laquerre v. woodbury

CourtVermont Superior Court
DecidedFebruary 29, 2024
StatusPublished

This text of laquerre v. woodbury (laquerre v. woodbury) 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
laquerre v. woodbury, (Vt. Ct. App. 2024).

Opinion

STATE OF VERMONT

SUPERIOR COURT id ree > 3 CIVIL DIVISION Washington Unit Were os ANS Docket No. 347-6-17 Wnev

ARMAND LAQUERRE Plaintiff

Vv.

TOWN OF WOODBURY and SCOTT R. MEARS Defendants DECISION

_ This case concerns property on a peninsula that juts into Woodbury Lake. The dispute is between Plaintiff Armand Laquerre, who owns property on the peninsula, and Defendant Scott Mears, who owns property that abuts the Laquerre property and is located on the same private road, Haskett Road, that provides access for ingress and egress for both properties (and others) from the peninsula to the nearest public highway. The Town of Woodbury has been dismissed from the case. Intervenors Pamela and Bruce Ankuda, who own property abutting both Laquerre and Mears, have appeared in the case but have not raised any claims or defenses.

Laquerre seeks compensation from Mears for trespass. Mears seeks: a declaration of his common boundary with Laquerre, a declaration of easement rights held by Mears on Laquerre land, and compensation for tortious interference with contractual relations.

A final hearing was held on November 30, 2017 and January 23, 2018. The court visited the site on November 30, 2017 with the parties and their attorneys prior to taking testimony. Laquerre is represented by Attorney Brooke L. Dingledine, Mears is represented by Attorney Michael D. Monte, and the Ankudas are represented by Attorney David L. Grayck.

Motions

At the close of the Mears evidence in support of his counterclaim, Laquerre’s attorney made several motions, which were or are resolved as follows on the basis of evidence that had been presented as of that time:

Counterclaim Count I: Declaratory Judgment for Easement by Necessity

Plaintiff moved for judgment on the grounds that the Mears land was not landlocked and had no necessity for access across Plaintiff's land because there was access by water. The motion is denied as this argument is not based on current law. See Berge v. State, 2006 VT 116, { 12, 181 Vt. 1 (“We depend on roads and automobiles for transporting not only our family and friends, but all our basic necessities to and from our homes, and it is a quaint but ultimately pointless fiction to pretend that water—much less ice—represents a sufficient substitute.”).

Alternatively, Plaintiff moved for judgment on the grounds that any easement by necessity only applied across lands of Ankuda and not Laquerre. If, however, the 1924 deed creating the Mears lot failed to provide access to the lot across Laquerre land from a valid right of way, that circumstance could have created a way of necessity. There was sufficient evidence to this effect. The motion is denied.

Counterclaim Count IH: Declaration for Prescriptive Easements for Access The parties agreed on the record that Plaintiff was entitled to judgment on this count.

Counterclaim Count HI: Tortious Interference with Contractual Relations Plaintiff sought to conform the pleadings to the evidence to add the affirmative defense of failure to mitigate damages. The court denied this motion for the reasons stated on the record.

Plaintiff moved for judgment as a matter of law on the grounds that Mears had advance notice that Laquerre would claim trespass if, on June 19-20, he brought equipment and a concrete truck onto Haskett Road and the Mears lot, and Mears went ahead and did so intentionally anyway, thereby failing as a matter of law to act reasonably under the circumstances. This motion is denied. Mears had introduced evidence that he had a good faith basis for believing that he had both legal access to the property over Haskett Road and a right to proceed with construction. This is sufficient evidence for the court to have to consider competing evidence to determine what was reasonable under the circumstances. The court cannot rule that Mears failed to act reasonably under the circumstances as a matter of law. The mere fact that Laquerre had served a notice of trespass was not conclusive as a matter of law that it was unreasonable for Mears to bring an excavator and concrete truck to his parcel.

Counterclaim Count IV; Declaration as to Ownership (Determination of western boundary)

_ To the extent that the counterclaim sought ownership of a disputed triangle on the basis of adverse possession, the Mears evidence was insufficient to support a claim of ownership of the disputed triangle by adverse possession and Plaintiff is entitled to judgment on that portion of the claim. Otherwise, the evidence included several surveys showing the western boundary line as claimed by Mears. This was sufficient evidence to support a claim. The evidence showed a need for factfinding on disputes of material fact.’ Plaintiff's request for judgment as a matter of law on Count IV is denied, and the issue is resolved on the basis of the findings of fact and conclusions of law set forth below.

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

Findings of Fact

The peninsula on which the parties’ properties are located is off Route 14 in the Town of Woodbury. As of August 1912, the peninsular land was owned by Morse and Pierce as shown - on a plan recorded in the land records. (Exhibit 32). The plan portrays an intent to create a number of small shorefront lots at the water’s edge along the outer edge of the peninsula. In 1913, Morse and Pierce conveyed their land to Martin and Anna Clark, who divided the peninsula into two separate parcels the same year by conveying most of the peninsula (the northwest part with the most shorefront) to Smith and Kent. Both the Laquerre and Mears properties are part of the Smith/Kent parcel. The Clarks retained the balance (southeast section), which included all the frontage on the public road, Route 14.'! The Smith/Kent (northwest) parcel had no frontage on a public road, but the Clarks conveyed to Smith and Kent three rights of way across their retained parcel to provide access to various parts of the peninsula. Smith and Kent later sold some waterfront camp lots based on the recorded August 1912 plan. Exhibit 4A, while not accurate as to specific details as described in these findings, provides a visual representation of the peninsula as a whole and the layout of lots and the three rights of way.

The Clark to Smith/Kent deed of 1913 established a fixed point that is critical in . determining the location of the boundaries between the Laquerre and Mears properties. The fixed point, which was located on the line between the parcel the Clarks sold to Smith/Kent (northwest piece) and the retained parcel (southeast piece), was described as an iron post at a birch tree (hereinafter IPBT). This point was approximately 33 feet away from the shoreline and, oddly, the deed description did not take the dividing line between the conveyed and retained parcels all the way to the shoreline but stopped at the IPBT fixed point. This is one contributor to the subsequent problems in identifying the Laquerre/Mears line.

In 1924, Kent and the heirs of Smith created the Mears lot by conveying it out of their remaining peninsular land. It is a smail lot of approximately 30’ x 40° or 1,307 square feet (0.03 acre). The point of beginning is away from the shore and is described as “an iron post at the foot of an old birch tree.” (Exhibit 2C). The parties do not dispute that this point is the same as the IPBT, even though there is no longer a birch tree there, and they do not dispute its location. It is the northeast corner of the Mears lot and the point of beginning, about which there is no disagreement.

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laquerre v. woodbury, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/laquerre-v-woodbury-vtsuperct-2024.