FRANK W. LYNCH et al., Plaintiffs and Appellants,
v.
WARREN GLASS, JR., et al., Defendants and Respondents.
Court of Appeals of California, First District, Division Four.
*946 COUNSEL
Edward R. Fitzsimmons and Ken Fishbach for Plaintiffs and Appellants.
Spridgen, Barrett, Achor, Luckhardt, Anderson & James, James B. Hinton and A. Leonard Bjorklund, Jr., for Defendants and Respondents.
OPINION
CHRISTIAN, J.
Frank and Ellenora Lynch and Edward and Elizabeth Fitzsimmons appeal from a judgment determining that they have no easement rights over a road across property of defendants Warren and Ida Lou Glass and James S. Erway.
In 1965, respondents and others blocked off from public access a road known as Wolfback Ridge Road crossing partially undeveloped territory west of Sausalito. Appellants sued to establish their claimed right to use the road, alleging alternatively that the road was a public way or was subject to a private easement in their favor. The judgment for respondents was based on the trial court's determinations that a judgment in a prior action collaterally estopped appellants from asserting a public easement, and that appellants had failed to prove a private easement.
The prior judgment was against Gulf Oil Corporation and Frouge Corporation, the intended developers of certain lands adjoining the Glass property in the Wolfback Ridge area. The developers acted on the assumption that Wolfback Ridge Road would provide public access to their lands. The Glasses instituted a slander of title action against the two corporations, seeking damages and an injunction against trespass. James Erway, also a respondent in the present appeal, was joined as a cross-defendant in the Gulf Oil case. The two corporations asserted in defense that Wolfback Ridge Road was subject to private or public easements. After a lengthy trial, the present respondents took a judgment determining that they were holders of record title to portions of the road, that neither the corporations nor the public had any recorded interest in the road, and that the road had neither been dedicated to public use nor subjected to an implied easement. That judgment was affirmed on appeal. (Glass v. Gulf Oil Corp. (1970)
*947 (1a) Appellants contend that the court erred in determining that they were collaterally estopped from asserting that Wolfback Ridge Road was subject to a public easement. (2) The prerequisites for the application of collateral estoppel are an identity of issues decided in a prior case with those presented in subsequent litigation, a final judgment on the merits, and a determination that the party against whom the principle is asserted was a party or in privity with a party in the prior action. (Teitelbaum Furs, Inc. v. Dominion Ins. Co., Ltd. (1962)
A party cannot assert a prior adjudication against another who was not a party or in privity with a party to the prior action. (See Developments in the Law: Res Judicata, 65 Harv.L.Rev. 818, 855; Comments, Nonparties and Preclusion by Judgment: The Privity Rule Reconsidered, 56 Cal.L. Rev. 1098, 1101; 46 Am.Jur.2d, Judgments, § 518, pp. 669-670.) Privity is essentially a shorthand statement that collateral estoppel is to be applied in a given case; there is no universally applicable definition of privity. (See People v. One 1964 Chevrolet Corvette Convertible (1969)
Thus, the question of privity has been restated in terms of whether a nonparty was "sufficiently close" to an unsuccessful party in a prior action as to justify the application of collateral estoppel against the nonparty. (People v. One 1964 Chevrolet Corvette Convertible, supra,
(4) Notwithstanding these developments, collateral estoppel may be applied only if the requirements of due process are met. (Blonder-Tongue v. University Foundation (1971)
*949 A nonparty should reasonably be expected to be bound if he had in reality contested the prior action even if he did not make a formal appearance. Thus, collateral estoppel has been applied against nonparties who had a proprietary or financial interest in and control of, a prior action. (See, e.g., Zingheim v. Marshall (1967)
Collateral estoppel has been given effect in a second category of cases against one who did not actually appear in the prior action. These cases involve situations where the unsuccessful party in the first action might fairly be treated as acting in a representative capacity for a nonparty. Thus, collateral estoppel was applied against a corporation which was a mere alter ego of an individual party in the first action (Teitelbaum Furs, Inc. v. Dominion Ins. Co., Ltd., supra,
(1c) Appellants were apparently identified in interest with the two corporations in the Gulf Oil case, with a view to developing their respective properties and establishing public access thereto. Appellants' side of the underlying dispute was urged by the corporations at trial and on appeal. (See Glass v. Gulf Oil Corp., supra, 12 Cal. App.3d at pp. 416-420, 425, 427-430.) But it cannot be said that appellants should reasonably have expected to be bound by the prior adjudication. Although appellants were fully aware of the prior litigation, the appearance of one of them as a witness gave them no power to control any aspect of the case. (See Minton v. Cavaney (1961)
*950 It is true that the corporations asserted public rights to the roadway and that appellants stood to gain from any determination in the corporations' favor. If the first lawsuit had involved the City of Sausalito, which is in a position to safeguard the rights of the public,[*] appellants might be precluded from asserting that a determination adverse to the city should not be binding upon them (see Rynsburger v. Dairymen's Fertilizer Coop., Inc., supra,
(5a) Appellants also contend that a prescriptive easement had been acquired. (6) A prescriptive easement may be acquired by open, notorious, continuous and hostile use, under a claim of right, for a five-year period. (Code Civ. Proc., § 321; Civ. Code, § 1007; Taormino v. Denny (1970)
(8) The hostile use of a road does not ripen into a prescriptive easement unless the party against whom it is asserted has actual or constructive knowledge of such use. (Clarke v. Clarke, supra,
As to the determination that there was no private easement, the judgment is affirmed; in all other respects the judgment is reversed.
Rattigan, Acting P.J., and Emerson, J.,[**] concurred.
NOTES
Notes
[*] See, e.g., Civil Code, section 3491, under which the city would be authorized to proceed against some of the actions complained of in this action.
[**] Retired judge of the superior court sitting under assignment by the Chairman of the Judicial Council.
