Giroux v. City of Chicopee

2 Mass. Supp. 863
CourtMassachusetts Land Court
DecidedOctober 21, 1981
DocketNo. 39260
StatusPublished

This text of 2 Mass. Supp. 863 (Giroux v. City of Chicopee) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Massachusetts Land Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Giroux v. City of Chicopee, 2 Mass. Supp. 863 (Mass. Super. Ct. 1981).

Opinion

DECISION

The petitioner, Rosa A. Giroux, filed a petition with the Land Court pursuant to the provisions of G.L. c. 185, § 1(a) to confirm her title to land in Chicopee in the County of Hampden shown on a plan filed with the petition (Chalk A). A copy of the filed plan, reduced to scale, is attached hereto as Exhibit A to this decision. On this exhibit the Court has sketched the three parcels of land which the petitioner claims comprise the locus and as to which there are separate chains of title as to parcels 1 and 2 and no title of record as to parcel 3, the petitioner’s claim thereto being based on adverse possession. In addition to the portions of locus included within said three parcels, [864]*864the petitioner also elani-"- title to the portion of Beaudry Avenue located within the green tinted linas shown on the plan and denies the rights of all other persons to use it. This area is narked “4” on Exhibit A. The petitioner finally claims the appurtenant right to use that portion of Beaudry Avenue as shown on'the plan from the locus to Memorial Drive, a public way.

An objection to aIJrv/unce of the petition was filed on behalf of (he City of Chicopee (the “City”), which claimed an 'easement to repair ;¡¡A maintain a sanitary sewer in Beaudry Avenue, and this objection ultimately was disposed of by a stipulation between the petitioner and the City. It also appeared during the trial that a portion of the premises had been taken by the City for the nonpayment of taxes and that a pending Superior Court proceeding had .been stayed until a decision as to title was reached in this Confirmation case.

The Assessors’ plan of locus and surrounding properties shows as assessed to “owners unknown” a huge area to the north and east of parcels 1 avid 2 and extending farther to the c;<*4 and south than the petitioner claims (Defendants’ Exhibit No. 4). A copy of the applicable portion of the plan is attached hereto as Exhibit B. Beaudry Avenue appears to end at the easterly line of property shown, thereon as “Joseph E. Bessette et ux” rather than at the easterly line of lot 25 as it is shown on the filed plan, Chalk A.

An answer also was filed by an abutter, Leonard LaMothe, wh . claimed the right as appurtenant to his ).»■*.( southerly of locus to use the pen Bon of Beaudry Avenue which the p.-dtioruv seeks to eliminate and who, in addition, contended that he owned the No ío a portion of said Avenue free from the rights of others therein. The land claimed by the respondent LaMothe is indicated as “5” on Exhibit A. “5” is situated within “4”.

A trial was held at the Land Court on August 12, 1980, at which time it appeared that one Laurent A. Cote, named in the citation but who neither had appeared or answered, might have certain claims to the locus not previously communicated to counsel for LaMothe who was attempting also to represent Mr. Cote. The Court agreed to give Mr. Cote an opportunity to obtain the services of his usual counsel. A conference subsequently was held on September 11, 1980 to inform the Court of the real estate tax status and to arrange to complete the trial in a manner equitable to all. On April 30, 1981, the trial was concluded in the courtroom of the Chicopee District Court, and a view was taken by the Court in the presence of counsel.

No question has been raised as to the petitioner’s title to parcels 1 and 2, and it is clear that title to those portions of locus may be confirmed. There is a dispute affecting Beaudry Avenue, however, which peripherally concerns parcel 1. Parcel 1 was conveyed to the petitioner and her late husband, Moise, by Ella M. Shea by deed dated August 20, 1948 and recorded with Hampden County Registry of Deeds Book 1954, Page 461 (to which Registry all recording information hereinafter set forth refers unless the context otherwise requires). (Abstract s. 12 Exhibit No. 1). It is on this piece that the petitionér and her husband built their home as shown on the plan. The deed described the property as lots numbered 21, 22, 23, 24 and 25 on Plan of Lots of Thomas N. Hafey and Louis J. Rigali recorded in Book of Plans 1, Page 132 to which Plan reference may be had for a more particular description. Said lots are 109.67 feet in depth and 50 feet wide. The recorded plan appears at sheet No. 5 of the abstract and shows Oak Street (now Beaudry Avenue) approximately fifty feet in width bisected by a dotted line from the easterly line of lot 25 to a point approximately five hundred feet westerly thereof. From the westerly end of the fifty-foot segment westerly to Willimansett Road, as shown on the recorded plan, [865]*865Oak Street is somewhat more than twenty-five feet wide. In the area where the fifty-foot wide street is indicated lots 26 to 38 inclusive, are shown on the southerly side thereof. So far as the abstract indicates (Exhibit No. 1) the developers Hafey and Rigali never acquired title to the southerly twenty-five feet of Beaudry Avenue or the land comprising lots 26 to 38.

The petitioner’s chain to the parcel which I have denominated “4”, the northerly 25 feet of Beaudry Avenue, commences in 1893, and that of respondent LaMothe commences in 1911 with a deed from Philias Tedero to Philomehe Tabonte dated March 30, 1911 and recorded in Book 802, Page 200. (Defendant’s Exhibit 2). The respondent Leonard LaMothe and one Yvonne LaMothe (not a party to this proceeding) subsequently acquired the premises which it is claimed include a portion of Beaudry Avenue by a deed from William Burnett, Jr., et ux dated February 3, 1927 and recorded in Book 1340, Page 433 (Defendant’s Exhibit No. 1). The three deeds in this respondent’s chain all follow the same description which is as follows:

Beginning at a point on the northerly side of Britton Street, seventy (70) feet easterly from the easterly line of land now or formerly of Joseph Renaud, and thence running easterly along said Britton Street, sixty-four (64) feet to land now or formerly of Louis Theroux; thence northerly along said Theroux’s land, to the center of the pond; thence westerly, on the center of the pond, sixty-four (64) feet, more or less, to land now or formerly of one Eugene Homemeyer; thence southerly along said Homemeyer’s land, to said Brit-ton Street and place of beginning.

No evidence was introduced as to the location of the pond referred to in the LaMothe description, but the copy of the applicable sheet of the Chicopee Assessors’ Plan (Defendant’s Exhibit 4) shows the parcel extending into the easterly twenty-five feet of Beaudry Avenue. This does not accord with Defendant’s Exhibit No. 1 quoted above where the description bounds sixty-four feet on the center of a pond. No pond is shown on the Assessor’s plan, nor is there one now apparent on the ground. However, the view was suggestive of a pond in years gone by at the easterly end of the land claimed by the petitioner, but the Court was not furnished with atlases or other tools to substantiate the appearance of the terrain. The legal description of the LaMothe land dates back at least to 1911, which is subsequent to the recording of Exhibit 2 hereto which locates Beaudry Avenue in the same place as the Assessors’ plan now places the northerly point of respondent LaMothe’s land. The 1911 deed in turn gives as a title reference an 1892 conveyance, although the instrument itself was not introduced into evidence and therefore cannot figure in the Court’s decision.

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Bluebook (online)
2 Mass. Supp. 863, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/giroux-v-city-of-chicopee-masslandct-1981.