Jordan v. Shea

2002 ME 36, 791 A.2d 116, 2002 Me. LEXIS 36
CourtSupreme Judicial Court of Maine
DecidedFebruary 25, 2002
StatusPublished
Cited by27 cases

This text of 2002 ME 36 (Jordan v. Shea) 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
Jordan v. Shea, 2002 ME 36, 791 A.2d 116, 2002 Me. LEXIS 36 (Me. 2002).

Opinion

ALEXANDER, J.

[¶ 1] Kenneth and Stephen Shea appeal from a judgment entered in the Superior Court (Hancock County, Mead, C.J.) interpreting an easement deed in favor of Patrick Jordan and granting Jordan and Eberhardt Duschek an easement by necessity over the Stabawl Road in Hancock. The Sheas argue that the Superior Court erred in: (1) reforming the easement deed when an action for reformation was not pled; (2) finding that Jordan did not have the right to use the “woods road” by prescription; and (3) finding an easement by *119 necessity over Stabawl Road. We affirm in part and vacate in part.

I. CASE HISTORY

[¶ 2] In 1940, Emmons Shea, the predecessor-in-interest to Kenneth and Stephen Shea, acquired a twenty-eight acre parcel of land in Hancock. Emmons Shea sold six of those acres to a third person in 1948, creating what is now known as Jordan’s little lot. Ultimately, after a series of transactions, Lucia Merritt acquired Jordan’s little lot in 1988. Lewis and Sarah Smith, the parents of Lucia Merritt, purchased the parcel of land north of the Shea property, now known as Jordan’s big lot, in 1945. Merritt inherited Jordan’s big lot in 1996, selling both that parcel and Jordan’s little lot to Patrick Jordan two years later.

[¶ 8] In 1966, Eberhardt Duschek purchased the parcel of land located east of the Shea property and south of Jordan’s big lot. Both Duschek and Kenneth Shea testified that access to Duschek’s property has always been over Stabawl Road, which runs east-west along the border between the Sheas’ property, Jordan’s little lot, and Duschek’s property.

[¶ 4] The Hancock County Commissioners formally abandoned Stabawl Road as a public way from the Ellsworth/Hancock town line eastward into Hancock in 1946, causing title of that portion of the road to revert to the abutting landowners to the centerline. However, until 1998, all the parties were under the mistaken impression that the road was a public road. In 1998, the Superior Court {Mead, J.) declared the Hancock portion of Stabawl Road to be private and found that “no easement by prescription in favor of the public in general” had been created. City of Ellsworth, v. Shea, CV-96-50 (Me.Super.Ct., Hancock Cty., Sept. 11, 1998). That judgment, to which Duschek and Shea were parties, was not appealed.

[¶ 5] Stabawl Road is used as access to the woods road, which runs north-south along the Shea-Duschek boundary and provides access to Jordan’s big lot. Historically, members of the public used the woods road without question for hunting and hauling wood. Kenneth Shea testified that Emmons Shea and the Smiths were under the impression that the woods road was on the Shea property. This was first questioned in 1967 when, notwithstanding a surveyor’s conclusion that the woods road was on Shea property, Duschek determined that the woods road was on his property by walking his property line and observing blaze marks on the left side of the road. Duschek testified that he discussed the blaze marks with Lewis Smith and told Smith that he could use the woods road even though it was on Duschek’s property. Until 1996, this permission was never withdrawn.

[¶ 6] After the 1967 survey, Lewis Smith apparently approached both Emmons Shea and Duschek to receive permission to travel the woods road. At some time prior to 1975, Smith asked Emmons Shea to grant him an easement over the Shea property to ensure access to Jordan’s big lot. Kenneth Shea testified that Emmons was reluctant to grant the right of way and initially tried to give Smith permission to haul wood over his property. In 1975, Emmons Shea and the Smiths entered into an agreement in which the Smiths, as grantees, agreed that (1) they would continue to use the existing woods road “crossing the land of the grantor,” which they believed to be on Shea’s property, and (2) they would not exercise the access easement “until the grantor,” Shea, notified the Smiths to discontinue use of the existing woods road, after which time the *120 Smiths would only use the easement granted by Shea.

[¶ 7] In 1996, Stephen Salsbury, a surveyor hired by Lucia Merritt, concluded that the woods road was on Duschek’s property. Merritt’s attorney then approached Duschek and requested that he deny Merritt permission to use the woods road so as to trigger the deeded right of way across the Sheas’ property. Duschek subsequently signed a letter drafted by Merritt’s attorney withdrawing his permission. He also placed boulders on the northern end of the woods road between his property and Jordan’s big lot.

[¶ 8] Lucia Merritt then initiated a lawsuit against Kenneth and Stephen Shea to clarify her access to Jordan’s big lot. The second amended complaint, substituting Patrick Jordan as plaintiff, sought a declaratory judgment to establish (1) the existence, location and rights of the easement deed over Shea property, and (2) a right of way over Stabawl Road on Dus-chek, Shea and/or Babcock 2 property by adverse possession. The Jordan complaint also alleged (1) the existence of an easement over the woods road on Duschek property by adverse possession, and (2) a prescriptive easement, implied easement, easement by necessity and/or easement by adverse possession over Stabawl Road on Duschek, Shea and/or Babcock property.

[¶ 9] The Sheas answered, counterclaimed seeking a declaration that Jordan be allowed to use the woods road by prescriptive easement and to quiet title, and filed a third-party complaint against Dus-chek alleging damages as a result of Dus-chek’s denial of the use of the woods road. Duschek, as a third-party defendant, counterclaimed alleging he had a right of way over Stabawl Road by adverse possession and sought a declaratory judgment to that effect. That counterclaim also served as a third-party complaint against Babcock, regarding Babcock’s portion of Stabawl Road.

[¶ 10] At the close of the evidence in the nonjury trial, Duschek’s counsel orally moved to amend the pleadings to permit a claim for a public easement over Stabawl Road. The court denied this motion, finding that the “issue of public easement was not raised in the pleadings or any pre-trial submissions and is not properly before the court.” Such a claim had also been rejected in the 1998 judgment.

[¶ 11] The Superior Court found that: (1) the use of Stabawl Road and the woods road “cannot ripen into any right pursuant to the doctrines of adverse possession or easement by prescription” because Sta-bawl Road was used under the mistaken belief that it was a public road, and the woods road was used under the mistaken impression that it was on the Sheas’ property; (2) the condition triggering Jordan’s express easement over the Sheas’ property had been met and the easement had ripened as pled in the second amended complaint; and (3) an easement by necessity existed in favor of Jordan and Duschek over Stabawl Road. 3

[¶ 12] The court’s order indicated that it was entering judgment on the various claims in accordance with its determinations, 4 but it also requested that a declara *121 tory judgment be drafted.

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Bluebook (online)
2002 ME 36, 791 A.2d 116, 2002 Me. LEXIS 36, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/jordan-v-shea-me-2002.