delivered the Opinion of the Court.
¶1 Yellowstone River, LLC (hereinafter ‘YR”) commenced this action against Meriwether Land Fund I, LLC, and Meriwether Land Co., LLC (collectively ‘Meriwether”) in the Sixth Judicial District Court, Sweet Grass County. YR sought a determination that it has an easement to access its property over Meriwether’s adjacent property. YR raised multiple theories in support of its alleged easement; however, through summary judgment proceedings, the issue was narrowed to the sole question whether YR has an easement by necessity. Ultimately, the District Court ruled that an easement by necessity does not exist over Meriwether’s property for the benefit of YR’s property. YR now appeals.
¶2 The sole issue on appeal is whether the District Court erred in granting summary judgment to Meriwether on YR’s claim of easement by necessity. We agree with YR that the District Court erred in part of *276 its analysis. We conclude, however, that the District Court nevertheless reached the correct result, and we accordingly affirm.
BACKGROUND
The Properties and the Alleged Easement
¶3 The properties at issue are located east of Big Timber, Montana, in Township 1 North, Range 15 East, Montana Principal Meridian. YR owns essentially the western half of Section 22. YR’s property is bounded on the west by the Yellowstone River and on the north, east, and south by property owned by Meriwether. Specifically, Meriwether owns Section 15, the east side of Section 22, and the portion of Section 27 north and east of the Yellowstone River. Meriwether’s holdings also include Sections 13,14, and 23, and portions of Sections 10,11, and 26. Howie Road is a public road that runs east-west along the north lines of Sections 10, 11, and 12. Spannering Road runs south from Howie Road along the boundary between Sections 10 and 11. Spannering Road is a public road for the first half mile south from Howie Road. The layout of these properties and roads is shown below on Diagram I. 1 Meriwether’s property is the area enclosed by the semibold line. YR’s property is represented by the crosshatching in Section 22.
[[Image here]]
*277 ¶4 Sections 26 and 27 contain steep, cliff-like terrain. Thus, YR claims an easement from the north. As noted, Spannering Road is a public road from Howie Road south to the quarter corner of Sections 10 and 11. The dirt-and-gravel road then continues in a southerly direction, generally following the boundary lines between Sections 10 and 11 and Sections 14 and 15. The road turns southwesterly into Section 15’s southeast quarter and then, upon reaching some old ranch buildings, veers southeasterly and continues into Section 23. YR contends that its easement, shown below on Diagram II, follows this road to the old ranch buildings and then proceeds southwesterly to a point where it crosses the north boundary of YR’s Section 22 property.
[[Image here]]
Land Grants to the Railroads
¶5 The basis of YR’s easement claim requires an understanding of the land grants by Congress to railroad companies in the nineteenth century. The Supreme Court discussed the history of these grants in detail in
Leo Sheep Co. v. U.S.,
¶6 At this point, a short diversion is necessary. Pursuant to acts of Congress passed in the late 1700s and early 1800s, the public lands of the United States north of the Ohio River and west of the Mississippi River (except Texas) were surveyed into rectangular tracts called “townships.” Joyce Palomar, Patton and Palomar on Land Titles vol. 1, §116, 291, 294 (3d ed., West 2003); see also Walter G. Robillard & Donald A. Wilson, Brown’s Boundary Control and Legal Principles 125-66 (6th ed., John Wiley & Sons 2009) (discussing the development of the Public Land Survey System); Curtis M. Brown, Walter G. Robillard, & Donald A. Wilson, Evidence and Procedures for Boundary Location 179-200 (2d ed., John Wiley & Sons 1981) (same). With some exceptions not applicable here, each township is six miles square. A particular township’s location is identified relative to an east-west base line and a north-south principal meridian. See Palomar, Patton and Palomar on Land Titles at 294-95. In some states, there is more than one base line or principal meridian. In Montana, however, there is just one of each, as shown below on Diagram III. 2 The Montana Principal Meridian was adopted in 1867. It and Montana’s base line intersect in Gallatin County, near Willow Creek, Montana.
[[Image here]]
*279 As noted, YR’s and Meriwether’s properties are located in Township 1 North, Range 15 East, Montana Principal Meridian-meaning they are in the first east-west strip of townships lying north of the base line, and in the fifteenth north-south strip of townships lying east of the Montana Principal Meridian (each “strip” being six miles wide).
¶7 Townships are subdivided into 36 tracts called “sections.” In theory, each section is one mile square and contains 640 acres. 3 The sections are numbered consecutively, commencing with section 1 at the northeast corner and proceeding west to section 6; thence in the next tier proceeding east from section 7 to section 12; and so on, back and forth, until section 36 is reached in the southeast corner. Palomar, Patton and Palomar on Land Titles at 296. A subdivided and numbered township is shown in Diagram IV. 4
[[Image here]]
Of significance to the present discussion, it should be noted that even-numbered sections are bounded on four sides by odd-numbered sections, and vice versa. For example, section 22 is bounded by sections *280 15, 21, 23, and 27. This resulted in the “checkerboard” land-grant scheme referred to above and described below.
¶8 The backdrop of the
Leo Sheep
case was the Act of July 1,1862,12 Stat. 489, which granted public lands to the Union Pacific Railroad for each mile of track that it laid. Land surrounding the railway right-of-way was divided into “checkerboard” blocks. Odd-numbered sections were granted to Union Pacific, and even-numbered sections were reserved by the federal government, thus resulting in a checkerboard of public and private lots. Hence, Union Pacific land in the area of the right-of-way was usually surrounded by public land, and vice versa. The price of the government’s reserved sections was doubled so that it could be argued, in order to disarm the ‘Internal improvement” opponents, that by giving half the land away and thereby making possible construction of the railroad, the government would recover from the reserved sections as much as it would have received from the whole.
Leo Sheep,
¶9 The land grants made by the Union Pacific Act included the odd-numbered sections within 10 miles on either side of the track. But when Union Pacific’s original subscription drive for private investment proved a failure, the land grant was doubled by extending the checkerboard grants to 20 miles on either side of the track.
See
13 Stat. 356, 358 (1864). The Union Pacific Act specified a route west from the 100th meridian (in central Nebraska) to California. Construction commenced in July 1865, and thus began a race with the Central Pacific Railroad, which was laying track eastward from Sacramento, for the federal land grants which went with each mile of track laid. The race culminated in the driving of the golden spike at Promontory, Utah, on May 10, 1869.
Leo Sheep,
¶10 The backdrop of the present case is the Act of July 2, 1864, 13 Stat. 365, which created the Northern Pacific Railroad Company. 5 The Northern Pacific Act granted the company the right-of-way through *281 the public lands for the construction of a railroad and telegraph line, contemplated to be about 2,000 miles in length, from Lake Superior to Puget Sound. The Act also granted the company non-mineral public lands to subsidize the construction. Like the Union Pacific Act, the Northern Pacific Act involved a checkerboard land-grant scheme: Northern Pacific received odd-numbered sections; the federal government reserved even-numbered sections. The grant applied to land within 20 miles on either side of the track as it passed through any state, and 40 miles on either side of the track as it passed through any territory. Several other details of the legislation, explained below, are relevant to the parties’ arguments in the present case.
¶11 When the 1864 grant was made, substantially the entire country between Lake Superior and Puget Sound was untraveled and uninhabited except by Indians, very few of whom, at that time, were friendly to the United States.
Nelson v. N. Pac. Ry.
Co.,
¶12 Formerly, public lands that would probably be affected by a grant to a railroad company were, as soon as the grant was made, if not in advance of it, withdrawn from the market. But experience proved that this practice retarded the settlement of the country. Thus, by the 1860s, the rule was not to withdraw the lands until the railroad line was actually located. In this way, the ordinary working of the land system was not disturbed. Private entries, preemption, homestead
*282
settlements, and reservations for special uses continued within the supposed limits of the grant, the same as if the grant had not been made. But they ceased when the railroad route was definitely fixed. If it then appeared that a part of the lands within the limits of the grant had been sold at private entry, taken up by preemptors, or reserved by the United States, an equivalent, was provided.
Leavenworth, Lawrence, & Galveston R.R. Co. v.
U.S.,
¶13 For example, the grant to Northern Pacific included only those odd-numbered sections (within the 20-mile or 40-mile limits) to which the United States had full title, and which had not been previously reserved, sold, granted, or otherwise appropriated, and which were free from preemption or other claims or rights,
at the time the railroad line was definitely fixed.
¶14 The Northern Pacific Act called for a railroad and telegraph line “by the Northern Route.” The Act did not specify the precise course; it merely stated that the line was to begin at a point on Lake Superior and proceed “westerly by the most eligible railroad route, as shall be determined by said company, within the territory of the United States, on a line north of the forty-fifth degree of latitude to some point on Puget’s Sound.”
¶15 Whenever 25 consecutive miles of any portion of the railroad line became ready for service, the President was to appoint three commissioners to examine the same. If it appeared that the line had been completed in a good, substantial, and workmanlike manner, patents were to be issued to Northern Pacific for the lands situated opposite to, and coterminous with, the completed portion. This procedure was to be repeated as each stretch of 25 miles was completed.
¶16 The upshot of this scheme is that the issuance of the patent did not mark the point in time when title to the land vested in Northern Pacific. Title vested as of the date of the 1864 grant. But the identity of the odd-numbered sections to which the title attached was not determined until the railroad line was definitely located and the government survey completed. ‘Obviously, until surveyed, no odd-numbered sections could exist.”
U.S. v. N. Pac. Ry. Co.,
¶17 Moreover, at that point, the company’s title attached to only those odd-numbered sections which had not been granted, sold, reserved, occupied by homestead settlers, preempted, or otherwise disposed of during the intervening years. In the interim, Congress could dispose of the public lands along the general route of the railroad as it saw proper, provision having been made for the indemnification of the company if an odd-numbered section to which it would have been entitled was no longer available.
Sanders,
History of Property Ownership
¶18 In 1872, Northern Pacific filed in the General Land Office a map of the general route of its railroad through Montana. Construction westward from Minnesota reached the Yellowstone River in Montana in 1880. Meanwhile, the company began building eastward from Washington Territory in 1879. The definite location of the railroad line through the area of the parties’ properties was fixed in 1881. Eastward and westward extensions met at a point in Montana (at Gold Creek,
*285
northwest of Garrison) in 1883.
See Sanders,
¶19 In 1877, the Surveyor General approved the survey of that portion of Township 1 North, Range 15 East, lying north and east of the Yellowstone River (where the parties’ properties are situated). Thereafter, when the railroad line was definitely located, this township came within the 1864 checkerboard grant. Northern Pacific’s title attached to the odd-numbered sections which had not already been appropriated to other purposes. Of relevance here, Northern Pacific’s title attached to Sections 11,15, and 23, and the northeastern portion of Section 27. A patent was issued to Northern Pacific for these and other sections in 1896. 7 The United States, on the other hand, retained ownership of Section 22, which did not have a public road running through or adjacent to it. Thus, one would have to cross Northern Pacific’s land in order to reach Section 22.
¶20 In 1906, Northern Pacific conveyed Sections 11,15, and 23 to John P. Halverson. In 1908, Northern Pacific conveyed its interest in Section 27 to Waborn A. Harrison. Through subsequent transfers, these lands passed to Meriwether in 2006.
¶21 Meanwhile, Raymond L. Becker commenced a homestead entry 8 on the west side of Section 22 in 1915. Raymond, his wife, and their two children maintained continuous residence on the property and cultivated flax, wheat, and winter wheat. On June 10,1919, the United States issued Raymond a patent for 326.86 acres. During this same period, Raymond’s brother, Eugene C. Becker, filed a homestead claim on the eastern 240 acres of Section 22. Eugene established residence on that land in 1912 and was issued his patent on July 24, 1919. Raymond’s and Eugene’s properties are shown here on Diagram V.
*286 [[Image here]]
¶22 Raymond fell victim to influenza and died in 1919. His real property was distributed in equal shares to his wife (Maijorie) and their two children. Marjorie soon relocated to Nebraska in order to be closer to family support, and it appears that no one has lived on the Section 22 property since. In his deposition in the instant case, however, Maijorie’s son-in-law recalled that Maijorie and other family members made summer visits to the property over the years and that the property was leased at various times for grazing purposes. Ultimately, the 326.86 acres were acquired by YR. (YR is comprised of two members, one of whom is Raymond’s grandson.) Eugene’s 240 acres, on the other hand, are now owned by Meriwether.
¶23 At no point after Northern Pacific’s title attached to the odd-numbered sections has the west side of Section 22 been held in common ownership with Sections 15, 23, or 27. It is apparent, then, that Raymond had to cross property owned by other parties in order to reach his Section 22 property. As a result, YR initially alleged an easement by prescription. However, YR was not able to show continuous and uninterrupted use of this route for the requisite statutory period, 9 and YR has not appealed the District Court’s order granting summary judgment to Meriwether on YR’s prescriptive easement claim. Also, YR did not oppose Meriwether’s motion for summary judgment on YR’s private condemnation claim under Title 70, chapter 30, MCA, and YR has not appealed the District Court’s order granting that motion. The only theory now pursued by YR is an easement by necessity. The District Court granted Meriwether’s *287 motion for summary judgment, and denied YR’s cross-motion for summary judgment, on this claim. The court’s reasoning is discussed below, where relevant.
STANDARD OF REVIEW
¶24 We review summary judgment rulings de novo, applying the same criteria as did the district court under M. R. Civ. P. 56.
Shattuck v. Kalispell Regl. Med. Ctr., Inc.,
DISCUSSION
¶25 An easement may be created by an instrument in writing, by operation of law, or by prescription.
Blazer v. Wall,
¶26 Concisely stated, there are two essential elements of an easement by necessity: unity of ownership and strict necessity, both of which the proponent of the easement must prove by clear and convincing evidence.
Frame v. Huber,
¶27 For starters, the parties disagree regarding the point in time at which unity of title should be analyzed. In Meriwether’s view, that point is June 1919 when the United States issued Raymond Becker his patent for the west side of Section 22 and thereby established the parcel of land presently owned by YR. Proceeding on this premise, Meriwether argues that the “unity of title” element fails because the United States, at that time (i.e., in June 1919), did not own two of the alleged servient properties (Sections 11 and 15) in common ownership *288 with the alleged dominant property (Section 22). 10 This was the analysis adopted by the District Court in its order. YR, on the other hand, argues that unity of title is satisfied because the United States owned all of these sections in common ownership until title to the odd-numbered sections transferred to Northern Pacific, at which point Section 22 became landlocked.
¶28 The parties also differ as to the “strict necessity” element. Meriwether argues that, even if unity of title is considered as of the date when title transferred to Northern Pacific, YR has failed to show that a public road could be accessed, at that time, from Section 22 by crossing Sections 11 and 15. In this connection, Meriwether points out that a way of necessity may exist only across land that had access to a public road when the property was divided.
See Watson v. Dundas,
2006 MT104, ¶ 33,
*289 [[Image here]]
¶29 YR’s and Meriwether’s arguments reflect some confusion regarding the rules for implying easements by necessity. Moreover, although the issue has arisen in some of our prior cases, we have not squarely considered such easements in the specific context of federal checkerboard land grants to the railroads. 11 It is useful, therefore, to discuss the doctrine of implied easements in further detail before addressing the parties’ arguments.
Implied Easements
¶30 As noted, we recognize two types of implied easements: easements by necessity and easements by existing use. Easements by necessity are typically implied to provide access to a landlocked parcel, while easements by existing use are based on a landowner’s prior use of part of his property (the quasi-servient tenement) for the benefit of another
*290
part of his property (the quasi-dominant tenement).
12
Jon W. Bruce & James W. Ely, Jr.,
The Law of Easements and Licenses in Land
§4:2, 4-3 to 4-4 (Thomson Reuters 2011) (hereinafter, ‘Bruce & Ely”). For an easement by necessity to arise, there must be unity of ownership, severance, and strict necessity (i.e., no practical access to a public road from the landlocked parcel except across the remaining land of the grantor). Also, the necessity must exist at the time the unified tracts are severed and at the time of exercise of the easement.
Watson,
¶¶ 32-33. For an easement by existing use to arise, there must be unity of ownership, severance, and an apparent, continuous, and reasonably necessary use of the quasi-servient tenement for the beneficial use and enjoyment of the quasi-dominant tenement. Also, the parties must have intended the use to continue after the severance.
Waters v. Blagg,
¶31 There are two principal rationales underlying implied easements: the inferred intent theory and the public policy theory. See Bruce & Ely, §4:5, 4-11 to 4-13, §4:15, 4-61 to 4-62; Gerald Korngold, Private Land Use Arrangements: Easements, Real Covenants, and Equitable Servitudes §3:09(c), (d) 46-49 (2d ed., Juris Publg. 2004) (hereinafter, ‘Korngold’); Restatement (Third) of Property: Servitudes §2.15 cmt. a (2000). As to the inferred intent theory, it has been said that
where the owner of a single area of land conveys away part of it, the circumstances attending the conveyance may themselves, without aid of language in the deed, and indeed sometimes in spite of such language, cause an easement to arise as between the two parcels thus created-mot only in favor of the parcel granted (‘implied grant’) but also in favor of the one remaining in the ownership of the grantor (‘implied reservation’). The basis of the doctrine is that the law reads into the instrument that which the circumstances show both grantor and grantee must have intended, had they given the obvious facts of the transaction proper consideration.
Mitchell v. Castellaw,
¶32 The public policy theory, on the other hand, is premised on the view that ‘lands should not be rendered unfit for occupancy or successful cultivation by a lack of access.”
Bob Daniels and Sons v. Weaver,
¶33 Yet, although our cases have referred to this public policy, we have never implied an easement based solely on the notion that a tract of land should not be isolated. To the contrary, we have stated that implied easements ‘have never been intended to provide access across the land of others to benefit any and all landlocked property.”
Frame,
¶ 10. We have emphasized that implied easements are considered with “extreme caution” and that courts are “reluctant” to find such easements for the reason that they deprive the servient landowner of property rights by imposing a servitude through mere implication and without any compensation.
Graham,
¶34 In a sense, then, it may be said that the public policy favoring access to property serves as an underlying justification for implying an easement where the parties failed to address the issue themselves in the transaction documents, but that such implications are limited to narrow situations: the doctrine applies only to the transaction (i.e., severance) which created the access issue in the first place, and where the parties’ intent to include an easement may reasonably be inferred from the circumstances.
See e.g. Murphy v. Burch,
¶35 With an easement by necessity, the alleged dominant and servient tenements must have been held in common ownership-either as a single tract of land or as contiguous tracts of land-and the property held in common ownership must have been severed (i.e., part of it transferred to another party) in such a way that a portion of the property became landlocked.
Frame,
¶ 12;
see also Thompson on Real Property
vol. 7, §60.03(b)(5)(iii), 506 (2d Thomas ed., Matthew Bender 2006) (TA]n easement by necessity cannot be created unless the dominant and servient tenements were originally one piece of property.”);
Campbell v. Summit Plaza Assocs.,
¶36 Similarly, with an easement by existing use, the alleged dominant and servient tenements must have been held in common ownership, and there must have been, at the time of severance, an apparent, continuous, and reasonably necessary use of the servient part of the property for the benefit of the dominant part. Waters, ¶ 14. It is from the existence of this quasi-easement that it may be inferred that the parties intended the use to continue, and thus the quasi-easement ripens into a true easement upon severance. Bruce & Ely, §4:15, 4-60 (‘Easements may be implied from a landowner’s use of part of the landowner’s property ... for the benefit of another part....”).
Unity of Title
¶37 It can be seen from these principles that the District Court’s analysis with respect to unity of title (the same approach that Meriwether argues on appeal) is incorrect. The District Court concluded that the relevant severance occurred in 1919 when Raymond Becker received his patent from the United States for the western side of Section 22. The court based this conclusion on the view that this ‘is the date when the parcel owned today by YR was created.” The court then reasoned that because the United States did not also own the servient parcels (the neighboring odd-numbered sections) at that time, *294 there was no common ownership at the time of severance and YR’s claim, therefore, failed.
¶38 The relevant severance for purposes of an easement by necessity, however, is the severance that creates the necessity for an easement. Restatement (Third) of Property: Servitudes §2.15 cmt. c (‘[Easements by necessity] will be implied only in conveyances that cause the necessity to arise.’). This occurs when the alleged dominant and servient tenements are severed from common ownership and the dominant estate is left isolated as a result. Frame, ¶ 12 (“Unity of ownership is established if the dominant and servient parcels were owned by one person or entity immediately prior to the severance that gives rise to necessity.’); Bruce & Ely, §4:7, 4-26 (‘Unity of title must have produced the circumstances that led to the isolation of the dominant estate. In other words, common ownership must have immediately preceded the severance that created the necessity.” (footnote omitted)); Thompson on Real Property §60.03(b)(5)(iii), 507 (“For an easement by necessity to be implied, the severance creating the dominant and servient tenement must have created a situation in which there was no access for the dominant tenement to some public roadway.’). Hence, if the alleged dominant and servient parcels were never held in common ownership, or if the particular severance did not leave the dominant estate isolated, then the inferred intent theory fails and the doctrine of easement by necessity simply has no application. But, if the alleged dominant and servient parcels were held in common ownership, and if a severance of that unified property resulted in a landlocked parcel and a non-landlocked parcel, then it is inferred that the common owner intended at the time of severance to grant or reserve an easement over the non-landlocked parcel for the benefit of the landlocked one. (Of course, as discussed in the next section, this inference may fail if “strict necessity” does not actually exist or if there is proof of contrary intent on the part of the parties.)
¶39 In June 1919, when the United States issued Raymond a patent for the western side of Section 22 and retained the eastern side of Section 22 (recall that the patent for the eastern side was issued to Eugene in July 1919), the entirety of Section 22 was already landlocked. 13 The severance that created YR’s property, therefore, did *295 not create the necessity for an easement over the neighboring odd-numbered sections. Indeed, the access issue already existed due to the checkerboard land grant to Northern Pacific several decades earlier. In this respect, the District Court correctly concluded that an easement by necessity could not have arisen out of the issuance of Raymond’s patent: at that point, the United States no longer owned Sections 11 and 15 (the alleged servient parcels), and thus there is no basis for inferring that the United States intended to reserve an easement by necessity over those sections for Section 22’s benefit.
¶40 The District Court erred, however, in not considering the severance that did create the alleged necessity for an easement. The District Court rejected YR’s argument that unity of title existed up to the point when the United States transferred its interest in the odd-numbered sections to Northern Pacific. The District Court expressed concern that if it “determined that the land was severed at the time that the Railroads were granted lands, that could conceivably impact thousands of landholders in Montana alone.” Yet, while this is a legitimate concern (as indicated by the Supreme Court in Leo Sheep, discussed in further detail below), it is not pertinent to the unity of title question.
¶41 Determining when the relevant severance occurred is more complicated in this case due to the “in praesenti” nature of the grant to Northern Pacific. As explained above (see ¶¶ 12, 14, supra), title vested in 1864 as of the date of the grant. But the grant was in the nature of a float, and the company’s title did not attach to any specific sections until they were capable of identification. Meanwhile, the ordinary working of the land system continued within the supposed limits of the grant, the same as if the grant had not been made. Thus, no “necessity” for an implied easement yet existed. Once the government survey was completed and the railroad line definitely located, however, the company’s title attached to the non-mineral odd-numbered sections that had not already been appropriated to other purposes. Only if the ultimate configuration of Northern Pacific’s ownership left a given even-numbered section landlocked could it then be claimed that a necessity existed. Accordingly, the date of severance for purposes of our analysis is the date when the relevant odd-numbered sections subject to the 1864 grant were identified and an adjacent even-numbered section was then found to be landlocked.
*296 ¶42 Here, the survey was completed in 1877, and the definite location of the railroad line was fixed in 1881. Prior to this point, Sections 10,11,14,15, 22, 23, and 27 were part of the public domain. This is the only time that the alleged dominant and servient tenements were held in any sort of “common ownership” (by the United States) as a unified tract of land. This common ownership was severed when Northern Pacific’s title attached to the odd-numbered sections in 1881. This severance created a situation where Section 22 no longer had access to a public roadway; in other words, Section 22 became isolated when Northern Pacific’s title attached in 1881. Thus, the severance caused by the checkerboard land grant is the severance that gave rise to the alleged necessity for an easement over Sections 11 and 15. Common ownership by the United States immediately preceded the severance that created the necessity.
¶43 Meriwether relies heavily on
Kullick v. Skyline Homeowners Assn., Inc.,
¶44 One further point should be noted here. In making its arguments, Meriwether overlooks the fact that when a dominant estate is transferred in separate parcels to different persons, each grantee acquires a right to use easements appurtenant to the dominant estate, provided the easements can be enjoyed as to the separate parcels without any additional burden on the servient estate.
Mularoni v. Bing,
Strict Necessity and Contrary Intent
¶45 Having concluded that unity of title exists, we address whether “strict necessity” is met. We also must consider whether any of the circumstances surrounding the severance negate the inference that the United States intended to reserve an easement.
¶46 “An easement of necessity is extinguished when the necessity on which it is based ends.”Bruce & Ely, §10:9,10-21;
accord Restatement (Third) of Property: Servitudes
§4.3 cmt. b (‘Because necessity is the justification for the servitude, its duration is limited to the period of necessity.” (citation omitted)). Thus, we have said repeatedly that ‘tsjtrict necessity must exist at the time the tracts are severed from the original ownership
and
at the time the easement is exercised.”
Frame,
¶ 14 (emphasis in original);
accord Ashby,
¶ 22;
Watson,
¶ 32;
Loomis v. Luraski,
¶47 A developed way of access to the landlocked parcel need not actually exist at the time of severance. Indeed, this is the fundamental distinction between an easement by necessity and an easement by existing use.
Frame,
¶ 14;
Graham,
¶48 As noted, Meriwether makes much of the fact that YR has not presented evidence of a public road, accessible by crossing Sections 11 and 15, in 1864. Meriwether is mistaken, however, in its assumption that a public road must be shown to exist in 1864. The necessity for an implied easement did not arise until 1881, when it was determined that Sections 11, 15, 23, and 27 were subject to the 1864 grant, Northern Pacific’s title attached to those sections, and Section 22 was found to be landlocked. See ¶¶ 41-42, supra. By that time, there was a public road across Sections 9, 10, 11, 12, and 13, as depicted on the 1877 survey provided by YR. See Diagram VI, ¶ 28, supra.
¶49 On the other hand, there is some validity in Meriwether’s *299 alternative argument that strict necessity could not have existed because the United States had the power to condemn an access road for the benefit of Section 22. As Meriwether and YR both acknowledge, this question surfaced in Ashby, but we did not render a holding because the parties had not properly preserved and briefed the issue. See Ashby, ¶ 25 (opinion of the Court), ¶ 49 (Leaphart & Rice, JJ., specially concurring), ¶¶ 50-71 (Nelson, J., dissenting). Moreover, Ashby involved property held in common ownership by a subdivision of state government (specifically, Ravalli County), not by the federal government, and thus Ashby is distinguishable on that ground.
¶50
Leo Sheep,
on the other hand, specifically addressed the point now argued by Meriwether. As discussed,
Leo Sheep
involved a checkerboard land grant like the present case: odd-numbered sections were granted to Union Pacific; even-numbered sections were reserved by the United States. Leo Sheep Co. and Palm Livestock Co. were Union Pacific’s successors in fee to specific odd-numbered sections of land in Wyoming. When a dispute arose over the public’s ability to access a nearby reservoir used for fishing and hunting, the federal government cleared a dirt road extending from a local county road to the reservoir across both public domain lands and fee lands of Leo Sheep.
Leo Sheep,
¶51 The Union Pacific Act included a few specific reservations to the checkerboard grant, such as mineral lands and land sold, reserved, or otherwise disposed of by the United States, but it did not contain an express reservation of the easement asserted by the Government. Thus, the Government argued an implicit reservation of an easement by necessity.
Leo Sheep,
The applicability of the doctrine of easement by necessity in this case is, therefore, somewhat strained, and ultimately of little significance. The pertinent inquiry in this case is the intent of Congress when it granted land to the Union Pacific in 1862. The 1862 Act specifically listed reservations to the grant, and we do not find the tenuous relevance of the common-law doctrine of ways of necessity sufficient to overcome the inference prompted by the omission of any reference to the reserved right asserted by the Government in this case. It is possible that Congress gave the problem of access little thought; but it is at least as likely that the thought which was given focused on negotiation, reciprocity considerations, and the power of eminent domain as obvious devices for ameliorating disputes. So both as a matter of common-law doctrine and as a matter of construing congressional intent, we are unwilling to imply rights-of-way, with the substantial impact that such implication would have on property rights granted over 100 years ago, in the absence of a stronger case for their implication than the Government makes here.
Leo Sheep,
It is certainly true that the problem we confront today was not a matter of great concern during the time the 1862 railroad grants were made. The order of the day was the open range-barbed wire had not made its presence felt-and the type of incursions on private property necessary to reach public land was not such an interference that litigation would serve any motive other than spite. Congress obviously believed that when development came, it would occur in a parallel fashion on adjoining public and private lands and that the process of subdivision, organization of a polity, and the ordinary pressures of commercial and social *301 intercourse would work itself into a pattern of access roads.
Leo Sheep,
¶52 In
Murphy,
the California Supreme Court concluded that “conveyances involving a sovereign as the common owner typically do not give rise to implied
reservations
of easements or other property interests in conveyed land.”
Given the unique historical and legal nature of land patents, extreme caution must be exercised in determining whether the circumstances surrounding a government land grant are sufficient to overcome the inference prompted by the omission of an express reference to a reserved right of access. In such cases, the easement claimant bears the burden of producing evidence on the issues regarding the government’s intent to reserve an easement and the government’s lack of power to condemn.
Murphy,
¶53 The approach adopted by the Supreme Court of California is consistent with the reasoning of Leo Sheep, which focused both on the lack of strict necessity (due to the power of eminent domain) and, most significantly, on the intent of Congress. We will utilize the same approach when analyzing an alleged easement by necessity where, as here, the claimant traces common ownership of the dominant and servient parcels back to the federal government and the necessity for the easement arose when those parcels were severed from the federal *302 government’s common ownership. The claimant bears the burden of producing evidence on the issues regarding the government’s intent to reserve an easement and the government’s lack of power to condemn an easement.
¶54 In the present case, Meriwether suggests that, before issuing Raymond his patent, the United States could have condemned an easement for the benefit of Section 22, thus negating the notion of “strict necessity.” YR, for its part, has not endeavored to show otherwise. But even more problematic for YR is the evident intent of the United States
not
to reserve the easement YR claims. Like the Union Pacific Act, the Northern Pacific Act includes a few specific reservations to the checkerboard grant, such as mineral lands and land sold, reserved, or otherwise disposed of by the United States prior to the date of definite location of the railroad line. However, there is not an express reservation of an ingress/egress roadway across every odd-numbered section granted to Northern Pacific in favor of every even-numbered section reserved by the United States. YR asserts that the United States “contemplated” homesteading for such lands, yet YR points to no language in the Northern Pacific Act (or in the Homestead Act) granting or reserving the right to cross Northern Pacific’s property for homesteading purposes. In fact, the Northern Pacific Act recognizes that there may be homestead entries upon the lands within the supposed limits of the grant
before
the railroad line is definitely located and Northern Pacific’s title attaches. But there is no reservation of a right to cross sections to which the company’s title has attached. As the Supreme Court indicated, the doctrine of easements by necessity is not “sufficient to overcome the inference prompted by the omission of any reference [in the Northern Pacific Act] to the reserved right asserted by [YR] in this case.”
Leo Sheep,
¶55 Thus, the checkerboard land grant to Northern Pacific presents an instance where the inferred intent to create an easement fails. As stated above, if the alleged dominant and servient parcels were held in common ownership, and if a severance of that unified property
*303
resulted in a landlocked parcel and a non-landlocked parcel, then it is inferred that the common owner intended at the time of severance to grant or reserve an easement over the non-landlocked parcel for the benefit of the landlocked one. ‘The implication will not be made, however, where it is shown to be contrary to the parties’ intentions.”
Murphy,
¶56 As a final matter, YR cites
Mont. Wilderness Assn. v. U.S. Forest Serv.,
CONCLUSION
¶57 The District Court erred in concluding that unity of title did not exist in this case. Returning to the discussion of implied easements (¶¶ 30-36, supra), the “unity of title” requirement was fulfilled because immediately prior to the 1881 severance, the United States owned all of what would become the alleged servient parcels (the odd-numbered sections granted to Northern Pacific under the 1864 Act) over which YR claims an easement, along with what would become the alleged dominant parcel (Section 22), a portion of which YR now owns. In 1881, Sections 11, 15, 23, and 27 became subject to the 1864 grant, Northern Pacific’s title attached to those sections, and Section 22 thereby became landlocked, thus giving rise to an ostensible necessity for an implied easement. The easement fails, however, because the United States’ power of eminent domain negates the “strict necessity” requirement. Furthermore, the conscious decision by Congress to include specific reservations in the grant to Northern Pacific is evidence that Congress did not intend for there to be other, implicit reservations-such as the access easement YR claims in this case. Finally, because implied easements are not favored in the law, we will not ground the creation of such an easement in public policy where, as here, doing so would not only be at odds with federal jurisprudence, but would also have the potential to affect and destabilize thousands of other land titles.
¶58 For these reasons, Meriwether is entitled to judgment as a matter of law on YR’s claim of easement by necessity. We will not reverse a district court when it reaches the right result, even if it reached that result for the wrong reason.
Wells Fargo Bank v.
*305
Talmage,
¶59 Affirmed.
Notes
Diagram I and Diagrams II, V, and VI (below) are included in the record, with some labeling added and editorial modification for clarity.
Diagram III was obtained from the U.S. Bureau of Land Management website: http://www.blm.gov/wo/st/en/prog/more/cadastralsurvey/meridians.html.
Due to the earth’s curvature, meridians converge as they approach the north. Thus, it is inherently impossible to lay out a square section with its lateral boundaries oriented to true north. Due to this fact, and due to the limitations of the surveying equipment used at the time, sections are not always exactly one mile square.
See
Walter G. Robillard & Lane J. Bouman,
Clark on Surveying and Boundaries
§5:15, 139-40 (7th ed., Lexis Law 1997); Palomar,
Patton and Palomar on Land Titles
at 298;
Maricopa Co. v. Pima Co.,
Diagram IV was obtained from
Dykes v. Arnold,
The Northern Pacific Railroad Company and its property were acquired by the Northern Pacific Railway Company in 1896.
See N. Pac. Ry. Co. v. Boyd,
The two 10-mile strips were known as the “indemnity belts” or “indemnity limits.”
See U.S. v. N. Pac. Ry. Co.,
YR and Meriwether both state in their briefs that the patent was issued in 1897. This is incorrect. Patent No. 22 (identified in the record as Meriwether’s Exhibit 8), which includes Township 1 North, Range 15 East, is dated July 24, 1896, on its last page. The 1897 date underneath (on the same page) is the date the document was ‘filed for record” by the Sweet Grass County Clerk and Recorder.
Act of May 20,1862,12 Stat. 392, and the acts supplemental thereto.
The statutory period was five years prior to 1893, ten years from 1893 to 1953, and five years since 1953.
See Heller v. Gremaux,
Incidentally, in June 1919, the United States still owned the relevant parts of the even-numbered sections over which YEt’s alleged easement passes-namely, the southeast quarter of Section 10 and the western side of Section 14. Based on homestead entries, the United States issued patents for the southeast quarter of Section 10 in 1921 and for the north and south halves of Section 14 in 1920.
The issue arose in
State v. Cronin,
An easement implied from existing use is sometimes called a “quasi-easement” before the property is divided, because a person cannot hold an easement in her own land.
Albert G. Hoyem Trust v. Galt,
It should be noted that Raymond’s homestead entry in 1915 had the effect of withdrawing his land from the public domain, and the patent issued in 1919 related back to the date of Raymond’s 1915 entry.
See U.S. v. Etcheverry,
The same principle can be seen in
Graham,
which we discussed in
Kullick,
¶ 26. At the time of the first severance, the grantor (Collingson) disclaimed any intent to access his retained land by crossing the land of his grantee (Graham).
Graham,
Our analysis in
Kelly v. Burlington N. R.R.
Co.,
In
Herrin v. Sieben,
