Burr v. Algonquin Gas Trans. Company, No. Cv-89-0368933 S (Aug. 12, 1991)

1991 Conn. Super. Ct. 7323
CourtConnecticut Superior Court
DecidedAugust 12, 1991
DocketNo. CV-89-0368933 S
StatusUnpublished

This text of 1991 Conn. Super. Ct. 7323 (Burr v. Algonquin Gas Trans. Company, No. Cv-89-0368933 S (Aug. 12, 1991)) 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
Burr v. Algonquin Gas Trans. Company, No. Cv-89-0368933 S (Aug. 12, 1991), 1991 Conn. Super. Ct. 7323 (Colo. Ct. App. 1991).

Opinion

[EDITOR'S NOTE: This case is unpublished as indicated by the issuing court.] MEMORANDUM OF DECISION This is an action brought by the owners of land in Cromwell against Algonquin Gas Transmission Company ("Algonquin") and Connecticut Natural Gas Company ("CNG"). Originally, there were two lawsuits which were filed by the plaintiff, the first being No. CV 89-0368933S, which was brought in the Judicial District of Middlesex against Algonquin only. The reason for the second suit was that Algonquin's property is located in both Rocky Hill (Judicial District of Hartford/New Britain) and Cromwell (Judicial District of Middlesex), whereas CNG's property is located only in Rocky Hill (Judicial District of Hartford/New Britain). The Middlesex case was transferred to this judicial district, and the cases were consolidated at the start of trial. The court finds the issues in favor of the defendants.

The plaintiff, Harry E. Burr, Trustee, ("Burr") is the owner of land which is located adjacent to and easterly of the land owned by Algonquin. Burr is acting as trustee for a general partnership known as Shunpike Associates. The seven partners of Shunpike Associates are Harry Burr, William Berman, Robert Frazier, Mario Pittruzello, Salvatore Pittruzello, Kenneth Kasek and Michael O'Brien. The Burr land consists of approximately twenty-five acres in Cromwell. Defendant Algonquin owns approximately thirty-eight acres of land in the towns of Rocky Hill and Cromwell, which is adjacent to the plaintiff's land. Defendant CNG is a gas distribution company which delivers and sells gas to local customers in Connecticut. It owns land in the Town of Rocky Hill which is located northerly of and adjacent to the land owned by Algonquin.

Plaintiff Burr's purpose in bringing these actions is to establish a right of way westerly over land of the defendants to a public highway running north/south, known as Route 3 or the "Shunpike." The complaint is in six counts. The first, second, and fifth counts are directed at Algonquin and seek to quiet title to an easement, pursuant to C.G.S. 47-31, over

Algonquin's land, and to enjoin Algonquin from interfering with it. The first count is based on a theory of express easement and the fifth count, in the alternative, is based on a theory of prescriptive right. The third, fourth, and sixth counts set CT Page 7325 forth similar theories with respect to CNG. The express easement over the Algonquin property is alleged to have been reserved in favor of the plaintiff's predecessor in title, Acquiviva, in a grant of easement dated November 10, 1951. The prescriptive right is alleged to have arisen through adverse use by the plaintiff's predecessor and the plaintiff. The express easement over the CNG property is alleged to be the result of a grant of easement by CNG's predecessor, Hartford Gas Company, to Algonquin and the plaintiff's predecessor, Acquiviva, on November 21, 1962. The prescriptive right over CNG's property is alleged to have arisen through adverse use by the plaintiff's predecessor and the plaintiff. At the conclusion of the evidence in this case, the plaintiff conceded that the allegations of the sixth count had not been proved, and the court accordingly dismissed that count.

The court's findings of fact are based on expert and lay testimony; documentary and physical evidence in the form of deeds, maps and photographs; and the court's field inspection of the properties in question. The narration may be aided by reference to the court's diagram, attached hereto as Appendix A.

I. CHRONOLOGY

Plaintiff Burr's property lies to the east of property of Algonquin and adjacent to it, and to the southeast of property of CNG. The chronology of the various parties' acquisitions of their properties is important to the resolution of the case and is as follows:

From 1941 to January 1989, plaintiff Burr's property was owned by the Acquiviva family.

On October 11, 1951, Algonquin acquired the Ewald property.

On November 10, 1951, Acquiviva granted Algonquin a pipeline easement over the Acquiviva/Burr property. In that deed, Acquiviva stated:

"It is understood that the owner will have the right to enter his property through the old trace road which crosses the company property. It is the same road which has for its entrance on the Shunpike and it continues on to the north of the owners land." CT Page 7326

In 1952, Algonquin acquired the Brace property.

In 1957, Algonquin acquired the Brennan, Smith and Klupko properties.

In 1958, Algonquin acquired the Talbot and McIntyre properties.

In 1960, Algonquin acquired the Bordonaro property.

In 1962, Hartford Gas Company (predecessor of CNG) granted an easement along its southern border to Algonquin and Acquiviva.

In 1989, plaintiff Burr acquired the Acquiviva property.

As the above chronology and the diagram in Appendix A demonstrate, Algonquin did not own any land adjacent to Route 3/Shunpike or adjacent to the Acquiviva/Burr property in 1951, when Acquiviva inserted the statement concerning the "old trace road" in the deed granting the pipeline easement. Acquiviva did not own any of the land over which he sought to reserve the "old trace road" right of way. Plaintiff Burr did not own his property at the time Hartford Gas granted the easement along its southern border and running to Route 3/Shunpike.

II. Old Trace Road

Various expert witnesses testified as to the location of the "old trace road," which is the name given to the right of way in the 1951 pipeline easement and which is the easement now claimed by the plaintiff. Samuel Acquiviva, the son of the original owner, testified as to the location of an old road and path from the Shunpike to the Acquiviva land. Additionally, during the trial, the court inspected the area to attempt to determine the location of the road. There is essentially no dispute that the dirt road shown in the court's diagram as running north/south through the former Bordonaro property is the "old trace road." At its northern extremity, that road dissolves into a melange of thickets, streams, clumps of trees, tall weeds, and grass. Preceding northwesterly through the former Ewald property, vestiges of either a narrow road or wide path sporadically appear. Samuel Acquiviva testified that his family would enter the former Talbot property from Route 3/Shunpike and proceed easterly along a dirt road or path until nearing a high tension power station. The station is on the former Bordonaro lot. At that point, they would leave the CT Page 7327 road, which was then barely discernible, and walk easterly to the Burr/Acquiviva property. Later, after Algonquin paved its driveway, the Acquivivas were directed by Algonquin employees to enter through that driveway rather than over the original grassy route south of the driveway.

There is no present indication of any road, other than the paved driveway, that connects the Algonquin property directly to Route 3/Shunpike.

Based on all of the evidence, the court finds that no part of the "old trace road" referred to in the November 1951 pipeline easement ever connected to or touched the plaintiff Burr's property at any point. The court further finds that at the time of the 1951 pipeline easement Algonquin did not own the property where the "old trace road" connected to Route 3/Shunpike (former Talbot property) or the property (former Bordonaro property) through which the "old trace road" ran and which was adjacent to the Burr/Acquiviva property.

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Bluebook (online)
1991 Conn. Super. Ct. 7323, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/burr-v-algonquin-gas-trans-company-no-cv-89-0368933-s-aug-12-1991-connsuperct-1991.