“Restoring the Road”: Stephenson v. Lone Peak – 2025 MT 148 and the Refined Status-Quo Test for Preliminary Injunctions in Easement Disputes

“Restoring the Road”: Stephenson v. Lone Peak – 2025 MT 148
and the Refined Status-Quo Test for Preliminary Injunctions in Easement Disputes

Introduction

Stephenson v. Lone Peak, 2025 MT 148, is the Montana Supreme Court’s latest word on how trial courts must assess requests for preliminary injunctions in real-property access cases. The dispute pits Steven Corry Stephenson—owner of Lot 11 in a Big Sky subdivision— against Lone Peak Preserve, LLC—owner of adjacent Lot 13—over the extent and use of two overlapping access easements: (1) a 30-foot recorded strip across Lot 11, and (2) a 60-foot “cul-de-sac” shown on historic certificates of survey.

After Stephenson placed boulders, a log and a speed bump that hampered Lone Peak’s construction access, the District Court issued a preliminary injunction ordering removal of the obstructions and banning further interference during the litigation. Stephenson appealed, arguing primarily that the order was a mandatory injunction (thus requiring a higher showing) and that the court upset the “status quo.”

The Supreme Court affirmed, refining Montana’s status-quo doctrine, clarifying the difference between mandatory and prohibitory relief, and applying the Legislature’s 2023–2025 overhaul of § 27-19-201, MCA.

Summary of the Judgment

  • Status Quo Defined: The “last peaceable, non-contested condition” existed before Stephenson installed impediments; therefore, restoring an unobstructed roadway maintained—not altered—the status quo.
  • Prohibitory vs. Mandatory: Although Stephenson had to remove objects, the injunction was deemed prohibitory because it merely re-established the status quo rather than compelling new affirmative conduct.
  • Likelihood of Success: (a) The 30-ft easement is likely valid via the 2013 Access Agreement incorporating the 2005 deed;
    (b) The cul-de-sac easement is likely valid under the easement-by-reference doctrine (COS 1754/1754A & 1993 Affidavit of Dedication);
    (c) Boulders and speed bump are likely unreasonable interferences.
  • Irreparable Harm: Restricted access for residents, guests and emergency vehicles cannot be fully compensated by money damages.
  • Balance of Equities & Public Interest: Safe ingress/egress for homeowners and emergency services outweighs Stephenson’s landscaping preferences; public safety favors the injunction.
  • No Manifest Abuse of Discretion: Detailed factual findings were supported by substantial evidence; the injunction complies with the amended four-factor test of § 27-19-201, MCA.

Analysis

3.1 Precedents Cited and Their Influence

  • Flying T Ranch, LLC v. Catlin Ranch, LP, 2022 MT 162
    Reaffirmed that the status quo is the last non-contested condition and that removal of later-added obstacles restores, rather than disturbs, that condition.
  • Flora v. Clearman, 2016 MT 290
    Used to illustrate how a court may fail to preserve the status quo when it limits a pre-existing easement use.
  • Mercer v. DPHHS, 2025 MT 9
    Distinguished to explain the heightened standard for true mandatory injunctions; here, the Court held the injunction was prohibitory.
  • O’Keefe v. Mustang Ranches HOA, 2019 MT 179 and Yorlum Props. v. Lincoln County, 2013 MT 298
    Groundwork for the easement-by-reference doctrine supporting the cul-de-sac easement.
  • Musselshell Ranch Co. v. Seidel-Joukova, 2011 MT 217
    Cited for the rule that a servient estate may use its land so long as it does not unreasonably interfere with the easement holder’s rights.

3.2 Statutory and Doctrinal Framework

Section 27-19-201, MCA, now mirrors the federal Winter test. The 2025 Legislature (HB 409) banned “sliding-scale” approaches, requiring each factor to be met independently. Stephenson confirms that Montana courts are complying with the revision: the District Court addressed all four factors in detail.

3.3 Court’s Legal Reasoning

  1. Status-Quo Identification. Borrowing from Flying T, the Court asked what the parties’ relationship looked like before the controversy ignited. Because Stephenson’s obstacles sparked the dispute, the “peaceable” condition was an unobstructed roadway—even if the exact boundary of the easements remained contested.
  2. Mandatory vs. Prohibitory. An injunction is “mandatory” only when it imposes new duties that create a change. Requiring removal of recently-placed obstructions merely restores the prior condition, so the usual “likelihood of success” standard—not the heightened “clearly favors” test—applies.
  3. Easement Validity (Prima Facie). • 30-ft strip: validated by the 2013 Access Agreement referencing the 2005 deed.
    • Cul-de-sac: validated by COS 1754/1754A and 1993 Dedication under easement-by-reference doctrine, satisfying the Yorlum criteria.
    • Interference: physical impediments interfering with emergency-vehicle turn radius deemed unreasonable.
  4. Remaining Factors. Permanent loss of safe emergency access is irreparable; equities and public interest favor safety and property access.

3.4 Impact of the Judgment

  • Clarified Status-Quo Analysis: Trial courts must ask whether the challenged conduct itself upset the peaceable condition; if so, ordering its removal is prohibitory.
  • Guidance on Easement Litigation: Parties who add obstructions during pending litigation risk swift injunctive relief against them—courts will look to the last uncontested use, not the most recent physical configuration.
  • Mandatory vs. Prohibitory Distinction Sharpened: Property owners cannot recast a prohibitory injunction as “mandatory” simply because it requires physical action (e.g., moving rocks) when that action restores the pre-dispute condition.
  • Statutory Compliance: Demonstrates how courts must honor HB 409’s instruction to avoid the “serious-question” sliding scale while still applying equitable principles.
  • Emergency-Access Emphasis: Confirms that public-safety concerns carry significant weight under the public-interest prong, especially in rural and mountainous regions.

Complex Concepts Simplified

Preliminary Injunction
Temporary court order issued before final judgment to preserve rights and prevent harm; must satisfy four statutory factors.
Status Quo
The last calm state of affairs before the conflict erupted; courts aim to preserve it until they can decide the case fully.
Mandatory vs. Prohibitory Injunction
Prohibitory – stops a party from doing something.
Mandatory – forces a party to take affirmative action creating a new condition.
The label matters because mandatory relief demands a higher showing.
Easement by Reference
An easement created when a deed refers to a recorded plat or survey that clearly depicts the easement; no separate written description is required if the dominant and servient parcels and purpose are reasonably ascertainable.
Chain-of-Title Doctrine
Narrow vs. broad views of which recorded documents buyers are deemed to know; Montana shifted to a broad doctrine in Earl v. Pavex (2013). Stephenson’s reliance on the old narrow doctrine was unpersuasive at the preliminary stage.

Conclusion

Stephenson v. Lone Peak provides a detailed blueprint for courts and litigants navigating access-easement disputes under Montana’s modernized injunction statute. The decision:

  • Affirms that courts must restore the last uncontested use of property, even when that requires removal of recent obstacles.
  • Differentiates between mandatory and prohibitory injunctions with practical guidance: where the defendant’s own acts upset the peace, ordering reversal is typically prohibitory.
  • Applies and reinforces the easement-by-reference doctrine, clarifying that cul-de-sacs and turnarounds depicted on surveys may constitute enforceable easements.
  • Demonstrates strict adherence to the updated four-factor test in § 27-19-201, MCA, eschewing sliding-scale flexibility.
  • Underscores the public’s interest in unimpeded emergency access—a theme likely to echo in future rural-subdivision controversies.

Going forward, property owners who attempt “self-help” by installing obstructions during contested easement litigation should expect swift, prohibitory injunctions compelling them to stand down. Conversely, dominant estate holders gain a clearer roadmap for securing interim relief without having to meet the steeper burden reserved for truly mandatory injunctions. Stephenson thus strengthens both procedural clarity and substantive fairness in Montana real-property law.

Case Details

Year: 2025
Court: Supreme Court of Montana

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