Barr's Estate v. Guay

250 A.2d 512, 127 Vt. 374, 1969 Vt. LEXIS 239
CourtSupreme Court of Vermont
DecidedFebruary 4, 1969
Docket621
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 250 A.2d 512 (Barr's Estate v. Guay) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Vermont primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Barr's Estate v. Guay, 250 A.2d 512, 127 Vt. 374, 1969 Vt. LEXIS 239 (Vt. 1969).

Opinion

Keyser, J.

This controversy centers on the fixation of the boundary line between the lots owned by the parties on the shore of Lake Champlain. The case is here on appeal by the plaintiff after retrial on remand. See 125 Vt. 1, 209 A.2d 304. Since then the plaintiff has deceased and the case proceeded with the administrator of the estate as party plaintiff. On rehearing, the transcript of the prior testimony together with the admitted exhibits were received into evidence by agreement of the parties.

The court below found the boundary line between the two properties as claimed by the defendants and judgment order issued accordingly. The plaintiff contends that the evidence does not support the result reached by the trial court.

*375 In 1929, P. J. Farrell et ux owned a tract of land in North Hero lying between U.S. highway No. 2 and the east shore of Lake Champlain. Conveyances were first made at the outside boundaries of the tract and progressed north and south. The Guay lot was the last, or most northerly, of the southerly lots conveyed and its boundaries are oriented only to the previous deeds of lots to the south of it. The last, or remaining, lot sold in the tract was the Barr lot and its boundaries are descriptively related to the lots north of it. It is plaintiff’s southern boundary that is sought to be established. Thus, a determination of the northern Guay boundary is required to settle the controversy.

The description given in the Barr deed is as follows:

“A certain lot of land having a frontage on Lake Champlain of one hundred and eighty (180) feet, more or less.
“Said lot is bounded on the south by land owned by Marcell and Carolyn Guay; on the north by land owned by one John Stephen and wife; on the west by the highway Route U.S. #2, and on the east by the waters of Lake Champlain.
“The eastern boundary of the lot extends north one hundred and eighty (180) feet from the established boundary, more or less, and the western boundary extends two hundred (200) feet from the established boundary, more or less (highway frontage). The northern boundary of the lot runs parallel with the established southern boundary.
“There is also conveyed to the grantees herein a right-of-way in common with others over the existing road leading from Route U.S. #2, to the premises herein conveyed.
“The lot of land hereby conveyed is the remaining part of a parcel of land conveyed to the grantor herein by Warranty Deed to Eileen Farrell, dated August 17, 1945, and of record in Vol. 15, page 550 of North Hero Land Records, after the conveyance of two lots of land by this grantor, one being to Stephen and wife, by Warranty Deed dated June 11, 1956 and of record in Vol. 23, page 227 of North Hero Land Records, and the other being a deed to Marcell Guay and Carolyn Guay, dated November 4, 1957, and recorded in Vol. 23, page 409 of North Hero Land Records.”

There are two lots located immediately'to the north of the Barr lot, the first and adjoining one is the Stephens lot and the one next north is the Cordner lot. The Cordner lot, the first lot sold off the tract, was *376 conveyed by P. J. Farrell and wife to Effie S. Thomas. This lot was later acquired by Cordner in 1933.

In 1938 the state highway department relocated a section of U.S. highway Route No. 2 in the area. This required acquisition by the state of a part of the Farrell land on the east side. Mr. Farrell then owned what are now the Stephens, Barr and Guay lots. At that time (1938) there was a wire fence which marked the north line of the Farrell land and the southerly line of the Cordner lot. The highway department used this established lot line in its survey and placed a concrete marker at the westerly end of the boundary. This marked the northwesterly corner of the Farrell land after Mr. Farrell’s deed to the state. There is no dispute between the parties but that the wire fence is the established southerly line of the Cordner (formerly Thomas) land.

In 1945 P. J. Farrell conveyed what are now the Stephens, Barr and Guay lots to Eilleen Farrell and she in turn deeded the same land to Leroy S. Walker who was the common grantor of the Stephens, Guay and Barr lots. Stephens et ux acquired their lot 100 feet in width in 1956. The deed recited that the lot was bounded “on the north by lands owned by one Cordner” and “on the south by lands owned by the Grantor Leroy S. Walker, this boundary is run parallel to established northern boundary.” Since the Barr lot adjoins the Stephens lot on the south it is clear that the established northern boundary of the plaintiff’s lot is parallel to the Cordner and Stephens southerly lines.

The deed from Walker to the Guays describes the'lot as follows:

“A certain lot of land with a building thereon, having a frontage on Lake Champlain of One Hundred Fifty (150) feet. Said lot is bounded on the South by the established boundary of lands owned by one Kropper; on the East by the waters of Lake Champlain; on the West by U.S. Route #2; on the North by land owned by the Grantor herein, Leroy S. Walker.
“The Eastern boundary of lot extends North One Hundred Fifty (150) feet Lake front from the established boundary, and the Western boundary extends North one Hundred Fifty (150) feet from the established boundary, (highway frontage) The Northern boundary of lots runs parallel to the established Southern boundary.”

*377 The location of the Guay northern line is dependent upon' the data derived from prior deeds conveying the lots to its south. It is from that source that the “established Southern boundary” is to be determined.

The second conveyance out of the Farrell tract was from its southern end in 1930 and was the first of the southern lots sold. At that time P. J. Farrell et ux deeded a lot carrying a width of 100 feet to Malcolm G. Clark. One pertinent provision of the deed reads:

“Said lot of land to contain one hundred feet of shore front and to extend back from the shore front one hundred feet in width to said U.S. highway #2, the northerly and southerly boundaries of said lot to be parallel with the lines of land sold by the Grantors hereof to Mrs. Effie S. Thomas in September 1929.” (Italics added).

Here we have a firm and definite relationship between the lines of the Clark lot with the lines of the Thomas (Cordner) lot at the extreme north of the tract. The lines of these two lots are fixed by the deed as being parallel with each other. The north line of the Clark lot thus became at that time “the established Southern boundary.”

In 1938 the state highway department placed a concrete marker at the northwest corner of the Clark lot. This tied in with the description given in the Farrell deed to the state which shows that the distance between the north and south concrete state markers is 774 feet.

In 1940 P. J. Farrell conveyed a lot northerly of and adjoining the Clark lot to the same M. G. Clark.

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

Related

VERMONT STRUCTURAL STEEL CORPORATION v. Brickman
300 A.2d 629 (Supreme Court of Vermont, 1973)
In Re Hatch
290 A.2d 180 (Supreme Court of Vermont, 1972)
State v. Mastaler
285 A.2d 776 (Supreme Court of Vermont, 1971)
Diamond National Corporation v. Szerbik
282 A.2d 806 (Supreme Court of Vermont, 1971)
State Highway Board v. Jackson
276 A.2d 620 (Supreme Court of Vermont, 1971)
In Re Mossey
274 A.2d 473 (Supreme Court of Vermont, 1971)
Rambeau v. Barrows
255 A.2d 175 (Supreme Court of Vermont, 1969)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
250 A.2d 512, 127 Vt. 374, 1969 Vt. LEXIS 239, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/barrs-estate-v-guay-vt-1969.