Opinion
In this case we hold that a transfer of title to real property after
the prescriptive period for adverse possession of the property has begun does not interrupt or terminate the running of the prescription period. Adverse possession refers to occupation or use of land adverse to legal title, not to a particular holder of legal title.
On June 21, 1988, Ronald and Nancy Sevier filed a complaint to quiet title in which they alleged that on November 4, 1986, they acquired by grant deed a parcel of real property and an easement over a strip of land running along the edge of that property to the street. The land belonged to Lawrence and Constance Locher who used it as a driveway to their property directly behind the Seviers’. The Lochers cross-complained to quiet title and extinguish the easement by adverse possession.
The trial court found the Seviers’ roadway right-of-way was extinguished by adverse possession but their utility easement over the property survived.
I
An easement obtained by grant may be extinguished by adverse possession by the owner of the servient tenement.
(Masin
v.
La Marche
*1085
(1982)
The Seviers’ primary contention is that the Lochers did not occupy the easement adversely to
them
for the required period since they had not owned the property for five years. The trial court found “the five year prescriptive period does not commence again upon the sale to plaintiff of the subject property,” citing
Le Roy
v.
Rogers
(1866)
In
Le Roy,
the prescriptive period had already run before a mortgage was executed and foreclosed, and the premises sold by the sheriff, conveyed to the assignee of the mortagee and thence to the plaintiff.
(Le Roy
v.
Rogers, supra,
The Seviers maintain that
Le Roy
is inapplicable to them because they acquired an “independent title” rather than stepping into the shoes of one whose title was already subject to a claim of adverse possession. On the contrary, like the plaintiff in
Le Roy
who took the mortgagor’s estate as if it had been directly conveyed (
The issue in
Masin
was whether adverse possession was continuous from 1972 or began in 1975. The court quoted from
Zimmer
v.
Dykstra
(1974) 39
*1086
Cal.App.3d 422, 432 [
The cases the Seviers cite are all based on inapplicable rules of law. The first was enunciated in
Jefferson
v.
Wendt
(1877)
A second rule was summarized in
Laubisch
v.
Roberdo, supra,
It is noteworthy that in
Leonard
v.
Flynn, supra,
II
The Seviers also contend the Lochers’ occupation of their driveway was insufficiently hostile and adverse. Whether the various elements of adverse possession have been established is a question of fact.
(Masin
v.
La Marche, supra,
The trial court found the Lochers’ adverse possession of their driveway had extinguished the Seviers’ right to use it “as a roadway for vehicles of all kinds, pedestrians and animals.” In 1982, the Lochers blocked access from the driveway to the street, first with a chain and padlock and then with a six-foot high wrought-iron gate with a locking mechanism. They refused to give the Seviers a key. The Seviers’ grantors had never used the driveway for any purpose.
2
Although the Seviers occasionally stepped onto the driveway through a gate in a fence" along their property in order to examine plantings and top a tree, they never drove a vehicle over it until 1988.
3
As in
Ross
v.
Lawrence, supra,
The judgment is affirmed.
Low, P. J., and Haning, J., concurred.
Notes
For example, “Where one, possessing only those rights in the land that grow out of prior possession, is ousted, after the expiration of five years, he is barred of his recovery; and if he thereafter acquires the title from the general Government, it may properly be said that he then acquires an independent title .... And the remainder man, upon the expiration of the particular estate, does not come in under it, but claims through an independent source of title . . . .” (Le Roy v. Rogers, supra, 30 Cal. at pp. 235-236.)
The Seviers’ grantors are not parties to this appeal so we do not have before us the question of what rights, if any, the Seviers may have against their grantors.
Mr. Sevier’s testimony that he drives over the easement “several times” a day refers to a portion of the driveway beyond the locked gate within the county right of way.
