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THE SUPREME COURT OF THE STATE OF ALASKA
JIGLIOTTI FAMILY TRUST, )
) Supreme Court No. S-17614
Appellant, )
) Superior Court No. 3PA-12-02262 CI
v. )
) OPINION
DONALD EDWARD BLOOM, )
DEBORAH JANE BLOOM, and ) No. 7562 – October 29, 2021
JOHN W. MOORE, )
)
Appellees. )
)
Appeal from the Superior Court of the State of Alaska, Third
Judicial District, Palmer, Gregory Heath, Judge.
Appearances: Patricia R. Hefferan, Wasilla, for Appellant.
Donald Edward Bloom, Deborah Jane Bloom, and John W.
Moore, pro se, Willow, Appellees.
Before: Bolger, Chief Justice, Winfree, Maassen, Carney,
and Borghesan, Justices.
MAASSEN, Justice.
I. INTRODUCTION
A family trust owns property reachable by an access road that follows an
easement across others’ properties. A neighboring couple objected to the trust’s use of
the easement. They contended that the easement grant was invalid and that, if valid, it
had been extinguished because of the trust’s failure to insist on its right to use it over the
course of several decades, during which time the couple had built a house on the
easement and made other use of the area. The trust filed a quiet title action. The superior
court decided on summary judgment that the easement was valid; following trial,
however, it found that the trust’s action was barred by laches and, alternatively, that the
easement had been extinguished by prescription where it met the neighboring couple’s
house. The trust appeals.
The superior court’s conclusion that the easement was partially
extinguished by prescription is supported by its findings of fact, which are not clearly
erroneous, and we therefore affirm its decision on that ground. But because the parties
are entitled to a final judgment quieting title in accordance with the court’s rulings as
affirmed on this appeal, we remand the case for that purpose.
II. FACTS AND PROCEEDINGS
A. Facts
The primary issue in this case is whether the Jigliotti Family Trust has an
easement by which it can access its property through land owned by Deborah and
Donald Bloom. The easement at issue — which we also refer to as the access
road — begins at Willow Fishhook Road and crosses parcels owned by John W. Moore
and the Matanuska-Susitna Borough before reaching the Blooms’ property, then
terminates in land now owned by the Trust.
The Trust’s property was formerly owned by Henry Jones; the Blooms’
property was formerly owned by Joseph Reid. In 1966 Jones and Reid entered into an
agreement entitled “License To Construct, Maintain, Use And Enjoy An Access
Highway Over The Land Of The Licensor.” The license allowed Jones to construct “a
highway” over Reid’s property, to “be laid out and planned by the mutual agreement
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between the parties.” The license also provided that if Reid ever sold his land, the sale
would be “subject to this license.”1
The Blooms purchased Reid’s property in 1994. An existing cabin was
situated about 15 feet from the access road. The Blooms began repairing the cabin and
in July 1994 moved in. At that time, according to Donald Bloom, the access road was
mostly “impassable” for all but three months of the year, and they had to “pack [their
provisions] in by hand” or all-terrain vehicle. They eventually upgraded the access road
“to [their] front door,” but past their buildings — where the access road continued into
what was to become the Trust property — it remained muddy and usually impassable.
John Jigliotti, the settlor of the Trust, purchased Jones’s property in the
early 1970s. He held the property as an investment; Jigliotti family members never lived
there and rarely visited. The superior court found that the first encounter between the
Jigliottis and the Blooms occurred in the summer of 1994 or 1995. John Jigliotti’s
daughters, Carol and Joey, along with Joey’s husband, Scott Henderson, attempted to
reach the Jigliotti property via the access road. When they reached the Blooms’
property, the Blooms told them they could not go through “and that if they wanted to
build a road they could do so on the section-line easement” that bordered the Blooms’
property to the west. The Blooms did, however, allow the party to park their car next to
the cabin before following a powerline easement to the Jigliotti property.
1
The Trust presented a witness at trial with expertise in interpreting
historical geophysical data from aerial surveys, who testified that the access road
preexisted the 1966 license by at least five years. Another expert witness, a land
surveyor, testified that it was not unusual for parties to enter into an easement agreement
to validate an already existing access route; he appeared to assume that this was Jones’s
and Reid’s purpose in entering into the license.
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In 1996 the Blooms began building a new home directly on the access
road;2 the house was completed in late 1997. The superior court found that the Jigliottis
visited the property again in the late 1990s and saw the house in the roadway. When the
Jigliottis stopped their car, the Blooms “confronted” them. “The Jigliottis explained that
they were the neighbors trying to get to their property,” and that although Donald Bloom
“was not happy about the intrusion,” he “permitted the Jigliottis to continue on foot
along the access road in order to get to their property.”
John Jigliotti created the Jigliotti Family Trust in 2007, named Carol and
Joey as the beneficiaries, and quitclaimed the property to the Trust. He appointed
Henderson, Joey’s husband, as trustee.
Members of the Jigliotti family visited the Trust property again in 2011
with a real estate agent and a potential buyer. They walked into the property along the
section-line easement and left via the access road. As they were leaving they met
Deborah Bloom, who wanted to know what they were doing on her property. According
to Joey, Henderson talked to Deborah “to kind of ease the situation,” and Deborah let the
group pass through.
Later that summer the Jigliottis commissioned a surveyor to visit the Trust
property in preparation for a sale. The Jigliottis assert that the Blooms turned the
surveyor away. A second surveyor, Paul Pilch, testified that he showed a couple the
Jigliotti property in 2012. He testified that he drove along the access road to where the
Bloom property began, then hiked in along the section-line easement. Henderson
testified that he visited the property in 2015 with a third surveyor; they walked in along
the section-line easement and left by the access road.
2
The superior court observed in its post-trial findings of fact that “[t]he only
credible evidence presented as to the position of the Blooms’ house was the Blooms’
testimony and [Donald] Bloom’s drawing” submitted as an exhibit.
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At trial the Blooms testified they did not know about the 1966 license
between Reid and Jones and that since 1995 they had consistently objected to the
Jigliottis, or anyone else, using the access road without their permission. They testified
about building their home on the access road and installing water, gray water, and sewer
lines beneath the roadway. They kept two “aggressive, territorial” dogs loose on their
property; Pilch, the surveyor, testified that the dogs gave him a “bark signal” that made
him “cautious” about getting out of his car at the time of his 2012 visit.
B. Proceedings
In October 2012 the Trust filed a complaint against Moore, the Blooms, and
the Borough seeking to quiet title to the access road.3 The court addressed the validity
of the 1966 license on cross-motions for summary judgment. The court rejected
arguments by Moore and the Blooms that the license was void as “against public policy
and the legislative intent of the homestead patents.” It confirmed the license’s validity,
deciding that it “created an easement appurtenant through the defendants’ land for
ingress and egress to the Jigliotti property.”
The court held a three-day bench trial in September 2018 to determine the
route of the access road and the extent to which the Blooms’ conduct had extinguished
the Jigliottis’ right to use it.4 The Trust presented the testimony of two experts who
3
The Trust dismissed its claim against the Borough after concluding that the
Borough would likely approve an easement over its property without litigation.
4
The parties framed the issues differently. In its opening statement, the Trust
said it was seeking a court order establishing the existence and location of the access
road so that “there’s no controversy about where it is, [and] the Jigliotti property can be
marketed.” Deborah Bloom described the issues as (1) whether the 1966 license was
valid (though that had already been decided on summary judgment); (2) whether the
Jigliottis “waited too long to bring [the license] forward”; and (3) whether the Blooms
could “show that through prescriptive easement [they] have extinguished that easement
(continued...)
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discussed the history and location of the access road, as well as the testimony of
Henderson, Carol and Joey Jigliotti, and Moore. The Blooms, representing themselves
at trial, both testified; they also presented the testimony of the Jigliottis’ surveyor, Pilch,
and Donald’s brother, Robert.
In written findings of fact and conclusions of law, the court found in favor
of the Blooms, primarily on laches grounds.5 The court found that the Blooms’
interference with the Jigliottis’ use of the easement was the paradigm of “open,
continuous, notorious, hostile and adverse use” sufficient to show adversity to the
easement holder’s interests. The court found that the Blooms told the Jigliottis and
Henderson in 1994 or 1995 that the access road did not continue through to the Jigliottis’
property; that the Blooms “consistently confronted” visitors attempting to use the road,
including the Jigliottis, whom they perceived to be trespassers; and that in 1997 the
Blooms constructed their house and outbuildings on and around the access road. The
court found that the Jigliottis, in contrast, “did not actively assert their rights to the
easement” even when faced with these events, instead presenting themselves “as
neighbors exploring surrounding land and attempting to access their property” while
acceding to the Blooms’ instructions as to where they were allowed to walk.
The court found that “[a] reasonable person would have been galvanized
into action the first time [the Blooms] denied access to the easement and asserted that
4
(...continued)
by building [their] home and [their] outbuildings and everything else in the middle of
that access.”
5
“Laches is an equitable defense available ‘when a party delays asserting a
claim for an unconscionable period. To bar a claim under laches, a court must find both
an unreasonable delay in seeking relief and resulting prejudice to the defendant.’ ” Burke
v. Maka, 296 P.3d 976, 979 (Alaska 2013) (quoting Whittle v. Weber, 243 P.3d 208, 217
(Alaska 2010)).
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there was no easement,” and that by 1994 or 1995 the Jigliottis had notice of a
controversy sufficient to prompt a reasonable person to file a quiet title action. Yet it
was “approximately fifteen years” later that the Trust filed suit. In the meantime, the
Blooms had built their house on the access road and made other permanent uses of the
property that interfered with travel along the easement. The court thus determined that
the Trust’s claim was barred by laches.
The court found “[a]dditionally and alternatively” that the Blooms had
“partially extinguished the access road easement through prescription . . . by building
their home, out buildings, and . . . other improvements on the easement.” The court
found that although the easement continued to exist “through the Moore property and
through part of the Bloom property,” it was extinguished once it reached the “[t]he
cleared portion of the Blooms’ property . . . not . . . less than 25 feet from their house.”
Finally, the court addressed the Trust’s alternative claim that it was entitled
to an easement by necessity because it could not make use of its land without an access
road.6 The court found that the Trust had not yet “attempted to obtain the wetlands
permit necessary to begin constructing a road” along the section-line easement, which
would “provide[] an alternative route for ingress and egress”; the court concluded,
6
An easement by necessity “may arise where an owner of land conveys to
another an inner portion which is entirely surrounded by lands owned by the conveyor
or by the conveyor and another. In such a situation a right of access across the retained
land of the conveyor is normally found, based upon public policy which is favorable to
full utilization of land and [the] presumption that parties do not intend to render land
unfit for occupancy.” Freightways Terminal Co. v. Indus. & Com. Constr., Inc., 381
P.2d 977, 984 n.16 (Alaska 1963). An easement by necessity ceases to exist when it is
no longer necessary. Id.
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therefore, that the Trust’s claim “that the access road should be enforced based on
necessity [was] premature” and dismissed it without prejudice.
The Trust appeals.
III. STANDARD OF REVIEW
“Whether an easement was extinguished by prescription presents issues of
both law and fact.”7 “We do not disturb a trial court’s findings of fact unless they are
clearly erroneous. We review the application of law to facts de novo.”8
“Whether principles of finality apply to a judgment is a question of law that
we review de novo.”9
IV. DISCUSSION
The Trust contends that the superior court erred by relying on the laches
doctrine because the Blooms did not raise it as a defense and neither party explicitly
addressed the doctrine in their pleadings or at trial. We do not need to decide whether
this was error, because we can affirm the court’s judgment on the basis of its alternative
ruling: that the easement was extinguished by prescription at a point short of the
Blooms’ house.
A. The Superior Court Did Not Clearly Err By Concluding That The
Access Road Easement Was Partially Extinguished By Prescription.
In Alaska, the creation of an easement by prescription10 is governed by
7
Reeves v. Godspeed Props., LLC, 426 P.3d 845, 849 (Alaska 2018).
8
Id. (quoting HP Ltd. P’ship v. Kenai River Airpark, LLC, 270 P.3d 719,
726 (Alaska 2012)).
9
State, Child Support Enf’t Div. v. Bromley, 987 P.2d 183, 192 (Alaska
1999).
10
Relevant definitions of “prescription” include “[t]he effect of the lapse of
(continued...)
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statute.11 In common law, easements may be not only created but also extinguished by
prescription; we adopted this rule in Hansen v. Davis, following “the approach adopted
by the Restatement (Third) of Property and many jurisdictions.”12 Under this approach,
“a party claiming that an easement was extinguished by prescription must prove
continuous and open and notorious use of the easement area for a ten year period by clear
and convincing evidence.”13
The prescriptive period begins when the landowner’s use of the easement
unreasonably interferes with the easement holder’s current or prospective use of it;14 such
unreasonable interference should put easement holders “on notice of the hostile nature
of the possession so that [they] may take steps to vindicate [their] rights by legal
action.”15 The landowner’s use of the easement area must be “extensive,” sufficient to
demonstrate the landowner’s “ ‘distinct and positive assertion’ . . . that [its] use of the
10
(...continued)
time in creating and destroying rights” and, more specifically, “[t]he extinction of a title
or right by failure to claim or exercise it over a large period.” Prescription, BLACK’S
LAW DICTIONARY (11th ed. 2019); see also RESTATEMENT (THIRD) OF PROP.:
SERVITUDES § 2.16 cmt. a, g (AM. LAW INST. 2000) (defining “prescription” as process
by which “a person begins using property without the consent or authority of the owner
and acquires a servitude” by satisfying certain conditions, including that the use be open,
notorious, and continuous “for the prescriptive period”).
11
Hansen v. Davis, 220 P.3d 911, 915 (Alaska 2009) (citing AS 09.10.030(a);
AS 09.45.052).
12
Id. at 916 (footnote omitted).
13
Id.
14
Id.
15
Id. (quoting Peters v. Juneau-Douglas Girl Scout Council, 519 P.2d 826,
832 (Alaska 1974)).
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easement is hostile to the rights of the easement holder and is not merely a permissive
use.”16
“Determining what constitutes unreasonable interference, and thus triggers
the prescriptive period, [is] heavily fact dependent.”17 If the easement holder does not
often use it, as in this case, the landowner “enjoys wide latitude with respect to use of the
easement area, and a showing of extensive activity will be required to demonstrate
adversity.”18 “As a general guideline, temporary improvements to an unused easement
area that are easily and cheaply removed will not trigger the prescriptive period;
permanent and expensive improvements that are difficult and damaging to remove will
trigger the prescriptive period.”19
The Trust contends that the court erred in several ways when finding that
the easement was partially extinguished by prescription. First, the Trust challenges the
superior court’s finding that “although the Blooms had constructive notice of the
License, they did not have actual notice of the easement.” (Emphasis in original.) The
Trust cites testimony that the road remained visible in aerial photos all the way to the
Trust’s property and that it had been walked as recently as 2012. However, the superior
court credited the Blooms’ testimony that they subjectively believed there was no
easement and that they asserted control over the easement area in good faith. Because
these findings turn on witness credibility, we defer to the superior court’s judgment.20
16
Id. (quoting McDonald v. Harris, 978 P.2d 81, 85 (Alaska 1999)).
17
Id. at 917.
18
Id.
19
Id.
20
Whitesides v. State, Dep’t of Pub. Safety, Div. of Motor Vehicles, 20 P.3d
(continued...)
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The Trust next argues that “there was no dispute shown in the record that
there was disagreement about using the access road” before their suit was filed, citing
Henderson’s testimony that the Jigliottis used the road several times and Deborah’s
testimony that the Blooms did not prevent that use. But the court found that although the
Jigliottis did use the access road on occasion, it was only when they used it with the
Blooms’ permission that their use was tolerated. The court found specifically that the
Blooms “confronted” the Jigliottis and others when they sought to enter via the access
road; that the Blooms informed the Jigliottis that there was no easement except along the
section line; that the Jigliottis were not allowed to drive their vehicles through the
Blooms’ property; and that in 1997, 15 years before suit was filed, the Blooms
constructed their house and other improvements directly in what the Jigliottis claimed
to be the roadway. If there was no “disagreement” over use of the access road prior to
2012, it was only because the Blooms consistently asserted their authority over it and the
Jigliottis consistently yielded to that authority. And to the extent the Jigliottis were
claiming a right of way through the Blooms’ property, the evidence supported a finding
that the Blooms strongly disagreed, believing that it was up to them to decide whether
to permit the Jigliottis’ use.21 The court’s findings on this issue are not clearly erroneous.
The Trust next contends that the easement cannot have been extinguished
by prescription because the evidence showed that the road was not totally obstructed by
the Blooms’ improvements. They cite Carol’s and Joey’s testimony that the Jigliottis
20
(...continued)
1130, 1136-37 (Alaska 2001) (observing that we “consistently grant[] deference to trial
courts where credibility is at issue”).
21
A permitted use is not hostile to the rights of the party that permits it. See
Hansen, 220 P.3d at 916 (noting that prescriptive extinguishment requires that
landowner’s use of property “is hostile to the rights of the easement holder and is not
merely a permissive use”).
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were able to skirt around the Blooms’ house without straying from what they believed
to be the access road. They also cite Donald’s, Deborah’s, and Robert’s testimony that
although the Blooms’ water, sewer, and electrical lines ran under the road and would not
stand up to heavy traffic, the house itself was three feet from the roadway.
However, the court found that the Blooms “buil[t] their home on the access
road.” As noted above, the court found that there was little evidence of the house’s exact
placement; it relied for its finding on the Blooms’ testimony and Donald’s drawing on
a map used as an exhibit. Although the testimony was imprecise, the court made other
pertinent findings about the Blooms’ use of their property. It found that the Blooms had
“made a new road to access their backyard,” implying that this was how visitors were
able to circumvent the house. It referenced “a garden and pigpen” that had been there
at the time of the Jigliottis’ 1994 or 1995 visit. It noted that the property contained
unidentified “outbuildings,” “a shop [built] along the access road,” and cleared land
“around the access road to accommodate [Donald] Bloom parking equipment and
vehicles on the property.” The court also found that “the Blooms consistently enforced
exclusive use of the cleared portion of the access road next to their cabin and their
house.” When deciding where the access road should be deemed extinguished, the court
found that 25 feet from the house would give the Blooms “a reasonable area around their
house that shall be considered a driveway,” with the easement ending at the driveway’s
edge.22
22
Cf. Hakala v. Atxam Corp., 753 P.2d 1144, 1145, 1149 (Alaska 1988)
(following land exchange, requiring Native corporation to reconvey cabin to hunting
guide who had historically used it as base camp and remanding “to the trial court to
determine the size of the curtilage; that is, a reasonable area surrounding the cabin which
[the guide] needs so that he can use the cabin as his own”); Dudley v. Neteler, 924
N.E.2d 1023, 1025, 1029 (Ill. App. 2009) (in quiet title action involving claimed
(continued...)
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In Hansen we decided as a matter of law that “the maintenance of a garden
on the easement area did not constitute an improvement sufficiently adverse to
commence the prescriptive period.”23 We cited this conclusion in Reeves v. Godspeed
Properties, LLC, when we addressed whether gold-mining activity in a roadway
easement was sufficiently adverse to the easement holder’s rights to begin the
prescriptive period; we concluded that parked “cars, equipment, and gravel piles” were
sufficiently moveable that, like the garden in Hansen, they did not demonstrate the
required adversity.24
Some of what the Blooms maintained in the area of the easement — the
garden, the pigpen, and the parked vehicles — appear to be similarly movable. If that
were the extent of the Blooms’ occupation of the easement area, this case would be
indistinguishable from Reeves, as the Trust argues. But given the superior court’s
findings about the house, the shop, and the rerouted access to the Blooms’ backyard, we
cannot say that its finding that the Blooms “buil[t] their home on the access road” and
thus blocked it off entirely is clearly erroneous.
We conclude, therefore, that the superior court did not clearly err in its
findings of fact. These findings support its conclusion that the easement to the access
road was extinguished by prescription at the edge of the Blooms’ driveway, and we
therefore affirm the court’s decision.
22
(...continued)
easement for house straddling property line, remanding “for the trial court to conduct an
evidentiary hearing to determine the extent of the curtilage, if any, that existed as a part
of the conveyed easement based upon the established and necessary usage historically
established by the grantor’s use”).
23
220 P.3d at 917.
24
426 P.3d 845, 847, 854 (Alaska 2018).
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B. The Parties Are Entitled To A Final Judgment Quieting Title.
The Trust also contends that it is entitled to a judgment, consistent with
Alaska Civil Rule 58, addressing the legality of the 1966 license and the validity of the
easement up to the point on the Blooms’ property where it is extinguished by
prescription. We agree.
As explained above, the court determined the validity of the 1966 easement
on summary judgment, then, following trial, entered extensive findings of fact and
conclusions of law that addressed the remaining issues in the case. The court’s findings
and conclusions ended with the sentence, “IT IS HEREBY ORDERED that this case is
DISMISSED.” Rule 58, however, requires that “[e]very judgment must be set forth on
a separate document distinct from any findings of fact, conclusions of law, opinion, or
memorandum.” The Trust submitted a timely motion for reconsideration asking, among
other things, that it be allowed to submit form judgments “to confirm the jeep trail access
through the MOORE property.”25 The court invited a response from the Blooms and
Moore, but although the court later denied those parties’ motion to amend the findings
and conclusions, the record contains no final judgment.
The parties are entitled to a judgment quieting title in accordance with the
superior court’s rulings on summary judgment and following trial as affirmed in this
opinion. We remand this case to the superior court for that purpose.
25
The Trust also asked for relief that plainly required reconsideration of the
superior court’s findings and conclusions, including that the court enter judgment “to
confirm the jeep trail access through the BLOOM property allowing the court’s
reasonable buffer for [the Blooms’] home.”
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V. CONCLUSION
We AFFIRM the superior court’s decision that the access road was
extinguished by prescription 25 feet from the Blooms’ house. The case is remanded for
entry of a final judgment quieting title.
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