Gutcheon v. Becton

585 A.2d 818, 1991 Me. LEXIS 18
CourtSupreme Judicial Court of Maine
DecidedJanuary 31, 1991
StatusPublished
Cited by27 cases

This text of 585 A.2d 818 (Gutcheon v. Becton) 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.

Bluebook
Gutcheon v. Becton, 585 A.2d 818, 1991 Me. LEXIS 18 (Me. 1991).

Opinions

GLASSMAN, Justice.

The defendant, Jeffrey Becton, appeals from the judgment entered by the Superior Court (Hancock County, Beaulieu, J.), which accepted and adopted the report of a referee finding that the plaintiffs,1 Jeffrey B. Gutcheon, Martha M. Green, Sterling Douglas Steele and Geraldine Elaine Steele, Don P. Reiman and Gwen C. Rei-man, Laurie A. Hayward and Clarence M. Hayward, and Cheryl Steele Morse and Terrell Morse, had acquired a right of way by prescription over Becton’s property. Becton contends that the court erred in adopting the finding of the referee that such easements were created by prescription and were not currently overburdened, and in failing to describe the nature of the easements with sufficient particularity to prevent future overburdening. Finding no error, we affirm the judgment.

The focus of the present case is a one-lane dirt road (access road) that begins on a rural town road in Deer Isle, traverses in a southeasterly direction across property now owned by Becton, and terminates at the northern border of Lot 48D. (See diagram attached as Appendix “A” to this opinion). However, the access road is also the means of reaching eight other lots, 48, 48A, 48B, 48E, 48F, 49, and 49-1. The relevant facts regarding the past use of this access road can be briefly summarized: Beginning in 1932, Fountain and Celia Davis began to make successive purchases of the land located south of the current Becton property, comprised of land originally owned by Celia’s father. They first acquired Lot 48D, located at the terminus of the access road, and began to use the road for vehicular access to their year-round residence which they had constructed on this lot. In 1935, the Davises acquired Lots 48E and 48F, located adjacent to Lot 48D to the east, and a small section of Lot 48, and continued to maintain and use this land in its undeveloped state as woodlots and pasture. In 1956 the Davises acquired the remainder of Lot 48, to the east of and adjacent to the three previously acquired lots, in its undeveloped state as woodland and pasture. Three years later, and prior to the Davises’ acquisition of this lot, the Davises’ daughter constructed a log cabin for seasonal use on Lot 48A, a small parcel south of Lot 48 reached by the access road and a driveway that the Davises had gradually extended from the terminus of the access road on Lot 48D to their other lots. In 1961, the Davises purchased Lot 48A and undeveloped Lots 48B, 48C, and [821]*82149, all located to the south of Lot 48 and also reached by the access road and the extended driveway. The plaintiffs in the instant case all trace the titles to their respective lots as successors in interest to the Davises.2 Other than Lots 48D and 48A, all of the other lots acquired through the Davises remained nonresidential in character until 1979.

In 1985, nine years after the purchase of his property, Becton recorded a notice, which he had previously posted at the intersection of the town and access roads, to prevent the acquisition of a right of way by the plaintiffs. See 14 M.R.S.A. § 812 (1980).3 This notice was the first objection by Becton or any of his predecessors in title to the use of the road. The Frenches, then the current owners of Lot 49, brought the present action pursuant to 14 M.R.S.A. § 6654 (1980), claiming a prescriptive easement over the access road as ingress to Lot 49. Becton filed a counterclaim against all of the plaintiffs seeking a declaratory judgment as to the rights of the parties with respect to the access road. By agreement of the parties, the matter was referred to a referee. After a hearing, the referee found for the plaintiffs and issued his report stating, inter alia:

[The plaintiffs are granted] an easement for vehicular traffic over the land of the defendant situated in Deer Isle, Hancock County, Maine. Said easement is located on a dirt road as now existing, which leads southerly from a road known as the French Camp Road through land of the defendant to land now owned by the plaintiffs, in that portion of Deer Isle known as Mountainville. The plaintiffs, their heirs and assigns, have the right to maintain the road, but are obligated to keep it in its present rural state, being a single-lane dirt road with limited turn-out areas.

Becton filed objections to the report pursuant to M.R.Civ.P. 53(e). After a hearing on the objections, the court entered a judgment adopting the referee’s report and Bec-ton appeals.

Becton first contends that the plaintiffs failed to establish a continuous use of the road for the requisite statutory period for the purpose of access to residential lots, and that the referee therefore erred in finding that prescriptive easements had been created over his land to benefit the plaintiffs’ property in such a changed condition.4 As with all the other elements of a prescriptive easement, we review the factual finding as to the element of continuity of use for clear error, see Fitanides v. Holman, 310 A.2d 65, 68 (Me. 1973), and will affirm a court’s finding of fact if there is any competent evidence in the record to support it. See Sheridan Corp. v. Silsby, 410 A.2d 225, 227 (Me. 1980). See also M.R.Civ.P. 52(a) (Findings of referee to extent adopted by the court are considered as findings of court and shall not be set aside unless clearly erroneous. Due regard shall be given to opportunity of factfinder to judge credibility of witnesses). A prescriptive easement is established if the claimant can prove “a continuous use for at least twenty years under a claim of right adverse to the owner, with his knowledge and acquiescence, or by a use so open, notorious, visible and uninter[822]*822rupted that knowledge and acquiescence will be presumed.” Town of Manchester v. Augusta Country Club, 477 A.2d 1124, 1130 (Me.1984). Continuity of use may result from the “tacking” of successive periods of use when there is evidence of privity of title between successive users. See Jost v. Resta, 536 A.2d 1113, 1115 (Me.1988). The present record discloses that the Davises had acquired a prescriptive easement for vehicular traffic across the access road for ingress to Lot 48D in 1952, and to Lots 48E and 48P in 1955, and thereafter passed these rights of way by grant of these properties in 1974. An easement appurtenant to Lot 48 was acquired in 1976, since the plaintiffs Geraldine Steele and Sterling Steele, as successors in title to the Davises, could tack the nineteen years of prior use accumulated by the Davises. By similar tacking of the Davises’ prior usage between 1961 and 1969, the Frenches acquired in 1981 an easement appurtenant to Lot 49 that was later divided into Lots 49 and 49-1 and passed to Green and Gut-cheon as the respective grantees of those lots. In each case, the court properly found a continuity of use for the prescribed period of time and declared the creation of distinct easements appurtenant to each of the plaintiffs’ lots. See G. Thompson, 2 Commentaries on the Modern Law of Real Property § 349 (1980).

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Bluebook (online)
585 A.2d 818, 1991 Me. LEXIS 18, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/gutcheon-v-becton-me-1991.