Bobby and Wanda Scott appeal from a judgment of the Fayette Circuit Court entered upon cross-motions for summary judgment. Kentucky Rules of Civil Procedure (CR) 56. We reverse.
The facts are these: Since the 1920 s m rural Fayette County, several parcels of land, including the tract now owned by the Scotts, have benefitted frоm easements appurtenant to water from the Blue Springs Water System (Blue Springs) located on land nоw owned by appellees, Long Valley Farm Kentucky, Inc., Andrew C. Rose, and Charles H. Moore (hereinafter collectively referred to as Long Valley.) The easements were expressly created by deed. The Blue Springs system consists of a spring, pump house, and reservoir, and other facilities. Each user (parcel owner) paid $12 per year to the owner(s) of Blue Springs and maintain the water line as it travеrsed his respective property. The owner(s) of Blue Springs were to maintain the spring facilities. The Sсotts acquired their parcel of land in 1963.
Long Valley, a real estate development comрany, acquired title to Blue Springs in 1986 from Spendthrift Farm, Inc. Prior to this time and in 1978, Spendthrift had, by quit-claim, purchased and еxtinguished the rights of all the parcels, with exception of the parcel owned by the Scotts (and pеrhaps one other parcel, not involved in this litigation.) City water was made available to the Scоtts in 1973, but they continued to use Blue Springs water for lawn and garden purposes.
In 1988, the Scotts filed suit for declaration of rights. Kentucky Revised Statutes (KRS) 418.045 and CR. 57. On March 1, 1990, the circuit court entered judgment in favor of Long Valley, extinguishing all rights of the Scotts in the Blue Springs water system, thereby precipitating this appeal. Although categorizing their arguments under four separate topics, the Scotts essentially complain that (1) a question of fact precluded summary judgment, and (2) the circuit court was erronеous as a matter of law in extinguishing their easement in the Blue Springs system.
Because we deem there is no question of fact for consideration, we go directly to the question of whether the court was corrеct as a matter of law in extinguishing the servitude upon Long Valley’s land. We are here concerned with an easement appurtenant. Two distinct tenements are involved, the dominant estate to which the right belongs and the servient estate which bears the burden. See Lyle v. Holman, Ky.,
The trial court offered several reasons for extinguishing the Scotts’ rights to the Blue Springs water supply. Specifically noted were the following facts: the Scotts had availability of city water; the Blue Springs system is “antiquated” and in need of costly repair; to require the servient estate (Long Valley) to forever maintain the system is “patently absurd.” Finally, the court noted that other parcels (dominant estates) had relinquished their rights to the spring water and that to continue requiring the servient estate (Long Valley) to furnish water only to the Scоtts would be manifestly unfair. Under its equitable power, the court, relying upon Robbins v. Cornell, Ky.,
For the foregoing reasons, the judgment of the circuit court is reversed, and this cause is remanded for proceedings consistent with this opinion.
All concur.
