1 for the benefit of Tract 4 and his property to the south and west of Tract 4. Citing Bache, the court concluded that “the transaction documents concerning the sale of Tract 1 of COS No. 4446, by Davis to Lockman clearly establish an easement over Tract 1 for the benefit and appurtenant to Tract 4 and the other lands owned by Davis lying to the South and West of Tract 4 of COS No. 4446.” The court further concluded that the easement had not been extinguished by adverse use for the statutory period; that the statute of limitations set forth in § 27-2-207, MCA, did not apply in this case; that the Waldhers’ arguments based on laches, estoppel, acquiescence, delay, and consent by implication “were not established by the evidence and do not apply to this case”; that Blazer was entitled to an injunction requiring the Waldhers to remove the encroachments constructed within the easement; and that Blazer was entitled to recover his costs. The court entered judgment accordingly.
¶19 The Waldhers filed a motion under M. R. Civ. P. 52(b) to amend the court’s findings and judgment on the ground that an easement established under Bache cannot benefit “some other nearby or far away parcel” not shown on the referenced certificate of survey. Alternatively, the Waldhers reiterated a previous request that the
ISSUES
¶20 The Waldhers raise four issues on appeal, which we restate as follows:
1. Did the District Court err in concluding that Davis created an express easement across Tract 1 of COS 4446 for the benefit of Tract 4 and Davis’s off-survey property to the south and west of Tract 4?
2. Assuming that such an easement was created, did the District Court err in not defining its use and scope?
3. Did the District Court err in denying relief under the Waldhers’ defenses of laches, abandonment, acquiescence, and estoppel?
4. Is Blazer entitled to the Settlement Master fee and the trial-exhibits expense enumerated in his Bill of Costs?
¶21 Because we reverse the District Court’s judgment on Issue 1, we do not address Issues 2, 3, and 4.
STANDARDS OF REVIEW
¶22 In an action tried without a jury, we review the district court’s findings of fact -under the clearly erroneous standard. M. R. Civ. P. 52(a). A district court’s findings of fact are clearly erroneous if they are not supported by substantial credible evidence, if the court misapprehended the effect of the evidence, or if a review of the record leaves this Court with the definite and firm conviction that a mistake has been made. Tomlin Enterprises, Inc. v. Althoff,
DISCUSSION
¶23 Did the District Court err in concluding that Davis created an express easement across Tract 1 of COS 4446 for the benefit of Tract 4 and Davis’s off-survey property to the south and west of Tract 4?
¶24 An easement is a nonpossessory interest in land-a right which one person has to use the land of another for a specific purpose or a servitude imposed as a burden upon the land. Burleson v. Kinsey-Cartwright,
¶25 In the case at hand, Blazer claims an easement appurtenant. The alleged servient tenement is Tract 1. As for the dominant tenement, Blazer stated a number of times in the District Court that he was asserting easement rights only as the owner of Davis’s off-survey property to the south and west of Tract 4. Likewise on appeal, Blazer states that “[t]he rights Blazer asserts to [sic] do not arise from the Fosters, or from the property which Blazer acquired from the Fosters in 2003” (i.e., the western five acres of Tract 4). Rather, according to Blazer, “the dominant estate here” is “Davis’ southern properties,” and “the easement rights he asserts stem from that acquisition [directly from Davis].” Thus, one alleged dominant tenement is Davis’s (and now Blazer’s) off-survey property to the south and west of Tract 4. In addition, notwithstanding Blazer’s articulated basis for this lawsuit, the District Court ruled that an easement exists “over Tract 1 for the benefit and appurtenant to Tract 4 and the other lands owned by Davis lying to the South and West of Tract 4” (emphasis added). The Waldhers have appealed from this judgment and, on appeal, contend that no such easement was created. Accordingly, it is necessary to
¶26 An easement cannot be created except by an instrument in writing, by operation of law, or by prescription. See Burleson, ¶ 14; Ruana,
¶27 A grantor may expressly reserve an easement over granted land in favor of retained land by using appropriate language in the instrument of conveyance. See e.g. Burleson, ¶¶ 7, 17; Reichle v. Anderson,
¶28 Here, there is no language in the Davis-Lockman deed expressly “reserving” an easement. The deed contains a description of the real property being conveyed in metes and bounds, immediately followed by the words “Tract 1 of Certificate of Survey No. 4446,” which is in turn followed by the clause, “SUBJECT TO 30 foot road easement as shown on Certificate of Survey No. 4446.” In Bache, we observed that “ ‘subject to’ language in a document of conveyance does not create an easement.” Bache,
The words “subject to” used in their ordinary sense, mean subordinate to, subservient to or limited by. There is nothing in the use of the words “subject to”, in their ordinary use, which would even hint at the creation of affirmative rights or connote a reservation or retention of property rights. “Subject to” wording is commonly used in a deed to refer to existing easements, liens, and real covenants that the grantor wishes to exclude from warranties of title.
Wild River,
¶29 Given that there is no language in the Davis-Lockman deed expressly reserving an easement, Blazer relies on the reference in the deed to “Tract 1 of Certificate of Survey No. 4446.” The Waldhers argue, however, that COS 4446 does not satisfy the requisites of this Court’s easement-by-reference doctrine. Before addressing the parties’ specific arguments, therefore, it is useful to review this doctrine.
II. Easements Created by Reference to a Plat or Certificate of Survey
¶30 In Majers v. Shining Mountains,
[A] grantor, who induces purchasers, by use of a plat, to believe that streets, squares, courts, parks, or other open areas shown on the plat will be kept open for their use and benefit, and the*186 purchasers have acted upon such inducement, is required by common honesty to do that which he represented he would do.
Ute Park,
¶31 In Benson v. Pyfer,
¶32 Likewise, in Pearson v. Virginia City Ranches Ass’n,
¶33 We applied these principles in favor of the sellers in Bache v. Owens,
¶34 The Baches asserted that by these transaction documents, they had reserved an easement across Tract 2 for the benefit of Tract 1. We agreed. Citing Benson,
¶35 We reached the same conclusion in Halverson v. Turner,
¶36 In analyzing these transaction documents, we observed that a land description is a necessary inclusion in an instrument conveying title so that the extent of the claim to the property may be determined, and a reference to a map or plat may be included to express, confirm, or amplify the land description. See Halverson,
¶37 By contrast, the 1968 plat at issue in Tungsten Holdings, Inc. v. Parker,
¶38 We discussed an important limitation on the easement-by-reference doctrine in Ruana v. Grigonis,
¶39 We addressed a related restriction on the doctrine in Kelly v. Wallace,
¶40 To summarize, our cases have recognized the creation of an easement where the deed explicitly referred to a recorded plat or certificate of survey on which the subject easement was adequately described. However, express depiction of an easement on a referenced plat or certificate of survey is not sufficient, in and of itself, to create an easement for the benefit of a stranger to the deed. In addition, an
¶41 An easement created in this manner-i.e., by reference in an instrument of conveyance to a plat or certificate of survey on which the easement is adequately described-must arise expressly, not by implication. In Albert G. Hoyem Trust v. Galt,
¶42 In Bache, for instance, the certificate of survey depicted Tracts 1 and 2 and a 30-foot-wide strip of land along the western boundary of Tract 2. The strip of land extended from Tract 1 to a state route on the other side of Tract 2, and it was “clearly and specifically” identified with the label “P.R.E.,” which the legend identified as “private roadway easement.” We held that in this manner, the Baches had reserved an easement over Tract 2 in favor of Tract 1. See Bache,
¶43 In sum, an easement created by reference in an instrument of conveyance to a plat or certificate of survey adequately describing the easement is an express easement. The term “express” is defined as “[c]learly and unmistakably communicated; directly stated.” Black’s Law Dictionary 620 (Bryan A. Garner ed., 8th ed., West 2004); cfi § 28-2-103, MCA (defining an “express” contract as “one the terms of which are stated in words”). The term “expressed” is defined as “[djeclared in direct terms; stated in words; not left to inference or implication.” Black’s Law Dictionary 620. Consistent with these definitions, the intent to create an easement must be clearly and unmistakably communicated on the referenced plat or certificate of survey using labeling or other express language. This is the minimal requirement to establish the easement. An easement may not be inferred or implied from an unlabeled or inadequately described swath of land or other such depiction appearing on a plat or certificate of survey. See Our Lady of the Rockies, Inc. v. Peterson,
III. Application of the Doctrine to the Davis-Lockman Conveyance
¶44 Turning now to the case at hand, we first note that the alleged easement over Tract 1 was reserved, if at all, when Tract 1 was split from single ownership. Ruana,
¶45 The Waldhers contend that COS 4446 was not incorporated, in its
The Southwest Property
¶46 We begin with Davis’s (and now Blazer’s) off-survey property to the south and west of Tract 4. The Waldhers do not dispute that COS 4446 depicts a strip 30 feet wide along the northern and western boundaries of Tract 1 and that this strip is clearly labeled “30' EASEMENT ROAD.” However, they point out that “[COS 4446] shows the road leaving Tract 4 onto unidentified real property” and that “[t]here are no labels, words or drawings to learn the scope of the easement nor the identity of the dominant estates within the COS.” They argue that under Bache, Halverson, and Ruana, the grantee of property being burdened by a servitude must have knowledge of its use or its necessity and, to this end, there must be an adequate description of the easement on the referenced certificate of survey. They contend that an “adequate description” means that “the servient and dominant tracts are known and depicted in the COS,” and they point out that in both Bache and Halverson, the easement’s termini were shown on the COS, thereby giving the grantee of the servient estate knowledge of the easement’s use or necessity. Therefore, according to the Waldhers, an easement depicted on a certificate of survey can “only be for the benefit of Tract(s) shown on the same COS.” They acknowledge Davis’s trial testimony that he wanted to provide access to his off-survey property to the south and west of Tract 4; however, they point out that an easement by reservation must arise from the written documents of conveyance and that Davis’s southwest property is not shown or even mentioned in the Davis-Lockman transaction documents.
¶47 In response, Blazer asserts that “there is no such requirement” that “a COS must show both the servient and the dominant estate on the same document.” He opines that “[a] servient estate does not exist in limbo; by its very nature it is servient to a dominant estate.” Blazer
¶48 We agree with the Waldhers that the easement road depicted on COS 4446 cannot benefit the off-survey property to the south and west of Tract 4, and we correspondingly reject Blazer’s suggestion that his alleged right to use the easement may be established through extrinsic evidence. We reach this conclusion for the following reasons.
¶49 First, we have stated repeatedly that “[a]n easement by reservation must arise from the written documents of conveyance” (emphasis added). Halverson,
¶50 Again, in Tungsten Holdings, we held that “[t]he mere fact that lot 34’s long and narrow configuration gives it the appearance of a roadway or that the developers may have intended it as [a] roadway is not sufficient. Easements by reservation must be created or reserved
¶51 Second, a land description is necessary in an instrument conveying title so that the extent of the claim to the property may be determined, and a reference to a plat or certificate of survey may be included to express, confirm, or amplify the land description. See Halverson,
¶52 We have recognized the creation of an easement where the deed referred to a plat or certificate of survey on which the easement was clearly depicted and labeled as burdening an identifiable servient tenement for the benefit of an identifiable dominant tenement. But we have never recognized an easement created to benefit a dominant tenement that was not ascertainable from the referenced plat or
¶53 By contrast, in the case at hand, the alleged dominant tenement-Davis’s (and now Blazer’s) property to the south and west of Tract 4-is not identified anywhere on COS 4446. Rather, COS 4446 depicts Tracts 1 through 7 and an easement road crossing Tracts 1 and 4 and continuing to unidentified off-survey property located beyond Tract 4. COS 4446 fails to provide any information whatsoever as to the use or necessity of the open-ended road leaving Tract 4. Accordingly, because Blazer’s off-survey property to the south and west of Tract 4 is not an identifiable dominant tenement on COS 4446, it cannot benefit from the easement depicted thereon.
¶54 In sum, an easement by reservation must arise from the written documents of conveyance. Reference in an instrument of conveyance to a plat or certificate of survey on which an easement is adequately described is sufficient to establish the easement. However, an easement appurtenant is not adequately described if the identities of the dominant and servient tenements are not ascertainable with reasonable certainty from the referenced plat or certificate of survey. The grantor’s intent to reserve an easement for the benefit of particular land must be clearly and unmistakably communicated and not left to inference, implication, or extrinsic evidence. Accordingly,
Tract 4
¶55 With respect to Tract 4, the Waldhers argue that in order to “adequately describe the easement,” Bache and Halverson require a referenced certificate of survey “to show what tract(s) on the survey are [to] be the dominant tract(s).” The Waldhers reason that here, since the easement road depicted on COS 4446 crosses Tract 4 and leaves COS 4446 with a 90-degree turn to the west, it is not clear what was intended, what land was to be benefited, and what purpose was to be served. They suggest that the depiction of the easement road could be interpreted as burdening Tract 4 for the benefit of the other tracts on COS 4446 (Tracts 1, 2, 3, 5, 6, and 7). Thus, given this degree of uncertainty, the Waldhers contend that an easement was not created under the easement-by-reference doctrine.
¶56 We agree that COS 4446 fails to establish an easement for the benefit of Tract 4. As explained above in ¶¶ 49-54, an easement appurtenant is not adequately described for purposes of the easement-by-reference doctrine if the identities of the dominant and servient tenements cannot be ascertained with reasonable certainty from the referenced plat or certificate of survey. The grantor’s intent to reserve or grant an easement for the benefit of particular property must be clearly and unmistakably communicated and not left to inference, implication, or extrinsic evidence. Furthermore, in determining the existence of an easement in the written documents of conveyance, it is necessary that the grantee of the property to be burdened by the servitude have knowledge of its use or its necessity.
¶57 Here, although there is a 30-foot-wide easement road depicted and labeled on COS 4446, the use or necessity of this open-ended road and the intended dominant and servient tenements are not ascertainable with reasonable certainty from the certificate of survey. An individual examining COS 4446 cannot know whether an easement is being reserved or granted and, thus, whether Tract 4 is dominant or servient. In the case of a reservation, Tract 4 benefits from an easement over Tract 1 to access Whitefish Stage Road. See e.g. Bache,
¶58 The Dissent contends that our conclusion here “calls into question what kind of specificity would be required in a plat or certificate of survey to give the grantee of the property being burdened by the servitude ‘knowledge of its use or its necessity.’ ” Dissent, ¶ 83. We disagree. The easement-by-reference cases in which we have recognized the creation of an easement illustrate what kind of specificity is sufficient and why the depiction on COS 4446 is not sufficient.
¶59 As we discussed in ¶ 52 above, it was abundantly clear from the depiction and labeling on the certificate of survey at issue in Bache that the easement burdened Tract 2 for the benefit of Tract 1 to provide access from Tract 1 to the state route. Likewise, in Halverson, the certificate of survey made it clear that the easement burdened Turner’s tract for the benefit of Dahlia’s tract to provide access from Dahlia’s tract to the public street. And in Pearson, the plat clearly depicted and labeled a bridle path easement crossing the subdivision for the benefit of all lot owners. By contrast, COS 4446 depicts Tracts 1 through 7 and an open-ended road crossing Tracts 1 and 4 and continuing to an unidentified off-survey destination located beyond Tract 4. COS 4446 utterly fails to provide any information as to the use or necessity of this road and, correspondingly, the intended dominant tenement(s). Contrary to the Dissent, it is far from clear that the road’s only intended purpose is to benefit Tract 4.
¶60 Indeed, the Dissent acknowledges that COS 4446 is ambiguous. Dissent, ¶ 91. However, the Dissent argues that the “subject to” clause
¶61 First, even if the “subject to” language in the Davis-Lockman deed establishes that Tract 1 is servient (as the Dissent argues), this language does not establish which tract or tracts are dominant. As suggested in the different scenarios set out above, Tract 4 could benefit from an easement over Tract 1; Tracts 2, 3, 5, 6, and 7 could benefit from an easement over Tracts 1 and 4; or all seven tracts could benefit from a common right to use the road. In other words, each of the tracts on COS 4446 is a potential dominant tenement; and the “subject to” clause is of no assistance whatsoever in resolving this ambiguity. At most, the clause is merely indicative of a servient tract (Tract 1).
¶62 Second, and in this regard, the Davis-Foster deed (by which Davis conveyed Tract 4 to the Fosters) contains a similar “subject to” clause, which states: “SUBJECT TO the 30' road easement along the westerly boundary as shown on Certificate of Survey No. 4446 . . . .” Thus, following the Dissent’s argument to its logical conclusion, Tract 4 must also be servient to the easement depicted on COS 4446. This, in turn, leaves us back at square one with the question of which tract is dominant.
¶63 Lastly, Blazer has invoked the easement-by-reference doctrine to establish an easement over Tract 1 for the benefit of his properties. He claims that the reference in the Davis-Lockman deed to COS 4446 created the easement. The Dissent acknowledges this point and the fact that Blazer is not relying on the “subject to” clause in the DavisLockman deed to establish the easement. Dissent, ¶ 89. Furthermore, the Dissent agrees that under our easement-by-reference doctrine, the purported easement fails if the identities of the dominant and servient tenements are not ascertainable with reasonable certainty from the referenced plat or certificate of survey, since it is necessary that the grantee of the property to be burdened by the servitude have knowledge of its use or its necessity. Dissent, ¶ 80. Nevertheless, the Dissent then proceeds to fashion what appears to be either an exception to this clear rule or a brand new easement doctrine of the Dissent’s own making. In particular, the Dissent proposes that an easement can be created by reference in an instrument of conveyance to an ambiguous plat or certificate of survey which in turn is “clarified or qualified” by referring back to a “subject to” clause contained in the
¶64 We have consistently held that “ ‘subject to’ language in a document of conveyance does not create an easement.” Bache,
¶65 At bottom, the Dissent’s arguments are circular and internally inconsistent. On one hand, the Dissent states that “an easement-by-reference fails if it does not depict and identify both the dominant and servient tenements.” Dissent, ¶ 80. Yet, on the other hand, the Dissent asserts that an ambiguous plat or certificate of survey can create an easement, notwithstanding the fact that the dominant and servient estates are not identified as such thereon. See Dissent, ¶¶ 89-92. The basis for this latter assertion is that a “subject to” clause in the deed may “clarify or qualify an existing easement.” Dissent, ¶ 89. Yet, an easement cannot be “existing” if its sole basis for existence is an ambiguous plat or certificate of survey-the original point conceded by the Dissent.
¶66 The Dissent also claims that a “subject to” clause in a deed establishes that the grantee’s parcel is servient to an easement road depicted on an ambiguous plat or certificate of survey referenced in the
¶67 It bears repeating that purchasers must be able to ascertain, with reasonable certainty, from the referenced plat or certificate of survey whom the depicted easement benefits, whom it burdens, and what its use or necessity is. Here, COS 4446 lacks the clarity necessary to impart such information, and the “subject to” clause of the DavisLockman deed does not remedy this flaw. Therefore, as stated above, because the depicted easement’s intended use or necessity and, correspondingly, the intended dominant and servient estates are not ascertainable with reasonable certainty from COS 4446, the document failed to establish an easement for the benefit of Tract 4.
¶68 Blazer elicited testimony from Davis for the purpose of establishing what Davis intended in the Davis-Lockman transaction documents. Davis testified that he wanted to create an easement to provide access to “the top of the hill” (which he explained was at or about the southwest corner of Tract 4) and his property to the south and west of Tract 4. In effect, Davis’s testimony supplied terms that were not included in the Davis-Lockman transaction documents-namely, that an easement was being “reserved” (as opposed to “granted”) and that Tract 1 was servient to Tract 4 (not vice versa). The District Court’s findings of fact and conclusions of law reflect that the court relied on this testimony in ruling that Tract 4 benefited from an easement over Tract 1. Thus, it is necessary to address whether this evidence was properly considered in construing the Davis-Lockman transaction documents. For the reasons which follow, we hold that it was not.
¶69 An easement can be granted or reserved under our easement-by-reference doctrine by an instrument in writing only. Section 70-20-101, MCA; Halverson,
¶70 Furthermore, a property description is a necessary inclusion in an instrument conveying title so that the extent of the claim to the property may be determined. See Halverson,
¶71 However, extrinsic evidence may not provide the property description in the first instance or add terms to an insufficient description. “The distinction . . . should always be clearly drawn between the admission of oral and extrinsic evidence for the purpose of identifying the land described and applying the description to the property and that of supplying and adding to a description insufficient and void on its face.” Lexington Heights v. Crandlemire,
When the agreement itself fails to identify the property, or to furnish the means by which it may be done, by pointing to some extrinsic fact by whose aid the ambiguity may be removed, to allow parol evidence to explain what was intended, would be to allow the entire consideration of a contract in relation to lands, on the part of the person conveying the property, to be proved by parol, and render useless and nugatory the above provision of the statute of frauds [requiring every contract for the sale of any lands or interest in lands to be in writing].
Ryan v. Davis,
¶72 The foregoing principles bar the use of Davis’s testimony to establish that the Davis-Lockman transaction documents reserve an easement over Tract 1 for the benefit of Tract 4. First, the only operative words in the Davis-Lockman deed state that Davis does “hereby grant, bargain, sell and convey” Tract 1 of COS 4446. There are no operative words respecting the easement road depicted on COS 4446-e.g., “reserve” or “grant”-and such language may not be inserted into the deed using parol evidence. Second, although an easement road is depicted and labeled on COS 4446, the certificate of survey contains insufficient information from which to ascertain with reasonable certainty the intended dominant and servient tenements. Supplying that information through Davis’s testimony would be, in effect, using parol evidence to add terms to an existing but insufficient property description, which is not permitted.
¶73 Aside from the statute of frauds and the foregoing rules governing
¶74 But a recorded instrument cannot impart constructive notice that an easement burdens a particular parcel of land for the benefit of another if the intended dominant and servient estates are ascertainable only by resort to parol evidence. Cf. Wills Cattle Co. v. Shaw,
¶75 In sum, COS 4446 fails to establish an easement for the benefit of Tract 4, given that the intended dominant and servient tenements are not ascertainable with reasonable certainty from COS 4446. This is not to say that Tract 4 is not an identifiable dominant tenement; it is an
¶76 Before concluding, we note the Dissent’s contention that our holding herein somehow “confounds” and “complicates” the “already complicated” and “tortuous” body of our easement-by-reference jurisprudence. Dissent, ¶¶ 79, 83. Yet, the fundamental principles articulated above-with which the Dissent generally agrees (see Dissent, ¶¶ 80-81)-clarify exactly what is required to create an easement under the easement-by-reference doctrine. By contrast, the Dissent would muddle the law with respect to “subject to” clauses and allow for the creation of an easement by reference to an ambiguous plat or certificate of survey. While this approach may be of benefit to Blazer, it is fundamentally unfair to the Waldhers, who have a right to enjoy their property free from the impediment of an unsubstantiated easement grounded in a vague depiction on a certificate of survey. Worse still, and on a wider scale, the Dissent’s approach would confound our easement-by-reference jurisprudence even further and inject uncertainty and insecurity into land titles generally. We refuse to perpetuate-much less exaggerate-the imprecision and confusion that brought us to this complicated case in the first place. As Winston Churchill is reported to have observed, “If you simply take up the attitude of defending a mistake, there will be no hope of improvement.”
¶77 The District Court erred in concluding that the DavisLockman transaction documents created an easement appurtenant across Tract 1 of COS 4446 for the benefit of Tract 4 and Davis’s (now Blazer’s) off-survey property to the south and west of Tract 4.
¶78 Reversed.
Notes
The subsequent Tract 1 conveyances are as follows: the Lockmans to Lawrence F. and Rosalia R. Rooney in January 1995, the Rooneys to Brian C. Rooney in April 1995, Brian C. Rooney to Elaine Comfort-Waldher in April 1999, Elaine ComfortWaldher to Manley Financial Group, Inc., in April 2000, and Manley Financial Group, Inc., to the trustee of the Sugar Shack Land Trust Dated 4-09-01 in April 2001.
Blazer has provided a copy of COS 4268 as an appendix to his appellate brief. However, as just explained, the Davis-Lockman deed is decisive here, and that deed refers to COS 4446, not COS 4268. (COS 4268 is referenced in the Davis-Blazer deed.) Thus, COS 4268 has no hearing on our analysis.
“Extrinsic ambiguity” is another term for “latent ambiguity.” See Black’s Law Dictionary 88, 625 (Bryan A. Garner ed., 8th ed., West 2004). A “latent ambiguity” is “[a]n ambiguity that does not readily appear in the language of a document, but instead arises from a collateral matter when the document’s terms are applied or executed <the contract contained a latent ambiguity: the shipping terms stated that the goods would arrive on the Peerless, but two ships have that name>.” Black’s Law Dictionary 88.
Dissenting Opinion
dissenting.
¶79 I concur with the Court’s conclusion that COS 4446 could not, as a matter of law, create an easement burdening Tract 1 for the benefit of any properties not shown on the survey. Opinion, ¶ 54. I dissent from the Court’s conclusion, however, that the same principles prevent COS 4446 from creating an easement burdening Tract 1 for the benefit of an on-survey property, Tract 4. Opinion, ¶ 75. The Court’s analysis of whether an easement exists to benefit Tract 4 misstates our previous easement-by-reference decisions, and confounds this already complicated body of law.
¶80 I agree with the Court’s summary of the easement-by-reference rule that an express easement is created “where the deed refer[s] to a plat or certificate of survey on which the easement [is] clearly depicted and labeled as burdening an identifiable servient tenement for the benefit of an identifiable dominant tenement.” Opinion, ¶ 52; accord Pearson v. Virginia City Ranches Ass’n,
¶81 The Court adopts language from the appellate court of Indiana that “[t]he instrument by which an easement by express grant is created should describe with reasonable certainty the easement created and the dominant and servient tenements. A reservation of an easement is not operative in favor of land not described in the conveyance.” Opinion, ¶ 51 (quoting Lennertz v. Yohn,
¶82 The Court falters, however, in its application of this rule to the question of whether COS 4446 created an easement over Tract 1 for the benefit of Tract 4. The Court reasons that the Waldhers could not ascertain with reasonable certainty the identities of the dominant and servient tenements. Opinion, ¶¶ 56-57. The Court proceeds to reiterate some basic easement-by-reference principles and basic easement and property principles. Opinion, ¶¶ 67, 69-70. The Court also reviews the law of statute of frauds and Montana’s notice and recording statutes. Opinion, ¶¶ 70-71, 73-74. The Court concludes that the easement benefiting Tract 4 fails because it is uncertain and can be proved only with extrinsic evidence that violates the statute of frauds. Opinion, ¶ 75.
¶83 The Court errs when it concludes that COS 4446 fails to provide with reasonable certainty the identities of the dominant and servient tenements. The uncertainty, according to the Court, arises from the fact that COS 4446 does not show “whether an easement is being reserved or granted and, thus, whether Tract 4 is dominant or servient.” Opinion, ¶ 57. The Court’s erroneous conclusion complicates the already tortuous body of our easement-by-reference jurisprudence-the complexity of which the Court acknowledges by its meticulous review at ¶¶ 24-43. The Court’s conclusion also calls into question what kind of specificity would be required in a plat or certificate of survey to give the grantee of the property being burdened by the servitude “knowledge of its use or its necessity.” Pearson, ¶ 20 (citing Halverson,
¶84 This Court previously has required little more than a simple labeled depiction of an easement on a survey or plat to create a valid easement. E.g. Mularoni v. Bing,
¶85 The Court insists that COS 4446 is fatally unclear because the grantor could have intended it to create either an easement for the
¶86 COS 4446’s legal relevance relates only to the Davis-Lockman deed. The Court calls the Davis-Lockman deed “decisive” in this case. Opinion, ¶ 44. The Davis-Lockman deed states expressly that Tract 1 of COS 4446 is “SUBJECT TO 30 foot road easement as shown on [COS] 4446....” The Court in ¶ 28 dismisses the significance of this language on the grounds that “‘subject to’ language in a document of conveyance does not create an easement.” The Court cites Ruana v. Grigonis,
¶87 I disagree with the Court’s application of this rule to the “subject to” language in the Davis-Lockman deed. None of the cited authority speaks to the question of whether “subject to” language could clarify or qualify an easement created by reference. Wild River concerned whether “subject to” language, by itself in a deed, could create a road easement. Wild River,
¶88 The Court in Wild River further commented, however, that the “subject to” phrase “is commonly used in a deed to refer to existing
¶89 Nothing in the Wild River rule, therefore, prevents us from using the “subject to” section of a deed to clarify or qualify an existing easement. This rule means only that “subject to” language cannot create an easement by itself. Blazer does not allege, however, that the “subject to” language created an easement benefiting Tract 4. Blazer asserts that the reference in the deed to COS 4446 created the easement. The “subject to” language in the Davis-Lockman deed, stating that Tract 1 is subject to the easement depicted on COS 4446, clarifies and qualifies what otherwise could be an ambiguous survey depiction. Tract 1 represents the tenement servient to the easement created by reference to COS 4446, and not Tract 4, if we consider the “subject to” language in the Davis-Lockman deed.
¶90 Wild River suggests that “subject to” language appropriately may be used in this manner. Wild River deems “subject to” to be words of “qualification.” Wild River,
¶91 I cannot agree with the Court’s assertion that COS 4446 remains ambiguous as to the identities of the dominant and servient tenements in light of “subject to” language in the Davis-Foster deed. Opinion, ¶ 62. The Davis-Foster deed could not operate to create an easement in favor of Tract 1 as an easement-by-reference is effective only when the
¶92 The Court acknowledges that, absent the uncertainty created by COS 4446’s apparent ambiguity, COS 4446 provides the burdened party with knowledge that “Tract 4 benefits from an easement over Tract 1 to access Whitefish Stage Road.” Opinion, ¶ 57 (citing Bache,
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