CASSANI v. Hale

2010 VT 8, 993 A.2d 422, 187 Vt. 336, 2010 Vt. LEXIS 9
CourtSupreme Court of Vermont
DecidedFebruary 12, 2010
Docket2008-351
StatusPublished
Cited by11 cases

This text of 2010 VT 8 (CASSANI v. Hale) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Vermont primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
CASSANI v. Hale, 2010 VT 8, 993 A.2d 422, 187 Vt. 336, 2010 Vt. LEXIS 9 (Vt. 2010).

Opinion

*338 Burgess, J.

¶ 1. Defendants 1 appeal an order locating a right-of-way across their land and authorizing construction of a bridge on their lot to connect the right-of-way easement with the town highway. The newly located right-of-way runs briefly parallel to an existing right-of-way, the “Rock driveway,” while the new bridge would lie right alongside an existing bridge connecting the Rock driveway to the town highway. Granted by George Rock, the common predecessor in title to defendants, the old bridge and Rock driveway branch off the town highway and allow access to the highway from the lots of the Hales, Meadowsend, and the Labries to the south of plaintiff-Cassani’s lot. The bridge is almost entirely on Hale’s lot. The Rock driveway ends far short of the Cassani lot.

¶2. We first considered this right-of-way dispute in Cassani v. Northfield Savings Bank, 2005 VT 127, 179 Vt. 204, 893 A.2d 325 (Cassani I), when defendants appealed the trial court’s order authorizing reformation of an earlier easement deed. The terms of the easement indicated an intent to grant a perpetual right-of-way along a preexisting, but undefined, “lane or road” across the LaBrie land from the highway to plaintiffs’ lot. In that case, the trial court concluded that mutual misunderstanding between the grantor and grantee of the easement as to the accuracy and sufficiency of their description justified reformation to comport with their original intent, and that it was possible to locate the easement from physical landmarks and a sketch-map in evidence. We affirmed the reformation order and remanded. Id. ¶ 1. Then pending in the court below was an action by plaintiffs to prevent their neighbors who used the Rock driveway from interfering with plaintiffs’ use. At the same time, defendants-LaBrie argued in Cassani I that reformation of the easement deed would impose a servitude upon the Rock driveway and bridge, when the owners of that driveway were not parties to the reformation action. Accordingly, we noted that the case below would “allow the superior court to determine how, if at all,” reformation would affect the other defendants, id. ¶ 12, and our remand ordered that the cases be consolidated for a determination of “whether the easement established in the reformed deed is legally permissible in light of the preexisting Rock right-of-way.” Id. mandate. The trial court *339 carried out the objective of the remand, reforming the deed and resolving the dispute with regard to the affected parties. Again, we affirm.

¶ 3. In happier times, Cassani owned both the Cassani lot to the north and what became the LaBrie lot to the south. During this ownership, Cassani undertook to fashion a road from the Rock driveway, just after the bridge, across the south lot (which became the LaBrie lot) so that the Cassani lot was accessible from the town highway. While the Rock driveway ran northerly, straddling the joint boundaries of Hale and LaBrie, and then Meadowsend and LaBrie, the road built by Cassani crossed the southern lot (again, now the LaBrie’s) past the bridge in a northwesterly direction to the Cassani lot. By 1995, this road was passable, although unfinished. It was this passage that the LaBries have since blocked, shortly after acquiring the property as described in ¶ 6, infra. (See Cassani I for an illustration of the underlying land).

¶4. Beginning in 1995, there were several changes in fortune and ownership that brought about the current dispute. That year, the Cassanis ceded title to the northern Cassani lot in a bankruptcy action and lost the south lot (now the LaBries’) in foreclosure to Northfield Savings Bank. The Cassani lot was bought by the Cassani’s daughter, Laurie Quensler, in May 1996. At that time, the Bank still owned the south lot. The Bank was made aware through discussions with plaintiffs of the need for a right-of-way and agreed to grant an easement following the road already in place.

¶ 5. The Bank issued an easement deed purporting to grant and convey a perpetual easement right to the bankruptcy estate across the south lot so that future owners of the Cassani lot would have access to and from the highway. However, neither the description in the deed nor any referenced survey accomplished a particular layout of the easement. The Vermont Easement Deed stated as follows:

This easement is part of all and the same land and premises conveyed to the Northfield Savings Bank [in the Cassani foreclosure] and of record in Attachment Book 5 at Page 205 of the Groton Land Records. This easement is depicted on a certain survey plan entitled “Property survey on a portion of Milton B. Ricker Estate ...”
*340 Being a 50’ perpetual easement, for the sole purpose of ingress and egress, over and on the above-described land and premises. The 50’ easement created by this instrument commences on the northwesterly edge of the right-of-way limits of Town Highway £4» awd proceeds in a generally northwesterly direction across the lands of Grantor herein, along the existing lane or road, and terminates at the southern boundary of land of the Grantee herein. This easement is for the benefit of and appurtenant to the land of the Grantee herein, and is for the benefit of and appurtenant to those lands and premises conveyed to Robert Cassani and Shirley Cassani ... of record in Book 37 at Page 403 of the Groton Land Records, all as more particularly shown on the above referenced survey plan.

Vermont Easement Deed, February 23, 1996 (as recorded at Groton Town Clerk’s Office, November 13, 1996) (emphasis added). The survey plan referred to was apparently a hand drawn sketch on a photocopy of an existing survey map, not a survey on file with the town. The parties testified to the existence of the survey during trial, but it was not put into evidence.

¶ 6. In October 1997, defendant Linda LaBrie sought to buy the south lot from the Bank. In a letter in which she offered only $25,000 for the lot, she justified the low offer in part with an acknowledgement that “[t]he property contains a right-of-way through it, right past the camp, that is the sole access for the Quensler [Cassani lot] acreage.” Cassani I, 2005 VT 127, ¶ 19. The Bank sold the south lot for $32,000 subject to and with the benefits of rights-of-way and easements of record. Shortly after the purchase, the LaBries closed the access to the Cassani lot. In 2001, litigation over the easement commenced.

¶ 7. The history bringing this dispute to its present disposition has resulted in three separate cases and six court orders. In the first action, Quensler v. LaBrie, No. 214-8-01 Cacv (Pearson, J., May 9, 2002), the court granted defendants-LaBrie summary judgment in May 2002, and denied Quensler declaratory relief on the existence of the right-of-way because of defects in the Easement Deed. However, the court suggested that Quensler might have a remedy in a reformation action. Id. In 2002, Robert Cassani, after reacquiring title to the Cassani lot from his *341

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Bluebook (online)
2010 VT 8, 993 A.2d 422, 187 Vt. 336, 2010 Vt. LEXIS 9, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/cassani-v-hale-vt-2010.