ONE HARBOR FINANCIAL LIMITED COMPANY, Appellant,
v.
HYNES PROPERTIES, LLC, Appellee.
District Court of Appeal of Florida, Fifth District.
*1041 David G. Larkin and Jesse L. Kabaservice of Fallace & Larkin, L.C., Melbourne, for Appellant.
Alfred A. Lasorte, Jr., of Shutts & Bowen LLP, West Palm Beach, for Appellee.
PETERSON, J.
One Harbor Financial Limited Company, ("One Harbor"), appeals a final judgment quieting title to property owned by Hynes Properties, LLC, ("Hynes").
One Harbor and Hynes own title to adjoining parcels of land and deraign title from the same remote grantor, Paul M. Hoffenberg. Hoffenberg had acquired the two parcels by separate deeds in which his name apрeared as grantee followed by the words "as trustee" or "trustee."
At some time prior to August 19, 1986, Hoffenberg constructed a 75,000 square foot building on the parcel now owned by One Harbor. In an attempt to meet the then-existing zoning regulations which required thirteen additional parking spaces to that available on the parcel, on August 19, 1986, Hoffenberg "individually аnd as trustee," executed an easement agreement, ("Agreement"), that purported to convey a perpetual, non-exclusive easement for thirteen parking spaces along with a twenty-foot strip of land to be used for ingress and egress, from the adjacent New Haven Avenue to those parking spaces upon the proрerty now owned by Hynes in favor of the property now owned by One Harbor. In the Agreement, Hoffenberg was identified as both the grantor and grantee. Two days later, on August 21, 1986, Hoffenberg "individually and as trustee" conveyed the parcel now owned by Hynes to Curtis Hendrix without making any reference to the easement.[1] The Agreement was duly recorded on August 29, 1986[2] and use of the easement began on or abоut August 21, 1986, and has continued ever since.
Through subsequent conveyances, Hynes acquired title to the parcel purported to be encumbered by the easement. Aware of the easement, Hynes purchased the property on the advice of counsel that the underlying Agreement was invalid and the easement unenforceable. Hynes then filed a quiet title action seeking to eliminate the easement from its title so that it could construct a building that would encroach upon the area described in the Agreement. The complaint alleged that the Agreement was invalid because title to the dominant estate (currently owned by One Harbor), and the servient estate (currently owned by Hynes) were held by the *1042 same person (Hoffenberg) at the time of the creation of the easement, rendering the Agreement void under Florida law.
One Harbor's answer admitted that Hoffenberg owned both properties "individually and as trustee" at the time the Agreement was executed, but asserted that the easement was valid because the grantee and grаntor did not maintain the same indicia of title and ownership as to both properties. Additionally, One Harbor argued that even if the Agreement was deemed invalid as drafted, an easement over Hynes' property existed as the result of an implied reservation from a pre-existing use. Because all predecessors in interest to Hynes and One Harbor acknowledged the existence of the easement over Hynes' property, One Harbor further asserted that Hynes is equitably estopped from denying the validity of the easement because Hynes purchased the parcel with full knowledge of the Agreement regarding the easement and was aware that One Harbor claimed an interest in Hynes' property. One Harbor also counterclaimed seeking to quiet title to the easement and alleging that as a result of Hoffenberg's pre-existing use, One Harbor acquired an easement by implied reservation and that as a result of continued use by One Harbor and its predecessors in interest, One Harbor acquired an easement by prеscription.
The trial court specifically found that Hoffenberg took title to each parcel "individually and as trustee," that no trust or beneficiary was identified in any conveyance of either parcel, and that there was no evidence that a trust relating to either parcel was ever recorded. The trial court applied thе provisions of section 687.07, Florida Statutes (1959), and concluded, inter alia, that Hoffenberg was the fee simple "individual" owner of each parcel at the time that the Agreement was executed.[3] The trial court also found that at the time the Agreement was recorded Hoffenberg owned both parcels of land.[4] Because the Agreement purported to convey an easement from Hoffenberg, as both grantor and grantee, the trial court held that Hoffenberg's attempt to create an easement over his own property was void *1043 ab initio. The trial court further held that One Harbor neither proved the establishment of an easement by prescription nor an implied easement becausе the equitable arguments raised were not supported by the facts, the record or the law. We agree with the trial court's findings.
APPLICATION OF SECTION 687.07, FLORIDA STATUTES
In reaching its decision, the trial court applied section 689.07, Florida Statutes (1959).[5] Section 689.07 provides:
(1) Every deed or conveyance of real estate heretofore or hereafter made or executed in which the words "trustee" or "аs trustee" are added to the name of the grantee, and in which no beneficiaries are named, the nature and purposes of the trust, if any, are not set forth, and the trust is not identified by title or date, shall grant and is hereby declared to have granted a fee simple estate with full power and authority in and to the grantee in such deed to sell, convey, and grant both the legal and beneficial interest in the real estate conveyed, unless a contrary intention shall appear in the deed or conveyance; provided, that there shall not appear of record at the time of recording of such deed or conveyance, a declaration of trust by the grantee so described declaring the purposes of such trust, if any, declaring that the real estate is held other than for the benefit of the grantee.
The purpose of section 689.07 is to protect persons who rely upon the public land records to ascertain title to real property when a beneficiary's interest is not disclosed in the grantor/grantеe index by either the deed transferring title or a recorded declaration of trust. In re Schiavone,
Because the deeds used in the initial conveyance of the parcel to Hoffenberg did not identify either trust, name the trust beneficiaries or state the nature or purpose of either trust, аnd because a declaration of trust was never recorded under section 689.07, the trial court was correct in finding that Hoffenberg owned each parcel in fee simple absolute. See, e.g., Zosman v. Schiffer,
AGREEMENT VOID AB INITIO
Under Hensel v. Aurilio,
An easement, by definition, is the right to use land owned by another. Black's Law Dictionary 527 (Bryan A. Garner ed., 7th ed. West 1999). This court made clear that that right exists in one other than the owner of the land to use land for some particular purpose or purposes. (Emphasis added.) Dean v. MOD Properties, Ltd.,
IMPLIED EASEMENT
An easement is a real property interest subject to the statute of frauds, and apart from prescription, requires a writing for its creation. Dotson v. Wolfe,
One Harbor asserts that if the Agreement is deemеd invalid, it still maintains an easement over Hynes' property by implied reservation through a pre-existing use. Under the holding in Tortoise Island, to imply such an easement, the implication must arise from a "duly-executed" writing. It necessarily follows that the writing from which such an easement is implied must itself be a valid legal instrument.
Documents that convey easements are subject to the same rules of construction as other contracts and should be interpreted using contract principles. See, e.g., Los Angeles County v. Wright,
One Harbor's reliance on this court's ruling in Martin v. Kavanagh,
One Harbor urges this court to employ its equitable powers to give effect to the intent of the parties in view of fifteen years of uncontested use of the property, and to declare the easement valid, but such remedy is beyond this court's power. Courts of equity simply have no power to issue rulings which they consider to be in the best interest of justice without regard to established law. E.g., Flagler v. Flagler,
EASEMENT BY PRESCRIPTION
It is uncontested that use of the easement began on August 21, 1986 and has continued ever since. Because the statutory twenty-yeаr period required to obtain an easement by prescription had not run prior to the filing of this action on June 18, 2001, no easement arose through prescription. See, e.g., Downing v. Bird,
One Harbor has exhausted its inventory of theories to establish the validity of the attempt by Hoffenberg to establish an easement, and we agree with the trial court that none of those thеories can support its position. Therefore, we must affirm the judgment quieting title.
AFFIRMED.
THOMPSON, J., and SMITH, C. M., Associate Judge, concur.
NOTES
Notes
[1] The record does not disclose whether Hendrix had or did not have notice of the easement when he acquired title and the concept of the bona fide purchaser for value without notice is not an issue in this appeal.
[2] The record is unclear as to when the Agreement was recorded. Appellant's initial brief indicates that the Agreement was recorded on August 20, 1986. During a hearing on January 4, 2002, counsel for the Appellant stated that the Agreement was recorded on August 29, 1986. The Agreement appears to be date stamped on August 29, 1986.
[3] An estate in fee simple can only be held in severalty. See 4 Thompson on Real Property § 1770 (1979) (citing In re Sullivan's Estate,
[4] The trial judge also held that Hoffenberg was the owner of the fee simple title of each parcel at the time that the Agreement was executed, yet noted that the properties had merged upon their initial conveyance to Hoffenberg. One Harbor disagrees, stating that because the properties were never owned under a common deed, and were acquired at different times, under different documents, the properties did not merge. One Harbor is correct, but for the wrong reason. The merger doctrine is applied to sepаrate parcels owned by the same individual in the same right where there is an existing easement that creates both a dominant and a servient estate. See, e.g., Lacy v. Seegers,
[5] The trial court likely reviewed the statute as amended in 1959. The 1959 amendment added sections (2) through (5) and provided the grantee with the additional authority in section (1) to "encumber" the legal and beneficial interest. Prior to the amendment, the proviso now in section (1) required the declaration of trust to "appear of record." The provision was expanded by the amendment to read "appear of record among the public records of the county in which the real property is situated."
[6] § 689.07(4), Fla. Stat. (2003).
