Burroughs v. Acadia Inv., Inc.

CourtSuperior Court of Maine
DecidedAugust 21, 2002
DocketHANre-00-15
StatusUnpublished

This text of Burroughs v. Acadia Inv., Inc. (Burroughs v. Acadia Inv., Inc.) 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
Burroughs v. Acadia Inv., Inc., (Me. Super. Ct. 2002).

Opinion

STATE OF MAINE SUPERIOR COURT HANCOCK, SS. CIVIL ACTION Docket No. RE-00-15 ,

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Linda Carter Burroughs, Plaintiff Vv. Decision and Judgment

Acadia Investments, Inc., DONALD L. GARBRECHT Defendant LAW LIBRARY

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Hearing in this matter was held on August 12, 2002. The plaintiff, a representative of the defendant and counsel for both parties were present.’

The parties own adjacent parcels of real property located on Ash Place in Bar Harbor. The street address for the plaintiff’s parcel is 22 Ash Place, and the defendant’s is 20 Ash Place. The common boundary of the parcels is the northern side of the plaintiff’ s property and the southem side of the defendant’s. The length of that common boundary is nearly two hundred feet. The plaintiff alleges that through adverse possession, she also owns a strip of property roughly ten feet in width that runs along the entire length of her northem boundary, extending that far into the defendant’s lot. The record shows — and the plaintiff does not dispute — that her record title included in the relevant deed descriptions does not encompass that disputed area. Thus, record title to

that property lies with the defendant.

' In its present posture, this case involves one plaintiff and one defendant. This action was filed by the present plaintiff and her father, Harlan Carter. Mr. Carter died during the pendency of this case. The suggestion of death did not seek to substitute another party to represent any continuing interest that Mr. Carter’s estate might represent.

Further, the prior owner of the defendant’s parcel, Lura Jones, was originally named as a co-defendant. The plaintiff voluntarily dismissed any claim against her early on in these proceedings, presumably because she conveyed her interest in the property to the remaining defendant very close in time to the date when the plaintiff commenced this action. “To successfully acquire title by adverse possession, the adverse possessor must prove by a preponderance of the evidence possession for a 20-year period that is actual, open, visible, notorious, hostile, under a claim of right, continuous and exclusive.” Loavenbruck v. Rohrback, 2002 ME 73, J 11, 795 A.2d 90, 93. The claimant must establish these elements by a “fair preponderance of the evidence,” which means simply a preponderance of that evidence. Streifel v. Charles-Keyt-Leaman Partnership, 1999 ME 111,93, 733 A.2d 984, 988. Here, the defendant does not appear to seriously challenge the plaintiff's adverse possession analysis, and the evidence nonetheless establishes affirmatively that the plaintiff has acquired an ownership interest in part ~ but not all -- of that area through adverse possession.

There are three distinct sections of the disputed strip of realty that must be analyzed separately in the context of the plaintiff’s adverse possession claim. First, the plaintiff has established each element of a claim of adverse possession to that portion of the disputed area that runs between Ash Place and the location where a maple tree stood in very close proximity to the sunroom of the house on the defendant’s property.” This front (westerly) section of the disputed area is lawn. The plaintiff and her parents, when they occupied the house now owned by the plaintiff, maintained that grassy area as if it were their own and in a way that satisfies the elements of a claim for adverse possession. In 1978, the plaintiff’s father noticed a pin in the location where the southwest corner of 20 Ash Place is located, according to the record description of that property. He then set his own pin at the spot where he believed that his northwest corner was located. This second pin is approximately ten feet north of the pin that correctly reflects the record boundary. The court concludes that even though Mr. Carter was mistaken regarding the location of his northwest corner and therefore of the location of the northern boundary of his property, he did not intend to occupy the disputed property conditionally. His discovery of the more southerly pin (the one that correctly depicts the northwest corner of

22 Ash Place) constituted a message that he did not own north of a line that extended

* After the defendant purchased the property, its principal cut down the maple tree because it was in poor condition and threatened the house located on the defendant’s lot -- and, presumably, the house on the plaintiff’s own lot. The remainder of the maple tree has regenerated into something resembling a bush or shrub. Its location is therefore apparent. from that location. In the face of this message, he manifested an intention to assert ownership beyond that point. “If... a party claiming through mistake has an absolute intent to claim the land, his possession is adverse to the true owner.” Emerson v. Maine Rural Missions Association, Inc., 560 A.2d 1,3 (Me. 1989). As in Emerson, the plaintiff’s predecessor in interest asserted title to the disputed property even knowing of circumstances that this assertion was challenged. Jd. Therefore, the plaintiff at bar has proven “the requisite ‘absolute intention’ necessary to constitute adverse possession.” Id. However, the plaintiff has not acquired the remainder of the disputed section under principles of adverse possession. After the plaintiff’s father acquired 22 Ash Place in 1978, he piled stumps, brush and other vegetative debris within the rear section of the disputed area, which is the easterly end. He did this to create a barrier that would make it difficult for people present on the land at 20 Ash Place from crossing over onto the boundary (as he believed it to be) onto his property +The evidence does not reveal when he began that practice, and the plaintiff therefore has failed to establish at least the temporal element of an adverse possession claim for that portion of the disputed property. Finally, the middle section of the disputed property is overgrown with bushes. At one point, the plaintiff’ s predecessor in interest maintained a rock garden in that area. However, that project was abandoned, and that area grew over. Neither the plaintiff nor any of her predecessors have possessed the third, middle section of the disputed property in a way that would support a claim of ownership by means of adverse possession to it. Therefore, the court concludes that the plaintiff has established title by adverse possession to the section of the disputed property, which, as described above, is between the site of the felled maple tree and Ash Place. The defendant contends that in the circumstances of this case, the plaintiff is barred by the equitable theory of laches from asserting an ownership claim to any part of its parcel.

Laches is the omission to assert a right for an unreasonable and unexplained length of time. . . .It exists when the omission to assert the right has continued for an unreasonable and unexplained lapse of time, and under circumstances where the delay has been prejudicial to an adverse party, and where it would be inequitable to enforce the right. .. .Whether the equitable doctrine of laches applies in a given circumstance is a question of law. Northeast Harbor Golf Club v. Harris, 1999 ME 38, | 19, 725 A.2d 1018, 1023-24 (citations omitted). Delay alone is an insufficient predicate for a claim to be barred by laches. Longley v. Knapp, 1998 ME 142, { 10, 713 A.2d 939, 943.

Here, the record does not reveal that any delay by the plaintiff in raising an adverse possession claim has worked to the prejudice of the defendant sufficient to bar her claim on equitable grounds. The defendant purchased the Ash Place lot with the intention of developing it into the site of a multi-unit residential condominium.

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Related

Loavenbruck v. Rohrbach
2002 ME 73 (Supreme Judicial Court of Maine, 2002)
Northeast Harbor Golf Club, Inc. v. Harris
1999 ME 38 (Supreme Judicial Court of Maine, 1999)
Longley v. Knapp
1998 ME 142 (Supreme Judicial Court of Maine, 1998)
Emerson v. Maine Rural Missions Ass'n
560 A.2d 1 (Supreme Judicial Court of Maine, 1989)
Striefel v. Charles-Keyt-Leaman Partnership
1999 ME 111 (Supreme Judicial Court of Maine, 1999)

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Bluebook (online)
Burroughs v. Acadia Inv., Inc., Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/burroughs-v-acadia-inv-inc-mesuperct-2002.