Curtis v. Hahn

CourtSuperior Court of Maine
DecidedJuly 19, 2011
DocketCUMcv-10-325
StatusUnpublished

This text of Curtis v. Hahn (Curtis v. Hahn) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Superior Court of Maine primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Curtis v. Hahn, (Me. Super. Ct. 2011).

Opinion

STATE OF MAINE SUPERIOR COURT CUMBERLAND, ss. CIVIL ACTION Docket No. CV-10-325 TJ) vt! -C»J\j ~ ) /;q, j_o 1:' I

PETER CURTIS,

Plaintiff,

v. ORDER

WILLIAM B. HAHN, Trustee of STATE OF MAINE Cumberland, ss, Clerk's Office the William B. Hahn Revocable Trust JUL 1 9 2011 Defendant. RECEIVED A jury waived trial in the above captioned action was held on July 18, 2011.

Plaintiff Peter Curtis is seeking a declaratory judgment that he has a deeded right

of way across land owned by the William B. Hahn Revocable Trust. The Hahn Trust has

counterclaimed for trespass.

1. Right of Way Claim

The parties own land on Abner's Point, a promontory which forms the west

shore of Mackerel Cove on Bailey Island. To understand the dispute in this case, it is

helpful to look at a map. Attached to this order is a copy of the pertinent portion of a

January 1950 plan made for James Gardner which was admitted in evidence as

Plaintiff's Ex. 2 and Defendant's Ex. 25. The colored markings on that map have been

added by the court.

Curtis now owns the two parcels shown on the attached map as belonging to

Winifred W. Curtis. The Hahn Trust owns the parcels to the southwest of the Curtis

parcels shown on the attached map as belonging to Katherine Burnet and Katherine B. Hahn. The dispute involves the area shown on the attached map as a right of way along

the southeast border of the Katherine Burnet parcel and is shaded in yellow on the

attached map.

Curtis's claim that he has a deeded right of way essentially depends on two

deeds. The first is a 1927 deed from Waitstill Bibber and Lucy Doughty to James

Gardner conveying the parcel subsequently shown on the attached map as belonging to

Katherine B. Hahn and encompassing the smaller parcel subsequently shown on the

attached map as belonging to Winifred W. Curtis. Plaintiff's Ex. 10. The last sentence of

that deed reads as follows:

I reserve a right of way along the northwesterly side of this lot, This right of way for Dr. Burnet and others.

Dr. Burnet was Katherine Burnet (Hahn's grandmother). At that time she not only

owned the parcel shown as belonging to Katherine Burnet on the attached map but also

owned a larger parcel of land to the southwest.

As the attached map demonstrates, a right of way along the northwesterly side of

the lot conveyed to Gardner in 1927 corresponds to the right of way shaded in yellow

on the attached map. However, neither Dr. Burnet nor any of the unspecified "others"

were parties to the deed from Bibber and Doughty to Gardner. Under Maine law, a

reservation to a stranger, meaning an individual who is not a party to the transaction,

cannot of its own force pass rights to the stranger. Midcoast Cohousing land

Acquisition LLC v. Riverhouse Trust, 2008 ME 70

Holman, 310 A.2d 65, 67 (Me. 1973). As a result, the 1927 deed did not create the right

of way now claimed by Curtis. 1

1 If such a right of way had previously been granted to Dr. Burnet, then the reservation of that right of way in the 1927 deed would merely have confirmed that the property conveyed to

2 The second deed relied on by Curtis is a 1949 deed from James Gardner to

Winifred W. Curtis (Plaintiff's Ex. 1) conveying to Curtis the smaller of the two parcels

shown as belonging to Curtis on the attached map (outlined in blue). The 1949 deed

was recorded on February 6, 1950. Although the deed was executed before the date of

the 1950 Gardner Plan (Plaintiff's Ex. 2) and contains no reference to that plan, the deed

does reference some of the features shown on that plan, specifically the rights of way

shown on that plan. 2

Specifically, the third call of the property description runs to the "said right-of-

way on the East of the boundary line of other land of [Winifred W. Curtis]" and the

final call is "thence Northerly along the Easterly line of said right-of-way fifty feet (50')

to the point or place of beginning." Although no right of way along the northwesterly

boundary of Gardner's property had been legally created for the reasons stated earlier,

Gardner did not know that, and he therefore referenced that right of way in making the

1949 conveyance to Curtis.

Also granted in that deed is "all of the right, title and interest of [Gardner] in and

to the aforesaid rights-of-way adjoining the premises_ above described" (emphasis

added).

Curtis argues that the grant of right, title and interest in the "aforesaid" rights of

way was intended to convey to him the right of way shaded in yellow on the attached

map. Even assuming that the right of way had been legally created in the 1927 deed to

Gardner, however, the court would disagree. The right of way shaded in yellow does

Gardner was subject to that easement. No evidence was offered, however, that any such right of way had ever previously been granted or conveyed to Dr. Burnet. 2 Because the 1950 Gardner plan is not referenced in any of the relevant deeds, the court does not find that its depictions of rights of way have the legal effect of creating such easements. The map is, however, extremely useful in illustrating the location of the relevant parcels and the references in Gardner's 1949 deed to Winifred W. Curtis.

3 not adjoin the property conveyed to Winifred Curtis in 1949 ("the premises above

described"). Only the portion of that right of way which runs along the westerly

boundary of that parcel (the portion shaded in green on the attached map) adjoins that

property. To the extent that a right of way existed that Gardner could convey, therefore,

he did not convey the portion claimed by Curtis in this action?

2. Counterclaim for Tres12ass

Hahn's counterclaim for trespass is based on the presence of two encroachments.

Neither involve the right of way that is the subject of Curtis's claim.

One of encroachment involves a shed that was placed on the southern boundary

of the smaller Winifred Curtis parcel by Curtis's parents in 1995 or 1996. Curtis

subsequently learned that the back of the shed had been placed over the boundary of

the Hahn land but was originally told by William Hahn's sister (at that time a co-owner

of the Hahn property) not to worry about it. After Hahn and his siblings divided up the

property, however, Hahn became the owner of the land adjoining Curtis's property,

and Hahn asked Curtis to remove the encroachment. There is a dispute as to how long

it took Curtis to comply, 4 but the shed and all its contents were subsequently removed.

It is not disputed that this constituted a common law trespass that has now been

terminated. The Hahn Trust argues that it also constituted a statutory trespass under 14

M.R.S. § 7551-B. However, it did not plead a statutory trespass in its counterclaim.

3 Almost immediately after Gardner conveyed the parcel outlined in blue to Winifred Curtis, he conveyed the remainder of the land west of the town road that he had obtained in the 1927 deed to Katherine B. Hahn (this conveyance is also shown on the 1950 Plan) and Dr. Burnet's land and Katherine Hahn's land came into common ownership. At that point, to the extent that the right of way shaded in yellow on the attached map ever existed, it would have been extinguished by merger.

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Related

Fitanides v. Holman
310 A.2d 65 (Supreme Judicial Court of Maine, 1973)
Midcoast Cohousing Land Acquisition, LLC v. Riverhouse Trust
2008 ME 70 (Supreme Judicial Court of Maine, 2008)

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Curtis v. Hahn, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/curtis-v-hahn-mesuperct-2011.