Wade H. Hardy, Jr. v. Gene William Hardy
Wade H. Hardy, Jr. v. Gene William Hardy
Opinion
¶ 1. Wade H. Hardy Jr. (Hamp) and his wife Norma appeal the Marshall County Chancery Court's decision to deny an easement by necessity to use Gene Hardy's portion of Hardy Lane. Finding no error, we affirm.
FACTS AND PROCEDURAL HISTORY
¶ 2. In 1958, W.H. Hardy acquired title to an eighty-acre parcel of land in Marshall County, Mississippi. In 1977, his sons Hamp and Gene, along with their wives, purchased the eighty-acre parcel. In February 1992, Hamp and Gene divided the eighty-acre parcel equally between themselves into two forty-acre parcels. They used a road designated as "Hardy Lane" as the access point to the properties. Although the road is reflected on the Marshall County tax map, the county never adopted Hardy Lane as a county road or maintained or improved it. The parties and their families lived on these two forty-acre parcels and all mutually used Hardy Lane as the ingress and egress to their homes.
¶ 3. In 2006, Hamp and Norma moved to Aberdeen. Until that time, they had used Hardy Lane daily without incident for access to their "home place," which refers to their home, shop, barn, silo, and RV cover positioned on their parcel. For several years after they moved, Hamp would return twice monthly to mow and otherwise maintain the property. However, due to expense and travel, Hamp discontinued visits to or maintenance of his parcel, and the land became overgrown. Eventually, Hamp expressed his desire to sell his land. To obstruct the road from use by any potential buyers, Gene parked his tractor at the end of his driveway, in the middle of Hardy Lane. Gene never denied Hamp or Norma access down Hardy Lane, but Gene expressly stated he would not grant an easement to any potential buyers. Hamp maintained that he needed the easement providing access to the home place in order to sell the land.
¶ 4. Hamp and Norma filed suit in chancery court seeking an order declaring them the owners of an implied easement or easement by necessity. 1 After a bench trial, the chancellor held, "in this case ... there is an alternative route that [Hamp] can use and get to his property and, therefore, this is not an easement by necessity." Hamp and Norma now appeal.
STANDARD OF REVIEW
¶ 5. This Court "will not disturb the findings of a chancellor when supported by substantial evidence unless the chancellor abused his discretion, was manifestly wrong or clearly erroneous, or applied
an erroneous legal standard."
Smith v. Pettigrew
,
DISCUSSION
¶ 6. Hamp argues the chancellor erred by failing to find an easement by necessity or an implied easement over Hardy Lane. Hamp argues that (1) the chancellor applied the wrong legal standard and (2) that Hamp proved all the elements of an easement by necessity.
¶ 7. "An 'easement by necessity' and an 'implied easement' are the same."
King v. Gale
,
¶ 8. It is undisputed that the parties to this appeal hold land derived from a once commonly owned eighty-acre parcel. The parties also agree that Hardy Lane was used as the access point for ingress and egress to Hamp's home place after the eighty-acre tract was severed. The parties disagree, however, regarding whether the easement is necessary. Hamp argues that the chancery court erred by holding him to a standard of strict necessity instead of reasonable necessity.
¶ 9. For support, Hamp cites
Fourth Davis Island Land Co. v. Parker
,
¶ 10. In
Harkness v. Butterworth Hunting Club Inc.
,
and
Miss. Power Co. v. Fairchild
,
¶ 11. Hamp claims that he has a necessary right of way over Hardy Lane for access to his home place; thus the instant case involves a claim for a way of necessity-not an easement for utilities. The strict-necessity standard applies.
¶ 12. At trial, Hamp testified there was, in fact, another access to his forty acres-an unnamed driveway from Highway 309 put in by his son. Hamp complained, however, that this access point was one-half mile farther north and only provided access to his property and not to his home place. Hamp's wife Norma testified that the route from the north was not passable because there were trees, ditches, and it was overgrown. The chancellor personally visited the land and opined that the unnamed access road went across almost sixty percent of the property and that it would be feasible to make a road to the home place. The chancellor found that the easement over Hardy Lane was not necessary because Hamp had an alternative means of access to his land.
¶ 13. Nevertheless, Hamp argues that the easement is necessary because improving or extending the unnamed access road would involve disproportionate expense and that such a project would exceed the value of the land. Hamp testified that extending or improving the unnamed access road to the home place would be cost prohibitive. Yet, Hamp did not present any evidence regarding the value of the land or costs of establishing a road on the alternative route. "Where one seeks to obtain a 'way of access' easement by necessity but submits no evidence as to the allegedly higher costs of an alternative route, a trial court will not err in declining to award an easement."
Swenson v. Brouillette
,
¶ 14. The chancellor's finding that the easement was not necessary because Hamp had an alternative means of access to his land is supported by substantial and credible evidence. Furthermore, Hamp presented no evidence regarding allegedly higher costs of an alternative route. Therefore, we affirm the chancellor's decision declining Hamp an easement by necessity over Hardy Lane.
¶ 15. AFFIRMED.
IRVING AND GRIFFIS, P.JJ., BARNES, CARLTON, FAIR, WILSON, WESTBROOKS AND TINDELL, JJ., CONCUR. GREENLEE, J., NOT PARTICIPATING.
Hamp and Norma also sought to establish a prescriptive easement, which the chancellor denied. However, Hamp and Norma do not appeal the chancellor's decision denying the prescriptive easement.
Case-law data current through December 31, 2025. Source: CourtListener bulk data.