Gammon v. Tremblay

CourtSuperior Court of Maine
DecidedMay 2, 2002
DocketOXFre-00-041
StatusUnpublished

This text of Gammon v. Tremblay (Gammon v. Tremblay) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Superior Court of Maine primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Gammon v. Tremblay, (Me. Super. Ct. 2002).

Opinion

STATE OF MAINE ~~~, SUPERIOR COURT OXFORD, ss. |RECEIVED D AND FEL=~) CIVIL ACTION ' Docket No. RE-00-041 wy 22m | | ERO- Ui B/arqn LESLIE GAMMON, ~ yo

Plaintiff eat be—SonnaL. Hows. |. “CLERK OF COURTS v. ms ORDER THOMAS P. TREMBLAY and GAIL W. TREMBLAY, Defendants DONALD L. GARBRECHT and LAW LIGRARY J. EMILY FOSTER, may 8 2002

Counter-claimant

PROCEDURAL HISTORY —

This case was initiated by Leslie Gammon to establish the boundaries of parcels of land located in the Town of Waterford. In the complaint he filed on September 27, 2000, Mr. Gammon asserted that he, J. Emily Foster, Harlan Johnson, and Stephen Brown owned three abutting parcels in Waterford, and that there was a dispute concerning their respective and common boundaries. Mr. Gammon also asserted that defendant Foster had trespassed upon and damaged his land.

Ms. Foster responded to the complaint by filing a motion for substitution of parties on October 5, 2000, and an answer and counterclaim for slander of title the following day. In her motion, Ms. Foster stated that she had sold the property in question to Thomas and Gail Tremblay. Ms. Foster’s motion was granted without objection on October 17, 2000, and the Tremblays filed their own motion for

substitution on November 1, 2000. In that motion, they informed the court and the 2

plaintiff that they now owned both Ms. Foster’s parcel and the parcel once owned by Messrs. Johnson and Brown. Without objection, the Tremblays’ motion was granted on November 1, 2000. The Trernblays also received permission to file an amended counterclaim that included claims of statutory and common law trespass and slander of title against Mr. Gammon. Finally, Mr. Gammon was granted permission to withdraw his trespass claim.

A trial on all claims was held at the Oxford County Superior Court in South Paris on March 5 and 6, 2002. During the trial, testimony was taken from John Belding, Leslie Gammon, Gary Inman, Brenda Birney, Lewis Williams, Fred Foster, Jessica Emily Foster, Thomas Tremblay, John Belding, and Herbert Franklin Foster. In addition, the plaintiff admitted four photographs, copies of the worksheets prepared by surveyors Inman and Belding, and a letter written by Mr. Gammon to Mainely Properties. Ms. Foster admitted into evidence the sales contract between herself and the Tremblays, and the settlement statement from that transaction. The Tremblays admitted defendants’ exhibits 1, 2, 3, 4, 5i, 6, 7, 8b, 8c, 9, 10, 14, 15, 16, 17, 18a, 18b, 21b, 21c, 21d, 22, and 26. The parties placed three stipulations on the record — and, finally, the court went onto the land and saw the various claimed monuments and pins. At the conclusion of the trial, counsel requested additional time to submit memoranda of law. Those were all received by March 22, 2002.

FINDINGS OF FACT AND CONCLUSIONS OF LAW On August 6, 1890 Acsah A. Patterson acquired all of the land now owned by

the Tremblays, as well as the disputed parcel, from Winslow Bisbee. Four years 3

later, on May 1, 1894, the land now owned by Mr. Gammon, excluding the disputed parcel, was deeded to Charles Gammon by Mary Ames. On June 24, 1895, Charles Gammon deeded that property to Acsah’s husband, Samuel Patterson. The deeds of the side-by-side properties owned by Acsah and Samuel Patterson describe a common boundary that has been accepted as the “historical” boundary by all parties. That boundary runs approximately 1650 feet from Route 37 along a range line to the shore of McWain Pond. The remains of a stone wall are still present for approximately 200 feet of the northern half of that line. It is this boundary that lies at the heart of this dispute.

Acsah Patterson died intestate on June 24, 1900, and her property passed to Samuel. On July 9, 1900, Samuel transferred what had been Acsah’s property to Joseph Patterson. That property was then transferred at least four times between 1900 and 1965, when it was acquired by Frederick and Elizabeth Foster, parents of Emily, Fred, and Herbert Foster. At no time during any of these transfers was the description of the boundary in question changed.

In 1969, after her husband died, Elizabeth Foster deeded one small lakefront lot to Herbert, and another to Emily. Herbert’s lot abutted the Gammon lot to the east, and Emily’s lot to the west. In 1973, Elizabeth transferred the remainder of her property to Emily, keeping a life estate for herself. Again, the description of the boundary in dispute was never changed in any of these transactions.

Herbert Foster mortgaged his property in October 1993, and soon defaulted on

the payments. A foreclosure action was begun in 1997 and, in an order dated March 4

5, 1998, the Superior Court (Oxford County, Calkins, J.) granted judgment to KeyBank. Herbert failed to redeem the property within ninety days, and KeyBank sold the parcel to Harlan Johnson and Stephen Brown on August 18, 1998. Johnson and Brown sold it to the Tremblays on October 27, 2000. Emily Foster had already sold all of her property to the Tremblays on September 29, 2000.

The land now owned by Mr. Gammon, without the disputed area, was transferred from Samuel Patterson to Ida Gammon in a deed dated October 23, 1906. The Registry Book number was not supplied to the court, but the page is 551. Sometime thereafter, Ida apparently transferred this property, along with other parcels, to her husband Charles, their children Violet, Hyacinthe, Beatrice, and Gerald, and to Ora Gammon Millett. In 1925 Charles, Violet, Hyacinthe, Beatrice, and Gerald deeded their interests in what had been Ida’s property to Raymond Gammon, twenty-seven years later, in 1952, Ora did the same. None of the deeds admitted into evidence changed the description of the boundary in question, or of the parcel itself.

Although Mr. Gammon was born and raised in his family’s homestead, he did not become its owner until 1998, after the death of his father, Raymond Gammon. Mr. Gammon moved out of his parents’ home in 1957 or 1958. He lived across the road for the next forty years, and returned to his family’s home approximately five years ago. Mr. Gammon testified that he walked the boundaries

of what was to become his land with his grandfather, Charles Gammon, in 5

approximately 1950! and that, at that time, he saw a wooden stake in a pile of stone at the spot he now claims marks the terminus of the boundary line. Mr. Gammon also testified that, between 1950 and 1975, he and his father cut firewood on the disputed parcel, and that they cut right to the line he claims as the boundary.

According to Mr. Gammon, the Fosters also cut firewood during the late 1950s and 1960s, but only after he, his father, and Fred Foster had walked the boundary and “marked” the line with sticks. The aerial photograph admitted as defendants’ exhibit 18A was taken in 1953; it shows large pieces of cleared ground or meadow on the Foster property.

In addition, Mr. Gammon testified that in 1968, he and his father helped Elizabeth and Frederick Foster measure along the shorefront to establish the small lots that were eventually deeded to Emily and Herbert. He recalled that all of them agreed that the wooden stake in a pile of stone marked the boundary, and that they used the stake to begin their measurements.

The Gammon land was historically used as a cattle and poultry farm. Raymond Gammon continued to keep chickens until approximately 1975, and even today portions of a barbed wire fence used to contain the cattle still exist at various points along the historic boundary.

Throughout the last decades, the tax map for the Town of Waterford has

depicted the disputed parcel of land as part of the Foster parcel, and the Fosters have

1. If accurate, this walk occurred before Ora Millett transferred her interest to Charles Gammon. , 6

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Gammon v. Tremblay, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/gammon-v-tremblay-mesuperct-2002.