In re Town Highway No. 20 Town of Georgia

CourtSupreme Court of Vermont
DecidedMarch 23, 2012
Docket2010-100
StatusPublished

This text of In re Town Highway No. 20 Town of Georgia (In re Town Highway No. 20 Town of Georgia) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Vermont primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
In re Town Highway No. 20 Town of Georgia, (Vt. 2012).

Opinion

2012 VT 17

In re Town Highway No. 20, Town of Georgia (Petition of Rhodes), Rhodes v. Town of Georgia (2010-100 & 2010-338)

2012 VT 17

[Filed 23-Mar-2012]

NOTICE:  This opinion is subject to motions for reargument under V.R.A.P. 40 as well as formal revision before publication in the Vermont Reports.  Readers are requested to notify the Reporter of Decisions, Vermont Supreme Court, 109 State Street, Montpelier, Vermont 05609-0801 of any errors in order that corrections may be made before this opinion goes to press.

Nos. 2010-100 & 2010-338

In re Town Highway No. 20, Town of Georgia

(Petition of John Rhodes)

Supreme Court

On Appeal from

Franklin Superior Court

John Rhodes

January Term, 2011

    v.

Town of Georgia

In re Unnamed Town Highway of Town of Georgia

Superior Court, Franklin Unit,

Civil Division

Ben W. Joseph, J.

Joseph F. Cahill, Jr. and Michael S. Gawne of Brown, Cahill, Gawne & Miller, P.C., St. Albans,

  for Petitioner-Appellee and Plaintiff-Appellee/Cross-Appellant.

Joseph A. Farnham and Kevin J. Coyle of McNeil, Leddy & Sheahan, Burlington, for

  Respondent-Appellant and Defendant-Appellant/Cross-Appellee.

PRESENT:  Reiber, C.J., Dooley, Johnson, Skoglund and Burgess, JJ.

¶ 1.             SKOGLUND, J.   In 1995, John Rhodes, a resident of the Town of Georgia, petitioned his local governing body, the selectboard, to clarify several issues surrounding two roads that bordered his land.  While this case began as a suit over the existence and use of two ancient roads, it grew over time into a test of constitutional guarantees and a saga about abuse of power.  After almost fifteen years of litigation, including two side trips to federal court, the trial court entered judgment against the Town of Georgia.  The court found that Rhodes’s request to access his land over town roads had been repeatedly and maliciously frustrated by the Town selectboard in an ongoing attempt to protect the value of a neighbor’s property, a violation of Chapter I, Article 7 of the Vermont Constitution, the Common Benefits Clause.  The court concluded that Article 7 was self-executing and awarded monetary damages for the constitutional violation.  In this consolidated appeal, the Town of Georgia seeks to overturn the trial court decision.  As explained below, we affirm the judgment of liability but reverse the damage award and remand for further proceedings.  

¶ 2.             This appeal stems from two separate actions, both involving the same three parties and both—as noted—resulting from a dispute over the existence and use of two ancient roads.  Because they are inextricably linked, we review both appeals as one.  The underlying facts are largely uncontested.  The procedural history is quite lengthy but essential to a full understanding of the case.

¶ 3.             The two country roads at the heart of this conflict traverse the woods and fields of Georgia, Vermont.  The first road, Town Highway # 20 (TH #20), was officially laid out by the Georgia selectboard in 1813.  One section runs for 600 feet along the southeastern border of Rhodes’s 320-acre farm and divides his farm from his neighbors, the Bechards (neighbors).  The second road (Unnamed Road) runs along Rhodes’s southwestern border for approximately 2500 feet and intersects with TH #20 and another road in the vicinity of neighbors’ house.   

¶ 4.             In 1971, the selectboard voted to discontinue a portion of TH #20 that bordered Rhodes’s farm.  At around the same time, a culvert was installed under the Unnamed Road near its intersection with TH #20.  The culvert made it possible for Rhodes and neighbors to access land they individually owned via the Unnamed Road—it was otherwise impassible to vehicle traffic.  It also allowed the Town to access a gravel pit owned by neighbors.  In 1994, current neighbors’ father owned neighbors’ property.  Father asked the Town to remove the culvert.  Without providing justification, the selectboard, whose chair at the time was father’s son (current neighbors’ brother), ordered the culvert removed, an act that prevented Rhodes from driving any vehicles along the Unnamed Road or accessing his adjoining land.

¶ 5.              In 1995, Rhodes sent a formal application to the selectboard requesting that it: (1) determine the location of TH #20 where it bordered his farm; (2) reconsider its 1971 decision to discontinue that portion of TH #20; (3) give him permission to pay for improvements to TH #20 to make it passable for vehicles year-round; and (4) order neighbors to remove the fenced gate they had erected in the middle of TH #20 and the farm equipment and other personal property they stored in the TH #20 right-of-way.  In addition to seeking access to his lands, Rhodes’s request was motivated in part by an interest in subdividing the upper portion of his property, which would require improved vehicle access along TH #20 and the Unnamed Road, though his plans in that regard remain unclear to this day.  Neighbors, apparently also planning a subdivision of their farm, opposed Rhodes, claiming his farm did not abut TH #20.  The selectboard denied all of Rhodes’s requests in April 1997 and granted neighbors permission to store property in the TH #20 right-of-way because it “does not present a problem.”  Rhodes appealed this decision to the superior court. 

¶ 6.             In his petition to the superior court in 1997, Rhodes claimed that the selectboard had erred in determining the limits of TH #20 and improperly concluded TH #20 had been discontinued and reclassified in 1971.  He also argued that the selectboard’s decision had “denied [him] access as a matter of law to his property” and “improperly . . .

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In re Town Highway No. 20 Town of Georgia, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-re-town-highway-no-20-town-of-georgia-vt-2012.