Schneider v. Lane
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The case involves a dispute between neighboring property owners, Eberhard and Ursula Schneider (plaintiffs) and Karla S. Lane (defendant), over an easement used by Lane to access her property. The easement was initially destroyed by flooding in 2002, leading to a 2011 judgment that established the easement burdened the entire servient tenement owned by the Schneiders. The court relocated the easement further inland on the Schneiders' property. After another flooding incident in 2018 damaged the relocated easement, the Schneiders filed an action for quiet title and declaratory relief, while Lane filed a cross-complaint for declaratory relief.
The Superior Court of Alpine County granted Lane summary judgment against the Schneiders' complaint, ruling it was barred by res judicata. At trial on Lane's cross-complaint, the court again relocated the easement further inland but ruled that Lane was responsible for stabilizing the riverbank to prevent further erosion under Civil Code section 845.
The California Court of Appeal, Third Appellate District, reviewed the case. The court affirmed the trial court's decision to relocate the easement but reversed the ruling that Lane was responsible for stabilizing the riverbank. The appellate court held that section 845 requires the dominant tenement owner to maintain the easement in good repair but does not obligate them to construct new improvements, such as a riverbank stabilization project, separate from the easement to protect it from potential future harm. The court also found that the trial court did not abuse its discretion in selecting the new easement route that imposed the least burden on the servient tenement.
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