Love v. Bishop
Love v. Bishop
Opinion
¶ 1 Carole Bishop and Mark Klosky ("Klosky") 1 and Shannon and Keith Love ("the Loves") own adjacent parcels of land in Denver's Washington Park neighborhood. Klosky wants to remove a large tree sitting primarily on Klosky's property and partly on the Loves' property. The Loves want to keep the tree. Our seemingly straightforward task is to decide what analytical framework should govern this garden-variety dispute.
¶ 2 In undertaking this task, we do not write on a clean slate.
Rhodig v. Keck
holds that when a tree encroaches onto a neighbor's land, the tree remains the sole property of the owner of the land where the tree first grew, unless the tree was jointly planted, jointly cared for, or treated as a partition between the two properties.
¶ 3 If we're unwilling to construe Rhodig in their favor, the Loves ask us to overrule it and simply hold that a tree becomes joint property whenever it crosses a property line. We decline the Loves' invitation in both respects. As we explain more fully below, we do not construe our precedent in their favor. And we conclude that there is no sound legal basis for abandoning Rhodig . After surveying the early common law on which Rhodig is premised, we instead clarify that Rhodig governs "encroachment trees," which are those that begin life entirely on one person's property only to migrate partially to another's. Under Rhodig , a landowner may remove such a tree without first securing the approval of his neighbor, unless the landowners jointly planted, jointly cared for, or treated the trees as a partition between the properties. Here, the Loves did not prove such joint activity implying shared ownership of the encroaching tree. So, Klosky may remove the tree.
¶ 4 Thus, we affirm the judgment of the court of appeals and remand for further proceedings consistent with this opinion.
I. Facts and Procedural History
¶ 5 In central Denver's Washington Park neighborhood a seventy-foot-tall catalpa tree towers over two adjacent properties. At the base of its trunk, the tree sits roughly three- *1269 quarters on Klosky's property and one-quarter on the Loves' property. Estimated to be between seventy and ninety years old, the tree inhabited the lots well before the parties moved in, and it is unknown who planted it (or whether it might have simply sprung up as a "volunteer"). What we do know is that the tree sheds leaves, seed pods, and branches on both properties. 2
¶ 6 Unhappy with the debris, Klosky wants to cut the tree down. The Loves tried to convince Klosky otherwise, but to no avail. Therefore, the Loves filed a lawsuit seeking a temporary restraining order ("TRO"), declaratory judgment, and a preliminary injunction to prevent Klosky from felling the tree. The parties agreed to a TRO pending the preliminary injunction hearing, and also agreed to treat that hearing as a trial on the merits.
¶ 7 The trial court ruled in favor of Klosky, articulating what it perceived as the test for joint ownership of a boundary tree in Rhodig : "In addition to proving it straddles the line, ... [the Loves have] to prove that the tree was jointly planted by the property owners or their predecessors, that it was jointly maintained, or that it was jointly treated as the boundary."
¶ 8 The trial court made the following factual findings:
• 74% of the tree trunk at its base is on Klosky's property and 26% of the trunk at its base is on the Loves' property;
• the tree started life on Klosky's land and grew partly onto the Loves' land;
• the parties did not plant the tree;
• the parties did not jointly maintain the tree in a way that might reflect "an implicit understanding that the tree is jointly owned"; and
• the parties did not intend the tree to serve as a boundary.
¶ 9 Based on these findings, the trial court concluded that the Loves had not met their burden of proving that they had a property interest in the tree. So, it dismissed the Loves' claims and dissolved the TRO, but then stayed those orders pending appeal.
¶ 10 On appeal, the Loves contended that (1) the trial court erred in concluding Klosky and the Loves did not jointly care for the tree and (2)
Rhodig
should be overturned. A division of the court of appeals affirmed the trial court in a published opinion,
Love v. Klosky
,
¶ 11 The Loves sought our review, and we granted certiorari to decide whether to overrule Rhodig . 3
II. Analysis
¶ 12 We begin by identifying the standard of review, and then we summarize the doctrine of stare decisis, which governs when we should deviate from prior case law. We then consider whether to abandon Rhodig . To answer that question, we first evaluate what Rhodig means. We clarify that Rhodig outlines the test for determining ownership of an encroachment tree. We conclude that *1270 Rhodig has no bearing on the common law test for so-called "true boundary line" cases, that is, those cases that involve a tree straddling a property line without evidence of migration. Finally, we explain why the Rhodig rule, properly understood, remains sound for encroachment cases like the one before us here. Lacking a sound legal basis for abandoning our long-standing precedent in Rhodig , we conclude that we should not overrule it.
A. Standard of Review
¶ 13 We review questions of law de novo.
People v. Porter
,
B. Stare Decisis
¶ 14 Stare decisis is a judge-made doctrine that requires courts to follow preexisting rules of law.
Id.
at ¶ 23,
¶ 15 Still, courts may depart from a prior ruling, or overrule it, where sound reasons exist to do so.
Nicholls v. People
,
¶ 16 With these principles in mind, we turn to Rhodig .
C. The Rhodig Rule Embraces the Masters Approach for Encroachment Cases
¶ 17 Before deciding whether Rhodig should be overruled, we must first understand what Rhodig means. In order to understand what it means, it is helpful to evaluate the two prevailing approaches for determining the property rights of trees that have encroached on another's property. We can then see where Rhodig sits in historical context and what some of its more cryptic passages seek to convey.
¶ 18 While the division below saw
Rhodig
as part of the minority of cases rejecting what the division perceived as the common law majority rule for boundary cases generally (namely, that any tree straddling a boundary is joint property,
Love
, ¶¶ 22-23 ), we view the relevant split of authority somewhat differently. The common law rule regarding true boundary-line-tree cases, where the tree sits squarely on a property boundary with no evidence of migration, is not implicated here.
See
Dubois v. Beaver
,
1. The Masters and Waterman Approaches to Encroachment Cases
¶ 19 In 1620,
Masters v. Pollie
announced that when the roots of a tree planted in the land of one owner spread to a neighbor's
*1271
land, the tree belonged to the owner of the land in which the tree was planted. Roscoe Pound,
Juristic Science and Law
,
¶ 20 In contrast, Waterman v. Soper held that if a tree on A's land extended its root onto the land of B, then A and B became tenants-in-common. (1697-98) 91 Eng. Rep. 1393 (K.B.) 1393; 1 Ld. Raym. 737, 738 ("A tree belongs to the person or persons in whose land the root grows.").
¶ 21 In
Holder v. Coates
, the British court resolved this split in favor of
Masters
. (1827) 173 Eng. Rep. 1099 (K.B.) 1100; 1 Moody & M. 112, 113. There, the trunk of the tree was on the defendant's land, "but some of the lateral or spur roots grew into the land of both parties."
¶ 22 Early American cases recognized the
Masters
/
Waterman
split. For example, in
Dubois v. Beaver
, citing
Masters
and
Waterman
, the court outlined the encroachment-tree split.
¶ 23 In modern American times, debate continues about how to treat tree ownership. Even among jurisdictions that follow
Masters
and recognize that some trees with parts crossing a boundary are encroaching trees that are not jointly owned, another variation of the debate has sprouted: How do you tell the difference between boundary-line trees and encroaching trees? Some jurisdictions treat any tree with part of the trunk on both sides as a boundary tree.
See, e.g.
,
Blalock v. Atwood
,
2. Rhodig v. Keck
¶ 24 We joined the encroachment-tree debate in
Rhodig v. Keck
, where the Rhodigs sued their neighbor, Roy Keck, for damages because Keck had removed four trees near their shared property line.
¶ 25 The Loves first argue that Rhodig embraced a rule that would classify any tree on the property line as joint property of the *1272 two property owners, but with an exception for trees planted by trespass on a neighboring property. 4 We are unpersuaded by their argument for two reasons. First, nothing in Rhodig limits its test to trees planted by trespass. Rhodig prefaces its test by referring to "trees," with no mention of whether the trees were planted by trespass. Id. ("Apparently a test in determining whether trees are boundary line subjects entitled to protection is whether they were planted jointly, or jointly cared for, or were treated as a partition between adjoining properties." (emphasis added)). Second, the court applied the same test to all trees in question, even though the record revealed that only three of the four trees were necessarily planted by trespass. Id. The court did not apply the test to the one tree completely on Keck's land. Id. ("Obviously here one of the trees being wholly on Keck's land, it is not involved in this dispute under these facts."). Thus, we conclude Rhodig did not merely create an exception for trees planted by trespass.
¶ 26 The Loves argue in the alternative that we should overrule Rhodig and adopt an approach that would automatically make the Loves tenants-in-common with Klosky because the tree crossed the property line.
¶ 27 Klosky, on the other hand, argues that Rhodig holds that when a tree crosses over a boundary it remains the property of the owner of the land on which the tree originally grew, unless one of the joint-action situations enumerated in Rhodig applies. We agree with the outcome Klosky suggests, although we take a different path in reaching it.
¶ 28 We surmise that our ambiguous precedent caused the lower courts to conflate the common law rule for true boundary-line cases and the test for encroachment trees. The lower courts both described Rhodig as rejecting the common law rule for boundary-line cases and as creating a test that applies to all trees on a property line, not just encroachment cases. The district court articulated the test as applying to a tree that "straddles the line." Likewise, the division described the rule as "a rule that governed all boundary trees." Love , ¶ 20.
¶ 29 Instead, we infer that
Rhodig
embraced the
Masters
approach for encroachment trees; and in so doing, the
Rhodig
court defined encroachment trees as trees that start life on one property and grow onto a neighboring property.
See
*1273 ¶ 30 Rather than change the rule for all boundary trees, Rhodig merely chose the Masters approach for distinguishing encroachment trees from boundary-line trees. While adding caveats for when an encroachment tree could become joint property-namely, when the tree was jointly planted, jointly cared for, or treated as a partition between the properties- Rhodig embraces Masters . A tree does not automatically become a boundary-line tree, and thus joint property, merely by touching a property line.
3. Rhodig Remains Sound
¶ 31 Having clarified what
Rhodig
means, we now return to the doctrine of stare decisis and consider whether we are clearly convinced that (1)
Rhodig
was originally erroneous or is no longer sound because of changed conditions and (2) more good than harm will come from departing from precedent.
See
McShane
, ¶ 26,
¶ 32 First, Rhodig was correctly decided. We know of no other context in which a transfer of real property occurs with no action on behalf of either party and with no intent to transfer the property interest. Cf. § 38-35-101, C.R.S. (2017) ("Any deed or other instrument relating to or affecting title to real property acknowledged substantially in accordance with the following form before a proper official shall be prima facie evidence of the proper execution thereof...."). We are loathe to create a rule allowing for the automatic transfer of a property interest because an encroaching tree touches a property line.
¶ 33 While this is a case where the encroached-upon neighbor wants to keep the tree, typically, in similar disputes, the encroached-upon neighbor would be attempting to remove the encroaching tree. But under the Waterman approach (or the common law boundary-tree approach advocated by the Loves), such an encroached-upon neighbor would have no recourse to remove the tree over the objection of her neighbor because both neighbors would be required to consent to the tree's removal.
¶ 34 We can imagine many situations where the encroached-upon neighbor becomes an unwilling joint owner of the tree. Consider a tree that encroaches from A's land onto neighbor B's land and the roots begin pushing into B's sewage lines. Under the
Rhodig
/
Masters
rule, B could possibly bring a nuisance action against A for unreasonably interfering (via A's tree) with B's property.
See
Pub. Serv. Co. of Colo. v. Van Wyk
,
¶ 35 Or perhaps the tree barely inches over to B's land. B doesn't notice the minor intrusion onto her land. Under the Waterman approach, now B not only has the benefit of jointly owning the tree, but also the burden of legal responsibility for the tree. Imagine a branch of the tree falls and injures someone on the sidewalk. Should we now make B jointly liable for a tree that she-and anyone else who had not conducted an exacting land survey recently-thinks is her neighbor's property? Cf. § 13-21-115, C.R.S. (2017) (describing the circumstances under which a civil action may be brought against landowners by injured persons).
¶ 36 Thus, while this is a case where the encroached-upon neighbor wants to keep the tree, adopting the Waterman approach here would also have the consequence of imposing that same rule upon all other encroached- *1274 upon neighbors, many of whom may not want to be joint owners of an encroaching tree.
¶ 37 Because the Rhodig approach does not automatically transfer a property interest in encroachment-tree cases, we conclude that it remains sound. And, we see no conditions that have changed to make the above reasoning any less compelling today than when we decided Rhodig .
¶ 38 Finally, we do not see how overruling Rhodig to adopt the Waterman approach (or the common law boundary approach advocated by the Loves), would do more good than harm. As described above, there are many potential problems with such a change. And adopting the Waterman approach would simply switch winners in this case. As Judge Dailey noted in his special concurrence, "Changing winners is not a sufficient reason for overruling prior precedent." Love , ¶ 37 (Dailey, J., specially concurring).
¶ 39 Therefore, we decline the invitation to overturn Rhodig .
D. The Loves Have Not Demonstrated Joint Ownership Under Rhodig
¶ 40 Now that we've clarified and upheld Rhodig , we apply it to resolve the dispute at hand.
¶ 41 First, the tree here is an encroachment tree. Because the trees in
Rhodig
, "when planted, must necessarily have been wholly upon Keck's property," they were not "true boundary" trees.
¶ 42 Second, the Loves have not sufficiently shown other circumstances that could create joint ownership of the encroaching tree. Just as the Rhodigs had no property interest in the trees that had encroached onto their land because there was not sufficient evidence the parties jointly planted the trees, jointly cared for the trees, or intended for the trees to serve as a boundary, here, the Loves have no property interest in the tree that has encroached onto their land because they have not shown such joint activity implying shared ownership.
III. Conclusion
¶ 43 Because the tree here is an encroachment tree, Rhodig controls. And, under Rhodig , a landowner may remove a tree on his property that grew onto his neighbor's land without first securing the approval of his neighbor, unless the landowners jointly planted, jointly cared for, or treated the tree as a partition between the properties. Here, the Loves did not prove such joint activity implying shared ownership of the encroaching tree. So, Klosky may remove the tree.
¶ 44 Thus, we affirm the judgment of the court of appeals, albeit on different grounds, and remand for further proceedings consistent with this opinion.
JUSTICE GABRIEL does not participate.
Because Carole Bishop and Mark Klosky refer to themselves as Klosky (in the singular) in their briefing to this court, we do the same.
While the record includes a transcription of the trial court's factual findings and legal conclusions, the parties did not request a transcript of the entire hearing. Therefore, we rely on undisputed facts set forth in the briefs for some of the more peripheral background information.
We granted certiorari to review the following issue:
1. Whether this court should overrule its decision in Rhodig v. Keck ,161 Colo. 337 ,421 P.2d 729 (1966).
Although the division declined to address this interpretation of
Rhodig
because the Loves did not advance it in their opening brief, we address it here because in considering whether to overrule
Rhodig
, we must first understand its meaning.
Cf.
Roberts v. Am. Family Mut. Ins. Co.
,
Reference
- Full Case Name
- Keith LOVE and Shannon Love, Petitioners, v. Mark KLOSKY and Carole Bishop, Respondents.
- Cited By
- 9 cases
- Status
- Published
- Syllabus
- Adjoining Landowners, Stare Decisis.