Kenney v. North Canton Comm. U.M.C., No. Cv02 0815356 S (Dec. 31, 2002)

2002 Conn. Super. Ct. 15334-dc
CourtConnecticut Superior Court
DecidedDecember 31, 2002
DocketNo. CV02 0815356 S
StatusUnpublished

This text of 2002 Conn. Super. Ct. 15334-dc (Kenney v. North Canton Comm. U.M.C., No. Cv02 0815356 S (Dec. 31, 2002)) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Connecticut Superior Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Kenney v. North Canton Comm. U.M.C., No. Cv02 0815356 S (Dec. 31, 2002), 2002 Conn. Super. Ct. 15334-dc (Colo. Ct. App. 2002).

Opinion

[EDITOR'S NOTE: This case is unpublished as indicated by the issuing court.]

MEMORANDUM OF DECISION
This is an action seeking injunctive relief restraining the defendant church from interfering with a claimed prescriptive easement. The plaintiff Joan T. Kenney alleges that she is the owner of land which has historically been accessed through what is now part of the parking lot of the defendant North Canton Community United Methodist Church, Inc. ("church") and, because of the historical circumstances, she and her predecessor in interest, her mother, obtained prescriptive rights to the access. In 2001 the church attempted to block access to Kenney's property; this event immediately precipitated this action.

I find the facts as follows. Cherry Brook Road, also known as Route 179, runs generally in a north-south direction through the village of North Canton. Kenney lives on the westerly side of Cherry Brook Road. Roughly across the street from her is the defendant church. The church is immediately to the north of a small building formerly used as a schoolhouse by the Town of Canton. As will be noted more particularly, the town ceded the schoolhouse and its premises to the church in 1942. The church uses the land between the schoolhouse and the church building as a driveway and parking area. From the rear or easterly edge of the parking area there is a long unimproved roadway or driveway which leads to a pond and a cottage, which area is owned by Kenney. For many years access to the cottage and pond from Cherry Brook Road has been accomplished by passing over land in the schoolhouse lot, between the schoolhouse and the church, through what is now church parking lot, and into the driveway on Kenney's land. The primary issue for resolution is whether the historical circumstances are such that Kenney has obtained a prescriptive easement over the parking lot to access her cottage and rear lot. To resolve the issue, we will examine the sometimes murky but always fascinating historical records and human memories. The result of the inquiry is a surprisingly consistent constellation of events.

The plaintiff Kenney's family, the Tiltons,1 moved to the area in 1931. Soon afterward, the cottage was built on the pond, which was CT Page 15334-dd created by a dam. For many years beginning in the 1940's Kenney's godmother, one Miele, lived in the cottage. Access was gained at first by a path on the schoolhouse property between the schoolhouse and the church; later, the pathway through the schoolhouse premises was paved along with some of the surrounding area. To reach the cottage, one would travel from Cherry Brook Road easterly across the paved area. At the easterly end of the pavement, an unimproved but very obvious and well-defined driveway extended several hundred feet onward to the cottage and the pond.

In 1942, the town of Canton transferred the schoolhouse property to the adjacent church by means of a quit claim deed. The deed does not contain any mention of the Tilton accessway. Use of the accessway continued as usual, however: all of the evidence indicates that by about this time the cottage was used as a year-round residence by Miele and that she, guests and business invitees routinely used the route through the former schoolhouse property now belonging to the church. Apparently Miele owned the cottage, while Tilton owned the land.

In 1957 Kenney bought the house across the street from the schoolhouse and the church and she still lives there. As will be noted, there were significant communications with the church at about this time.

Miele died in 1974 and the cottage was rented to others virtually uninterruptedly to the present time. A Gary Tilton was the tenant in 1975; from 1976 to 1985 David Knauf was the tenant. Knauf used the accessway as one would use any driveway to a residence.

In 1984, Mrs. Tilton died and her daughter, the plaintiff Joan Kenney, inherited the cottage and the land on the pond.2 She continued to rent the premises while she lived across the street. Suzanne Wilcox rented the cottage from 1986 to 1994. She testified, and I credit her testimoney, that access was always gained by going through the church parking lot and up the drive from the back of the lot. She said there was never any interference with that passage, although arrangements were made during the church's strawberry festival to accommodate the extra crowds. If conditions were muddy, she would at times park her car in the church parking lot and walk the rest of the way in.

One Scott King lived in the cottage for less than a year, from 1994 to 1995, and Gail Easton leased the premises from 1995 to 2000. Alan Grandy, a young arborist, and his roommate next leased the premises in July, 2001, and moved in. Grandy testified that he used the parking lot and the driveway like the rest of the tenants, until, apparently not long after he moved in, the drive was blocked with a sawhorse. At first they CT Page 15334-de would simply move the sawhorse, drive up the driveway a short way and replace the sawhorse. Finally, a large dirt pile blocked access, and the tenants used a secondary "lower road" for access. This "lower road" is a rough hewn unimproved pathway through the woods. runs roughly parallel to and south of the driveway which historically provided access, and runs from Cherry Brook Road easterly over property entirely owned by Kenney to the lawn area adjacent to the pond and somewhat south of the cottage. Grandy and his roommate were able to use the lower access because they drove nonstandard vehicles and bushwacked their own steep pathway between the two drives. The lower pathway had been used very sporadically over the years, typically as a walkway to the pond rather than to the cottage. Although it does provide access to the property, it is considerably less convenient that the access through the church parking lot.3

It was the church that had blocked the traditional access; the church also, on December 5, 2001, filed in the Canton Land Records a notice of its intention to dispute Kenney's claimed right of way over its property, pursuant to § 47-39 of the General Statutes. These were the first unequivocal actions contesting the ability of Kenney and her tenants to use the claimed right of way.

On this scenario the plaintiff Kenney claims a prescriptive easement over the property of the church, because the use has been open and notorious for greater than the prescriptive period of fifteen years. See § 47-37 of the General Statutes. But the plot, almost needless to say, thickens. The church claims that the use was by permission, and therefore not assertion of a right. The church claims as well that the church asserted its hegemony over the easement from time to time and asserts additionally that Kenney's use was interrupted by church activities such as the annual strawberry festivals and occasional repaving and construction projects.4

It is clear from the evidence that Mrs. Tilton and Mrs. Kenney consistently asserted an interest in the passageway as a matter of right. No permission was ever sought from the church nor, so far as the evidence shows, from the town before it. As our examination of the controlling law will show, the assertion of a right, by itself, does not necessarily result in a prescriptive easement if the servient estate has granted permission rather than acquiesced in the assertion of the right. A significant question, then, is the extent to which the church granted permission.

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Bluebook (online)
2002 Conn. Super. Ct. 15334-dc, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/kenney-v-north-canton-comm-umc-no-cv02-0815356-s-dec-31-2002-connsuperct-2002.