Deane v. Kahn

88 A.3d 1230, 149 Conn. App. 62, 2014 WL 1202542, 2014 Conn. App. LEXIS 131
CourtConnecticut Appellate Court
DecidedApril 1, 2014
DocketAC31575, AC31576
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 88 A.3d 1230 (Deane v. Kahn) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Connecticut Appellate Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Deane v. Kahn, 88 A.3d 1230, 149 Conn. App. 62, 2014 WL 1202542, 2014 Conn. App. LEXIS 131 (Colo. Ct. App. 2014).

Opinion

Opinion

SHELDON, J.

In the early 1900s, Harriet Warner owned a large estate of land along the shore of the Connecticut River in Lyme. The estate was shaped roughly like a triangle, with its base running along the riverfront on the south side of the estate, where the river flows from west to east. The estate was accessible from the northeast via Brockway’s Ferry Road, a public road that ran from northeast to southwest along the upper left or northwest side of the estate. As the road approached the river, however, near the southwest corner of the estate, it split into two branches, one of which continued southwestward while the other turned sharply to the east and continued eastward, parallel to the river, part way across the south side of the estate.

On January 19, 1935, Harriet Warner conveyed a fee simple interest in a portion of her estate lying directly on the river to Walter Hastings (1935 conveyance). The tract deeded to Hastings was located immediately to the east of and downstream from another riverfront tract, which Harriet Warner previously had conveyed to her brother-in-law, Robert Huey, in 1909.

Under the terms of Harriet Warner’s deed to Walter Hastings (1935 deed), the tract conveyed to him was *65 to be free of encumbrances, “except that a right of way is reserved in perpetuity across said tract along the route now in use.” The 1935 deed contained no other language describing the location, direction, dimensions, uses or purposes of the right-of-way so reserved, or of “the route now in use” along which it was to run.

From this 1935 conveyance and, more particularly, from Warner’s reservation of a right-of-way across the deeded tract, a dispute has now arisen among the present owners of that tract and of two other riverfront properties located to the east of and downstream from it, both of which were parts of the Warner estate at the time of the 1935 conveyance. In this action to quiet title, the plaintiff, Curtis D. Deane, who now owns the easternmost of the three properties (Deane property), claims that he has the right to access the southern, riverfront portion of his sloping property from the west, across: (1) the deeded, tract, which is now owned by the defendant John Gorman (Gorman property), over which the plaintiff claims a right-of-way pursuant to the 1935 deed; and (2) the intervening property lying directly to the east of and downstream from the Gorman property and directly to the west of and upstream from his own property, which is now owned by the defendant Amy Day Kahn (Kahn property), over which the plaintiff claims an easement by necessity. 1

In a thorough memorandum of decision, the trial court concluded, inter alia, that the plaintiff has an easement over the Gorman property by virtue of the *66 1936 deed and an easement by necessity over the Kahn property, which arose in 1960 when Harriet Warner’s daughter, Musa Warner Capíes, who then owned the eastern portion of her mother’s former estate, which included both the Deane property and the Kahn property, divided those properties into separate tracts and conveyed them, respectively, to Charles Sreboff and Marion Sreboff (Sreboffs). 2 Upon reaching the foregoing conclusions, the court went on to rule that “the scope of the deeded easement over the Gorman property and the easement by necessity over the Kahn property should be defined in identical terms,” which it then described in great detail, specifying its location on the burdened properties, its dimensions and its scope, including both the purposes for which and the time and manner in which it could be used. 3

*67 On appeal from the trial court’s judgment in favor of the plaintiff, the defendants raise several claims of error. Gorman claims initially that the plaintiff did not meet his burden of proving the location, nature, scope and purpose of the easement allegedly created over his property by the 1935 conveyance. Because the plaintiffs claim of an easement over the Gorman property stems from Harriet Warner’s reservation of a right-of-way across that property in 1935, Gorman argues that that claim is defeated by that failure of proof. Gorman further claims that, even if the plaintiff could meet his burden of proving that Harriet Warner created an easement appurtenant to her estate running across his property along the riverfront, any such easement was extinguished as to the Deane property in 1960, when Capíes severed the Deane property from the Kahn property, and from her own property, and separately conveyed them to the Sreboffs, as a result of which the Deane property no longer abutted the Gorman property. The trial court agreed with Gorman on this aspect of his claim, but nonetheless determined that an easement by necessity arose over the Kahn property in 1960 as a result of Capíes’ separate conveyances to the Sreboffs in order to effectuate what it found to have been the intended transfer of the claimed riverfront easement over the Gorman property to Charles Sreboff. Gorman also challenges the court’s finding that the plaintiff has an easement by necessity over the Kahn property on the grounds that no reasonable necessity existed for the creation of such an easement at the time of its alleged creation, and, even if it did, that the court’s *68 orders defining the scope of that easement are overly burdensome to the Gorman property and much broader than necessary to accomplish any legitimate purpose supported by the record in this case. Kahn joins Gorman in claiming that the court erred in holding that the plaintiff has an easement by necessity over her property, because the plaintiff failed to establish the existence of any necessity for such an easement at the time of the 1960 conveyances of the Kahn and Deane properties to the Sreboffs. The essential basis for her argument on this issue is that, from the moment of its conveyance to Charles Sreboff, the Deane property “had road frontage [and] additional access via a navigable waterway.” Without any need for outside access to the Deane property, the only claimed purposes for creating an easement by necessity across her property—“to [enable the owners of the Deane property to] perform minimal lawn maintenance [on the lower portion of that property] and ... [to take] leisure walks”—were too insubstantial to warrant burdening her property in the manner proposed.

We agree with Gorman that the plaintiff failed to prove, either by the language of the 1936 deed or by the circumstances existing at the time of its execution, that the 1935 deed created an easement appurtenant to Harriet Warner’s property across the Gorman property. We also agree with the defendants that the plaintiff failed to prove that he is entitled to an easement by necessity over the Kahn property, either by showing that his property would be landlocked without it, which it would not be, or by showing that the parties intended to create such an easement at the time of its alleged creation in 1960, based upon evidence of the necessity for or the use of the claimed easement at that time. Accordingly, we reverse the judgment of the trial court.

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HISTORY

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Related

Deane v. Kahn
178 A.3d 403 (Connecticut Appellate Court, 2018)
Deane v. Kahn
Supreme Court of Connecticut, 2015

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
88 A.3d 1230, 149 Conn. App. 62, 2014 WL 1202542, 2014 Conn. App. LEXIS 131, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/deane-v-kahn-connappct-2014.