Galvin v. Gaffney

24 F. Supp. 2d 223, 1998 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 17477, 1998 WL 772178
CourtDistrict Court, D. Connecticut
DecidedJune 9, 1998
DocketCIV. 3:95CV1081(WWE)
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 24 F. Supp. 2d 223 (Galvin v. Gaffney) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, D. Connecticut primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Galvin v. Gaffney, 24 F. Supp. 2d 223, 1998 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 17477, 1998 WL 772178 (D. Conn. 1998).

Opinion

RULING

FITZSIMMONS, United States Magistrate Judge.

On June 8, 1995, James P. Galvin and Kathleen M. Galvin, the owners of property in New Milford, filed a complaint to prevent defendant’s interference with plaintiffs’ lawful use of an easement, and seeking confirmation of their right to install utility lines across defendant’s property to serve their residence. By agreement of the parties, 1 a trial on the merits was bifurcated, with the first stage limited to determining the existence and scope of an easement by deed. 2

This ruling addresses issues previously reserved for the second stage of this litigation. The questions before the Court are whether an easement created in the 1802 deed from Buck to Phelps, and later extinguished upon unity of ownership of the dominant and ser-vient estates in 1810, was newly created by implication or necessity upon the severance of the servient and dominant estates in 1826, or created by prescription during the intervening years since. If so, the Court must decide the scope of that easement.

Evidence was heard on January 7 and 9, 1998; James Galvin testified for the plaintiffs and Attorney Peter Ruvuolo, a title searcher, for the defendant. Proposed findings of fact and conclusions of law 3 were filed on February 20 and final argument was held on April 27,1998.

Testimony and evidence adduced at the hearing are summarized below as necessary to explain the Court’s findings and conclusions.

FINDINGS OF FACT

Based on the credible testimony, the exhibits, and the entire record compiled during the first stage of the litigation and the hearings on January 7 and 9, 1998, the Court finds the following facts established which are relevant to this ruling.

PARTIES

1. James and Kathleen Galvin reside at 178 Indian Trail Road, New Milford, Connecticut. [Compl. 1].

2. Defendant Elizabeth Gaffney resides at 440-60 Elbertson Street, Elmhurst, New York. [Compl. 2, Answ. 2],

The Servient Estate

3. Mrs. Gaffney is the owner of the “ser-vient estate” created when Samuel Buck conveyed a portion of his land, including the “passway” parcel, to Luke Hallock-in 1802. [Doc. # 62 ¶ 23],

4. Defendant acquired her interest in the servient estate on September 7, 1945, by virtue of two deeds, one from the Estate of McGraw and the other from Nathan McGraw. [Doc. # 62 ¶ 24],

*226 The Dominant Estate

The 1802 Deed

5. All of the land referred to in this case was originally part of the “Northpurchase,” land purchased from the native inhabitants of the New Milford area and sold and confirmed by the committees of Hartford and Windsor to the proprietors of the tract by an act of the governor and company of the colony of Connecticut on October 2, 1731 and by act of the General Court on October 18, 1731. [Doc. # 46 ¶ 3, Doc. # 62 ¶ 1],

6. The original proprietors then laid out the Northpurchase into a series of “lots,” with “highways” designated in the plan so that each of the lots had access to the planned public road system. [Doc. # 62 ¶ 2],

7. The proprietors thereafter sold these lots to private individuals by reference to the “layout” and to the “highways.” [Doc. # 62 ¶ 3].

8. The 57th lot, as created by the proprietors, was conveyed to one Daniel Nobel, being described in the conveyance as “ ... lying in the south tear .... Beginning at the fifty sixth lot and running one hundred and eighty one rods Bounded north and south on the highway and west upon the fifty eighth lot.” The highway on the north boundary of the 57th lot is referred to as the “ten rod highway.” [Doc. # 62 ¶ 4].

9. All of the parcels of land involved in this action were once part of the 57th lot. [Doc. # 62 ¶ 5].

10. Prior to February 15, 1802, Samuel Beebe Buck owned an irregularly shaped piece of land situated in the 57th lot of the Northpurchase in the Town of New Milford. [Doc. # 46 ¶ 4, Doe. # 59 at 1, Doc. # 62 ¶ 7].

11. Buck’s land was entirely surrounded by land of other private landowners, except for a portion 6 rods wide and 32 rods long which abutted a road (now Indian Trail Road) to the south, and which provided access to the remainder of Buck’s property. This 6 x 32 rod portion is referred to as the “passway”. [Doc. # 46 ¶ 5, Doc. # 59 at 1, Doc. # 62 ¶ 8].

12. On February 15, 1802, Samuel Buck deeded to Luke Halloek a part of Samuel’s property located on Indian Trail Road. (This was the western portion of his land, including the passway, now owned by the defendant.) [Doc. # 46 ¶ 6, Doe. # 59 at 1, Doc. # 62 ¶ 9],

13. The deed specifically provided that Buck “reserve to myself and heirs ... the right of passing occasionally to and from other lands ...” (hereinafter “passway rights”). [Doc. # 46 ¶ 7, Doc. # 59 at 2, Doc. # 62 ¶ 10],

14. Buck’s “other lands” consisted of approximately 25 acres of land adjacent to the piece that he sold to Luke Halloek, now the Galvin estate. These “other lands” were landlocked, except for the passway rights reserved by Buck. [Doc. #46 ¶ 8, Doc. # 59 ¶ 5, Doc. # 62 ¶ 11],

15. The passway rights reserved by Samuel Buck were appurtenant to the land that Buck retained because, without them, Buck had no access to the public road system. His retained property was bounded entirely by other private property owners. Therefore, the reservation was necessary to maintain the value of his retained land. [Doc. #46 ¶ 9, Doc. # 59 at 2].

16. On that same day, February 15, 1802, Buck conveyed his “other lands” (Galvin Estate) by quit claim deed to William Phelps. The deed included “... a privilege of passing south to and irom the highway in the old passway so called.” [Doe. # 46 ¶ 10, Doc. # 59 at 2, Doc. # 62 ¶ 12],

17. At the time of the Buck conveyance to Phelps, Phelps already owned a parcel of land between Buck’s land [the Galvin estate] and the “Ten Rod Highway” to its north. [Doc. # 46 ¶ 11, Doc. 59 at 3, Doc. # 62 ¶ 13],

18. As a result of the conveyance from Buck, Phelps owned a parcel of land that bounded to its north the “Ten Rod Highway”, as laid out by the proprietors of the Northpurchase. Phelps had direct access from the dominant/Galvin estate to the land designated by the original proprietors as the “Ten Rod Highway.” [Doc. # 62 ¶¶ 14, 15].

The Ten Rod Highway

19. The “Ten Rod Highway” referred to in various deeds was never built; it was only a “paper” highway, the property for which had *227 been sold off to private land owners before 1802. [Doc. # 46 ¶ 12, Doe. # 59 at 3].

20. The northern portion of the plaintiffs’ property, described as Ten Rod Highway on the Hart Map, has never been used as a roadway. [Doc. # 59 at 3; Ex. 24].

21.

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Bluebook (online)
24 F. Supp. 2d 223, 1998 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 17477, 1998 WL 772178, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/galvin-v-gaffney-ctd-1998.