Chase v. Eastman

563 A.2d 1099, 1989 Me. LEXIS 223
CourtSupreme Judicial Court of Maine
DecidedAugust 15, 1989
StatusPublished
Cited by23 cases

This text of 563 A.2d 1099 (Chase v. Eastman) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Judicial Court of Maine primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Chase v. Eastman, 563 A.2d 1099, 1989 Me. LEXIS 223 (Me. 1989).

Opinion

CLIFFORD, Justice.

The plaintiffs, Charles E. Chase, et al., own various parcels of inland real property on Thompson’s Point in Naples. Thompson’s Point is bordered, in part, by Sebago Lake and the Songo Bayou, formerly a portion of the Songo River. The defendants and counterclaimants, Merle C. East *1100 man and Marlene J. Eastman, own two cottages located on waterfront property on the Songo Bayou. The Superior Court (Cumberland County, Cleaves, J.) found that the plaintiffs have an easement to use the Eastmans’ property for walking, swimming, fishing, docking boats and other recreational activities and that all but a fifteen-foot strip of the easement has been abandoned by the plaintiffs. The court enjoined the plaintiffs from placing additional docks on the Eastmans’ property and from parking vehicles on the residential portions of the property. The Eastmans were permanently enjoined from blocking or otherwise restricting the plaintiffs’ access to or use of their easement. The plaintiffs appeal and the Eastmans cross-appeal from the judgment of the Superior Court. For the reasons set forth below, we affirm the judgment.

I.

The history of this real property dispute takes us back to the early 1930’s. In 1931, the Town of Naples approved a plan (the “1931 Plan”) subdividing a large tract of real property on Thompson’s Point into numerous inland and waterfront lots, private ways and waterfront areas designated on the plan as “reservation” or “reserved.” 1 The plan was recorded in the Cumberland County Registry of Deeds. The property was owned by Guy Dunton through a corporate entity. A revised plan including additional lots was also approved by the Town of Naples and recorded in 1932 (the “1932 Plan”). The Superior Court found that the reservation areas were set aside to provide the purchasers of inland lots with access to and use of the waterfront.

The focus of this dispute is on the easternmost reservation area indicated on the 1931 and 1932 Plans. The property is, in part, located at the end of a private way now known as Turtle Lane. During the 1950’s, Donald Rogers, who was employed by Dunton, dredged a portion of the Songo River and placed landfill on the reservation area and on an island created in the river across from the property. The landfill altered and extended the shoreline of the reservation area. The navigable body of water between the reservation area and the manmade island is now known as the Son-go Bayou.

Through two conveyances, Rogers acquired title to the reservation area “subject to all easements and rights of others which may exist.” Rogers later divided the property into four numbered lots and, during the early 1970’s, built two cottages on the property. The Eastmans purchased the cottages from Rogers and ultimately acquired title to the entire reservation area. Rogers also sold the Eastmans two inland lots adjacent to Turtle Lane.

The plaintiffs made various uses of the reservation area. Plaintiff Irene Harri-man, who purchased several inland lots in 1950, used the waterfront of the disputed property for fishing and to moor her boat. She was aware that the cottages were being built on the reservation area, but did not object to their construction or presence. All of the other plaintiffs acquired their inland lots during or after the construction of the Eastmans’ cottages. The plaintiffs generally used the waterfront of the reservation area for walking, fishing and other recreational activities. Some of the plaintiffs installed boat docks on the portion of the reservation area located at the end of Turtle Lane.

The plaintiffs, owners of inland lots, each have a deed connected in a chain of title back to Dunton, the common grantor who subdivided the property and recorded the 1931 and 1932 Plans. Those deeds refer to either or both the 1931 or 1932 plans, and contain an express grant with the following or similar language:

[T]he right in common with others to use the private ways laid out on said plan and also the right to use the parcels marked ‘Reservations’ on the said plan, but without unreasonably restricting or interfering with the reciprocal rights of *1101 others to the use of said ways and reserved sections.

During the summer of 1984, Mr. Eastman informed the plaintiffs that he owned the entire easternmost reservation area and that they had to remove their docks and boats from his property. The following spring, despite the written objections of the plaintiffs, the Eastmans blocked the end of Turtle Lane with a pile of gravel, thereby restricting the plaintiffs’ access to the waterfront.

The plaintiffs filed a complaint in the Superior Court seeking an order enjoining the Eastmans from blocking access to the waterfront and requiring them to remove the two cottages. The plaintiffs also sought a declaratory judgment defining the scope of their claimed easement to use the Eastmans’ property. The Eastmans’ amended counterclaim alleged, in the alternative, that the plaintiffs had no easement, or if an easement did exist, it had been abandoned or was limited to pedestrian access and did not extend to the landfill portions of the property created since 1931.

Following a nonjury trial, the court found that (1) the plaintiffs have an easement allowing them, in common with others, to use the Eastmans’ property for access to the waterfront for all purposes reasonably related to the enjoyment of the waterfront; (2) the placement of landfill on the waterfront of the property served to extend the easement from its original terminal point to the new shorefront; and (3) the plaintiffs abandoned a portion of their easement. The intent to abandon was evidenced by their failure, and the failure of their predecessors in title, to object to the construction of the cottages. The court did not find abandonment of “an appropriate strip of land along the waterfront ... sufficient for the reasonable use and enjoyment of the waterfront area by the plaintiffs.” The court concluded that:

[the] plaintiffs have the right to use [the Eastmans’ property] for swimming, fishing, boating and boat docking, sunbathing and other reasonably related reerea-tional pursuits with the exception that ... such use is limited to an area along the shorefront and extending back a uniform distance of forty (40) feet from [the] shorefront.

The court permanently enjoined the East-mans from restricting or impeding the plaintiffs’ right-of-way across or use of the property. The court also ordered the East-mans to pay for the damage to a dock they removed from the waterfront. Subsequently, the court, after taking a view of the property, granted the Eastmans’ motion pursuant to M.R.Civ.P. 59(e) to alter or amend the judgment by reducing the width of the easement from forty to fifteen feet. The Eastmans appealed and we remanded the case to the Superior Court for lack of a final judgment on the Eastmans’ counterclaim.

Upon remand, the Eastmans, pursuant to M.R.Civ.P. 15(a) and (b), moved to amend the counterclaim. The court granted the motion to amend. The amended counterclaim alleged that, in the event the easement included the right to place docks on the waterfront, it did not permit the placement of additional

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Bluebook (online)
563 A.2d 1099, 1989 Me. LEXIS 223, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/chase-v-eastman-me-1989.