Dorey v. Cummings

CourtSuperior Court of Maine
DecidedNovember 19, 2012
DocketCUMre-11-607
StatusUnpublished

This text of Dorey v. Cummings (Dorey v. Cummings) 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
Dorey v. Cummings, (Me. Super. Ct. 2012).

Opinion

STATE OF MAINE SUPERIOR COURT CUMBERLAND, ss. CNILACTION Docket No. RE-11-607 v' PETER DOREY,

Plaintiff

v. ORDER

STATE OF r\llAINE JAY CUMMINGS, et al., Cumberland, :,, Clerk's Office

Defendants NOV 2 2012 1 :

RECEIVED A one-day bench trial was held in the above-captioned case on November 13,

2012 with plaintiff Peter Dorey represented by counsel and defendant Jay Cummings

representing himself. 1

Although there are several issues in the case, the major dispute between the

parties concerns the western boundary of a lot owned by Cummings (variously referred

to as the "Park Lot" or Lot 20), as it borders on a woodlot owned by Dorey. Both parcels

of land are located in Bridgton to the west of the Fosterville Road and to the north of a

woods road known as the Old Harmon Road.

The court makes the following findings of fact and conclusions of law:

1. The controlling property description in this case is that originally contained in

a 1947 deed from Edith Durfee to Adelbert and Ethel Wentworth OX 8), _which created

the "Park Lot."

2. To the extent that prop~rty description in the 2005 deed from Elizabeth

Wenthe to defendant Cummings (JX 2) differs from the description in the 1947 deed to

the Wentworths, Ms. Wenthe could not convey land that she did not own. 1 The remaining defendant was dismissed prior to trial. 3. The 1947 deed describes the Park Lot (the property eventually owned by

Cummings) as follows :

Commence at a point on the westerly side of [the Fosterville] road opposite a telephone pole near the comer of the old cellar of the Harmon homestead, thence Westerly to a spotted yellow birch tree; thence southerly to twin elms spotted on the norther! y side of the old Harmon road; thence Easterly by said Harmon road to land of Wallace Chase, and thence Northeasterly by said Chase land to said Fosterville Road to the point of commencement and bound first mentioned, containing two acres more or less.

4. The problem in this case is that the current location of the "spotted yellow

birch tree" that existed in 1947 is uncertain, and there is no trace of the "twin elms" on

the northerly side of the old Harmon Road. Those are the monuments of the northwest

and southwest corners of the land owned by Cummings, which are the disputed

locations in this case. 2

5. In construing deeds, boundaries are controlled, in descending order of

priority, by monuments, courses, distances, and quantity unless this priority produces

absurd results. E.g., Theriault v. Murray, 588 A.2d 720, 722 (Me. 1991). The physical

disappearance of a monument does not end its use in defining a boundary if its former

location can be ascertained. The court has a duty to determine the original location of

monuments if it is possible to do so. Id. Accord, Ricci v. Godin, 523 A.2d 589, 592 (Me.

1987).

7. The northwest corner of the Park Lot actually no longer belongs to Cummings

because that portion of the Park Lot has been sold to Christopher Cloutier. However,

the location of the northwest comer is important because it remains one of the two

points setting the boundary line that is in dispute in this case. 2 The northeast and southeast corners of the Cummings property are not disputed and need not be addressed.

2 8. With respect to the northwest corner of the Park Lot, it is possible to locate

several birch trees, but there is a question whether either the birch tree located in the

2005 Farthing survey or the birch tree located in the 2011 Sawyer survey was in

existence in 1947 or was the "spotted yellow birch tree" referred to in the 1947

Wentworth deed. 3 A "latent ambiguity" exists when it is unclear how to apply a deed

description to the facts on the ground, and extrinsic evidence may be used to resolve a

latent ambiguity. E.g., Taylor v. Hanson, 541 A.2d 155, 157-58 (Me. 1988).

9. Parol evidence from Dorey, based on his 1983 boundary walk with Charles

Miller (one of Cummings's predecessors in title), established that a metal bar had been

placed in the ground near to the location of the yellow birch. See M.R. Evid. 803(20).

Dorey placed yellow paint on that bar during his boundary walk with Miller, and both

Farthing and Sawyer found a metal rod with yellow paint in that approximate location.

Accordingly, the court determines that it is more probable than not that the yellow­

painted rod shown on both the Farthing and Sawyer surveys marks the original

location of the spotted yellow birch at the northwest corner of the Park Lot.

10. With respect to the southwest corner of the Park Lot, the court cannot accept

the Farthing survey relied upon by Cummings (JX 15) because that survey sets the

southwest corner of the Park Lot based on a red painted iron pipe which is not

mentioned in the 1947 deed to W entworth. There is no evidence that the red painted

i ron pipe was placed to mark the location where the "twin elms" referred to in the 1947

W entworth deed had previously stood. As far as the court can tell, Farthing found an

i ron pipe with red paint and si mply assumed that it was intended to mark the

s outhwest corner of the Park Lot. 3 There w as eviden ce th at the larger birch tree (found by Sawyer) w as a more likely candidate. However, the N adeau report (JX 19, page 2) suggests that it is doubtful that either of those trees were the designated monuments.

3 · 11. Apart from its reliance on a monument that is nowhere mentioned in the

controlling deed, Farthing's survey is not based on courses, distance, or quantity.

Indeed, Farthing's proposed boundary would give the Park Lot a total size of 3.79 acres

- almost double the "two acres more or less" given as the original size of the Park Lot.

12. Farthing conceded that his determination of the western boundary of the

Park Lot was uncertain because he recommended to Ms. Wenthe that that line be

determined by agreement with Dorey and corrective deeds written. JX 16.

13. As a result of Farthing's uncertainty, Wenthe's deed to Cummings (JX 2) II describes the western boundary of the property conveyed as running along land of

Dorey and a proposed line of agreement" (emphasis added), demonstrating that

Cummings was aware of the uncertainty with respect to that boundary when he bought

his property. No agreement was ever reached.

14. In the absence of any evidence on the ground of the monument marking the

southwest corner of the Park Lot, the Sawyer survey (JX 17) - following the rule that

monuments, courses, distances, and quantity set the order of priority - interprets the

1947 deed reference "thence southerly to twin elms spotted on the northerly side of the

old Harmon road" to establish that the boundary should follow a line drawn due south

(magnetic) from the northwest corner of the property until that line intersects the old

Harmon Road. The problem with this interpretation is that "southerly" denotes a

general direction rather than a specific course.4

15. The Sawyer survey does result in a quantity (2.1 acres) that is close to the

"two acres more or less" specified in the 1947 Wentworth deed. However, "two acres

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Related

Taylor v. Hanson
541 A.2d 155 (Supreme Judicial Court of Maine, 1988)
Ricci v. Godin
523 A.2d 589 (Supreme Judicial Court of Maine, 1987)
Theriault v. Murray
588 A.2d 720 (Supreme Judicial Court of Maine, 1991)
Design Build of Maine v. Paul
601 A.2d 1089 (Supreme Judicial Court of Maine, 1992)
Androkites v. White
2010 ME 133 (Supreme Judicial Court of Maine, 2010)
Anchorage Realty Trust v. Donovan
2004 ME 137 (Supreme Judicial Court of Maine, 2004)

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Dorey v. Cummings, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/dorey-v-cummings-mesuperct-2012.