Opinion
Douglas and Hope Gray, on the one hand, and Daniel and Marilyn McCormick, on the other, own neighboring properties in a subdivision of multimillion dollar luxury homes. The Grays hold an exclusive access easement over the property owned by the McCormicks. The Grays contend the McCormicks are precluded from making any use whatsoever of the easement area, and they sued for a judgment to that effect. The McCormicks maintain they are entitled to make any use of the easement area that does not interfere with the Grays’ use of the same, and they filed a cross-complaint in furtherance of their position. The trial court ruled in favor of the McCormicks and the Grays appeal.
The express easement in question clearly provides that the easement is for the exclusive use of the owners of the dominant tenement. While as a general rule, the owners of a servient tenement, such as the McCormicks, are entitled *1022 to use the easement area in any manner not inconsistent with the specified use by the owners of the dominant tenement, such as the Grays, in this case, any use of the surface of the easement area, by the owners of the servient tenement, would be inconsistent with the exclusive use by the owners of the dominant tenement. The judgment is reversed in part and affirmed in part as modified herein.
I
FACTS
The Grays and the McCormicks own multiacre custom residential properties in upscale Coto de Caza. The Grays own Lot 6 of Tract Map No. 14505, as shown on a subdivision map recorded in book 717, pages 1 et seq. of miscellaneous maps, in the official records of Orange County, California, assessor parcel No. 778-131-03, known as 9 Olympic Way, Coto de Caza. The McCormicks own adjacent Lot 3 of Tract Map No. 14505, as shown on a subdivision map recorded in book 717, pages 1 et seq. of miscellaneous maps, recorded in the official records of Orange County, California, assessor parcel No. 778-131-05, known as 8 Olympic Way, Coto de Caza.
The properties are subject to the “Master Declaration of Covenants, Conditions, Restrictions and Reservation of Easements for Coto de Caza” (capitalization omitted) recorded March 5, 1984, as instrument No. 84-092424 in the official records of Orange County, California (Master CC&R’s) and the “Notice of Addition of Territory and Supplemental Declaration of Covenants, Conditions, Restrictions and Reservation of Easements for Coto de Caza (Delegate District No. 22/Tract 14505)” (capitalization omitted) recorded December 9, 1994, as instrument No. 94-0705287 in the official records of Orange County, California (Supplemental CC&R’s).
Tract Map No. 14505 denotes certain private streets providing access to the lots shown thereon. The Master CC&R’s provide that the various property owners have “nonexclusive appurtenant easements for vehicular, pedestrian and equestrian traffic over all [the] private streets . . . .” Lot A, known as Olympic Way, is the private street that provides access to Lot 3.
Tract Map No. 14505 also denotes a proposed easement across Lot 3, providing Lot 6 with access to Lot A, without which Lot 6 would be landlocked. The easement is 16 feet wide and approximately 90 feet long. The Supplemental CC&R’s provide that the easement is an exclusive easement in favor of Lot 6.
The easement area is currently unimproved. However, the McCormicks have been using the easement area for the passage of their horses, and for the *1023 transportation of their rubbish, horse feed and manure, to and from the stables in their backyard, to Lot A. The Grays, who paid $2,995,000 for the unimproved six-acre Lot 6, say they plan to spend several times that amount on the construction of the residence and other improvements, and intend to improve the easement area with a driveway, perimeter walls and landscaping. They object to the McCormicks’ continued use of the easement area. The McCormicks object to the Grays’ plans to exclude them from use of the easement area and to place walls on it. They say that they designed their landscaping to make continued use of the easement area for the passage of their horses and for the transportation of their rubbish, horse feed and manure.
After commencement of the litigation, the matter was submitted to the court on a joint statement of undisputed facts. The McCormicks argued that the easement was labeled “exclusive” to distinguish it from the other “nonexclusive” easements for roadway purposes, so that the easement would not be available for the use of other owners of properties within the Tract, but that they, as the owners of the servient tenement, would be entitled to use the easement area in any manner not inconsistent with the Grays’ access, ingress and egress rights. They also asserted that exclusive easements are not permitted under California law. The Grays, on the other hand, contended that the easement was designated an “exclusive” easement to mean that the Grays could exclude all other persons from the use of the easement area, including specifically the owners of Lot 3. They also emphasized that the Supplemental CC&R’s are clear with respect to the exclusivity of the easement and that an exclusive easement, in effect, prohibits the owner of the servient tenement from using the easement area at all.
Judgment was entered in favor of the McCormicks. The judgment provided: “The owners of Lot 3 have the right to use the Easement Area in any way that does not interfere with the [Grays’] Uses. [The McCormicks] and any subsequent owners of Lot 3 are enjoined from using the Easement Area in any way which interferes with the [Grays’] Uses.” The Grays appeal.
II
DISCUSSION
A. Introduction
Generally speaking, “ ‘[a]n easement is a restricted right to specific, limited, definable use or activity upon another’s property, which right must be
less
than the right of ownership.’ [Citation.]”
(Scruby v. Vintage Grapevine, Inc.
(1995)
“Under section 806 of the Civil Code ‘the extent of a servitude is determined by the terms of the grant
(Pasadena v. California-Michigan etc. Co.
(1941)
These rules concerning the interpretation of an easement contained in a deed apply with equal force to an easement set forth in CC&R’s. “The same rules that apply to interpretation of contracts apply to the interpretation of CC&R’s. ‘ “[W]e must independently interpret the provisions of the document. . . .” ’ ”
(Chee
v.
Amanda Goldt Property Management
(2006)
B. Easement Language
Section 12 of the Supplemental CC&R’s (section 12) provides: “Lot 6 Access Easement. Declarant hereby reserves for the benefit of Lot 6 of Tract 14505 (‘Lot 6’) an exclusive easement of access, ingress and egress (‘Easement’) over that portion of Lot 3 of Tract 14505, more fully described as Easement G on the Final Subdivision Tract Map for Tract . . . 14505 (‘Easement Area’). The Easement is created for the benefit of the Owner of Lot 6 for purposes of (a) access, ingress and egress to and from Lot 6 to the private street located on Lot A of Tract 14505 which constitutes a portion of the Association Property; and (b) construction, installation, maintenance and repair of access drive improvements on the Easement Area all in accordance with the provisions of the Master Declaration. Use of the Easement by the *1025 Owner of Lot 6 and such Owner’s family, guests, tenants and invitees shall be exclusive and in connection with such use the Owner of Lot 6 shall indemnify, defend and hold the Owner of Lot 3 harmless from any loss, damage or liability resulting from or arising in connection with such use (including without limitation attorneys’ fees and costs of court), provided however that such indemnity shall not apply to liability resulting from the negligence or misconduct of the Owner of Lot 3, such Owner’s family, guests, tenants or invitees. The cost of improvement and maintenance of the Easement Area shall be the sole responsibility of the Owner of Lot 6.”
C. Analysis
(1) Language of exclusivity
The McCormicks concede that this language creates an exclusive easement over their property. However, they maintain that even though the easement is exclusive, it nonetheless does not operate to exclude
them
from the easement area. They cite
Pasadena v. California-Michigan etc. Co., supra,
This is indeed the often-repeated general rule. (See, e.g.,
Blackmore v. Powell
(2007)
*1026 The question is whether the language of section 12 of the Supplemental CC&R’s clearly expresses the intention that the use of the easement area shall be exclusive to the owners of Lot 6, in the sense of excluding all other owners of property in the subdivision, including the owners of Lot 3. We see that it does.
Section 12 expressly defines the easement as an “exclusive easement of access, ingress and egress.” It specifically states that “[t]he Easement is created for the benefit of the Owner of Lot 6 . ...” It emphasizes that the “[u]se of the Easement by the Owner of Lot 6 and such Owner’s family, guests, tenants and invitees shall be exclusive . . . .” In other words, the provision repeatedly uses language of exclusivity. It clearly states that the “[u]se” by the owner of Lot 6 “shall be exclusive.”
In addition to the language of exclusivity, section 12 imposes upon the owners of Lot 6 the obligations of the “construction, installation, maintenance and repair of access drive improvements” and the burden of all costs associated with the improvement and maintenance of the easement area. So, the owners of Lot 6 must not only improve the easement area, they must also shoulder all costs of the maintenance of it. It is inconceivable that the owners of a multimillion dollar property who build out 90 feet of access drive improvements would be expected to share that drive with a neighbor whose property abuts the street and to bear the costs of cleaning up the horse droppings and hay scatterings associated with that neighbor’s use of the easement area.
The exclusivity of the easement is underscored by the indemnification obligation contained in section 12. Section 12 requires the owners of Lot 6 to defend, indemnify, and hold harmless the owners of Lot 3 from any liability, loss, or damage resulting from the exclusive use of the easement area by the owners of Lot 6. This indemnification obligation makes sense because the owners of Lot 3 have no right to use the easement area.
The McCormicks see it differently. They emphasize the portion of section 12 that makes the indemnification obligation inapplicable to liability arising out of the misconduct or negligence of the owners of Lot 3. According to the McCormicks, this language proves that the owners of Lot 3 are entitled to use the easement area—because the indemnification obligation does not extend to liability arising out of acts the owners of Lot 3 undertake on the easement area. But this is not quite what section 12 says. The indemnification obligation expressed therein does not address acts performed on the easement area. Rather, it pertains to liabilities arising from the misconduct or negligence of the owners of Lot 3, without regard to where the acts of misconduct or negligence take place. Misconduct or negligence in the use of the portions of *1027 Lot 3 immediately adjacent to the easement area could give rise to liability, loss or damage affecting the easement area.
The McCormicks insist that the language of section 12, despite labeling the easement “exclusive,” gives them the right to all uses of the easement area that are not inconsistent with the Grays’ access rights. In support of their position, they cite
City of Los Angeles v. Igna
(1962)
In
Igna,
the city and its department of water and power (collectively, the city) acquired, through two similar deeds, an easement for the purpose of power transmission.
(City of Los Angeles v. Igna, supra,
While the deeds used the word “exclusive” in describing the easements, they also contained extensive reservations in favor of the owner of the servient tenement.
(City of Los Angeles v. Igna, supra,
A dispute arose as to the extent of the rights of the owner of the servient tenement to use the easement area.
(City of Los Angeles v. Igna, supra,
*1028 The appellate court in Igna affirmed the judgment with modifications. (City of Los Angeles v. Igna, supra, 208 Cal.App.2d at pp. 341-342.) It held that “[t]he judgment must be modified so as to exclude only those uses by the servient owner which [were] shown to be inconsistent with the rights granted under the easement or which [interfered] with those rights.” (Id. at p. 342.)
The McCormicks contend that
City of Los Angeles v. Igna, supra,
The language of section 12 of the Supplemental CC&R’s labels the interest in question an “exclusive easement,” as did the language of the deeds in
Igna. (City of Los Angeles
v.
Igna, supra,
Section 12 of the Supplemental CC&R’s however, contains no express reservation in favor of the owners of Lot 3. The language of section 12 is not, as the McCormicks assert, “strikingly similar” to the language of the
Igna
deeds. Rather, it is in stark contrast thereto. The language of the
Igna
deeds shows without a doubt that the owner of the servient tenement was not intended to be excluded from all use of the easement area. Consequently, the easement in question was not completely exclusive, since there was no expression of intent that the easement area be for the sole use of the owner of the dominant tenement to the exclusion of the owner of the servient tenement.
(Pasadena v. California-Michigan etc. Co., supra,
17 Cal.2d at pp. 578-579.) In short, the language of the
Igna
deeds did not meet the exclusivity test of
*1029
Pasadena
v.
California-Michigan etc. Co., supra,
(2) Exclusive easements are not prohibited under California law
Language interpretation aside, the McCormicks contend that an exclusive easement that bars the owners of the servient tenement from using the easement area is prohibited under California law, because it would in effect grant the owners of the dominant tenement fee ownership over the easement area. They are in error.
Pasadena v. Califomia-Michigan etc. Co., supra,
In
Blackmore v. Powell, supra,
The easement language in
Blackmore
v.
Powell, supra,
*1030
In the case before us, on the other hand, section 12 of the Supplemental CC&R’s expressly provides that the “[u]se of the Easement . . . shall be exclusive” to the owners of Lot 6. Furthermore, the sharing of improvements over an area only 16 feet wide would prompt disputes over the passage of vehicles, and/or vehicles and horses, and create a source of chronic aggravation for the owners of Lot 6, who would be left perpetually cleaning up after the owners of Lot 3. This cannot have been the intent of the subdividers of a tract of land for multimillion dollar custom luxury homes. Indeed, “[t]he amount of consideration paid for the interest conveyed is of considerable importance in construing the deed. [Citation.]”
(Warren v. Atchison, T & S. F. Ry. Co.
(1971)
Blackmore v. Powell, supra,
For example, an exclusive easement was upheld in
Otay Water Dist.
v.
Beckwith
(1991)
The appellate court stated: “Contrary to [the servient tenement owner’s] arguments, however, an exclusive easement is not always ‘tantamount to a fee estate.’ The easement granted by the court here, for example, was significantly less than a fee title. The court granted [the water district] an easement consistent with its historical use, restricting [its] use of the property for reservoir purposes only and prohibiting [the water district] from increasing the burden placed upon the servient estates. If [the water district] stops using the property as a reservoir or increases the burden on [the servient tenement, the
*1031
water district’s] easement can be taken away. Such a restricted use is not the same as a fee interest.”
(Otay Water Dist. v. Beckwith, supra,
The practical effect of the exclusive easement in
Otay Water Dist. v. Beckwith, supra,
In the case before us, to construe section 12 of the Supplemental CC&R’s as creating an exclusive right of use in the owners of Lot 6, would no more create a fee ownership interest in the owners of the dominant tenement than did the granting of the exclusive prescriptive easement in
Otay Water Dist. v. Beckwith, supra,
An exclusive use was also granted to neighboring property owners in
Hirshfield v. Schwartz
(2001)
The trial court in
Hirshfield
v.
Schwartz, supra,
Inasmuch as
Hirshfield v. Schwartz, supra,
(3) Conclusion
The exclusive use of a defined area of the servient tenement by the owners of the dominant tenement is not prohibited under California law. In this case, the language of the instrument by which the easement was created, section 12 of the Supplemental CC&R’s, clearly expresses an intention that the use of the easement area be exclusive to the owners of Lot 6, at least as to the surface thereof. It is, therefore, sufficient to create an exclusive easement under California law.
(Pasadena v. California-Michigan etc. Co., supra,
The judgment is affirmed to the extent that it enjoins the owners of Lot 3 from using the easement area in any way which interferes with the use of the easement area by the owners of Lot 6, and to the extent that it orders the McCormicks to remove certain encroachments from the easement area. However, the judgment must be modified to clarify that any use of the surface of the easement area by the owners of Lot 3 is inconsistent with the exclusive use granted to the owners of Lot 6. The judgment is reversed to the extent that it permits the owners of Lot 3 to use the surface of the easement area in any manner. The owners of Lot 3 are precluded from making any use of the surface of the easement area.
*1033 III
DISPOSITION
The judgment is reversed in part and affirmed in part as modified. The Grays shall recover their costs on appeal.
Sills, P. J., and Rylaarsdam, J., concurred.
Respondents’ petition for review by the Supreme Court was denied January 14, 2009, S168681. George, C. J., did not participate therein.
