Belle Terre Associates v. Lindemann, No. Cv89 0101629 S (Oct. 5, 1992)

1992 Conn. Super. Ct. 9164
CourtConnecticut Superior Court
DecidedOctober 5, 1992
DocketNo. CV89 0101629 S CV89 0103020 S
StatusUnpublished

This text of 1992 Conn. Super. Ct. 9164 (Belle Terre Associates v. Lindemann, No. Cv89 0101629 S (Oct. 5, 1992)) 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
Belle Terre Associates v. Lindemann, No. Cv89 0101629 S (Oct. 5, 1992), 1992 Conn. Super. Ct. 9164 (Colo. Ct. App. 1992).

Opinion

[EDITOR'S NOTE: This case is unpublished as indicated by the issuing court.] MEMORANDUM OF DECISION This is an action by the present and former owners of land seeking an injunction to prohibit the defendants from using for all purposes of travel a driveway which crosses the plaintiff's land and terminates on Indian Field Road, a public highway in the Town of Greenwich. The plaintiffs allege that (1) The defendants have no legal right to do so (2) such use constitutes a trespass and nuisance, (3) the defendants have disparaged and slandered their title by filing certain documents in the Greenwich Land Records and (4) the defendants have interfered with the plaintiff Stiefel's contractual expectations.

As for (3) and (4) above, no evidence was offered to support these claims and so these issues are found for the defendants. In addition to the named parties, Elizabeth Gibson Dubois was made a third party defendant because she owns land over which the northerly portion of the driveway traverses. In her cross complaint over against the named defendants she makes the same claims as the plaintiffs and seeks the same relief. The named defendants have interposed two special defenses both of which assert a right of way over the driveway by express grant of an easement or in the alternative, by prescription. Both cases were consolidated for trial.

The plaintiff in the first case is the present owner of .73 acres designated as lot number 3 on a filed map entitled "Property of Florence C. Maginnis". The defendants own 9.7 acres on the waters of Long Island Sound which is designated on this map as "Tobeason". The third party defendant owns land which abuts lot number 3 and lot number 1 on the north designated on the map as CT Page 9165 "Dubois". The final piece in the puzzle through which the driveway passes is lot number 1 which is owned by Schubin who also owns lot number 2. All properties are improved with substantial dwellings either facing or oriented to Long Island Sound. The Schubins began as co-plaintiffs with Stiefel but withdrew from the action shortly after they conveyed an easement over lot number 1 to the defendants for vehicular and foot traffic.

The two principal issues in this case are as follow: (1) whether the defendants have any right to travel over lot number 3, and (2) whether they have the same rights over Dubois's property. There is no longer an issue as to whether the defendants enjoy a right of way over lot number 1 because that was settled by the easement grant from Schubin to the defendants on April 28, 1991.

THE EASEMENT OVER LOT NUMBER 3

Prior to November 9, 1951 Hans F. Tobeason ("Tobeason") owned land which now comprises lots number 1, 2 and 3 and the 9.7 acres owned by the defendants, all of which is shown on the aforementioned map of Florence L. Maginnis. On that date, Tobeason conveyed lots 1, 2 and 3 to Florence L. Maginnis. The deed did not expressly reserve a right of way over the driveway in question. Instead, it reserved a right to maintain existing utilities located within the premises conveyed. In 1952, Florence Maginnis quit claimed lot number 3 to her husband, Thomas Maginnis. On February 23 of that year both Maginnises and Tobeason entered into an agreement under which Tobeason released all of his rights in and to lot number 3. The habendum clause recited that Tobeason and his heirs would be forever barred and excluded from the premises. The effect of this was to preclude Tobeason as the owner of the 9.7 acre tract from using lot number 3 to get to Indian Field Road. In 1966, Caroline F. Otto ("Otto") acquired both lot number 3 and the 9.7 acre piece. The deed conveyed the property "together with the appurtenances and all rights in and to the private roads or driftways leading to or adjoining said premises". There is no question but that lot number 3 retained a right of way over the driveway to Indian Field Road but the 9.7 acre tract had previously relinquished that right in the Tobeason/Maginnis agreement. In 1971, Otto conveyed lot number 3 to Emily Coyne ("Coyne") together with the right to use the driveway. The deed contained the following provision: "Grantors herein reserve a right of way for their remaining property over the existing driveway for all lawful purposes of travel and for connecting with any utilities which may be located thereon". CT Page 9166

In 1976, Coyne conveyed lot number 3 to Herbert and Lucy Stiefel ("Stiefel"), the plaintiff in the second case. Coyne conveyed the land "together with all appurtenances thereof, including all rights and interest of the grantors in and to the private roads or driftways leading to or adjoining said premises on the west and north." The conveyance was expressly subject to "rights of others in and to the northerly thirteen feet of said premises formerly comprising a portion of the private road running easterly from Indian Field Road to Long Island Sound."

In 1982, Otto conveyed the 9.7 acre tract to Frayda and Carol Lindemann, the defendants herein "together with the appurtenances and . . . all rights and interest in and to the private roads, driveways and driftways leading or adjoining said premises and all right, title and interest, if any, in the public roads leading to or adjoining said premises."

In 1988, Stiefel sold lot 3 to Louis Grossman a co-plaintiff herein, "together with all appurtenances thereof, including . . . all rights and interest of the grantors in and to the private roads or driftways leading to or adjoining said premises on the west and north." Paragraph number 15 of the "subject to's" (more appropriately called exceptions to title), made the conveyance subject to the reservation of a right of way as contained in the deed from Otto to Coyne.

The plaintiff's chief argument is that the deed from Otto to Coyne failed to reserve an appurtenant easement over lot number 3 in favor of the 9.7 acre tract because it omitted to use the words of inheritance "heirs and assigns". If this argument is correct, it follows therefore that it created an easement in gross personal to Otto which was extinguished when Otto sold the property to the defendants.

It has been held consistently in Connecticut that if in the reservation of an easement no mention is made of the heirs and assigns of the grantor a "presumption is created that the intent of the parties was that merely a personal right of way was reserved. This presumption however is not conclusive. A reservation will be interpreted as creating a permanent easement if from all the surrounding circumstances it appears that was the intent of the parties". Kelley v. Ivler, 187 Conn. 31, 39 (1982). An easement of way will never be presumed to be personal when it can fairly be construed to be appurtenant to the land. Id. at 42. CT Page 9167

In Birdsey v. Kosienski, 140 Conn. 40, 403 (1953) the deed reserved an easement for the grantor but the words "heirs and assigns" were omitted. The court weighed the facts offered to prove that the easement was of value and that the owners of the servient tenement had recognized the rights of the dominant tenement for a long period of time. The court held that the easement was appurtenant. Similarly, in Kelley v. Ivler, supra, the court found that the reservation of the easement was appurtenant although it did not contain words of inheritance. The court examined the surrounding circumstances and found that the easement enhanced the value of the dominant tenement. In Dunn Bros. v. Lesnewsky, 164 Conn. 331 (1973) the court found that a deed reserving "an appurtenance to other land of the grantors" was sufficient to create an appurtenant easement without additional words of inheritance.

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Bluebook (online)
1992 Conn. Super. Ct. 9164, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/belle-terre-associates-v-lindemann-no-cv89-0101629-s-oct-5-1992-connsuperct-1992.