Hulme v. O'Hare
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The Supreme Court reversed in part the judgment of the district court granting summary judgment in favor of Plaintiff on his adverse possession claim and in favor of Defendant on Plaintiff's prescriptive easement and implied easement claims, holding that material issues of fact precluded summary judgment in favor of Plaintiff on his adverse possession claim and this error hindered review of the prescriptive easement claim.
At issue was the property boundary between two residential lots connected by a shared driveway. Plaintiff claimed that he had adversely possessed a thirty-inch strip of Defendant's driveway, that he had an easement over the entire driveway, and that Defendant had intentionally trespassed on the adversely possessed portion of his property. The district court granted summary judgment for Plaintiff on the adverse possession claim and granted summary judgment for Defendant on the prescriptive easement and implied easement claims. The Supreme Court reversed in part, holding (1) the court erred in granting summary judgment on the adverse possession claim because issues of material fact concerning hostility existed; (2) because the prescriptive easement cannot be resolved independent of the adverse possession claim, review on this claim was precluded; and (3) the district court did not err in granting summary judgment for Defendant on the implied easement claim.
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