Evelyn Rivera v. Jimmy Ducharme et al.

2023 DNH 102
CourtDistrict Court, D. New Hampshire
DecidedAugust 15, 2023
Docket21-cv-221-PB
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 2023 DNH 102 (Evelyn Rivera v. Jimmy Ducharme et al.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, D. New Hampshire primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Evelyn Rivera v. Jimmy Ducharme et al., 2023 DNH 102 (D.N.H. 2023).

Opinion

UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT FOR THE DISTRICT OF NEW HAMPSHIRE

Evelyn Rivera

v. Case No. 21-cv-221-PB Opinion No. 2023 DNH 102 Jimmy Ducharme et al.

MEMORANDUM AND ORDER

This case stems from a dispute between two neighbors over the location

of the boundary line between their properties. Plaintiff Evelyn Rivera asserts

that defendant Jimmy Ducharme is liable under state law for trespass,

nuisance, and negligence. She also charges that Ducharme violated the

Federal Fair Housing Act, 42 U.S.C. § 3617. Ducharme has counterclaimed

for trespass, ejectment, conversion, and unjust enrichment. Ducharme has

filed a motion for summary judgment challenging Rivera’s claims. For the

following reasons, I grant the motion in part and deny it in part.

I. BACKGROUND

Ducharme is the beneficial owner of real property located at 32 ½-36

Summer Street in Nashua, New Hampshire (“Ducharme property”). He

operates his construction business from that location. Rivera owns the

neighboring lot at 32 Summer Street (“Rivera property”). A two-family residence is located on the Rivera property. The disputed boundary line runs

between the two properties along the side of the two-family residence.

Ducharme and Rivera purchased their lots from Shane Tumpney, with

Ducharme purchasing his lot first. When Tumpney owned both properties, he

rented the Rivera property and allowed his tenants to park along the side of

the building. A stairway leading into the residence on the Rivera property

also protruded from the side of the building into the area between the two

properties.

When Ducharme decided to purchase the property, he commissioned

Meisner Brem Corporation (“MBC”), a licensed land surveyor, to survey his

lot and prepare a subdivision plan. That plan depicts the boundary line

between the Rivera property and the Ducharme property as being a mere 0.9

feet from the Rivera building at its narrowest point. It also suggests that the

building’s side stairway encroaches on the Ducharme property by 3.5 feet.

The plan states that the boundary lines were drawn using deed references for

the Ducharme property.

Before Rivera purchased the neighboring lot, Ducharme used the MBC

plan to persuade Tumpney to allow him to tear the side stairway down

because it encroached on his property. 1 Tumpney and Ducharme, however,

1 The stairway remains in place notwithstanding this alleged agreement.

2 agreed that Tumpney’s tenants could continue to park along the side of the

building in exchange for Tumpney providing snow clearing and landscaping

services to Ducharme’s properties. Both Tumpney and Ducharme understood

that this was an informal agreement that either side could revoke at any

time.

Around this time, one of Ducharme’s neighbors sent a letter to the City

of Nashua alleging inaccuracies in the MBC subdivision plan. Ducharme

later commissioned Maynard & Paquette Engineering Associates, LLC

(“M&P”) to prepare a new subdivision plan. The M&P plan differs from the

MBC plan in certain respects. Most notably, the frontage for the Ducharme

property on Summer Street is depicted as approximately two feet shorter in

the M&P plan. According to the M&P plan, the boundary line between the

Ducharme property and the Rivera property also appears to be somewhat

farther away from Rivera’s house, but the plan does not specify the distance

between the house and the boundary line. Unlike the MBC plan, the M&P

plan does not state that it was based on the boundary description in the

Ducharme deed. Critically, neither the M&P plan nor any other evidence in

the record suggests that the boundary line between the two properties is far

enough from the Rivera property to allow her to park along the side of the

building.

3 When Tumpney began to consider selling the lot that Rivera purchased,

he asked Ducharme to grant him a permanent parking easement for the area

along the side of the building. Ducharme declined. As a result, when

Tumpney put the property on the market, the listing sheet disclosed that the

only available parking was on the street.

Rivera purchased her property in October 2020. Both the realtor and

Tumpney told her that the listing sheet was wrong and that there was

parking along the side of the building. Rivera parked her car there the first

time she went to the property after closing. Ducharme, however, immediately

approached her and told her move her car because it was on his property.

Rivera declined. A few weeks later, Rivera paved a ten-foot-wide strip in the

disputed parking area without consulting Ducharme, despite his continued

insistence that she had no right to park on his property. Rivera and her adult

sons also continued to park their vehicles in that area. Frequent clashes with

Ducharme about the location of the boundary line ensued.

Although it was Rivera’s intention to move to the property when she

purchased it from Tumpney, Ducharme’s hostility caused her to keep her

primary residence in New York. Her two sons moved into one apartment at

the Rivera property, and she rented the other unit to the same tenants who

had occupied it while Tumpney was the owner. On one occasion when Rivera

was visiting her sons, Ducharme, who is white, called Rivera, who is of

4 Puerto Rican decent, a “spic” to her face. Rivera testified in her deposition

that Ducharme used the same slur multiple times in confrontations with her

sons. 2 Ducharme also once plowed snow directly onto Rivera’s car while it

was parked in the disputed driveway.

Approximately a month after Rivera purchased her property, she came

to the house to find that Ducharme had parked a Bobcat VersaHandler

machine alongside the paved strip of the disputed driveway. Rivera observed

the “huge” piece of construction equipment upon arrival, but she nonetheless

decided to pull in and park in the “narrow” spot between her house and the

VersaHandler, with the driver’s side door next to her house. Doc. 25-8 at 10.

Rivera then got out of the car, walked around the back, and opened the

passenger side rear door to retrieve some bags. When Rivera went to close the

door, she lost her balance, twisted her knee, and fell backward onto the

VersaHandler. She suffered serious injuries to her knee as a result of the fall.

2 It appears that Rivera’s testimony concerning what her sons had told her about their interactions with Ducharme would be inadmissible hearsay. Because the defendants do not object to Rivera’s statements on hearsay grounds, however, I assume for purposes of this motion that they are of evidentiary quality, because her sons presumably could testify as to their interactions with Ducharme.

5 The complaint asserts four state law claims and one federal claim

against Ducharme 3: (1) trespass, because Ducharme parked the

VersaHandler on what she claims is her property (Count IV); (2) nuisance,

based on his allegedly illegal storage of construction equipment (the

VersaHandler) in a residential area (Count V); (3) negligence, premised on

Ducharme’s decision to park the VersaHandler next to Rivera’s parking spot

(Count II); (4) intentional infliction of emotional distress (Count III); and (5)

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Related

Rivera v. Ducharme
D. New Hampshire, 2023

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2023 DNH 102, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/evelyn-rivera-v-jimmy-ducharme-et-al-nhd-2023.