Eo22-158_0.pdf

CourtSupreme Court of Vermont
DecidedNovember 10, 2022
Docket22-AP-158
StatusUnpublished

This text of Eo22-158_0.pdf (Eo22-158_0.pdf) 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
Eo22-158_0.pdf, (Vt. 2022).

Opinion

VERMONT SUPREME COURT Case No. 22-AP-158 109 State Street Montpelier VT 05609-0801 802-828-4774 www.vermontjudiciary.org

Note: In the case title, an asterisk (*) indicates an appellant and a double asterisk (**) indicates a cross- appellant. Decisions of a three-justice panel are not to be considered as precedent before any tribunal.

ENTRY ORDER

NOVEMBER TERM, 2022

Robert L. Greenfield* & Robin Imbrogno } APPEALED FROM: Greenfield* v. Kimberlee Luce et al. } } Superior Court, Windsor Unit, } Civil Division } CASE NO. 539-11-16 Wrcv Trial Judge: Robert P. Gerety, Jr.

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

Plaintiffs appeal from the trial court’s decision in this declaratory judgment action. The court rejected plaintiffs’ claims of an easement by necessity and an easement by implication across defendants’ land. Plaintiffs argue on appeal that the court erred in evaluating both claims. We affirm.

I. Trial Court’s Ruling

A. Factual Findings

The trial court made the following findings following a bench trial, some of which are based on the parties’ stipulation. In February 2008, plaintiffs purchased real property (referred to as the “70-acre parcel”) in Chester, Vermont. The 70-acre parcel is located at the center of several adjoining parcels, each of which has road frontage or other means of access to one of three public roads: Flamstead Road, Crow Hill Road, and Trebo Road. Plaintiffs also own property adjoining the 70-acre parcel, either solely or jointly, that has public road frontage on Crow Hill Road to the west and/or on Trebo Road to the north. Defendant Luce owns property that adjoins the 70-acre parcel and has public road frontage on Flamstead Road. Defendants Nancy and Robert Scott own property that adjoins the 70-acre parcel to the north and the Luce parcel to the west; the Scott parcel has public road frontage on Flamstead Road.

Plaintiffs sued defendants in June 2020, arguing in relevant part that they had the right to travel from the 70-acre parcel across defendants’ property to Flamstead Road. The trial court rejected both claims.

In reaching its conclusion, the court recounted the following deed history. In 1903, a Mr. Davis owned the land comprising the 70-acre parcel and the Luce parcel. Mr. Davis conveyed land that included the Luce Parcel to a Mr. Colvin in 1903 via warranty deed. Mr. Davis reserved and excepted a right-of-way to provide highway access to what is now the 70-acre parcel. This right-of-way did not include any deeded right to cross what is now the Scott parcel; that land was not owned by Mr. Davis at the time of the conveyance.

In 1948, a Mr. Raitanen acquired land referred to as the Wells Farm that included what is now the Scott parcel. In 1950, Mr. Raitanen acquired the 70-acre parcel. In 1960, the Hoars acquired land that encompassed what is now the Luce parcel. That year, the Hoars and Mr. Raitanen exchanged quitclaim deeds to clarify the location of the excepted right-of-way that crossed the Luce parcel and benefitted the 70-acre parcel. In 1966, the Hoars conveyed land including what is now the Luce parcel to the Ohls by warranty deed, subject to the deeded easement benefitting the 70-acre parcel that the Hoars had previously conveyed to Mr. Raitanen. In 1967, Mr. Raitanen participated in a series of deed transactions resulting in all of his land holdings, including the 70-acre parcel and the former Wells Farm (which includes the now-Scott parcel), being held by him and his wife as tenants by the entirety. This 1967 deed stated that the Wells Farm parcel was subject to a certain right-of-way recorded in the land records. The right- of-way referenced in this deed, however, only conveyed back rights to the former 1903 excepted right-of-way that crossed the now-Luce parcel; it did not convey any easement rights crossing the former Wells Farm, including the Scott parcel.

In 1978, after Mr. Raitanen died, Mrs. Raitanen conveyed the 70-acre parcel to the Higginses via warranty deed. At the time of the conveyance, the Higginses owned a parcel of land on Flamstead Road that adjoined the 70-acre parcel. The deed to the Higginses did not include an express easement over the Scott parcel (which Mrs. Raitanen owned at the time) to reach Flamstead Road. The Higginses did not request an express easement and Mrs. Raitenen did not offer one. After the sale, however, Mrs. Raitanen allowed the Higginses to bring logs to Flamstead Road over what is now the Scott parcel.

When the Higginses owned the 70-acre lot, Mr. Higgins believed he had an unrecorded right of access to Flamstead Road over the Luce and Scott parcels and, from time to time, he made use of the roadway to bring logs and other materials to Flamstead Road. Mr. Higgins also believed that access from Crow Hill Road would have provided good access to the entire 70-acre parcel but he did not have a right to cross the land between the 70-acre parcel and Crow Hill Road. The Higginses did not use the alternate access from Trebo Road to the northeast because that access was steep and not as good as the access to the south across the Luce and Scott parcels to Flamstead Road. The Higginses used the Luce/Scott roadway openly and no one informed them that they could not use the roadway. When he used this roadway, it was usable by trucks and logging equipment only, not passenger cars. The roadway would have needed substantial improvements to make it useable by cars. Mr. Higgins sold the 70-acre parcel to a Mr. Wood in 1997. Plaintiffs purchased the 70-acre parcel from Mr. Wood in 2008.

Meanwhile, not long after her conveyance to the Higginses, Mrs. Raitanen conveyed the Scott parcel to the Smiths via warranty deed in 1979. The Scotts purchased the property from the Smiths in 1998. The court found that when the Scotts purchased their parcel, there was a visible rough path from Flamstead Road to the Luce property line. The Scotts improved the path and used part of it for access to their residence on the Scott parcel. Where the rough path crossed onto the Luce property, there was a break or opening in the stone wall suggesting that historically, there was a path or rough road connecting the Luce parcel to the Scott parcel and Flamstead Road.

2 The court found that there was a logging road in 1964/65 that went from Flamstead Road to the 70-acre parcel across what was now the Scott and Luce parcels but this roadway was never used for access to the 70-acre parcel by standard two-wheel drive passenger cars or used to access a residence on the 70-acre parcel. The historical use of the 70-acre parcel was for firewood, logging, gravel extraction, and recreation. The logging road referenced above, was used occasionally to bring firewood from the 70-acre parcel to the then somewhat larger Scott property. It was also used periodically to bring logs, firewood, and gravel from the 70-acre parcel, across the Luce and Scott parcels to Flamstead Road.

The court found that the Luce/Scott route to the south was not the only reasonable access to the 70-acre parcel. Access from the east from Crow Hill Road over an adjoining parcel now owned by plaintiffs would also provide reasonable and practical access to the 70-acre parcel. That access would have to be developed by plaintiffs and, while it would present certain difficulties, it was not impractical or infeasible. It explained that this access was not possible for Mr. Higgins at the time he acquired the 70-acre lot because neither he nor Mrs. Raitanen owned the real property currently owned by plaintiffs that lies between the 70-acre parcel and Crow Hill Road. While the Higginses owned adjoining property that fronted on Trebo Road at the time they purchased the 70-acre parcel, access from Trebo Road was more difficult than the Luce/Scott route given the steepness of the terrain.

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Bluebook (online)
Eo22-158_0.pdf, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/eo22-158_0pdf-vt-2022.