Laird Properties New England Land Syndicate v. Mad River Corp.

305 A.2d 562, 131 Vt. 268, 1973 Vt. LEXIS 305
CourtSupreme Court of Vermont
DecidedApril 11, 1973
Docket78-72
StatusPublished
Cited by32 cases

This text of 305 A.2d 562 (Laird Properties New England Land Syndicate v. Mad River Corp.) 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
Laird Properties New England Land Syndicate v. Mad River Corp., 305 A.2d 562, 131 Vt. 268, 1973 Vt. LEXIS 305 (Vt. 1973).

Opinion

Shangraw, C.J.

This action was commenced by the plaintiff (The Laird Properties of New England Land Syndicate) against the defendant (Mad River Corporation) by a petition to quiet title to a parcel of land in the Town of Fayston, Vermont, containing about three acres of land lying between State Highway No. 17, the so-called McCollough Turnpike, and a much larger tract of land owned by Laird.

The three acre parcel in controversy is located generally northerly of the McCullough Turnpike. This highway runs generally east and west between the Waitsfield-Fayston area in Washington County and the Starksboro-Bristol area in Addison County. Both parties have extensive real estate holdings in the area of the Turnpike.

The disputed area is somewhat shaped like a piece of pie with the point removed. The removal line is the southerly boundary of the property (and the northerly sideline of the Turnpike). It runs generally parallel to the center line of the Turnpike and some 50-75 feet northerly thereon. The north line of the property is generally parallel to the Turnpike center line and about 250 feet northerly thereof. The southwesterly boundary of the disputed area is an original lot line between the Cloud and McCullough lots, so-called. It is also part of the original line between Lot 13, Range'7, and Lot 14, Range 7, in the Town of Fayston.

The boundaries of the three acre parcel of land are not in dispute. The controversy concerns title, record or by adverse possession.

By way of conclusions the court determined, as a factual matter, that the record title to the premises in question was in the plaintiff. However, by invoking the rule of “tacking” it determined that the defendant acquired title to the three acre lot by adverse possession, citing Montgomery v. Branon, 127 Vt. 83, 238 A.2d 650 (1968), and Hassam v. Safford, 82 Vt. 444, 74 A. 197 (1909).

On April 24, 1972, a judgment order followed adjudging that the defendant had acquired title to the land in question by adverse possession, subject to a right of way in favor of *272 the plaintiff for logging purposes over the existing logging road. The plaintiff has appealed to this Court for review.

Title to the lot in question was conveyed to James H. McCullough and Ai A. McCullough by warranty deed of H. 0. Ward, dated January 3, 1902. By deed of November 19, 1903, the McCulloughs conveyed to W. G. McAllister all the premises conveyed to them by H. 0. Ward, with the exception of certain premises reserved and described in the McAllister deed.

The plaintiff claims title to the disputed three acre parcel of land through W. G. McAllister as part of the premises conveyed in the foregoing deed, from the McCulloughs. It proved a clear chain of title running back to McAllister.

The defendant, on the other hand, traces its record title through proven conveyances back to the McCulloughs on the theory that the disputed land was not conveyed to McAllister, but reserved. Record title, therefore, as between the parties, depends on whether the disputed area was conveyed, or reserved, in the McCullough-McAllister deed.

The description in the reserved parcel of land described in the McCulloughs’ deed of November 19, 1903 to W. G. Mc-Allister is not precise. By Finding No. 13, the court determined that the area in dispute was conveyed to McAllister by the McCulloughs and not reserved. By this finding the court determined that the record title to the three acre area in question “is in the plaintiff and not in the defendant”.

The disputed land is contiguous with other extensive land owned by the plaintiff acquired by deed from Ward Lumber Company, Inc., dated December 20, 1968. Burton Ward and other members of the Ward family were predecessors in title of the Ward Lumber Company, Inc.

In general, these properties have always been wood, timber and forest lands and used as such. There are no buildings on the disputed area. The plaintiff and its predecessors in title own land north of the disputed area. There have been lumbering operations conducted on such land located north of the disputed area at various times by the plaintiff’s predecessors. It is unclear whether trees were cut on the disputed area in these operations, but a few trees were cut by the plaintiff in a similar operation in 1970.

It was also found by the court that the “Ward Lumber Company, Inc., from 1938 on, maintained a logging road *273 through the disputed land over which it transported timber cut on its adjoining lands to the north.”

By Finding No. 18, the court found that:

“Plaintiff and its predecessors have continuously used and occupied their large tracts contiguous to the disputed land on the north, to the extent that timberland is customarily used and occupied and have traversed the disputed area in connection with such use. They neither sought nor received permission for such traverse of the disputed land.”

In 1936, James and Urea McCullough quitclaimed to the State of Vermont some 31.31 acres which in its description included the disputed area. In 1948, Vermont purported to convey the same land to the defendants, reserving a strip 100 feet wide, 50 feet on either side of center line of the McCullough Turnpike. Thus, this deed purported to convey a strip about 200 feet wide northerly of the Turnpike. However, the court found:

“. . . that these conveyances did not serve to transfer record title to the disputed area to the defendant, since neither James and Urea McCullough, nor the State of Vermont, had such title at the times of their respective conveyances.”

In 1968, to perfect its title to the portion of the Turnpike just southerly of the disputed area (the so-called “point of the pie”), the State negotiated for, and took a quitclaim deed from Ward Lumber Company, Inc. By Finding No. 21 the court determined that:

“None of the parties involved seem to have paid any particular attention to the disputed area prior to 1956. The defendant, although it evidently assumed it had acquired title from the State, did nothing whatever with the area. It did not use it for any purpose, fence it, or place on it any visible indications of its claimed ownership. [Ward Lumber Company, Inc.], not completely sure of all the boundaries of its extensive holdings, started *274 a ‘comprehensive survey’ of them, largely by the surveyor Paul Bigelow, beginning around 1953.”

Continuing the findings, after taking its deed from the McCulloughs in 1936, the State of Vermont proceeded to construct a road along the center line which had been laid out in 1935. This center line was in the approximate, though not always the exact, center of. the 500 foot wide strip conveyed by the McCulloughs and other grantors. One of the other landowners conveying the land to the State of Vermont for the purpose of accommodating the highway was Burton Ward.

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Bluebook (online)
305 A.2d 562, 131 Vt. 268, 1973 Vt. LEXIS 305, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/laird-properties-new-england-land-syndicate-v-mad-river-corp-vt-1973.