Cris O'Donnell & Cheryl O'Donnell v. Hope Clough & Michelle Clough

CourtSupreme Court of Vermont
DecidedSeptember 5, 2025
Docket25-AP-088
StatusUnpublished

This text of Cris O'Donnell & Cheryl O'Donnell v. Hope Clough & Michelle Clough (Cris O'Donnell & Cheryl O'Donnell v. Hope Clough & Michelle Clough) 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
Cris O'Donnell & Cheryl O'Donnell v. Hope Clough & Michelle Clough, (Vt. 2025).

Opinion

VERMONT SUPREME COURT Case No. 25-AP-088 109 State Street Montpelier VT 05609-0801 802-828-4774 www.vermontjudiciary.org

Note: In the case title, an asterisk (*) indicates an appellant and a double asterisk (**) indicates a cross- appellant. Decisions of a three-justice panel are not to be considered as precedent before any tribunal.

ENTRY ORDER

SEPTEMBER TERM, 2025

Cris O’Donnell & Cheryl O’Donnell v. } APPEALED FROM: Hope Clough* & Michelle Clough* } } Superior Court, Orange Unit, } Civil Division } CASE NO. 21-CV-00261 Trial Judge: Daniel P. Richardson

In the above-entitled cause, the Clerk will enter:

Defendants Hope and Michelle Clough appeal pro se from the trial court’s decision in this declaratory-judgment action. We affirm.

This appeal concerns a dispute over the location, use, and scope of a right-of-way, created in the 1970s, which touches and concerns the parties’ property. Plaintiffs Cris and Cheryl O’Donnell and the Cloughs are adjoining landowners. The O’Donnells filed suit, seeking a ruling limiting the portions of the right-of-way that the Cloughs can use and determining the scope of limits of the Cloughs’ right to use or occupy the right-of-way. The Cloughs filed various counterclaims.

The court held a bench trial in October 2024 and issued a written order. It found as follows. The O’Donnells live on an approximately 1.52-acre parcel in Bradford, Vermont (the O’Donnell lot or Lot 5). The parcel’s southern boundary is bounded by two lots owned by the Cloughs: a 2.14-acre parcel with road frontage (the Clough homestead lot or Lots 1 and 3) and a 0.92-acre parcel of undeveloped land west of the homestead lot (Clough undeveloped lot or Lot 4). Both of these Clough lots are bounded to the south by lands also owned by the Cloughs. The Clough undeveloped lot is bounded to the west by an interstate highway; to the east by the Clough homestead lot; and to the north by the O’Donnell lot. The Clough undeveloped lot does not have any frontage along a public road.

At the boundary between the O’Donnell lot and the Clough homestead lot is a 50-foot- wide right-of-way. The right-of-way sits entirely on land owned by the O’Donnells. It runs from Fairground Road, a public highway, west to the end of a neighbor’s square-shaped lot; it then turns south and runs along the western boundary of the neighbor’s square-shaped lot to the Clough homestead lot. At the Clough homestead lot, the right-of-way turns west again and runs along the two Clough lots (homestead and undeveloped) to the interstate highway, where it ends. Parts of the right-of-way are unpaved, a portion of it was improved to the quality of an unpaved macadam driveway, and the remainder is unimproved grassy land. A portion of the right-of-way serves the O’Donnells’ driveway and the O’Donnells have accessed their property over this portion of their land since purchasing their lot in 1985. The evidence showed that only the O’Donnells used the right of way on a regular basis and only those portions that acted as their driveway and access to the public road. Michelle Clough testified at trial that her family occasionally used the right-of-way for large deliveries, such as furniture or appliances, but this use appeared to be limited.

The court described the history of the properties and terms of various deeds in detail. We do not repeat those detailed findings here, except as necessary in connection with the Cloughs’ arguments on appeal.

Based on its findings, the court concluded as follows. While there were several deeds and multiple parties buying and selling real estate, the evidence and deed language were fairly straightforward. A subdivision was created in the early 1970s that included the four lots at issue here. In October 1973, two of these lots (Lots 1 and 3), which the Cloughs treated as one homestead parcel, were conveyed to the Cloughs. As part of this conveyance, the grantor also conveyed to the Cloughs a “non-exclusive but perpetual right to use a 50-foot-wide right-of- way” over the lot that was eventually conveyed to the O’Donnells. This created an appurtenant easement, which runs with the land and may be passed along with the dominant estate from owner to owner. This easement was a general right-of-way that was deeded to the Cloughs before the homestead lot was developed. It was a nonexclusive easement, meaning that the Cloughs’ right to use the easement could not interfere with other’s use of the easement. In light of later deeds, and specifically a February 1975 deed to the predecessor-in-interest for the Clough undeveloped lot (Lot 4), the court found the purpose of this easement could only have been for ingress and egress access or running utilities to the dominant lots.

The O’Donnells agreed that the October 1973 deed created a right-of-way across a portion of their property (Lot 5) for the nonexclusive benefit of the Cloughs. While the evidence showed that the Cloughs had a right to the easement that ran across the O’Donnell lot, the right was limited to the Clough homestead lot. The deeds demonstrated that the Clough undeveloped lot (Lot 4) was initially deeded in February 1975 to the Cloughs’ predecessor-in-interest without the easement. As drafted, the deed expressly excluded any easement right running to the lot. This was because the grantees were also taking ownership of adjoining land, which included a driveway that could provide access and utilities to the lot. The Cloughs acquired this lot, as well as adjacent lot to the south, in 2014; this latter lot had provided access to the undeveloped parcel (Lot 4) since the 1975 deed referenced above. The court held that the Clough undeveloped lot did not include any rights to access or benefit from the right-of way on the O’Donnell lot.

The court found its conclusion supported by three legal principles. First, the scope of the easement was limited by its grant and could not be expanded without express permission of the grantor or its successor. The specific limitation on the easement at the time of the initial sale of what became the Clough undeveloped lot was that it had no claim to the right-of-way. Trying to add this lot to the right-of-way through the deeded right in the Clough homestead parcel would expand the original intent of the grantor and overburden the easement and it was not allowed. Second, the lot that became the Clough undeveloped lot was conveyed without a right to the right-of-way on the O’Donnell lot and this held true in subsequent conveyances, including the conveyance to the Cloughs. Third, the February 1975 deed for the undeveloped lot envisioned that access to what became the Clough undeveloped lot would be found from the property to the south. At no time since the February 1975 deed had the lot or the southern parcel been held in

2 separate ownership. Thus, there could be no argument that the lot needed access to the O’Donnell lot by reason of necessity. The lot had not been landlocked and it retained a right of access through the parcel to the south of it. The court therefore held that the Clough undeveloped parcel did not have a right-of-way on the O’Donnell lot as a matter of fact and law.

The court made additional findings about the use and maintenance of the easement that we do not repeat here. Finally, the court did not award damages to either party and it rejected the Cloughs’ counterclaims as lacking evidentiary support.

In its decision, the court noted that in their post-trial findings, the Cloughs included new evidence and additional testimony that was not presented at trial. The court explained that it could not accept such evidence after the close of the trial short of a showing under Vermont Rule of Civil Procedure 60(b). It found nothing in the Cloughs’ filing to indicate that they could meet this standard.

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Bluebook (online)
Cris O'Donnell & Cheryl O'Donnell v. Hope Clough & Michelle Clough, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/cris-odonnell-cheryl-odonnell-v-hope-clough-michelle-clough-vt-2025.