quincy
Senior Member
It was nice to see you back on the forum, Rooty1, although it would have been nicer if you had come back to say that everything with the bridge was resolved.Got it, thanks to all.
Happy Holidays!
Rooty

Happy holidays!
It was nice to see you back on the forum, Rooty1, although it would have been nicer if you had come back to say that everything with the bridge was resolved.Got it, thanks to all.
Happy Holidays!
Rooty
I understood that. It seems there is still much to do.... I would not go so far to say everything with the bridge has been resolved.
...
You do not own it, but you use it by permission of the owners, because you pay them a fee to use it. The owners of the bridge are using it by providing it's services, for a fee, to those who need it. It is similar to a toll bridge or toll road.
You are looking at the bridge as if it is some sort or public property that must be available for you to use or where rights can be given to you by some public entity. It is not. It may or may not have been private property prior to the court action, but since the court action it is private property owned by the bridge association. The bridge association filed that quiet title suit so that they would own the property and therefore feel comfortable spending money to maintain it.
Therefore, the only entity that can give you an easement is the bridge association and it is unlikely that they would ever consider doing so. Only the owners of a property can give an easement on the property.
LdiJ - one more question if I may. Why do you suppose the County considers the bridge to be "Leased Residential" when there is no lease agreement, no lessee, no lessor, and no residence? Thanks/
I still don't understand why the law firm of Givens & Pursley said the private owner of the river should provide the Bridge Association with an easement but now that the river is owned by the State, no such easement is necessary.
Or, how could a court could approve the associations Quit Claim Deed when there was never a deed in the first place; or how the State could not know who owns the bridge on their property yet have the authority to say landlocked property owners can use it.
quincy - The 21 property owners have each paid about $5,000 over the course of 8 years or so for a total of more than $100,000.
Thanks for answering my question, Rooty1.quincy - The 21 property owners have each paid about $5,000 over the course of 8 years or so for a total of more than $100,000.
LdiJ:
Reasonableness is in the eye of the beholder.
The State could easily provide all property owners on the West side of the river with an easement that would include a duty to repair and maintain the bridge. How could that be cumbersome and not enforceable? (Also, FYI, for decades, property owners had been donating funds for bridge maintenance, but it was not spent on the bridge.)
When the county abandoned the right-of-way over and across the bridge, the bridge would have reverted to the owner of the underlying fee. As such, the private party owner of the river became the owner of the bridge. That explains why Givens and Pursley recommended that the Bridge Association acquire an easement. Why would the Association need to obtain an easement from that property owner but not the new one? This is why I believe the bridge is now owned by the State.
In addition, when the county abandoned the bridge (for a second time) they violated I.C. § 40-203(2), “No highway or public right-of-way or parts thereof shall be abandoned and vacated so as to leave any real property adjoining the highway or public right-of-way without access to an established highway or public right-of-way.” There is no "reasonable fee" exception.
The States Title Insurance policy reads, "17. Rights, if any, of the public or owners of land generally to the West of the land of use, maintenance, ingress or egress, to, from, over and across the bridge known as the AlaccaBridge."
First, the State said an easement came with the property when they bought it. Then they said they understood that the bridge exemption requires them to allow access to the public and property owners across the bridge. Then they said property owners have an easement by operation of law that includes all four (4) of the following: An Easement by Express Grant and an Easement by Prescription and an Easement by Necessity and an Easement by Implication from a Prior Use. Then that changed to “owners of the bridge” have an easement by operation of law. Reminds me of the children’s game, “Go fish.”
While you may believe that the state is saying that it is beyond dispute that the owners of the bridge can use it and maintain it, that is only their opinion. Why do you seemingly believe that reducing said permission to writing is unreasonable?
The Quitclaim Deed used to transfer ownership of the bridge only to the Association is dubious at best. A quitclaim is a formal renunciation of a legal claim against some other person, or of a right to land. A person who quitclaims renounces or relinquishes a claim to some legal right or transfers a legal interest in land. The bridge was nothing more than a structural improvement to the real property of another when it was built. As such, whoever owns the land owns the bridge.
There is no “misinterpretation” regarding the "full context" involving the County treating the bridge as "Leased Residential" and my university student loan officer takes offense. The County Tax Master document is sitting in front of me, and it clearly shows LR 31N04E334205S with a market value of $15K. The county assessor said there must be a Lease Agreement between the State and God Knows Who, but she did not know where to find it. Smells fishy to me.
LdiJ
Humor me - I pull up to your house, construct a foot bridge on your front lawn, and claim I own it. Is that okay?
And, if the bridge does not have a parcel number, and it is not Leased Residential, what is it?