Colquhoun v. Webber

684 A.2d 405, 1996 Me. LEXIS 215
CourtSupreme Judicial Court of Maine
DecidedOctober 15, 1996
StatusPublished
Cited by66 cases

This text of 684 A.2d 405 (Colquhoun v. Webber) 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
Colquhoun v. Webber, 684 A.2d 405, 1996 Me. LEXIS 215 (Me. 1996).

Opinion

RUDMAN, Justice.

Helen Webber appeals from the judgment entered in the Superior Court (Lincoln County, Brodriek, J.) granting a summary judgment in favor of the Colquhouns in their quiet title action, and from the judgments entered after a jury-waived trial (Lincoln County, Brennan, J.) in favor of the Colquh-ouns on the remaining counts of their complaint seeking declaratory relief, damages for trespass, and slander of title. Webber raises four issues on appeal: (1) Whether the court erred in granting the summary judgment in favor of the Colquhouns based on a referee’s finding in the previous adjudication between the parties, (2) whether there was sufficient evidence to support the court’s finding that Webber had slandered the Colquhouns title to land, (3) whether the court’s declaratory judgment was improperly drafted and overly broad, and (4) whether the court erred or abused its discretion in its award of damages and attorney fees to the Colquhouns. Although we disagree with the first three of Webber’s assertions, we agree that the court erred in calculating the Colquhouns’ special damages, and therefore vacate the judgment only in respect to special damages awarded the Colquhouns.

The parties to this action have been before us once before, and an understanding of the first action, Colquhoun v. Webber, 505 A.2d 794 (Me.1986), is central to the resolution of the present dispute. We therefore begin with a short recitation of the earlier case.

The Colquhouns own a summer home on Round Pound in Bristol bordered by land owned at one time by Helen Webber. In 1979 a logger hired by Webber and her then spouse breached a stone wall and stored logs on land owned by the Colquhouns. As a result of this trespass, the Colquhouns commenced a trespass action against the logger and the Webbers. Id. at 795. The suit was referred to a referee for determination. The referee warned the parties that his determination of the trespass action would not quiet title to the disputed property. Id. Although neither party sought to amend their pleadings to seek a determination of title, the referee considered the ownership of the land and the relevant boundaries in determining whether a trespass did in fact occur. The referee concluded that the Colquhouns had established title both by deed and through adverse possession to all of the disputed lands, including the land occupied by the so-called Dan Coates Road, which he concluded did not exist. Based on his findings that the Colquhouns owned the disputed land and that the Webbers had not established the existence of a public or private way or the existence of an easement across the land, the referee found that the logger’s entry onto the Colquhouns’ land constituted a trespass and awarded damages in the amount of three hundred dollars to the Colquhouns.

Based on the referee’s report, the Superior Court entered a judgment in favor of the Colquhouns, and the Webbers appealed. Id. At oral argument before us the Webbers no longer contested that they had damaged property owned by the Colquhouns but rather sought only to prevent any collateral es-toppel consequences from attaching to the referee’s determination that the Dan Coates Road never had existed. Id. Because the Webbers now admitted their trespass, making the issue of the existence of and title to the land occupied by the Dan Coates Road of “no present, direct consequence,” we, after again emphasizing that the action was only an action in trespass and not a real action, affirmed the Superior Court’s judgment based “solely on ... the coincident circumstances” that the Colquhouns found the damage award sufficient and that the Webbers stood willing to pay the award for damage *408 done to land they admitted the plaintiffs owned. Id. We concluded our affirmance by stating that “[a]ny declaration by the referee as to the Dan Coates Road is entirely unnecessary to this present final judgment and therefore can have no preclusive effect in any future litigation between the parties.” Id. (citations omitted).

In 1986 the Colquhouns again commenced an action against Helen Webber and her then spouse for trespass. This initial complaint was subsequently amended four times over the course of three years to add additional defendants and counts. The fourth amended complaint contained five counts denominated as follows: Count I: Trespass; Count II: Slander of Title; Count III: Declaratory Judgment; Count IV: Quiet Title pursuant to 14 M.R.S.A. §§ 6651-54 (1980); and Count V: Quiet Title pursuant to 14 M.R.S.A. §§ 6655-58 (1980). Webber answered the amended complaint and by her counterclaim asserted ownership of or easement rights to the Dan Coates Road.

The slander of title claim against Webber arose from her recording, during the pen-dency of this action, a quitclaim deed in the Lincoln County Registiy of Deeds that purportedly conveyed her interest in land that she knew was claimed by the Colquhouns to “each and every citizen of the United States of America equally.”

In 1990 the Colquhouns moved for a summary judgment on their quiet title counts, claiming that the referee’s findings in the previous action estopped Webber from challenging the Colquhouns’ quiet title action. The Superior Court agreed and granted a summary judgment in favor of the Colquh-ouns on Counts IV and V of their complaint.

The case proceeded to trial on the remaining counts of the complaint. After a jury-waived trial, a judgment was entered in favor of the Colquhouns on all counts and against Webber on her counterclaim. After the court granted in part and denied in part Webber’s motion to alter or amend the judgment and for additional findings of fact and conclusions of law, this appeal followed.

I

The Summary Judgment

Webber contends that the court (Bro-drick, J.) erroneously relied on the doctrine of collateral estoppel in granting the plaintiffs motion for a summary judgment on Counts IV and V. She argues that our decision in Colquhoun I, 505 A.2d at 794, removed any effect of collateral estoppel in this subsequent litigation. Webber misperceives the record in this case, as well as the thrust of our decision.

First, in moving for a summary judgment on the “quiet title” counts, the Colquhouns candidly acknowledged that the status of the Dan Coates Road, as opposed to the underlying title, remained an open issue. They relied, however, on the referee’s finding that they had acquired title to the land by adverse possession. That question of title, they argued, was no longer open to dispute. Indeed, unlike the earlier litigation, Webber has not claimed any title to the disputed land in this case, but only a right to use, for access to her land, the way that has been called the Dan Coates Road. In the earlier appeal, the Webbers expressed their concern for the “possible collateral estoppel” effect only of the referee’s declaration as to the existence of the Dan Coates Road. Because the existence or non-existence of the road would not have any consequence on the Col-quhouns’ underlying fee and would not justify the Webbers’ trespass, we stated that determination of the legal status of the road was “entirely unnecessary to this present final judgment.” Id. at 795.

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684 A.2d 405, 1996 Me. LEXIS 215, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/colquhoun-v-webber-me-1996.