Dwinell v. Alberghini

62 A.2d 124, 115 Vt. 394, 1948 Vt. LEXIS 86
CourtSupreme Court of Vermont
DecidedNovember 3, 1948
StatusPublished
Cited by8 cases

This text of 62 A.2d 124 (Dwinell v. Alberghini) 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
Dwinell v. Alberghini, 62 A.2d 124, 115 Vt. 394, 1948 Vt. LEXIS 86 (Vt. 1948).

Opinion

Moulton, C. J.

This is a proceeding in equity, wherein the plaintiffs seek to restrain the defendant from obstructing a claimed right of way over the latter’s premises. After hearing and filing written findings of fact the decree was adverse to the plaintiffs and they have brought the cause to this coürt upon exceptions taken to certain findings, to the failure of the chancellor to comply with certain of their requests for findings, and to the decree.

It appears that the plaintiffs and the defendant own adjoining lands and buildings thereon situated on the westerly side of Main Street in the Village of Orleans. The plaintiffs are tenants in common of the premises owned by them, which are situated southerly of those of the defendant. There are business blocks on both properties. The respective titles of the parties are derived from a common grantor, through various mesne conveyances. The plaintiff Dwinell acquired his interest in 1905, and the plaintiffs Converse obtained theirs in 1945. The defendant’s deed was executed to him in 1927. None of the conveyances contain any mention of a right of way. There is a space used as a driveway between the buildings on the respective properties which is 27 feet wide where it touches Main Street, but which is narrowed to 23 feet farther to the west by reason of a cement walk and a porch built upon the southerly side of the defendant’s building. The boundary line as surveyed between the two properties is 12 feet northerly from and parallel with the northerly side of the plaintiffs’ block, not quite in the middle of the space between the respective buildings. There are two driveways branching off from the open space at the rear. One turns to the south, circles behind the plaintiffs’ building and reaches Main Street at its southerly side. The other proceeds in the opposite direction and goes around the defendant’s building to Main Street. The plaintiffs claim a right of way over the defendant’s part of the space between the two buildings, based upon long continued user, adversely and under claim of right by themselves and their tenants, their predecessors in title and their tenants and the general public.

The findings state that two years after he bought his property the defendant repaired the driveway leading from the street on his *396 southerly side by having sand and gravel brought in and spread upon his part of the space so as to keep surface water from' entering his cellar and to make the driveway on his side more passable and attractive. In doing so he may have put a very little of this material on the plaintiffs’ land. Each spring, and sometimes in the fall, thereafter he placed road blocks on his land to prevent travel over it during the muddy seasons.

For the past three winters the village of Orleans has plowed the snow so that there has been a driveway around the plaintiffs’ building and midway between the buildings of the parties. Before the village started to perform this work the defendant shoveled a driveway on and around his own property, assisted at times by the plaintiff, Hazen Converse, when the latter was a tenant in one of the defendant’s garages.

The occupants of certain tenement houses in the rear of the properties of the parties have for many years used the passage way between the garages of the parties as a means of access to Main street but the chancellor is unable to find whether they passed over the plaintiffs’ or defendant’s land in going to the street. One Hiram Allen at one time asked permission of the defendant to place planks upon the passage way to cover the mud thereon. Recently trucks, not connected with the plaintiffs’, or their tenants’, business, have been driven around the back of plaintiffs’ building and to the street and very close to the defendant’s porch and his plate glass window, and the defendant’s request to keep off his land has been answered with insulting and abusive language. Other trucks, delivering goods to a drug store occupying a part of the plaintiffs’ premises, may have been driven at times over on the defendant’s land for a distance of six to eighteen inches, but such use of his premises has not been continuous, adverse or under claim of right during the period of the defendant’s ownership. Other traffic entered from Main street and went around the other way. The defendant and his predecessors in title used the open space between the two blocks to go to and from Main street and the rear of the defendant’s property.

The findings state that the evidence of the use of the space was so uncertain and indefinite as to whether it was upon the plaintiffs’ land or upon some portion of the defendant’s land that the chancellor is unable to find that any particular portion of the defendant’s *397 property was ever so used by the plaintiffs, their predecessors in title, their tenants or the general public openly, continuously,'adversely and under a claim of right for a period of fifteen years. It is also found that the defendant has used his property, ever since he purchased it in 1927, openly, notoriously, continuously, uninterruptedly and under a claim of right, substantiated by his deed to the same. In 1946 the defendant placed two large logs along the land he claimed to own adjacent to the plaintiffs’ land and one of these logs is now upon the plaintiffs’ land, but the chancellor is unable to find upon the evidence how far it is over the boundary line or that it has caused the plaintiffs any damage.

The first exception briefed was taken to a finding that the defendant, within two years after acquiring his title, had about 100 loads of sand and gravel placed upon the driveway on his land adjoining the plaintiffs’ property, and that he placed road blocks upon his property during muddy seasons in the spring and fall. One ground of exception is that the evidence was that only 75 loads of sand and gravel were brought in. Obviously, this discrepancy is entirely immaterial to any issue in the case and too trivial to be considered. Another ground is that there is no evidence that the defendant had any separate driveway that he cotuld call “his driveway”. But this phrase is not used in the finding, and, since it has elsewhere been found that he owns the land which he claims, the objection has no force. It is also argued that there was testimony that there were mud holes in each side of the line between the two properties and that the road blocks were for the purpose of protecting both sides. There was, however, testimony that the obstructions were placed only on the defendant’s side and for his own protection and whatever incidental benefit to the plaintiffs might have been intended, or have actually accrued to them, by the defendant’s act, does not affect the question of his rights.

The second exception challenges the finding that “the occupants of the tenements in the rear of the plaintiffs’ and defendant’s properties . . . have for many years used the passageway between' the plaintiffs’ garage and the defendant’s garage and about ten years ago one Hiram Allen asked permission to put some planks between the two garages because there was mud there, but the Court is unable to find whether said persons going through the passage way between the two garages used the plaintiffs’ land or the defendant’s land in reaching Main street.”

*398

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
62 A.2d 124, 115 Vt. 394, 1948 Vt. LEXIS 86, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/dwinell-v-alberghini-vt-1948.