Bruchhausen v. Walton

276 A.2d 6, 111 N.H. 98, 1971 N.H. LEXIS 131
CourtSupreme Court of New Hampshire
DecidedApril 5, 1971
Docket6075
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 276 A.2d 6 (Bruchhausen v. Walton) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of New Hampshire primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Bruchhausen v. Walton, 276 A.2d 6, 111 N.H. 98, 1971 N.H. LEXIS 131 (N.H. 1971).

Opinion

Duncan, J.

The plaintiffs, Walter Bruchhausen and wife and Frank S. Dodge and wife, brought this bill in equity against Edwin C. Walton and wife, seeking to restrain the defendants from ■ “ relocating ” an existing way which crosses the defendants’ land to reach land of the plaintiffs Dodge, and a determination of the rights of the respective parties in access ways to their properties; and in particular a ruling that rights of way other than the existing travelled way used by the plaintiffs Dodge have been abandoned by the Waltons’ predecessors in title.

The bill was heard by a Master {Leonard C. Hardwick, Esq. ). The master’s report was accepted by the Superior Court {Morris, J.), subject to the plaintiffs’ exceptions. The questions of law presented by the plaintiffs’ exceptions were reserved and transferred to this court by Grant, J., following dissolution of a temporary injunction.

The parties are owners of three tracts of land on the north side of Mountain View Road in Whitefield. The plaintiffs Bruchhausen own a tract of approximately five acres, with a dwelling thereon, which they acquired in 1958. The tract has a frontage of 380 feet on Mountain View Road, and is over 550 feet deep. Access to the premises is afforded over a paved driveway fifteen feet in width, extending north from Mountain View Road, bordering the westerly side of the tract for a distance of 331 feet to a point just north of the Bruchhausen house and garage.

In 1967 defendants Walton acquired title to a tract of approximately three acres, west of the Bruchhausen land on tbe west side of the driveway to the Bruchhausen house. The Wal *100 ton tract has a frontage of 283 feet on Mountain View Road, and its rear or northerly boundary is on a line with the rear boundary of the Bruchhausen tract, and 500 or more feet from Mountain View Road.

Since 1961 plaintiffs Dodge have owned a nine acre tract adjoining both Bruchhausen and Walton on the north. The Dodge residence is situated some distance north of the Bruchhausen and Walton boundaries, and a caretaker’s house is located in the southwesterly corner of the Dodge tract, close by the Walton north line.

Before 1944, all three tracts were held in common ownership and had constituted a part of the Goodwin farm, so called. The tract now belonging to the defendants Walton was first to be conveyed out, in 1944, by deed which also conveyed a right to pass and repass over a twenty foot right of way bordering the easterly side of the tract conveyed. In 1945, the tract now owned by the Bruchhausens was conveyed, together with the right to pass and repass over the same right of way. In 1947, the nine acre tract now owned by the plaintiffs Dodge was conveyed, together with “ a right of way in common over the land southerly thereof to said Mountain View Road ... as reserved in former deeds. ” In 1952 the fee underlying the right of way was quitclaimed to the then owner of the tract now owned by the Waltons.

At some time during the year preceding April 1, 1952, the Bruchhausen dwelling was erected by the owner at that time. In April and May of the same year, by deeds given to the predecessor of the plaintiffs Dodge by the then owners of the Walton and Bruchhausen tracts, a new right of way in a slightly different location was established between Mountain View Road and the Dodge tract, described by course and distances, and shown on a recorded plan. The deeds relating thereto provided that the cost of construction and maintenance of the right of way should be shared equally by the owners of the three tracts in question, and expressed a purpose to relocate the earlier right of way created by prior conveyances. At approximately the same time the then owner of the Dodge tract was granted by tripartite agreement with owners of the other two tracts a right to install and maintain utility and water lines from Mountain View Road along the westerly boundary of tire newly established right of way to the Dodge tract.

*101 In November 1952 the Walton tract became the property of John B. Dodge, brother of the plaintiff Frank S. Dodge. At some time before 1958 when the plaintiff Walter Bruchhausen acquired the Bruchhausen premises, the paved driveway between the Bruchhausen and Walton tracts was built along a course substantially within the right of way established in 1952.

In 1961, the plaintiffs Dodge acquired the northerly nine-acre tract, and proceeded to build a house thereon. With the permission of his brother John, Frank Dodge then utilized and improved an old farm lane over John’s land, now the Walton land, as part of a route by which to reach the northerly tract. As shown by the plans in evidence, this passway branched off in a northwesterly direction from the paved right of way before reaching the Bruchhausen house, at a point a little better than halfway of the 331 foot driveway, skirted around to the west of an old stone wall and certain birch trees, and then turned back northeasterly to rejoin the course of the undeveloped right of way established in 1952, approximately 100 feet north of the end of the paved driveway; and thereafter followed the general course of the 1952 right of way to the Frank Dodge land, entering between two sections of stone wall marking the corners of the Walton and Bruchhausen parcels.

Later, after the caretaker’s house was erected in 1968 at the southwest corner of the Frank Dodge land, a new passway was used for access to this house, across what is now Walton land. This passway departed from the .passway then used to reach the Frank Dodge house, at a point approximately 100 feet below the southerly boundary of the Dodge land, and extended diagonally northwesterly, to cross the southerly Dodge boundary about midway of the John Dodge land. In 1965 a board fence was erected by Frank Dodge and Bruchhausen opposite the Bruchhausen garage and between the Bruchhausen driveway and the passway used by Frank Dodge.

The defendants became interested in the John Dodge tract in 1966 and inspected it in February 1967. The premises were conveyed to them by John Dodge by deed dated March 27, 1967, containing an exception and reservation of an easement conveyed to the plaintiffs Dodge by deed of the same date.

The decision of the master herein turns on large part upon the interpretation of the latter conveyance which provided in pertinent part as follows: “All my right title and interest in an *102 easement over the northerly portion of certain premises owned by me in the town of Whitefield . . . said easement to run from a certain right-of-way now owned in common, by the grantees herein, one Bruchhausen and myself to the caretaker’s cottage, so called, on land of the grantees herein. Said easement to be as presently located and used on the land. ”

The master concluded that this conveyance described the passway first used in 1966 to reach the caretaker’s house, from where it branched off from the twelve foot passway used by the Dodges to reach their premises. At this point the passway was located over the twenty foot right of way established in 1952.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
276 A.2d 6, 111 N.H. 98, 1971 N.H. LEXIS 131, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/bruchhausen-v-walton-nh-1971.