Keng and Lau filed a complaint in ejectment to prohibit Franklin and his invitees from using a mutual driveway lying over and along the boundary between their adjoining properties. The trial court ruled that Franklin had acquired by prescription a private way over the driveway. Keng and Lau appeal from the order, and we affirm the trial court.
In 1946, the parties’ predecessors in title recorded an easement providing for a mutual 12-foot-wide driveway that would burden the adjoining properties equally. However, the driveway was not constructed in accordance with the easement and only a small portion of the driveway burdens Franklin’s property, which he purchased in 1984. The adjoining landowner sought to remove the driveway in 1985, but Franklin refused to allow it, and, that same year, he repaved a substantial portion of the driveway at his own expense. Keng and Lau purchased the property adjoining Franklin’s in 1988, and initiated the instant action in 1993, seeking to abolish the driveway because it failed to comply with the recorded easement.
Prescriptive rights are to be strictly construed, and the prescriber must give some notice, actual or constructive, to the landowner he or she intends to prescribe against.
First Christian Church v. Realty Investment Co.,
Keng and Lau assert that the trial court erred in concluding that prescription began to run against them in 1985, because Franklin’s use was permissive and he never provided them with notice of his intent to change his position to that of a prescriber. They contend that Franklin lacked the necessary intent to hold the driveway adversely because he was operating under the mistaken impression that the easement gave him a right to possess and use the driveway in its present location. The argument fails.
Under the facts of this case, Franklin’s belief that he had a right to use the driveway in its present location is immaterial. See
Shiels v. Roberts,
Judgment affirmed.
