Brooks v. Carson

CourtSuperior Court of Maine
DecidedAugust 23, 2011
DocketSAGcv-10-009
StatusUnpublished

This text of Brooks v. Carson (Brooks v. Carson) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Superior Court of Maine primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Brooks v. Carson, (Me. Super. Ct. 2011).

Opinion

STATE OF MAINE SUPERIOR COURT <::~ 0 ~~- '(-,!·' ~·) \lft- 1- ~.· ... :--' - .• ,';) \ I _.- ;' ·' __)t'(' '

Sagadahoc, ss.

CONRAD BROOKS etal.,

Plaintiffs

v. Docket No. SAGSC-CV-1 0-009

BARBARA CARSON,

Defendant

DECISION AND JUDGMENT

This is an action brought pursuant to 23 M.R.S. § 3033(3), a provision of the

Maine Paper Streets Act, by subdivision lot owners who seek to prevent their rights of

access in a paper street from being terminated by the owner of lots abutting the paper

street

The case came before the court for ajury-waived trial on August 11 and 12,

2011. Most of the Plaintiffs as well as the Defendant were present with counsel, and

presented evidence in the form of sworn testimony and exhibits. The parties' joint

exhibits were admitted by stipulation at the inception of the trial. By agreement of the

parties, the court and counsel conducted a view before trial of the lots and streets

discussed in this decision.

Based on the entire record, the court adopts the following findings of fact and

conclusions of law and grants judgment to the Plaintiffs.

1 Factual and Legal Background

1. The following is a list of the names of the parties to this case, with the

following reference information for their parties' properties involved in this case: the

book and page numbers assigned to their deeds as recorded at the Sagadahoc County

Registry of Deeds; the tax map lot numbers assigned to their properties as shown on

Town of Phippsburg Tax Map No. 14, and the subdivision lot numbers assigned to

their properties on the subdivision plan titled "Plan Showing Property Popham Beach

Estates, Inc., Popham Beach, Maine" and recorded in 1922 in the Sagadahoc County

Registry of Deeds, Plan Book 2, Page 53 ("the 1922 Plan"]''

• Plaintiffs Conrad S. Brooks and Kathleen D. Brooks, Book 457, Page 55, Tax Map Lot No. 109, 1922 Plan Lot Nos. 450-451 and 470

• Plaintiffs Albert E. Desmond and Christine E. Desmond, Book 2946, Page 104, Tax Map Lot No. 63, 1922 Plan Lot Nos. 446-448

• Plaintiffs Robert Tebbetts and Charlene Tebbetts, Book 2719, Pages 188, 191, Tax Map Lot No. 138, 1922 Plan Lot No. not identified in the record

• Plaintiff Vivian]. Thompson, through the Vivian]. Thompson Living Trust, Book 1637, Page 96, Tax Map Lot No. 62, 1922 Plan Lot Nos. 423-424

• Plaintiffs Leland R. Oliver and jacqueline Y. Oliver, Book 1536, Page 166, Tax Map Lot No. 106, 1922 Plan Lot Nos. 452-453,468-469

• Plaintiff Popham Holdings, LLC, Book 2440, Page 127, Tax Map Lot No. 110, 1922 Plan Lot Nos. 419-422, 471

• Defendant Barbara Carson, Book 1728, Page 315, Tax Map Lot No. 144-1, 1922 Plan Lot Nos. 116, 425-427

2. The parties' above-described properties are all lots in a subdivision

located in the Popham Beach area of Phippsburg, in Sagadahoc County, Maine. The

parties' above-described properties are all shown as lots on two subdivision plans dating

2 to 1893 and a later plan from 1922. Only the 1922 plan is in evidence. The 1922 plan

depicts several hundred subdivision lots, including those owned by the parties. See

Joint Ex. 11.

3. The 1922 plan also incorporates proposed streets that have never been

accepted as public ways by the Town of Phippsburg. According to the Maine Paper

Streets Act, a 1987 enactment codified at 23 M.R.S. §§ 3031-3035 and 33 M.R.S.

§§ 460, 469-A, any such way not accepted as a public way by 1997 is deemed to have

the status of a vacated public way (absent any extension of the acceptance deadline, of

which there has apparently been none in this case). See 23 M.R.S. § 3032(1-A).

4. The owner of a lot that abuts such a proposed, unaccepted way (also

known as a "paper street") owns the land under the way to the center line, subject to the

right of other subdivision lot owners to use and travel over rl1e way. See 23 M.R.S. §

3031 (2) (subdivision lot owners' "private right-of-way" over proposed, unaccepted

ways); 33 M.R.S. § 469-A (abutting owners' title to paper streets). See also Callahan v.

Ganneston Park Development Corp., 245 A.2d 274, 278 (Me. 1968); Arnold v.

Boulay, 147 Me. 116, 120, 83 A.2d 574, 576 (1951) (subdivision lot owners have an

"easement by implication based upon estoppel" in proposed unaccepted ways).

5. This case arises under provisions of the Paper Streets Act that allow the

owner of a subdivision lot that abuts a paper street to acquire full ownership of the

abutting portion of the paper street to the center line, thereby extinguishing the right<; of

access of all the other subdivision lot owners in that part of the paper street See 23

M.R.S. § 3031-33.

3 6. The first step in the statutory process is for the lot mmcr who seeks to

acquire full ownership of the abutting portion of a paper street to record in the

appropriate registry of deeds a notice of claim of ownership in the form prescribed by

statute. Sec id. § 3033(1).' The notice must describe the area claimed and list in

alphabetical order the names of other lot owners of record in the subdivision, and it

must also be mailed to those other lot owners within 20 days of its recording. See id.

7. The effect of a properly drafted, executed, recorded and mailed section

3033(1) notice is to trigger a one-year period during which any lot owner who is named

in and receives the notice must record a sworn statement of claim in the portion of the

paper street at issue, or else be "forever barred" from asserting the claim. See id. §

3033(2).' After taking that step, any such claimant must also commence "an action in

equity" within 180 days or the claim is "forever barred." See id. § 3033(2).

8. At trial of the action, the plaintiff claimant must prove that deprivation of

the claimant's rights of access over the portion of the paper street at issue would

' Section 3033(1) reads in part as follows:

Any person claiming to own a proposed, unaccepted way or portion of a proposed, unaccepted way deemed vacated under section 3032 may record, in the registry of deeds where the subdivision plan, to which the notice set forth in this subsection pertains, is recorded, a conformed copy of the notice set forth in this subsection, with an alphabetical listing of the names of the current record owners of lots on the subdivision plan to which the notice pertains and their mortgagees of record.

23 M.R.S. § 3033(1).

' Section 3033(2) says that "[a )II persons receiving a notice under subsection 1" arc barred from asserting claims of access to the paper street involved unless they file and prove their claims. (emphasis added). Therefore, if a lot owner who was named in a section 3033(1) notice missed the one-year deadline for recording a claim or the 180-day deadline for filing an action, but subsequently asserted a claim, the giver of the notice would likely have to prove the recording of the notice and the claimant's receipt of the notice to establish the affirmative defense of bar.

4 "unreasonably limit" access from the claimant's lot to a public way, a public body of

water, or a common facility or common land in the subdivision. Sec id. § 3033(3).

9. The plain purpose of the statutory procedure is to balance the

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Related

Arnold v. Boulay
83 A.2d 574 (Supreme Judicial Court of Maine, 1951)
Driscoll v. Mains
2005 ME 52 (Supreme Judicial Court of Maine, 2005)
Callahan v. Ganneston Park Development Corp.
245 A.2d 274 (Supreme Judicial Court of Maine, 1968)
Maine Ass'n of Health Plans v. Superintendent of Insurance
2007 ME 69 (Supreme Judicial Court of Maine, 2007)

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Bluebook (online)
Brooks v. Carson, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/brooks-v-carson-mesuperct-2011.