Frederick v. Consolidated Waste Services, Inc.
This text of 573 A.2d 387 (Frederick v. Consolidated Waste Services, Inc.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Judicial Court of Maine primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.
Opinion
The plaintiffs, Edward and Gloria Frederick, appeal from the judgment of the Superior Court (Somerset County, Beau-lieu, J.) declaring that land owned by the defendant, Consolidated Waste Services, Inc. (“CWS”), was not subject to an easement benefitting the Fredericks’ property. We affirm the judgment.
The Fredericks and CWS own adjoining properties in the Town of Norridgewock. The Fredericks’ property is unimproved and serves as a woodlot. The chain of title to both parcels can be traced back to a common grantor in 1855. The deed from the common grantor to the Fredericks’ predecessor in title describes the property as being bounded on the north by a town road, and the conveyance to CWS’s predecessor describes land on both sides of a town road.
In 1950, Norridgewock discontinued La-gasse Road, a town road adjoining and northerly of the Fredericks’ property and bounded on both sides by the CWS property. 1 As a result of the discontinuance, the Fredericks’ property became landlocked. After CWS installed a padlocked cable across the discontinued road, the Freder-icks filed in the Somerset County Registry of Deeds a notice of intent to prevent extin-guishment of an easement in the part of Lagasse Road that ran through CWS’s property. See 14 M.R.S.A. § 813 (1980). In a counterclaim to a complaint filed by the Fredericks against it for trespass and the cutting and carrying away of timber, 2 CWS sought a declaration that no easement existed over its land and an order to discharge the notice of intent to prevent extinguishment of an easement.
At trial, a jury determined that the Fred-ericks did not acquire an easement over CWS property by prescription, a finding that the Fredericks do not challenge. The parties tried to the court, without a jury, the question whether CWS’s property was *389 burdened by an implied easement. The court concluded that the Fredericks had failed to establish that CWS’s land was subject to any easement. The court entered a judgment on Count I of the CWS counterclaim declaring that the Fredericks had no easement over CWS’s land and further declaring the notice to prevent extin-guishment of an easement to be void and of no effect. This appeal by the Fredericks followed.
The Fredericks claim an easement over that portion of CWS’s property that was part of the now discontinued Lagasse Road. The Fredericks acknowledge that they acquired no rights in Lagasse Road as members of the public by virtue of the town’s discontinuance. 3 Nor did the discontinuance of Lagasse Road in and of itself create in the Fredericks a private easement over that part of the road running through CWS property. See Warchalowski v. Brown, 417 A.2d 425, 428 (Me.1980). In order to establish easement rights over CWS property, the Fredericks must rely on their claim to a private easement that existed prior to and survived the discontinuance of Lagasse Road.
A private easement over land may be created in several ways. See O’Connell v. Larkin, 532 A.2d 1039, 1042 (Me.1987); see also Brown v. Dickey, 106 Me. 97, 100, 75 A. 382 (1909). Because there is no express grant creating an easement over CWS’s land, any easement that exists must have been created by implication or by estoppel. See O’Connell, 532 A.2d at 1042. The Fredericks presented no evidence to establish an easement by estoppel, see Bathport Bldg, Inc. v. Perry, 490 A.2d 663, 665-66 (Me.1985), and we find no merit in their claim of an implied easement.
We have recognized two kinds of implied easements, both of which the Fred-ericks rely upon in their contention that their land is benefitted by an easement. The first is an easement created by strict necessity, arising when a grantor conveys a lot of land from a larger parcel, and that conveyed lot is “landlocked” by the grant- or’s surrounding land and cannot be accessed by a road or highway. Because of the strict necessity of having access to the landlocked parcel, an easement over the grantor’s remaining land benefitting the landlocked lot is implied as a matter of law irrespective of the true intent of the common grantor. Bowers v. Andrews, 557 A.2d 606, 609 (Me.1989). At the time of the original conveyance of what is now the Fredericks’ land from the common grantor, who also owned the land currently held by CWS, the Fredericks’ land was bounded by a town road and was neither landlocked nor inaccessible. In the absence of strict necessity for an easement over the CWS parcel at the time of the severance of unity of title, the law will not imply one. O’Connell, 532 A.2d at 1042 n. 5; Warchalowski, 417 A.2d at 428. The trial court correctly rejected the Fredericks’ contention that their land is benefitted by an easement of strict necessity.
A second type of implied easement may be created when a common grantor severs real estate, conveying part of it and retaining the balance (or conveying it to a third person), and the circumstances at the time of the conveyance denote the grant- or’s intent to subject the retained land (the servient estate) to an easement benefitting the conveyed land (the dominant estate). Bowers, 557 A.2d at 608; O’Connell, 532 A.2d at 1042; Brown, 106 Me. at 101, 75 A. 382. In order for such an implied easement to be recognized (1) the “property when in single ownership [must have been] openly used in a manner constituting a ‘quasi-easement,’ ” (defined in Brown, 106 Me. at 101, 75 A. 382), as existing conditions on the retained land that are apparent and observable and the retention of which would clearly benefit the land conveyed); (2) the common grantor, who severed unity of title, must have “manifested an intent that the quasi-easement should continue as a true easement,” to burden the retained land and to benefit the conveyed land; and *390 (3) the owners of the conveyed land must have continued to use what had been a quasi-easement as a true easement. Bowers, 557 A.2d at 608.
In this case, at the time of the severance of unity of title in 1855, the deeds referred to a town road adjoining the property conveyed to the Fredericks’ predecessor in title and running through CWS’s property. In order for the common grant- or to have created a quasi-easement in that town road, he must have had some ownership interest in it at the time of the conveyance. Dorman v. Bates Mfg. Co., 82 Me. 438, 447, 19 A. 915 (1890). Not only did the Fredericks fail to establish the requisite element of ownership, see supra n. 1, but the existence of a town way accessible to the land now owned by the Fredericks at the time of the severance of unity of title is also strongly suggestive that the common grantor had no reason, and thus had no intent, to create a private easement to burden his retained land.
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573 A.2d 387, 1990 Me. LEXIS 116, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/frederick-v-consolidated-waste-services-inc-me-1990.