Hope v. Forbes
This text of Hope v. Forbes (Hope v. Forbes) 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.
Opinion
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STATE OF MAINE ..), SUPERIOR COURT CUMBERLAND, ss ",- '•. < .;~ ,: ilL CIVIL ACTION -' c_ I.- ; ; " u ~ Docket No. RE-0Y;-l ~ . TED ~~\AN\ - 'i ~:-lOO 7 ZnUl SEP -1 A \0· ij8 H. WARD HOPE, III and ELIZABETH HOPE,
Plaintiffs and Counterclaim Defendants, DECISION AND ORDERS v. ON MOTIONS FOR SUMMARY JUDGMENT
SCOTT FORBES and BETSY FORBES, et al.,
and DONA!.D ~ .. Cl!,prr~.-"·T <: Vi \.1 THE SWAN RIGHT OF WAYS ASSOCIATION, :JAN 1;) 20n~ Defendants and Counterclaim Plaintiffs.
I. MOTIONS PENDING
The following motions are pending before the court. The parties have been
afforded the opportunity for oral argument.
A. Plaintiffs' Motion for Summary Judgment.
B. Defendants' Motion for Summary Judgment.
C. Defendants' Motion to Extend Discovery Deadline.
II. BACKGROUND
The plaintiffs' complaint seeks to quiet title to beachfront property at Highland
Lake in Windham. They seek a declaratory judgment and temporary and permanent
injunctions to prevent the defendants and others from interfering with their use and
enjoyment of the beach area. The defendants, Scott and Betsy Forbes and The Swan Right of Ways
Association, oppose the plaintiffs' demands and filed a counterclaim for declaratory
judgment and a prescriptive easement. Twenty-one additional individuals who
presently or formerly owned property in the Highland Lake Beaches Subdivision were
granted permission to intervene and joined the defendants.
Plaintiffs and defendants have both moved for summary judgment and oppose
the other.
The controversy in this case centers around shorefront property on Highland
Lake. The plaintiffs own a cottage on a lakefront lot and contend that their ownership
includes the beach in front of their cottage.
The defendants contend that the plaintiffs' property does not include the beach
either because the deed does not, or was not intended to include the beach, or that the
defendants have obtained a prescriptive easement over the beach.
III. DISCUSSION
A. Summary Judgment Standard
This court will grant a motion for summary judgment when no genuine issue of
material fact exists and any party is entitled to judgment as a matter of law. Gagnon's
Hardware & Furniture v. Michaud, 1998 ME 265,1721 A.2d 193, 194; M.R.Civ.P. 56(c). A
fact is material when it may change the outcome of the case and "a genuine issue exists
when sufficient evidence supports a factual contest to require a fact finder to choose
between competing versions of the truth at trial." Burdzel v. Sobus, 2000 ME 84, 16, 750
A.2d 573, 575. When "determining whether to grant or deny a motion for summary
judgment, the trial court is to consider only the portions of the record referred to, and
the material facts set forth in the [statement of material facts]." Corey v. Norman, Hanson
& Detroy, 1999 ME 196, 1 8, 742 A.2d 933, 938 (internal quotations and citations
2 omitted). The court gives the party opposing a summary judgment the benefit of any
inferences that might reasonably be drawn from the facts presented. Curtis v. Porter,
2001 ME 158, 9I 9, 784 A.2d 18, 22.
B. Plaintiffs' Deed Claim
"Whatboundaries a deed refers to is a question of law but where those
boundaries exist on the face of the earth is a question of fact." Milligan v. Milligan, 624
A.2d 474, 477 (Me. 1993). "When interpreting a deed, a court should first look for the
controlling intent of the parties on the face of the deed." Id. "The intent of the parties
may not be clear from the face of the deed, however, if that deed contains a latent
ambiguity." Id. "A latent ambiguity in a deed is 'created when, in applying the
description to the ground, facts extrinsic to the document controvert or in some way
render unclear the deed's apparently unambiguous terms.'" Id. citing Taylor v. Hanson,
541 A.2d 155, 157 (Me. 1988). "When the language of a deed is susceptible of more than
one meaning, the trial court must determine the grantor's intent from contemporaneous
circumstances and from standard rules of construction." Id. A legal presumption exists
that property bordering a pond owns the property up to the low water mark of the
pond. Opinion of the Justices, 118 Me. 503, 505, 106 A. 865 (Me. 1919).
Plaintiffs' deed describes the property as follows:
A certain lot or parcel of land, with buildings thereon, situated in the Town of Windham, County of Cumberland and State of Maine, being Lot Numbered Thirty-eight (38) as shown on Plan of Lots at Highland Lake Beaches, made by W.E. Winslow, surveyor, dated September 1, 1929and recorded in the Cumberland County Registry of deeds in Plan book 19, Page 23.
In this case, the parties agree that the Hope lot is depicted as Lot #38 on a survey
map dated 1929. PSMF 9I 2. The parties disagree whether the boundary line on that
map includes the beach in front of Lot #38 to be within and part of lot #38. See PSMF 9I
3 7 and defendants' reply to PSMF I, Ex. 1-B, to prove the boundary's location. See DOSMF-1, replies to DOSMF1 The deed does not define specific metes and bounds; however, the plan depicts boundaries as 59.5 feet on the road, 118 feet on the common boundary with Lot 37, 126 feet along the common boundary with lot 39 and 40 feet on the lake side. The boundary at the lake end is indicated by multiple lines that fall outside the defined boundary of Lot #38. The sidelines of Lot 38 are designated on the Plan as specific lengths, not "+/ _", or some description that would lead to the conclusion that the length was indefinite or actually extended to the lake. The defendants have provided testimony from a professional licensed surveyor, Robert Yarumian, that Lot #38 is not waterfront property, but rather the property ends at a grassy bank prior to the beach. DOSMF 19. 1 The plaintiffs have failed to rebut this statement with anything other than the 1929 survey map that forms the basis for Yarumian's opinion. That map supports the defendants' experts' opinion that Lot #38 is not a waterfront lot and that the beach is not part of Lot #38. C. Defendants' Prescriptive Easement Claim and Defendants' Motion to Extend the Discovery Deadline The court's determination that lot #38 does not include the beach is dispositive of the case. The defendants' prescriptive easement claim and Motion to Extend the Discovery Deadline are moot. No rilling is required. 1 See Yarumian affidavit, 1:1: 12, 13, 16 and 17. 4 IV. DECISION AND JUDGMENT The clerk will make the following entries as the Decision and Judgment of the court: A. Defendants' Motion for Summary Judgment is granted as to Counts I, II and III of the complaint and to Counts I of the counterclaim. 2 C. Pursuant to M.R.Civ.P. 54(b)(l), the clerk is directed to enter final judgment for defendants. The court determines that there is no just reason for delay of entry of final judgment.B. Plaintiffs' Motion for Summary Judgment is denied.
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