Davies v. Sandbar Rd. Ass'n

CourtSuperior Court of Maine
DecidedMarch 16, 2007
DocketCUMre-05-103
StatusUnpublished

This text of Davies v. Sandbar Rd. Ass'n (Davies v. Sandbar Rd. Ass'n) 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
Davies v. Sandbar Rd. Ass'n, (Me. Super. Ct. 2007).

Opinion

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DAVID DAVIES, et al.,

Plaintiffs,

v. ORDER

SANDBAR ROAD ASSOCIATION,

Defendant.

Before the court is plaintiffs' motion for partial summary judgment. The dispute

in this case involves the boundary of certain property owned by plaintiffs in Windham

and whether that property is located between the end of Sandbar Road and Little

Sebago Lake or whether Sandbar Road reaches the water's edge.

1. Summarv Tudoment

Summary judgment should be granted if there is no genuine dispute as to any

material fact and the movant is entitled to judgment as a matter of law. In considering a

motion for summary judgment, the court is required to consider only the portions of the

record referred to and the material facts set forth in the parties' Rule 56(h) statements.

& Johnson v. McNeil, 2002 ME 99, 9 8, 800 A.2d 702, 704. The facts must be

considered in the light most favorable to the non-moving party. Thus, for purposes

of summary judgment, any factual lsputes must be resolved against the movant.

Nevertheless, when the facts offered by a party in opposition to summary judgment

would not, if offered at trial, be sufficient to withstand a motion for judgment as a

matter of law, summary judgment should be granted. Rodri~uev. Rodrigue, 1997 ME

99 ¶ 8,694 A.2d 924, 926. 2. Ambiguitv of Deed

The first issue presented by the instant motion is whether the relevant deeds

establish that plaintiffs' property lies between the end of Sandbar Road and the edge of

Little Sebago Lake.

The parties do not dispute that the crucial deed is a 1970 deed from Eleanor and

Arthur Phlpot to Evelyn Davies conveying land described as follows:

Beginning at the northerly corner of land now or formerly of Clarence Tasker, on the southeasterly side of the South Pond Road, also called The Sand Bar Road; thence southeasterly by said Tasker land to the shore of Little Sebago Lake; thence northerly and westerly by the shore of said Lake to a point in the extension of the northwesterly side of said South Pond Road or The Sand Bar Road, so called; thence southwesterly, by the northwesterly side of said road, as so extended to a point opposite the point of beginning; thence southeasterly to the point of beginning; excluding, however, that portion thereof which is now used as a road but reserving to this Grantee and others the right to use said portion as a road as now being used.

Plaintiffs' Statement of Material Facts (SMF) ¶ 7 (admitted) and Exhbit D thereto.

Eight years later, Eleanor Philpot conveyed all of her right, title, and interest in

the Sandbar Road to the defendant Sandbar Road Association. That deed contains the

following description of the property conveyed:

All my right, title and interest . . . in and to the fee and all other rights in a private roadway known as Sandbar Road . . . extending from the northeasterly side line of Route #I15 in said Windham in a general northeasterly direction, in most part near the shore of Little Sebago Lake, to its terminus at the Lake at the most easterly corner of premises now owned by William L. McVane, Jr., said portion of Sandbar Road being also sometimes referred to as South Pond Road, and also all the right, title and interest of the Grantor herein, as aforesaid, in a roadway running westerly from the first described roadway toward Pettengill Pond, second roadway commencing approximately eight hundred (800) feet from the northerly or northeasterly terminus of the first described roadway, said westerly extension being sometimes known as Old Sandbar Road. T h s conveyance includes all of the roadbed between the public hghway and the terminus of each of said Sandbar Roads and is abutted on either side by lands of lot owners or by the shore of the Lake . . . This conveyance is made subject to the rights of all others in and to said roadways, in common with the Grantor herein.

Plaintiffs' SMF 9 15 and Exhibit G thereto.

Thus the defendant Association was conveyed all of the roadway known as

Sandbar Road "to its terminus at the Lake at the most easterly comer of the premises

now owned by William L. McVane." Plaintiffs, however, argue that the 1978 Philpot

deed to the Association could not convey what Eleanor Phlpot did not own in 1978,

that Sandbar Road did not in fact extend to the Lake, and that the parcel previously

conveyed to Evelyn Davies included land between the terminus of Sandbar Road and

the Lake.

The area in dispute is perhaps best demonstrated by Exhibit B to the Affidavit of

David Davies, which is a survey of the property with the disputed area crosshatched

and colored in yellow. Plaintiffs contend that the disputed area was granted to them in

the 1970 Phlpot-Davies deed. Defendant contends that the road extends to the Lake

through the disputed area.

Because the 1970 Philpot-Davies deed preceded the 1978 deed to the Association,

if that deed unambiguously granted Evelyn Davies land between the end of Sandbar

Road and the Lake, plaintiffs would be entitled to summary judgment. Initially, h s

requires the court to construe the language in the deed that the property runs northerly

and westerly by the shore of said lake "to a point in the extension of the northwesterly

side of said . . . Sand Bar Road."

First, the court perceives an ambiguity in the language referring to "a point in the

extension of the northwesterly side" of Sandbar Road. Does the use of the term "extension" mean that the road itself has terminated and that the extension of the

northwesterly line of the road goes beyond the actual road? Or is "extension" used in

the sense that the road extends northwesterly to the lake and the point in question is

part of the road?

Even if the use of the term "extension" is intended to signify that the

northwesterly line of the road does not reach the lake, there is a potential ambiguity.

The Owen Haskell survey offered by plaintiffs (Exhbit B to David Davies Affidavit)

shows that the lakeshore cuts across the disputed area at an extreme dagonal angle. As

a result, it is possible that the southeasterly side of the Sandbar Road intersects the Lake

and that the road then stops. Whle the northwesterly line of the road would then have

to be extended to reach the lake, part of the road would still reach the lake.

2. Need to Determine Extent of Road

In the alternative, in the court's view, irrespective of any ambiguity, the

subsequent language in the deed "excluding, however, that portion thereof which is

now used as a road" means that the case cannot be decided without determining what

portion of the property was used as a road in 1970.' The result of the language

excluding the road is to make the Sandbar Road a monument whose location as of 1970

must be found in order to determine the boundary of the Davies property. See Theriault v. Murray, 588 A.2d 720, 722 (Me. 1991) (court must ascertain the original

location of any monuments used in a deed if it is possible to do so).

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Related

Johnson v. McNeil
2002 ME 99 (Supreme Judicial Court of Maine, 2002)
Theriault v. Murray
588 A.2d 720 (Supreme Judicial Court of Maine, 1991)
Rodrigue v. Rodrigue
1997 ME 99 (Supreme Judicial Court of Maine, 1997)
Levine v. R.B.K. Caly Corp.
2001 ME 77 (Supreme Judicial Court of Maine, 2001)

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Davies v. Sandbar Rd. Ass'n, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/davies-v-sandbar-rd-assn-mesuperct-2007.