Lake Garda Improvement Assn. v. Battistoni

231 A.2d 276, 155 Conn. 287, 1967 Conn. LEXIS 550
CourtSupreme Court of Connecticut
DecidedJune 26, 1967
StatusPublished
Cited by29 cases

This text of 231 A.2d 276 (Lake Garda Improvement Assn. v. Battistoni) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Connecticut primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Lake Garda Improvement Assn. v. Battistoni, 231 A.2d 276, 155 Conn. 287, 1967 Conn. LEXIS 550 (Colo. 1967).

Opinion

Alcorn, J.

The plaintiff is a specially chartered corporation composed of the owners of real estate around Lake Garda in Farmington and Burlington. Lake Garda Improvement Assn. v. Town Plan & Zoning Commission, 151 Conn. 476, 478, 199 A.2d 162. The defendant Harry J. Battistoni is president of the defendant Lake Garda Company, Inc., and owns 50 percent of the corporation’s stock, the balance of which is owned by his wife and daughter. The issue between the parties concerns the title to a tract of land adjoining a part of the west shore *289 of Lake Garda situated between the lots of private owners and the border of the lake. The case represents the most recent phase of the contention which has existed for over twenty years between the plaintiff or its members and Battistoni or the Lake Garda Company, Inc. Lake Garda Improvement Assn. v. Town Plan & Zoning Commission, supra, 480; Schroder v. Battistoni, 151 Conn. 458, 199 A.2d 10; Lake Garda Co. v. D’Arche, 135 Conn. 449, 66 A.2d 120; Lake Garda Improvement Assn. v. Lake Garda Co., 135 Conn. 240, 63 A.2d 145.

The trial court rendered judgment that the plaintiff owns a roadway fifty feet wide, called Beach Road, bordering the privately owned lots to the west of the lake and that “the defendant Lake Garda Company, Inc. (subject to its assignment of its interest to Lake Garda Water Company)” owns all of the area easterly of Beach Road, to the shoreline of Lake Garda, including what is called Children’s Beach, subject to rights of free access to, and common use of, the beach “in the nature of an easement” for the benefit of the plaintiff, its members, families and guests. The judgment also awarded $75 damages to the plaintiff to reimburse it for the expense of burying boulders placed along the edge of the beach by the defendants. The plaintiff appealed only “from such parts of the judgment . . . as pertain to the title ownership of ‘Children’s Beach’, so-called.” The defendants appealed from the entire judgment.

The pleadings, finding and judgment create a confusion which challenges solution. The action was commenced by a complaint, dated September 3, 1963, seeking damages and an injunction based on allegations that the defendants were interfering with the plaintiff’s use of the beach, to which, along *290 with “a narrow macadam roadway . . . designated as Beach Road”, the plaintiff claimed ownership by deed and by adverse possession. The complaint was then amended to allege adverse possession of both the beach and Beach Road and to seek a judgment determining the plaintiff’s right in or to the beach and Beach Road and settling the title thereto. To this amended complaint the defendants pleaded, as an affirmative defense, that Lake Garda Company, Inc., owned the beach by deed and by adverse possession. By an amended further defense, the defendants pleaded that Battistoni had acquired the beach and roadway by deed, that he had conveyed the property to the Lake Garda Company, Inc., which, in turn, had deeded the beach and roadway to the Lake Garda Water Company, Inc., on March 23, 1962, and that the water company thereafter had been billed for, and had paid, taxes on the property through 1964, and had openly, notoriously and under a claim of right exercised ownership of the property. The same defense also alleged, however, that the defendants Battistoni and the Lake Garda Company, Inc., had exercised control and ownership of the property. No period of time over which such ownership and control had been exercised by the water company or either of the defendants was alleged. Two additional amendments to the defendants’ answer were then filed, admitting that the plaintiff owns Beach Road but denying that the plaintiff ever acquired title by deed to the beach between that roadway and the lake.

On these pleadings the parties went to trial, treating the case as an action to quiet title. In substance the plaintiff claimed that it owned the entire tract between the lake and the privately owned lots to *291 the west of it, whereas the defendants conceded that the plaintiff owned a fifty-foot roadway hordering the lots but denied that the plaintiff owned the area between that roadway and the lake. As to the disputed portion of the land, however, the pleadings presented the confusing and conflicting claim, on the one hand, that Lake Garda Company, Inc., is the owner and, on the other hand, that Lake Garda Water Company, Inc., owned the area. The Lake Garda Water Company, Inc., was not made a party to the action, and no effort was made, before or during the trial, to clarify the inconsistent positions taken by Battistoni and the Lake Garda Company, Inc., on the pleadings.

During the course of the trial there was laid in evidence a quitclaim deed from Lake Garda Company, Inc., to Lake Garda Water Company, Inc., dated March 23, 1962, signed by Harry Battistoni, president of Lake Garda Company, Inc., conveying to the water company, its successors and assigns forever “all such right and title as it the said Lake Garda Company, Inc. has or ought to have in or to a certain piece or parcel of land, lying in the town of Burlington, Connecticut located on the westerly side of Lake Garda containing all the land between the said Lake Garda and the easterly street line of Beach Road, said street line being 50 feet from and parallel to the Westerly Street line of said Beach Road which abuts Lots 37 through 40 and Lots 507 through 519 as shown on map entitled ‘Lake Garda-Burlington & Farmington-Section A’, dated May, 1936, said map being on file in the Town Clerk’s Office in Burlington, Connecticut.”

The court has made a finding which is not subject to correction in any respect material to the record before us. The subordinate facts found by the *292 court make no reference whatever to the quitclaim deed just quoted. The only mention of the Lake Garda Water Company, Inc., appearing anywhere in the finding is in the court’s conclusion that “[t]he corporate defendant, (or its assignee, Lake Garda Water Company) is the title owner of all the land area easterly of said Beach Road, as defined, to the shoreline of Lake Garda, including all portions of said ‘Children’s Beach’ which be within this area.” The plaintiff assigns as error that this conclusion is not supported by the subordinate facts set forth in the finding. For the reasons already stated this assignment of error is valid. In another assignment of error the plaintiff has attacked the judgment as lacking support in the finding. This assignment is equally valid. The court’s finding as previously stated is that “[t]he corporate defendant, (or its assignee, Lake Garda Water Company) is the title owner” of the disputed land. The judgment, as previously quoted, is that “the defendant Lake Garda Company, Inc.

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Bluebook (online)
231 A.2d 276, 155 Conn. 287, 1967 Conn. LEXIS 550, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/lake-garda-improvement-assn-v-battistoni-conn-1967.