David Massey v. Town of Greensboro

CourtSupreme Court of Vermont
DecidedSeptember 30, 2015
Docket2015-034
StatusUnpublished

This text of David Massey v. Town of Greensboro (David Massey v. Town of Greensboro) 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
David Massey v. Town of Greensboro, (Vt. 2015).

Opinion

Note: Decisions of a three-justice panel are not to be considered as precedent before any tribunal.

ENTRY ORDER

SUPREME COURT DOCKET NO. 2015-034

SEPTEMBER TERM, 2015

David Massey } APPEALED FROM: } } Superior Court, Orleans Unit, v. } Civil Division } } Town of Greensboro } DOCKET NO. 335-10-12 Oscv

Trial Judge: A. Gregory Rainville

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

The Town of Greensboro and David Massey, a property owner, appeal separately from a superior court order reversing the Town’s decision to lay out a class 4 highway on a right-of-way known as Old Perrin Road. The Town contends the trial court erred in concluding that the Town’s findings on the necessity of the highway were inadequate. Massey does not contest the court’s decision, but nevertheless asserts that it erred in rejecting his assertion that the Town’s notice of the proceeding was flawed. We affirm.

On August 1, 2012, the Town selectboard held an administrative hearing to address the question of whether to lay out a class 4 highway over the so-called Old Perrin Road. The minutes of the hearing indicate that the board received evidence and heard testimony pertaining to the question, and subsequently issued a decision and findings, which included the following: Old Perrin Road “so-called, is a right of way adjacent to the south side of the Willey’s Store property which extends towards Greensboro Brook past the old Tannery property.” For many years, the road “was commonly viewed as a means of access to properties along Greensboro Brook from Town Highway 2,” and many viewed it as a public right of way. No Town records, however, show that Old Perrin Road was ever laid out as a public highway, although such evidence may have been among the Town records reportedly lost in a fire in 1831. The selectboard noted that the deeds to some adjacent properties contain references to boundary lines “to the edge” of Old Perrin Road, suggesting but not confirming its status as a public road.

The selectboard explained that it had convened the hearing because the status of Old Perrin Road “as a public right of way, and the related interests of private parties to pass or to control the access along Old Perrin road by others” had become “matters of serious contention . . . not otherwise . . . amenable to resolution.” The board found that “[a] practicable way to resolve the confusion” and “quarreling” was to establish a public right of way by laying out a class 4 highway. Accordingly, the board adopted a route proposed by a land surveyor retained for that purpose, along with a suggested modification by David Massey, who had raised “privacy concerns” about the decision’s impact on a parcel he owned adjacent to the road. In considering the effect on private parties, the board found “no evidence that any parcel crossed or abutted by the proposed” highway would be impaired if the right of way became public, and “no evidence of damages to any party for which compensation is both allowable and claimed.” On the contrary, the board found that the value of adjacent properties, including Massey’s, would be “enhanced” by putting the access issue “to rest.”

The selectboard thus concluded that “[t]he public good, necessity and convenience of the inhabitants of the Town of Greensboro require that a class 4 public highway right of way be laid out in such a manner as to provide approximately the same access to adjacent properties as the historical Old Perrin Road” and in such a manner as “to maximize equity” to adjoining landowners and the public.

Massey appealed the Town’s decision to the superior court, as authorized by 19 V.S.A. §740(a) and in accordance with Rule 74 of the Vermont Rules of Civil Procedure. Massey’s notice of appeal questioned both the necessity of the taking and the amount of damages awarded. The subsequent motion for partial summary judgment purported to relate “only to the question of necessity.” Massey maintained that there was no public necessity, and that the highway’s purpose was solely to benefit the Town as proprietor of a parcel adjacent to the road, which the Town leases to the Greensboro Historical Society. Thus, Massey suggested that, as the beneficiary of its own action, the Town was “statutorily conflicted in sitting as a judge in its own case” under 12 V.S.A. § 61(a), which provides, in part, that “[a] justice of the supreme court, judge, juror or other person shall not act in a judicial capacity in . . . a cause or matter in which he . . . is interested.” Massey also briefly suggested that the ownership of the road bed itself was “unclear,” and that the “true owner . . . may not have been given notice,” although he acknowledged in the same motion that the Town “gave due notice, [and] held a proper hearing.”

The Town also moved for summary judgment, disputing Massey’s assertion of a conflict of interest, and arguing that, because the historical record was “incapable of resolving the present acrimonious and disruptive dispute caused by [Massey], the public interest is well served by establishing a public right of way.”

Following a brief hearing in August 2014, the parties submitted supplemental memoranda on the adequacy of the Town’s notice of the selectboard hearing, and the court issued a written ruling in January 2015. The court observed, at the outset, that the parties had stipulated that the cross-motions “would be dispositive” and had “waived” the appointment of commissioners under 19 V.S.A. § 741, which provides that, in appeals from the laying out of a public highway, the court “shall appoint three disinterested landowners as commissioners, to inquire into the convenience and necessity of the proposed highway,” the manner in which it was laid out, and the amount of damages. The court also noted that the parties had submitted a stipulated set of facts “on the question of necessity” as part of the “record upon which the [c]ourt will conduct its review.”

The court initially rejected Massey’s suggestion that the selectboard was “statutorily conflicted” from “sitting as a judge on its own case” under 12 V.S.A. § 61, finding no necessary conflict, and no basis to conclude that the selectboard hearing was in any way unfair. The court also rejected Massey’s claim that, because the fee owner or owners of the road, if any, had not been identified, the board had failed to comply with the statutory requirement that it notify all “persons owning or interested in lands through which the highway may pass or abut” under 19 V.S.A. § 709. An interested person is defined as a person with a “legal interest of record in the

2 property affected.” Id. § 701(6). The court found that there were “no unknown owners who need[ed] to be noticed under the statute.”

Finally, the court turned to the question of necessity, noting that the Town’s decision to lay out a public highway must be supported by a finding that “the public good, necessity, and convenience of the inhabitants of the municipality require the highway to be laid out.” Id. § 710. The court also observed that, as provided by § 740(b), the meaning of “necessity” is set forth in 19 V.S.A. § 501(1) as “a reasonable need which considers the greatest public good and the least inconvenience and expense to the condemning party and the property owner.” The statute further explains that due consideration should be given to “the adequacy of other property and locations,” the extent of agricultural land taken, the effect on home and homestead rights, scenic and recreational values, the need to accommodate utility installations, the environmental impacts, and the effect on the grand list. Id.

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Related

Hansen v. Town of Charleston
597 A.2d 321 (Supreme Court of Vermont, 1991)
Ferguson v. Town of Sheffield
52 Vt. 77 (Supreme Court of Vermont, 1879)

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Bluebook (online)
David Massey v. Town of Greensboro, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/david-massey-v-town-of-greensboro-vt-2015.