Aksomitas v. South End Realty Co.

70 A.2d 552, 136 Conn. 277, 1949 Conn. LEXIS 236
CourtSupreme Court of Connecticut
DecidedDecember 14, 1949
StatusPublished
Cited by30 cases

This text of 70 A.2d 552 (Aksomitas v. South End Realty Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Connecticut primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Aksomitas v. South End Realty Co., 70 A.2d 552, 136 Conn. 277, 1949 Conn. LEXIS 236 (Colo. 1949).

Opinion

Brown, J.

The principal issue presented upon this appeal is whether the court erred in denying the plaintiff injunctive relief against the defendant’s interference with her claimed right of way over its land through her rear gate to the public highway. The plaintiff has appealed from the court’s judgment for the defendant and has assigned error in its finding, conclusions and judgment.

We summarize the material undisputed facts. Since June 20, 1930, the plaintiff has been the owner of 15 Capitol Avenue in Hartford. The premises consist of a lot fronting 22 feet on the street and 101.85 feet deep, with a house thereon which she has occupied with her family and has operated as a rooming house since she bought it. It is a house with a party wall on each side in a row of nine houses which have no intervening alley or passway. The house is on the south side of Capitol Avenue, and, except by the front entrance and thence through the house, the only access to the rear yard is over the defendant’s land, which adjoins it on the south. The defendant’s property, 373-381 Main Street, consists of a brick building fronting on the westerly side of Main Street occupied by stores on the first floor, with a gangway on the south side leading to its vacant land in the rear, the westerly part of which abuts the easterly side of Whitman Court. The distance between the rear of the defendant’s building and *280 Whitman Court is about 170 feet, and that between the south boundary of the defendant’s land and the rear of the plaintiff’s land is approximately 30 feet, widening to 45 feet at Whitman Court. The gangway is a common driveway, one-half of it being upon the property adjoining the defendant’s on the south.

In May, 1931, the plaintiff petitioned the selectmen to order a fence built between the rear of her property and what is now the defendant’s vacant land next south of it. In response to the plaintiff’s suggestion that she desired to have a gate in this fence, the representative of the bank which was the managing agent for the then owners of the abutting land told her that if she wanted a gate in the fence she would have to pay for the fence herself. Shortly after, the fence was erected at her expense and a gate was installed therein opposite the rear door of her house. This gate was three and a half feet wide; it remained open and was used from June, 1931, until July 25, 1947. It afforded means of egress from the plaintiff’s land to that now owned by the defendant, and of ingress from the latter to that of the plaintiff. It was in continuous use from June, 1931, to July 25, 1947, for the passage on foot of the plaintiff, her family, her tenants and callers. During this period what is now the defendant’s land to the rear of that of the plaintiff was open and it was possible to pass from the plaintiff’s land on foot westerly over the land now of the defendant to Whitman Court and easterly to Main Street by the common driveway. During all of this time meat, groceries, vegetables, coal, furniture and other items of like nature were delivered from Main Street through the alley and from Whitman Court over what is now the defendant’s land to the rear of the plaintiff’s land by carts, trucks and similar vehicles. These stopped opposite the gate, and delivery of the articles was made on foot through the *281 gate to the plaintiff’s rear door. Sometimes the vehicles turned around and went out the way they came in, and sometimes they continued on through in the direction in which they were proceeding.

Neither the plaintiff nor her tenants have ever obtained permission or license of any sort from the defendant or its predecessors in title for use of the right to pass and repass on foot or by vehicle over the land of the defendant referred to above. Neither she nor any of them has ever paid any consideration for such use. At no time did the defendant or its predecessors in title exercise their right under what are now §§ 7130, 7131 and 7132 of the General Statutes to prevent the plaintiff from acquiring a right of way by adverse use. On July 25, 1947, the defendant chained the gate shut and strung this chain along all of the rear line of the plaintiff’s lot in such a way as to prevent and interfere with the user of the plaintiff, whereupon this action was brought for injunctive relief.

The essential elements of a right of way by prescription, which is the basis of the plaintiff’s claim, are (1) a use which is open and visible, (2) which is continuous and uninterrupted for fifteen years, and (3) which is engaged in under a claim of right. C. B. Alling Realty Co. v. Olderman, 90 Conn. 241, 247, 96 A. 944. Actual user determines the nature of the use and the extent to which the servient land is bound. Hawley v. McCabe, 117 Conn. 558, 560, 169 A. 192; Lawton v. Herrick, 83 Conn. 417, 424, 76 A. 986. As regards any particular use of servient property, the use must have been so open, visible and notorious “as to give the owner knowledge and full opportunity to assert his own rights.” Exley v. Gallivan, 96 Conn. 676, 679, 115 A. 482; Ricci v. Naples, 108 Conn. 19, 25, 142 A. 452. A claim of right by prescription must be reasonable. Merwin v. Wheeler, 41 Conn. 14, 25; Lawton v. *282 Herrick, supra. Hence an indefinite user of a tract of land for passage cannot establish a .way by prescription. Speight v. Anderson, 226 N. C. 492, 496, 39 S. E. 2d 371; note, 143 A. L. R. 1403; 28 C. J. S. 670; cf. New Britain Trust Co. v. Spencer, 117 Conn. 402, 404, 168 A. 16.

The claim of the plaintiff as treated by the trial court has two phases: right of passage through the gate in the rear of her property across the defendant’s land either through the gangway to Main Street or to Whitman Court; and the right to the use of the defendant’s land for trucks to come to the gate to deliver merchandise and for like purposes. The facts recited above leave no doubt that, in so far as the existence of the gate and its use by the plaintiff and her household in passing through on foot to and from the defendant’s land are concerned, these were open and visible. They establish that this use was one well defined on the land. They also make clear that this use continued for more than fifteen years, and no fact is found to indicate that it was other than continuous and uninterrupted. Not only is it expressly found that no resort was had to the statutory procedure to interrupt it but there is no finding that either the defendant or any of its predecessors in title ever forbade or objected to this use, or did anything which stopped or interrupted it until the installation of the chain after it had continued for more than fifteen years. The court’s findings concerning the leasing of the land in the rear of the defendant’s building and the use made of it by the lessees are insufficient to establish an interruption of the plaintiff’s use in question. Their use included for a part of the time the parking of cars by customers of certain stores in the defendant’s building, and for some years the conduct of a parking lot, in connection with which there was a sign at the rear: “No trespassing.

Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI

Related

St. Germain v. Hurd
17 A.3d 516 (Connecticut Appellate Court, 2011)
Slack v. Greene
984 A.2d 734 (Supreme Court of Connecticut, 2009)
Gallo-Mure v. Tomchik
829 A.2d 8 (Connecticut Appellate Court, 2003)
Roman v. Julian, No. Cv 97 63656 S (Sep. 21, 1998)
1998 Conn. Super. Ct. 10570 (Connecticut Superior Court, 1998)
Swantek v. Taylor, No. Cv97-0259350s (Feb. 26, 1998)
1998 Conn. Super. Ct. 2238 (Connecticut Superior Court, 1998)
Somers v. LeVasseur
645 A.2d 993 (Supreme Court of Connecticut, 1994)
Hekeler v. Darroch, No. Cv93 0354540s (May 24, 1994)
1994 Conn. Super. Ct. 5526 (Connecticut Superior Court, 1994)
Greenburg v. Algonquin Gas Trans. Co., No. Cv89-93620 (Mar. 10, 1993)
1993 Conn. Super. Ct. 2533 (Connecticut Superior Court, 1993)
County of Westchester v. Town of Greenwich, Conn.
793 F. Supp. 1195 (S.D. New York, 1992)
Talmadge v. Bilides, No. 28 92 47 (Jun. 6, 1991)
1991 Conn. Super. Ct. 5598 (Connecticut Superior Court, 1991)
Morrell v. Caruso, No. Cv 89-0435874s (Nov. 30, 1990)
1990 Conn. Super. Ct. 3569 (Connecticut Superior Court, 1990)
Kuras v. Kope
533 A.2d 1202 (Supreme Court of Connecticut, 1987)
D'Agostino v. D'Addio
504 A.2d 528 (Connecticut Appellate Court, 1986)
Kaiko v. Dolinger
440 A.2d 198 (Supreme Court of Connecticut, 1981)
Johnson v. O'Connor
365 A.2d 814 (Supreme Court of Connecticut, 1975)
Wadsworth Realty Co. v. Sundberg
338 A.2d 470 (Supreme Court of Connecticut, 1973)
Putnam, Coffin & Burr, Inc. v. Halpern
227 A.2d 83 (Supreme Court of Connecticut, 1967)
Schroder v. Battistoni
199 A.2d 10 (Supreme Court of Connecticut, 1964)
Zavisza v. Hastings
118 A.2d 902 (Supreme Court of Connecticut, 1955)
Foot v. Bauman
129 N.E.2d 916 (Massachusetts Supreme Judicial Court, 1955)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
70 A.2d 552, 136 Conn. 277, 1949 Conn. LEXIS 236, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/aksomitas-v-south-end-realty-co-conn-1949.