Abington Ltd. Partnership v. Heublein, No. X01-Cv92-0151749 S (May 18, 1999)

1999 Conn. Super. Ct. 5491
CourtConnecticut Superior Court
DecidedMay 18, 1999
DocketNo. X01-CV92-0151749 S
StatusUnpublished

This text of 1999 Conn. Super. Ct. 5491 (Abington Ltd. Partnership v. Heublein, No. X01-Cv92-0151749 S (May 18, 1999)) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Connecticut Superior Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Abington Ltd. Partnership v. Heublein, No. X01-Cv92-0151749 S (May 18, 1999), 1999 Conn. Super. Ct. 5491 (Colo. Ct. App. 1999).

Opinion

[EDITOR'S NOTE: This case is unpublished as indicated by the issuing court.]

MEMORANDUM OF DECISION
The above-captioned case, referred to this court for a new trial after the Supreme Court set aside the judgment from the CT Page 5492 first trial, Abington Ltd. Partnership v. Heublein, 246 Conn. 815 (1997) ("Abington I"), concerns the claim of the plaintiff that is a servient landowner and that the dominant landowner is impermissibly using an access easement over its land to reach land added to the parcel for which the access easement was allegedly created.

During retrial, the parties agreed to an amendment of the complaint. In the first count of the amended complaint, the plaintiff seeks a settling of title. The plaintiff alleges trespass in the second count, misuse of the easement in the third count, and overburdening of the easement in the fourth count. (Penned changes in the fourth count reflect agreements made on the record in open court, and the penned changes are therefore part of the operative complaint.)

The amendment of the complaint reflects the fact that during the course of the trial the plaintiff withdrew claims against Katherine Vidal Smith, who had been identified as the party who sold the servient estate to the plaintiff's predecessor in interest, and against other parties who had been alleged to have been impermissibly using the same access route, including Bruce Gilbert Heublein.

Abington Limited Partnership, an entity owned and controlled by Michael Konover, owns a ninety-six acre piece of property on Talcott Mountain. The Abington land is located partly in the town of Avon and partly in the town of Bloomfield. The defendant Talcott Mountain Science Center for Student Involvement, Inc. ("science center") is a nonprofit educational institution created in 1965. It operates a science academy on Talcott Mountain for approximately sixty high school students selected for their high level of ability and interest, and it creates and broadcasts educational programs concerning meteorology and astronomy to other schools. The science center also conducts educational programs for students from several public school systems, plus Saturday and summer programs for interested children of school age. The science center has a communications tower on which are located equipment of various lessees: defendants Metro Mobile CTS of Hartford, Inc., Arch Communications Corporation, Chase Family Limited Partnership No. 7, Hartford Television, Inc., and The New England Weather Service, Inc. ("the lessees"). Other proceedings have established that these activities are incidental to the science center's educational purposes. CT Page 5493

The science center began its activities and programs in 1970 on a 6.34 acre site that had formerly been the radar tracking installation for a Nike missile facility operated by the federal government from 1955 until 1967. This site, which has been referred to throughout the trial as "the federal parcel" was acquired by the federal government upon a declaration of taking filed in United States District Court (D. Conn. at Hartford) on June 3, 1955. (Ex. 111.) The same declaration of taking listed, among the various parcels taken by eminent domain, three easements leading over roads from the federal parcel. Two of these easements provided access over a private road known as Montevideo Road on land now owned by Abington to Route 44, which is also known as Albany Road or Albany Avenue. In 1967 the federal government conveyed to the Town of Avon the interests it had taken by eminent domain. (Exs. 327 328.) The science center acquired the Abington easements from the Town of Avon at the same time that it acquired the federal parcel in June 1975. (Exs. 329 330.)

Description of the Properties at Issue

In 1980 the State of Connecticut conveyed to the Science Center a 13.8 acre parcel of land abutting the 6.34 acre federal parcel. (Ex. 341.) Initially, the science center conducted classes and other educational projects in renovated and expanded Nike site buildings. In 1989, at a cost of $2.6 million the science center built an additional building on its newly acquired land, which has been referred to as "the state parcel." Since the completion of that building in approximately 1991, the Science Center has used the access road over Abington's land to reach its buildings and conduct its activities on both the state and federal parcels. The lessees' equipment is located mostly on the federal parcel; however, data are transmitted from that equipment to facilities located in the new building on the state parcel.

The science center claims a right to vehicle access to both the state and federal parcels over the road on the Abington property leading to Route 44. The science center asserts that its right derives from two sources: 1) the easements taken by eminent domain by the federal government and 2) a pre-existing access right of Robert Hoe to the area now referred to as the state parcel, which the defendants assert that Hoe retained when he conveyed what is now the Abington parcel to a predecessor owner, Cornelia Whitehead, in 1890. The science center also has raised as a special defense a claim of laches against the plaintiff. CT Page 5494

Abington (under a prior name) acquired the land over which the access road runs in 1987 after the land had been purchased by another entity, Janney Realty Corp., with the plan of immediate transfer to Abington. The grantor to Janney Realty Corp. was Katherine Vidal Smith, who owned the Abington parcel at the time of the federal taking of the easement in 1955. Smith lived at times in a large house that overlooked Hoe Pond and at times in one of the smaller houses located on the property. At times, these smaller houses were rented to tenants. Smith and her tenants all reached their houses by the private road, known as Montevideo Road, that ends at Albany Road.

At the south end of Hoe Pond, a driveway leads north to the Heublein Tower, an edifice now located on land owned by the State of Connecticut. This driveway, approached from Route 44 via Montevideo Road, is used only by state vehicles for maintenance of the tower, and the end of the driveway near the pond is blocked by a locked gate. The public is permitted to reach the tower only by foot up an unpaved trail that starts at a short paved road leading to the Simsbury Road, Route 185, and leads upward over stony ground through trees along the flat top of a ridge with expansive views over the Farmington Valley on the way to the tower.

From the south end of Hoe Pond, the private road known along some of its length as Montevideo Road continues uphill to the right towards the federal parcel, which is located on the flat rocky top of a plateau-like promontory. This portion of the roadway continues on past the federal parcel to the state parcel and to residential properties along the same rock formation, which is referred to as "Gibraltar."

The defendants have referred to the portion of the route that starts near the south end of Hoe Pond as Gibraltar Road. The route over Montevideo Road and Gibraltar Road is the only existing vehicle access to the state and federal parcels now owned by the science center. Abington has granted easements over the entire length of the roadway out to Route 44 to the residential property owners whose properties are near the science center property. Abington is the fee owner of the land over which Montevideo Road and Gibraltar Road are located from Rte. 44 to the points of access to the science center's state and federal parcels. The driveway to the science center has been relocated so that vehicles now enter the science center property on the state CT Page 5495 parcel portion.

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Bluebook (online)
1999 Conn. Super. Ct. 5491, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/abington-ltd-partnership-v-heublein-no-x01-cv92-0151749-s-may-18-connsuperct-1999.