Larock v. Fisk

CourtVermont Superior Court
DecidedJune 24, 2026
Docket24-cv-1896
StatusUnknown

This text of Larock v. Fisk (Larock v. Fisk) 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
Larock v. Fisk, (Vt. Ct. App. 2026).

Opinion

Termont Superior Court Filed 06/18/26 Washington Unit

VERMONT SUPERIOR COURT CIVIL DIVISION Washington Unit Case No. 24-CV-01896 65 State Street Montpelier VT 05602 802-828-2091 www.vermontjudiciary.org

Lorie LaRock v. Tyler Fisk et al

TRIAL DECISION Plaintiff LaRock built a tiny slab house on River Road in Duxbury. Defendants, the Fisk family, own the property where LaRock built her house. At the time LaRock built the house, LaRock's daughter, Leigh-Ann Ravelin, had a romantic relationship with Tyler Fisk. Tyler's parents, Shane and Cathy, had co-signed the note on the property, making them co-owners. During their relationship, Ravelin, her four children and Tyler lived in Tyler's house on the property. Not long after LaRock moved into her tiny house, Ravelin and Tyler broke up. Ravelin and her children moved out. LaRock and Tyler remained on the property, along with their houses. Relations among the parties frayed. This case followed. By the time of trial, LaRock had left the property permanently and abandoned her tiny house which remains on the Fisks's property.

Trial took place May 26-28, 2026.' All parties had counsel. Tyler and his parents had separate counsel. Through the course of trial, the parties' claims narrowed. This decision addresses the remaining claims: LaRock's counts 3 (unjust enrichment) and 4 (private nuisance) and the Fisks's counterclaims 1 (trespass) and 3 (unjust enrichment). The court disposed of LaRock's counts 1 (oral contract) and 2 (promissory estoppel) and defendants' counterclaims 2 (ejectment) and 4 (declaratory judgment) with findings and rulings on the record, following opposing parties' Rule 52(c) motions. All parties filed post-trial briefs on June 12.2

I. Findings of Fact

A. Preface

This section summarizes the trial court findings based on the evidence most relevant to the remaining claims.* It cites exhibits for convenience. The court has considered all of the evidence, whether cited or not.

' Trial took place on May 26-27 in Montpelier. The IT department did an after-hours upgrade to the FTR system in Montpelier on May 27. On May 28, the FTR system in Montpelier did not work. Trial relocated to Barre on May 28 where it concluded. ? In their post-trial briefs, the parties briefly address the economic loss rule. The court's findings and conclusions on other matters make that dispute unnecessary to resolve, and the court does not address it for that reason. 3 The court offers fulsome findings now in the hope of limiting future remands. The court has chosen the untraditional structure of the findings section with the same hope. Unless otherwise noted, the descriptions under the witnesses’ respective sections reflect their trial testimony as found by the court. The sections say what the witness said as found by the court, without tediously repeating what they “said” or “testified to” and what the court explicitly “found.” The court’s written findings resulted from it sifting through the trial testimony to state the facts based on the witnesses’ respective testimony. See New England P’ship, Inc. v. Rutland City Sch. Dist., 173 Vt. 69, 74 (2001) (“It is the duty of the court, in making findings of facts, to sift the evidence and state the facts . . . to make a clear statement to the parties . . . of what was decided and how the decision was reached.”) (citation and internal quotations omitted).

In places, the court emphasizes certain findings regarding particularly disputed areas of testimony, outlining the bases for its findings. When the court otherwise describes witness testimony, that description contains the court’s inherent findings—it recounts the testimony of witnesses that the court implicitly deemed credible and reliable. See Krupp v. Krupp, 126 Vt. 511, 514 (1967) (cautioning courts that a “recitation of evidence in findings is not a finding of the facts contained in the testimony related and it cannot be so construed”).

LaRock’s trial witnesses were LaRock, Ravelin, Dale Cubit, Kevin Lavanway and Tyler, in that order. Defendants called Tyler, Shane and Cathy. In LaRock’s rebuttal case, she recalled Lavanway and herself.

Based on a preponderance of the credible evidence admitted at trial, the court makes the following findings of fact, focusing on the matters most relevant to resolving the parties’ remaining claims.

B. Lorie LaRock’s Trial Testimony

LaRock knows Cathy from high school. LaRock graduated in 1975. Around 2001, LaRock met her husband, Fred LaRock. LaRock, Fred, Cathy and Shane socialized regularly at each other’s homes. They hosted each other for dinners, impromptu get-togethers and hanging around their garages. They visited each other at least weekly. Their gatherings included Lavanway and Cubit. Fred, Shane, Lavanway and Cubit had gone to school together.

Fred died of cancer in 2012. LaRock stayed in their marital home. Around 2020 during COVID, LaRock realized she no longer wanted to remain there. She spoke to her children about selling. She started measuring out how much space she actually needed.

In 2021, Ravelin and Tyler had been discussing the possibility of building a garage with an apartment above for LaRock. At that time, Ravelin and Tyler had shared a romantic relationship for eight years and lived together in Tyler’s River Road home, along with Ravelin’s children. Tyler suggested LaRock could help with building expenses for the apartment. They mostly discussed the layout of the potential building, details like the location of the stairs and septic. They did not have drawings. They did not discuss other arrangements.

2 According to the running joke within the families, Tyler’s sister, Ashley, would take care of Shane and Cathy as they aged. Ravelin would take care of LaRock as she aged. It would help to have LaRock nearby, especially with her grandchildren of Ravelin’s.

The garage and apartment never happened. LaRock does not know why exactly. She thinks finances and structure size had something to do with it.

LaRock then shifted to thinking about building a tiny house somewhere. Tyler invited LaRock to build it on his land on River Road. LaRock found Tyler’s offer quite generous. He had even staked out a spot on his land for her house. Tyler would handle permitting and site preparation. He had an excavator. LaRock would pay all the costs, including septic, water, electric and materials like fill and building supplies. Based on the kit dimensions LaRock was then considering from Jamaica Cottage Shop, Tyler drew up a plan on a permit, including a driveway and lawn for LaRock’s house.

LaRock offered text exchanges from October 2021. In some, she discusses with Ravelin her upcoming visit to the cottage shop in South Londonderry. Ex. 3 at 1-2. In others, she discusses the size and the permit application with Tyler. Ex. 4 at 1. Tyler calls LaRock “Nanny.” Their exchange includes a pleasant exchange of thank you and you’re welcome.

No one said anything about rent. LaRock designed the home as her “forever home.” LaRock talked about it becoming Ravelin’s and Tyler’s after LaRock died. She understood she could stay there until she died and explicitly had that discussion with Tyler. She would also cover property taxes and insurance. Since Tyler had a property management business, he would mow and plow LaRock’s area.

Ultimately, LaRock decided not to buy from Jamaica Cottage Shop. The kit of unassembled materials would have cost $30,000-$50,000. E.g., Ex. D at 7. She found herself with more questions than answers. She visited the shop with Lavanaway. She knew he had built many houses. He believed he could build a better house for less money. She would help build it.

In May 2022, LaRock drew up a floor plan. Ex.

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Bluebook (online)
Larock v. Fisk, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/larock-v-fisk-vtsuperct-2026.