Isleib v. Zutell

CourtVermont Superior Court
DecidedMarch 2, 2012
Docket635
StatusPublished

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

Bluebook
Isleib v. Zutell, (Vt. Ct. App. 2012).

Opinion

Isleib v. Zutell, No. 635-8-10 Rdcv (Teachout, J., Mar. 2, 2012)

[The text of this Vermont trial court opinion is unofficial. It has been reformatted from the original. The accuracy of the text and the accompanying data included in the Vermont trial court opinion database is not guaranteed.] STATE OF VERMONT

SUPERIOR COURT CIVIL DIVISION Rutland Unit Docket No. 635-8-10 Rdcv

CYNTHIA ISLEIB and CAROL AINES (RAWSON), Plaintiffs

v.

JAMES ZUTELL and JANET ZUTELL, Defendants

DECISION Findings of Fact and Conclusions of Law

This matter came before the court for final hearing on January 5, 2012. Plaintiffs were present and represented by Attorney Karl C. Anderson. Defendants were present and represented by Attorney John S. Liccardi. Post-hearing memos were filed on January 20 and February 6, 2012. Plaintiffs seek recovery based on the cutting down of two large trees on their property.

Based on the credible evidence, the Court makes the following Findings of Fact and Conclusions of Law.

Findings of Fact

Plaintiffs Cynthia Isleib and Carol Aines own a residence on the corner of Route 30 and Huff Pond Road in Sudbury, opposite a picturesque green with large maple trees and a church. They have lived there for 22 years. The property is slightly over two acres and is roughly a rectangle shape, with the house and driveway fronting on Huff Pond Road, which is at the north end and is the short side of the rectangle, and the balance of the property toward the back being undeveloped woods with some cedar, maple, pine, and birch trees. There is a rise in elevation toward the back with good views of the Champlain Valley and the Adirondack Mountains.

Since purchasing the property, Plaintiffs have slowly been working their way toward the back of their lot, clearing and mowing and planting and landscaping the land. At the high spot, which they hadn’t reached yet, there were two large, old maple trees. They had a plan that when they reached that spot they would custom build a gazebo, making use of the two handsome maple trees as features for the site and to provide shade without obstructing the views. They would also retain nearby birch trees for their aesthetic value. Their southeast corner was marked by an iron pipe that protruded 18” out of the ground. The distance from Huff Pond Road to the iron pipe matches the distance in the Plaintiffs’ deed. The location of the two large maples on the rise was well to the north of the iron pipe, well within the Plaintiffs’ land. On the property easterly and adjacent to the Plaintiffs’ land, running roughly parallel to and near the easterly boundary of Plaintiffs’ land (although not exactly bordering it) was a woods road that ran toward lands belonging to others to the south of Plaintiffs’ land, including land owned by Defendant Janet Zutell’s mother, who had previously owned Plaintiffs’ land. Janet Zutell and her husband James lived two properties to the east of Plaintiffs. They had permission from Janet Zutell’s mother to use her property for their own purposes. James Zutell used the woods road to access a long-standing debris pile on his mother-in-law’s property where he accumulated scrap metal until he had enough to otherwise dispose of a full load.

Plaintiffs also used the woods road to walk their dogs occasionally. In March of 2009, Plaintiffs were walking on the woods road and discovered an open area at the back of their woods and bulldozer tracks running from the woods road into their property. They found that a bulldozer had cleared a swath of their property from the woods road approximately 150 feet west through the back of their property. The swath was between 15 and 35 feet wide. On further exploration, they discovered that the two maple trees that were on the high spot where they had planned their gazebo had been cut down. Two stumps remained. The stem of one of the trees had been hauled back to the woods road and lay along side it. Sections of the trees had been removed.

They talked to James Zutell, who did not deny that he had been responsible for the cutting of the trees, which had been done by a person working with him and under his direction. He treated it as “not that big a deal,” and expressed surprise that they would be so upset about it. Plaintiffs brought this suit to recover damages for the loss of the trees, which were important to their use and enjoyment of their property and their ongoing plans for it. They believe that the Zutells have used portions of the wood for firewood, as they heat their home with wood. Mr. Zutell denies having done so. There is no evidence of any portions of either tree having been cut into firewood and burned by the Zutells, although portions of the trees are missing.

At trial, Mr. Zutell testified that he believed that the trees were located on his mother-in-law’s land, and that he knew that Plaintiffs owned about two acres and “felt” that the trees were located south of where their land must be. He said that he “went with what I felt was far enough.” He testified that he cut them down because they would be a hazard to anyone walking in the woods, as they were decaying.

The Court finds this testimony not credible. He never attempted to contact the Plaintiffs with a concern about hazardous trees on or near their land, or to determine whether any trees he proposed to cut were located on Plaintiffs’ land or on his mother-in-law’s land. He did not explain, when first confronted by the Plaintiffs, that he had cut them down to minimize hazards to people walking in the woods. The iron pipe at the southeast corner of the Plaintiffs’ land might have been covered with snow when he cut the trees, but it had been there for at least 20 years, and he had lived in the vicinity and used his mother-in-law’s land for many years. The method he says he used to estimate that he was cutting on his mother-in-law’s land is not a responsible way to avoid trespassing on someone else’s land and cutting their trees. Furthermore, while one of the trees had some decay, it was 65% good, and the other had no decay at all. A tree nearby

2 that was more of a hazard but did not have as good wood was not cut down. The Court finds that he cut the trees because he wanted to do so and disregarded the ownership of the land on which they stood. He did not make a legitimate or understandable mistake about the Plaintiffs’ boundary; he simply ignored it, and gave an explanation after the fact in which he attempted to characterize his actions as a mistake.

The evidence suggests that he cut the trees to use the wood for firewood. However there is no concrete evidence that this actually occurred, and Mr. Zutell denies it. The use by both Zutells of wood from the cut trees for firewood in heating their home is not proved by a preponderance of the evidence.

Two experts were asked to view the stumps and other remains of the trees on the property and describe their condition and value. The Court finds the testimony of arborist Michael Fallis credible with respect to the condition of the trees. He observed the trees first and testified, and the Court finds, that the smaller of the two trees (Tree #1) had some decay, but that it was 65% good, and that sugar maples decay slowly. Based on his testimony, it is not likely that Tree #1 when standing was a hazard in the woods. His testimony was consistent with the testimony of Plaintiffs, who had observed branches and canopy and a tree healthy enough that they included it in their gazebo plan. With respect to Tree #2, the Court finds the testimony of Mr. Fallis credible that it was a healthy tree with no decay. Its stem had been hauled to the side of the woods road. It is not likely that it was a hazard as a standing tree. The Plaintiffs’ testimony that it was a large healthy-looking tree is consistent with Mr. Fallis’s testimony.

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Bluebook (online)
Isleib v. Zutell, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/isleib-v-zutell-vtsuperct-2012.