RENDERED: APRIL 16, 2021; 10:00 A.M.
NOT TO BE PUBLISHED
Commonwealth of Kentucky
Court of Appeals
NO. 2019-CA-1538 -MR
ARLENE RAMSEY APPELLANT
APPEAL FROM BRECKINRIDGE CIRCUIT COURT
v. HONORABLE BRUCE T. BUTLER, JUDGE
ACTION NO. 17-CI-00095
DONALD G. KEESEE; IVAN N.
BENNETT, JR.; AND PATRICIA F.
KEESEE APPELLEES
OPINION
AFFIRMING
** ** ** ** **
BEFORE: ACREE, KRAMER, AND TAYLOR, JUDGES.
ACREE, JUDGE: Appellant, Arlene Ramsey, appeals the Breckinridge Circuit
Court’s November 28, 2018 Findings of Fact, Conclusions of Law, and Judgment
concluding appellees, Donald G. Keesee, Patricia F. Keesee, (the “Keesees”), and
Ivan N. Bennett, Jr. (collectively, “the appellees”), acquired a prescriptive
easement in a road located on the easternmost boundary of her property. Ramsey
also appeals from the circuit court’s September 11, 2019 Findings of Fact,
Conclusions of Law, and Judgment defining the location, permitted uses, and
termination point of the easement. Upon careful consideration, we affirm.
BACKGROUND
Ramsey owns approximately 145.226 acres of rural farmland in
Breckinridge County, Kentucky. She acquired the farm in 2004 upon the death of
her husband, Charles Ramsey, who inherited it from his parents in 1976. Since
1976 the property has been used primarily to raise cattle and crops.
The appellees own nearly all the property adjacent to Ramsey’s
eastern boundary line.1 Originally, all the appellees’ properties were part of one
large farm owned by Owen and Veteur Bennett. In 1975 the Keesees purchased
21.33 acres of the Owen and Veteur Bennett farm. This tract of land begins at the
northeast corner of Ramsey’s property and runs south, along its eastern boundary.
In 2006, Ivan N. Bennett, Jr., the grandson of Owen and Veteur
Bennett, purchased 15.939 acres of the Owen and Veteur Bennett farm.2 This tract
borders the southern boundary of the Keesees’ 21.33-acre tract and continues
south, along the eastern boundary of the Ramsey farm.
1
For visual reference, see Ramsey’s Exhibit 5. (Record (“R.”) at 287).
2
Tract 4 on Ramsey’s Exhibit 5.
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In 2016 the Keesees purchased an additional 13.537 acres3 from
Darlene Bennett, the daughter-in-law of Owen and Veteur Bennett. This tract
borders the southern boundary of Ivan N. Bennett, Jr.’s tract and continues south,
along the eastern boundary of Ramsey’s property. Taken together, the property
owned by the appellees extends nearly the entire eastern boundary of Ramsey’s
farm.
The dispute in this case concerns the use of a road (“the road”) that
runs along the entirety of Ramsey’s eastern boundary. The road connects at its
southern point to a county road – Pile Ford Road – which runs directly into
Kentucky Highway 401. The road lies entirely on Ramsey’s property but is
bordered to the east by the appellees.
In 2017, Donald Keesee began maintenance on the road without
Ramsey’s consent. In response, Ramsey erected a gate across the southern point of
the road and placed a lock on it to prevent anyone who did not have a key from
using the road. The appellees sued Ramsey, seeking an order directing her to
remove the lock from the gate to allow the unobstructed use of the road. Ramsey
answered the complaint and filed a counterclaim against the Keesees seeking
compensatory and punitive damages, and attorney’s fees.
3
Tract 5 on Ramsey’s Exhibit 5.
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The parties waived trial by jury, and the case was tried before the
circuit bench. At the close of evidence, the only issue remaining for the judge to
decide was whether the appellees had acquired a prescriptive easement. The
circuit court found:
(9) Mr. Keesee has used the road as a way of accessing
Kentucky Highway 401 from the 21.33 acres he and
his wife purchased in 1975. Until he purchased an
additional tract of property in 2016 he had never been
told he could not use the road and in fact he had never
asked if he could use the road. He used the road by
using his ATV or a truck. Donald Keesee has used
the road an average of two or three times a week since
1975.
....
(12) Ivan N. Bennett, Jr. and his mother and father have
used the road for many years to access the property
owned by the Keesees at the northern end of the road
and also to access property that Ivan N. Bennett, Jr.
purchased from his grandmother in 2006. He and his
mother and father used the road with a truck to access
the property owned by Keesee at the northern end of
the property for camping purposes. They used the
road to haul out firewood and generally for access to
Highway 401. This use spans at least forty (40) years.
(13) The road has been fenced on both sides most of its
existence. . . . there had been an opening placed on
the east fence to allow access to the road from the
property owned by the Bennetts and Keesees on the
east side of the road. The purpose was to move grain
and farm products by accessing Kentucky Highway
401.
....
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(16) The Bennetts and Keesees never asked for permission
to use the road. They always used it openly and
without interference until [Ramsey] had a gate placed
across the road with a lock after Donald Keesee
purchased some property in 2016.
Based in part on these findings, the circuit court determined the
appellees “and their predecessors in title acquired a prescriptive easement over the
road by actual, hostile, open and notorious, exclusive and continuous possession of
the road for the statutory period of fifteen (15) years.”
Ramsey filed a motion pursuant to CR4 59.05 asking the circuit court
to clarify the location and permitted uses of the prescriptive easement. After
hearing the issues and making factual findings, the circuit court concluded “the
road bed shall be twelve (12) feet wide and the easement containing the road bed
shall be thirty (30) feet wide.” It further concluded the appellees have the right to
use the road for purposes of ingress and egress for agricultural and recreational
purposes and to maintain the road in a reasonable manner. This appeal followed.
STANDARD OF REVIEW
When a circuit court holds a bench trial and serves as the finder of
fact, those findings of fact shall not be set aside unless clearly erroneous. CR
52.01; Owens-Corning Fiberglas Corp. v. Golightly, 976 S.W.2d 409, 414 (Ky.
4
Kentucky Rules of Civil Procedure.
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1998). Findings of fact are clearly erroneous if they are not supported by
substantial evidence. Moore v. Asente, 110 S.W.3d 336 (Ky. 2003). Evidence is
substantial if, “when taken alone, or in the light of all the evidence, it has sufficient
probative value to induce conviction in the minds of reasonable [people].”
Janakakis-Kostun v. Janakakis, 6 S.W.3d 843, 852 (Ky. App. 1999).
Due regard must be given to the circuit judge’s opportunity to
consider the credibility of the witnesses. CR. 52.01; Cherry v. Cherry, 634 S.W.2d
423 (Ky. 1982). Even if this Court would have reached a contrary conclusion, we
will not disturb the circuit court’s findings that are supported by substantial
evidence. The circuit court’s conclusions of law are subject to an independent de
novo review. Gosney v. Glenn, 163 S.W.3d 894 (Ky. App. 2005).
ANALYSIS
“Generally, an easement may be created by express written grant,
implication, prescription or estoppel.” Gosney, 163 S.W.3d at 899. The law
governing prescriptive easements is derived from the principles underlying adverse
possession. “As with adverse possession of a fee simple estate, a prescriptive
easement can be acquired by actual, hostile, open and notorious, exclusive, and
continuous possession of the property for the statutory period of fifteen years.”
Columbia Gas Transmission Corp. v. Consol of Kentucky, Inc., 15 S.W.3d 727,
730 (Ky. 2000).
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On appeal, Ramsey asserts: (1) the Keesees’ use of the road was not
open and notorious; (2) Ivan N. Bennett, Jr.’s use of the road was not hostile; (3)
the circuit court erred by not properly limiting the prescriptive easement to the use
and location established during the prescriptive period; and (4) any easement over
the portion of the road north of the “Tate House”5 was abandoned. We limit our
discussion to these specific contentions.
Substantial evidence supports the finding that Donald Keesee’s use of the road
was open and notorious.
“The ‘open and notorious’ element requires that the possessor openly
evince a purpose to hold dominion over the property with such hostility that will
give the nonpossessory owner notice of the adverse claim.” Appalachian Reg’l
Healthcare, Inc. v. Royal Crown Bottling Co., 824 S.W.2d 878, 880 (Ky. 1992).
Such possession must be “conspicuous and not secret, so that the legal title holder
has notice of the adverse use.” Id. (citing Sweeten v. Sartin, 256 S.W.2d 524, 526
(Ky. 1953)). The purpose of this requirement is simple – “to give the owner of the
servient estate ample opportunity to protect against the establishment of
prescriptive rights.” Ellington v. Becraft, 534 S.W.3d 785, 795 (Ky. 2017).
5
The “Tate House” sits approximately halfway along the road, where the southwestern corner of
Ivan N. Bennett, Jr.’s property (Tract 4) connects with the northwest corner of the Keesees’
13.537 acre tract (Tract 5). The road north of the “Tate House” is a wooded area overgrown with
trees and vegetation.
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Ramsey does not live on the farm and claims she never saw Donald
Keesee use the road until he purchased the second tract of land in 2016. She
contends that Donald Keesee’s use of the road two or three times per week did not
constitute “open and notorious” possession because it was insufficient to put her on
notice that he was using the road. Specifically, she claims that his use of the road
would leave no physical evidence to put her on notice of his use of the road,
especially given the fact that other people used the road with her permission. And,
that she “should not have to get on her hands and knees and review tire tracks to
determine if they are from an adverse user or someone allowed to be on the
property.”
Kentucky jurisprudence is clear that “[i]t is the legal owner’s
knowledge, either actual or imputable, of another’s possession of lands that affects
the ownership.” Appalachian Reg’l Healthcare, 824 S.W.2d at 880 (emphasis
added). As clearly stated by our Supreme Court:
To start the running of the statute of limitations, the
disseizor must have an actual possession; it must be an
open, notorious, and visible possession; it must be a selfish
or exclusive possession, that is the disseizor must hold
possession for himself to the exclusion of the true owner,
and all others; it must be a hostile possession, not only as
against the true owner but as against the world; it must be
a definite possession, that is its confines must be marked
by an inclosure or other plainly visible indications; the
disseizor must fly his flag, and indicate the lines of his
dominion, the extent of his possession must be evident;
and it must be a possession under a claim by the disseizor
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of ownership in himself, so notorious as to amount to a
constructive notice of its adverseness. When all these
things coexist, the running of the statute starts. To keep it
running the disseizor must in this commonwealth maintain
that status in full vigor in all its elements for every hour of
every day for 15 years . . . .
Moore v. Stills, 307 S.W.3d 71, 77 (Ky. 2010) (emphasis added) (citation omitted).
Accordingly, it is not necessary that an adverse possessor’s use put the
legal title holder on actual notice. Instead, it is sufficient if the adverse possessor’s
use is of such a conspicuous nature that it would put the legal title holder on
constructive notice of the adverse use, assuming the legal title holder exercises
ordinary care in looking after the estate. McCoy v. Thompson, 172 Ky. 794, 189
S.W. 1139, 1141 (1916) (“to constitute adverse possession there must be such open
and notorious acts of physical possession as would put the owner of the land--
assuming him to be a person of ordinary prudence and diligence in looking after
his estate--upon notice that a hostile claim was asserted to his property.”
(emphasis added)).
With this standard in mind, we now turn to whether Donald Keesee’s
use was sufficient to put Ramsey on constructive notice. We note, it is “the
character of the property, its physical nature and the use to which it has been put,
[that] determines the character of acts necessary to put the true owner on notice
that a hostile claim is being asserted.” Ely v. Fuson, 297 Ky. 325, 180 S.W.2d 90,
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92 (1944). Whether an adverse possessor’s use is “open and notorious” is a
finding of fact for the judge to determine based on the evidence presented at trial.
The circuit court found that the road has been fenced on both sides
with an opening along the east fence to provide access to the road from property
owned by the appellees. Donald Keesee testified he has used the road two or three
times per week since purchasing his 21.33 acre parcel of property in 1975. He
noted that he traveled the road by ATV or truck to access Kentucky Highway 401
and to check on his cattle.
Penny Willis and her husband David Willis testified at trial. They
own property that borders Ramsey to the south, directly off Pile Ford Road and
have lived there for over twenty years. Penny Willis testified that she saw Donald
Keesee using the road by truck or ATV three to four times in total prior to 2016,
but more often after purchasing the additional 13.537 acres. David Willis testified
that he would see Donald Keesee “every once and awhile” prior to 2016 and more
often thereafter. However, both noted that due to their work schedules, they were
not home during most of the day and would not be in a position to see him as often
as he claims.
Given the nature of the land and its normal uses – an unimproved
farm road that has been used to access the highway and move cattle and crops – we
believe Donald Keesee’s use of the road to access Kentucky Highway 401 and
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check livestock are clear examples of his customary use of the road. In addition,
his use of the road two or three times per week since 1975 was “open and
notorious” in the sense that it was sufficient to put Ramsey on constructive notice
of his use. Accordingly, substantial evidence supports the circuit court’s finding
that the Keesees’ possession was open and notorious.
Ramsey further argues that the lack of an “open and notorious” use by
Donald Keesee was particularly true of the road north of the “Tate House.” There
was testimony that this section of the road could not be traveled by vehicle due to
its overgrowth of vegetation and trees. Although we concede this section of the
road was far less traveled, Donald Keesee testified that he still traveled the wooded
area “maybe once every two weeks” by way of ATV.
We acknowledge that the circuit court could have given more detail in
its discussion relating to use of the road north of the “Tate House.” However, the
court heard testimony and reviewed pictures of this section of the road and still
found that Donald Keesee’s use of the road was open and notorious. Given Donald
Keesee’s testimony, we conclude that the circuit court’s finding is supported by
substantial evidence.
Substantial evidence supports the finding that Ivan N. Bennett, Jr.’s use of the
road was not permissive.
Ramsey next attacks Ivan N. Bennett, Jr.’s use of the road, contending
it was permissive and, therefore, not hostile. “To say that possession is hostile
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should mean nothing more than that it is without permission of the one legally
empowered to give possession, usually the owner.” Henninger v. Brewster, 357
S.W.3d 920, 927 (Ky. App. 2012) (citation omitted). Substantial evidence
supports the circuit court’s finding that Ivan N. Bennett, Jr. and his predecessors in
titles’ use was hostile.
Darlene Bennett, the mother of Ivan N. Bennett, Jr., testified that prior
to 1991,6 she and her husband would use the road to go camping with their son,
Ivan Bennett, Jr., and to cut firewood, which her husband would sell. She noted
that they would use the road to access a camping spot they had cleared on the
Keesees’ land and to cut wood from both her father-in-law’s property and the
Keesees’ property. When asked if permission was ever given to use the road, she
testified, “no, because I didn’t have to . . . at that time, it was a county road.”7 She
noted that no one ever questioned their use of the road. When asked about the use
of the property by Owen and Veteur Bennett, Ivan N. Bennett, Jr.’s predecessors in
title, she testified that Owen Bennett would use the road by way of tractor and to
check on his cattle.
6
Darlene and her husband, Ivan Bennett, Sr. moved to Breckinridge County in 1991. Prior to
that, she lived in Louisville with her husband and Ivan N. Bennett, Jr.
7
The road at issue was never a county road.
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On cross-examination, Darlene Bennett was asked whether the use of
Ramsey’s land to hunt and fish was permissive. She testified, “[Ivan Bennett, Sr.]
did not ask permission, [Ramsey] just gave him permission. She told him he could
go and do anything he wanted over there.”
Ivan N. Bennett, Jr. also testified about his use of the road. He stated
that prior to 1991, he was at his grandfather’s property about every weekend. He
traveled the road by ATV or truck and was “all over the woods.” When asked if he
ever asked Ramsey for permission, he stated no. He also testified that he was
never stopped from using the road until Ramsey erected the fence.
He further testified that his grandparents and parents always referred
to the road at issue as an “old county road.” He stated he always believed the road
at issue was “an old county road” and you “don’t need to ask permission to use a
county road.” On cross-examination, he did acknowledge that he had permission
to hunt and fish on Ramsey’s property.
Ramsey’s argument revolves around Darlene and Ivan N. Bennett,
Jr.’s admission that they had permission to hunt and fish on her property.
Although it is true that Ivan N. Bennett, Jr. and his predecessors may have been
given permission to hunt and fish on Ramsey’s property, these statements do not
infer consent to use the road at issue. In fact, both parties specifically testified that
they did not ask to use the road. Additionally, Ivan N. Bennett, Jr. noted he did not
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believe Ramsey even owned the road, because he and his predecessors always
believed it to be a county road. This would support testimony that permission to
use the road was never sought or given.
Ramsey further contends that even if permission was not explicit, it
was implicitly given. She claims she maintained gates across the road, which is
indicative of permissive use. Smith v. Oliver, 189 Ky. 214, 224 S.W. 683, 685
(1920). Although the maintenance of gates carries evidentiary value in support of
permissive use of a road, it is not conclusive. Ward v. Stewart, 435 S.W.2d 73, 75
(Ky. 1968).
Here, the circuit court found:
(13) The road has been fenced on both sides most of its
existence. [Ramsey’s] husband used the road to
move his cattle up and down his farm which he
owned and which she now owns which lies on the
west side of the road. Occasionally, there would be
a temporary fence or gate placed across the road to
facilitate the moving of cattle. . . .
(15) There was some testimony that was conflicting
regarding the number and placement of gates on the
road that is now called Pile Ford Road. It appears to
the Court that before Pile Ford Road was adopted
into the county road system there were various gates
at various locations on the Pile Ford Road, with the
last gate being where the Pile Ford Road runs into
the Ramsey property. The testimony was not clear
as to the time periods when these gates existed and
their locations.
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It is unclear where and how long the gates were erected on the road at issue. As
pointed out by the circuit court, these gates were primarily intended to facilitate the
movement of cattle. It does not appear they were intended to keep anyone off the
road. Additionally, Ivan N. Bennett, Jr. and his mother Darlene Bennett both
testified there were never any gates preventing them from accessing the road.
Given that any gates on the road were primarily for farm purposes, we
do not believe it undermines the circuit court’s conclusion that Ivan N. Bennett,
Jr.’s use of the road was not permissive. Accordingly, we conclude substantial
evidence supports the circuit court’s finding that use of the road had been hostile
since 1940 by Ivan N. Bennett, Jr.’s predecessor in title, Owen Bennett.
The circuit court properly determined the use and location of the prescriptive
easement.
“[A]n easement must be ‘defined in conformity with the nature of its
use.’” Ellington, 534 S.W.3d at 801 (citing Lyle v. Holman, 238 S.W.2d 157, 160
(Ky. 1951)). “An easement created through prescriptive use is limited to the use
during the prescriptive period” and “will not ripen into a greater estate after the
period of limitation has passed.” Id.
Ramsey asserts the circuit court improperly expanded the easement
beyond its adverse use in three ways. First, she argues the circuit court improperly
expanded the easement by granting the appellees the ability to rock or gravel the
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road from the “Tate House” south to its beginning.8 She contends that the
evidence presented before the court established that neither the Keesees or Ivan N.
Bennett, Jr., have ever rocked or graveled the road and, therefore, it was not part of
their adverse use.
We agree that maintenance of the road was not a part of the appellees’
adverse use. However, the circuit court found that some of the road would wash
out and leave ruts during bad weather, making it impassable. Kentucky courts
allow an adverse possessor to maintain and improve an easement so long as such
repairs do not inflict unnecessary injury on the servient estate. Elam v. Elam, 322
S.W.2d 703, 706 (Ky. 1959); Spalding v. Louisville & N.R. Co., 281 Ky. 357, 136
S.W.2d 1, 3 (1940). Maintaining the roadbed will not injure Ramsey’s land.
Ramsey next argues the circuit court erred by concluding the
easement was thirty feet in width. The circuit court found, in relation to this issue:
[Ramsey’s] husband, who had inherited the property from
his father, in a joint effort with neighbors including
Plaintiffs Keesees constructed fences indicating there was
a thirty (30) foot wide strip of ground that was open except
for temporary closures for moving live stock.
There was testimony that the road bed measures ten to
twelve (10-12) feet in width. The Court accepts that
number but that pertains only to the “road bed.” The
prescriptive easement pertains to a wider strip that enables
8
This argument arises from the circuit court’s September 11, 2019 Findings of Fact, Conclusions
of Law, and Judgment pursuant to Ramsey’s CR 59.05 motion to clarify the location and
permitted uses of the easement.
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road beds to be properly ditched and maintained for
drainage and other reasons. The use of the road has been
used as ingress and egress to the property owned by the
Plaintiffs by motor vehicles, tractors, farm equipment, on
foot and all-terrain vehicles to enable the Plaintiffs to use
their property for agricultural and recreational purposes.
Accordingly, the circuit court concluded “[t]he road bed shall be twelve (12) feet
wide and the easement containing the road bed thirty (30) feet wide.”9
Ramsey contends that the appellees only used the roadbed, which is
approximately ten to twelve feet wide and, therefore, any easement should be
limited to that width. We disagree. It is uncontested that the strip of land
containing the road bed was fenced on both sides by Donald Keesee and Ramsey’s
husband, approximating thirty feet in width. Accordingly, we cannot say that
substantial evidence does not support the circuit court’s conclusion.
Ramsey next asserts the circuit court erred by ordering her to remove
the gate she erected to keep the appellees off the road. Specifically, she contends
throughout the period of adverse use, there had been multiple gates erected on the
road and, therefore, she should be able to maintain said gate. Effectively, Ramsey
is seeking this Court’s authority allowing her to maintain a gate that interferes with
the appellees’ reasonable use and enjoyment of the easement. That would
9
A barn was erected on Ramsey’s property in 1983, which may encroach upon the easement.
The circuit court concluded that if it did, “the easement shall be moved however many feet
necessary to avoid relocating the barn.”
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contradict the circuit court’s decision, and we decline to so hold. Because the gate
interferes unreasonably with the appellees’ rights as owners of the dominant estate,
it must be removed.
The easement over the northern section of the road was not abandoned.
Last, Ramsey argues that any easement over the road north of the
“Tate House” was abandoned.10 She contends that the parties’ non-use of this
portion of the road, coupled with the fact that it had grown up to such degree that it
was not passable, was sufficient to evidence abandonment of the easement. We
disagree.
In Kentucky, easements are not abandoned simply by non-use.
“[A]uthorities take pains to mark the distinction between mere non-user, with
nothing more, and non-user attended by circumstances showing clearly the
intention of abandonment of the easement.” City of Harrodsburg v. Cunningham,
299 Ky. 193, 196, 184 S.W.2d 357, 359 (1944). “[A]n easement acquired by
prescription may be extinguished by a nonuser under circumstances indicating an
intention of abandonment whenever such nonuser has extended over that period of
time sufficient to have created the prescriptive right at its origin.” Ellington, 534
S.W.3d at 801 (quoting Jones v. Dunn, 305 Ky. 562, 205 S.W.2d 156, 157 (1947)).
10
Ramsey raised this argument in her proposed findings of Fact, Conclusions of Law, and
Judgment. However, the circuit court did not address this argument in its order.
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Because the prescriptive period here is fifteen years, “non-use of the easement
could only establish an intent to abandon after fifteen years of non-use.” Id.
(emphasis added). Substantial evidence does not support such a conclusion.
We acknowledge that the road north of the “Tate House” is
overgrown with trees and vegetation. However, as noted above, Donald Keesee
testified he used this section of the road “maybe once every two weeks.”
Additionally, the fact that the road has fallen into disrepair, alone, is insufficient to
constitute abandonment. Chitwood v. Whitlow, 313 Ky. 182, 184, 230 S.W.2d 641,
642 (1950). Accordingly, we find no abandonment.
CONCLUSION
Based on the foregoing, we affirm the November 20, 2018 and
September 11, 2019 Judgments of the Breckinridge Circuit Court.
ALL CONCUR.
BRIEFS FOR APPELLANT: BRIEF FOR APPELLEES:
Dustin C. Humphrey Donald W. Cottrell
Radcliff, Kentucky Leitchfield, Kentucky
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