Chittenden v. Waterbury Center Community Church, Inc.

726 A.2d 20, 168 Vt. 478, 1998 Vt. LEXIS 400
CourtSupreme Court of Vermont
DecidedDecember 11, 1998
Docket97-235
StatusPublished
Cited by30 cases

This text of 726 A.2d 20 (Chittenden v. Waterbury Center Community Church, Inc.) 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
Chittenden v. Waterbury Center Community Church, Inc., 726 A.2d 20, 168 Vt. 478, 1998 Vt. LEXIS 400 (Vt. 1998).

Opinion

Dooley, J.

This case concerns a driveway that separates the Cold Hollow Cider Mill in Waterbury Center, one of the state’s busiest tourist attractions, from a neighboring church. Plaintiffs and counterclaim defendants Eric and Erancine Chittenden are the owners of the cider mill business and the real property it occupies. They appeal from a judgment entered in the Washington Superior Court concluding that the driveway in question is the property of defendant and counterclaim plaintiff Waterbury Center Community Church, Inc., free of any claim by plaintiffs. The heart of plaintiffs’ case is that they are entitled to a prescriptive easement over the driveway. On appeal, plaintiffs contend that (1) 12 V.S.A. § 462, which effectively protects property belonging to religious institutions and certain other entities from claims of adverse possession, violates both the U.S. and Vermontconstitutions, 1 (2) notwithstanding § 462, plaintiffs enjoy an easement based on the doctrine of presumed grants, and (3) the church’s claim of unencumbered title to the driveway is barred by laches. We affirm.

I. Background

The ease was tried to the court, which issued extensive findings of fact, not challenged here, and conclusions of law. Accordingly, we draw our summary of the relevant facts from the trial court’s findings.

Plaintiffs’ business, the Cold Hollow Cider Mill, operates on a four-acre parcel of land located on the east side of Route 100 in Waterbury Center. Bordering plaintiffs’ property on the south and *480 also fronting on Route 100 is the real property owned by defendant, Waterbury Center Community Church, Inc., a Methodist congregation. Plaintiffs have run their business at its present location since April 1976, operating out of a series of buildings constructed in the early-to-mid-nineteenth century. The church building was constructed in 1833, and the church traces its title to the land to a “conditional lease” executed in the following year. The 1834 conveyance provides that the “premises shall be used and occupied by [grantees] as a site for [a] Meeting house and necessary appendages thereto, and for no other purpose.”

Located between the buildings on plaintiffs’ property and the church building is a gravel driveway, referred to in the record as the “north driveway” and leading eastward from Route 100. 2 Branching off from the north driveway to the south is a second, semicircular driveway that provides direct access to the front of the church building. The church uses the north driveway for vehicular access to its semicircular driveway as well as for parking to the north of the church building. Plaintiffs use the north driveway to provide public access to their business.

Since 1834, the church has held weekly religious services, additional services on religious holidays, and occasional weddings and funerals on its premises. Church suppers have taken place there on an occasional basis throughout the twentieth century. During the 1960s and 70s, church attendance fell off, and the condition of the church building deteriorated. As a result, the church did not use the building during the winter months for several years. However, use of the church building increased in the 1980s, and it was restored. Various outside groups such as Alcoholics Anonymous and Weight Watchers use the church occasionally. The church holds three flea markets and three chicken pie suppers each year. Weekly Sunday services generally attract between 40 and 50 worshipers.

Plaintiffs’ property was owned by Keith H. Gibbs and/or Colleen R. Gibbs from 1945 to 1973, the last year in which Mrs. Gibbs occupied the property as a widow. During this period, the owners used the property both for residential purposes and to conduct extensive *481 commercial operations, including: a milk-hauling business; a dairy farm; marketing, auctioning and transportation of cattle; and the hauling of sand, gravel and fill. All social and business invitees of the owners used the disputed driveway for parking and access to the rear of the property, as did their tenants and employees. During this period, many large trucks used the driveway on a regular basis.

From 1973 to July 1976, plaintiffs’ property was occupied by Richard and Linda Angelino. The Angehnos used the driveway for access for themselves and for tenants residing in an apartment on the premises, and for transporting horses onto and off the property. Farmers used the driveway during this period to access the Angelinos’ barn for hay storage. The public was also permitted to use the driveway to gain access to farm pastures located to the east of the parties’ property.

Since purchasing the property in 1976, plaintiffs have used it for both residential and business purposes. Their cider mill business has grown steadily during their ownership. By 1994, annual visitors had increased to more than 250,000. Mail-order and wholesale operations now account for more than half of the cider mill’s business volume.

A significant aspect of plaintiffs’ business involves patrons arriving by bus. From the onset of operations through June 1991, defendant made no objection to buses gaining access to plaintiffs’ property via the north driveway. During the first year plaintiffs operated their business, approximately fifty buses visited the facility. By the late 1980s, the volume had increased to approximately 600 buses per year, ninety percent of which make their visits between late August and late October. During this peak period, as many as thirty buses visit daily. The buses unload their passengers on the north driveway and park behind the church on plaintiffs’ property. Occasionally, a bus remains next to the church with its engine idling to wait for another vehicle ahead of it to unload.

Over the many years that plaintiffs or their predecessors in title have used the north driveway, they performed nearly all of the maintenance on it. This work included grading, graveling and snow plowing, all of which have gradually widened the driveway approximately IY2 feet onto the lawn of the church. No one associated with the church ever gave the plaintiffs or their predecessors permission to use the driveway and, indeed, no such permission was ever requested.

The church engaged a surveyor in 1973 who determined that the north driveway is located entirely on the church’s property. A second *482 survey commissioned by the church in 1991 also confirmed that the church owned the north driveway.

Church trustees invited plaintiffs to attend their meeting on June 13, 1991. At that meeting, the church trustees disclosed for the first time that they contended that the church owned the north driveway and that plaintiffs had no right to its use. The church demanded deeded rights to parking on plaintiffs’ property in exchange for deeded rights to the north driveway. Plaintiffs refused, maintaining they owned the driveway. The church trustees warned the plaintiffs they would close off the north driveway for one complete day at some point before July 13, 1991.

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Bluebook (online)
726 A.2d 20, 168 Vt. 478, 1998 Vt. LEXIS 400, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/chittenden-v-waterbury-center-community-church-inc-vt-1998.