Laux v. Harrington

2012 ME 18, 38 A.3d 318, 2012 Me. LEXIS 18
CourtSupreme Judicial Court of Maine
DecidedFebruary 21, 2012
StatusPublished
Cited by25 cases

This text of 2012 ME 18 (Laux v. Harrington) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Judicial Court of Maine primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Laux v. Harrington, 2012 ME 18, 38 A.3d 318, 2012 Me. LEXIS 18 (Me. 2012).

Opinion

MEAD, J.

[¶ 1] Robert J. Laux and Cynthia A. Moran-Laux (collectively Laux) appeal, and Ralph Harrington cross-appeals,1 from a judgment of the Superior Court (Oxford County, Clifford, J.) declaring the continued existence and location of a road easement in favor of Harrington over Laux’s property located in the Towns of Newry and Hanover, and awarding Harrington nominal damages for Laux’s interference with his use of the easement. Laux asserts that a 1990 quitclaim deed given by Harrington’s predecessor-in-title to Laux’s predecessor-in-title extinguished the easement, or, alternatively, that construction on the site of its original entry point resulted in its abandonment. Harrington contends that the court erred in excluding cei'tain evidence at trial, resulting in its miscalculation of his damages and failure to award punitive damages. We affirm the judgment.

[321]*321I. BACKGROUND

[¶ 2] In 1962, Ralph Richardson, the grandfather of Ralph Harrington, deeded to Gerald Harrington, Ralph Harrington’s father, a parcel of land in the Town of Newry. Along with the parcel, Richardson conveyed an easement:

Including [sic] in this conveyance is a right of way over and across my Cow Pasture which is partly in the Town of Hanover and partly in said Town of Newry for access to and from said lot, and is on the condition that said right of way is subject to the said Harrington’s keeping the gates and bar closed while livestock is being pastured there.

[¶ 3] In 1994, Ralph Harrington inherited the parcel. Harrington uses it primarily as a wood lot, although he also uses it for personal recreation and has considered building a camp on it. The easement benefiting the parcel burdened Richardson’s land that, omitting intervening transactions not relevant here, was purchased by Erik Nelson in 1981, and then in 1993 by Laux. The servient Laux parcel is depicted on an exhibit attached to the Superior Court’s judgment:

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[¶ 4] As shown in the exhibit, the southern edge of the Laux parcel lies along Route 2 in the Town of Hanover, while the northern part of the parcel lies in the Town of Newry. Most of the Harrington parcel lies to the northeast of the area depicted in the exhibit; its southwest corner is the “pile of stones” on the northern bank of Stoney Brook. The road at issue [322]*322in this case is shown as a light dashed line, labeled “woods road.”

[¶ 5] Prior to 2008, Harrington accessed his lot using a road across land owned by Robert Chadbourne. Harrington’s access was permissive, in that Chad-bourne allowed it but declined to grant Harrington a formal right-of-way. In January 2008, Chadbourne notified Harrington that the road would be closed. James Sysko, the co-defendant in this case, owns property adjoining Harrington’s, as well as a hydroelectric generator in Stoney Brook (labeled “generator house” on the exhibit) and a co-located cement bridge over the brook sited on land owned by Bruce Powell. He too was unsuccessful in obtaining a formal right-of-way from Chadbourne, and he talked to Harrington about using Harrington’s right-of-way over Laux’s property to gain access to the Sysko lot. Harrington spoke to Laux two or three times about using the easement, most recently in 2008, but no agreement was reached as to whether the easement allowed Harrington to drive trucks on the woods road as part of his timber harvesting operation, or whether it was a “walking easement” only.

[¶ 6] Following the 2008 meeting with Laux, Harrington contacted an attorney for advice concerning the right of way; the attorney advised him that he could use the road over Laux’s property. Harrington testified that he initially travelled on the road a few times, smoothed out a drainage ditch that had been dug across it, and moved aside some cement blocks that were blocking the way. That night he received a call from Sysko; he told Sysko that his attorney had given the go-ahead to use the road. Soon after, Sysko hired a contractor to work on the road by adding gravel, smoothing high spots, removing rocks and stumps, and adding culverts where there had been drainage trenches. Near the end of the roughly four-day project, Laux came to the site and informed Sysko that he had no right to work on the road.

[¶ 7] In October 2008, Laux filed a complaint against Harrington and Sysko in the Superior Court, seeking (1) a declaration that the road easement no longer existed; (2) a permanent injunction barring Harrington and Sysko from using the road; and (3) damages for common law and statutory trespass. Harrington counterclaimed, requesting a declaratory judgment and a permanent injunction in his favor. Laux and Harrington each moved for summary judgment; both motions were denied.

[¶ 8] In November 2010, Harrington filed a “motion to permit access,” seeking a court order permitting him to smooth out one area of the woods road and haul timber over it pending trial. The motion was granted and an order issued. Three days later Laux spoke to Bruce Powell, who owns the property between the northeast corner of Laux’s property and Sysko’s bridge over Stoney Brook that leads to Harrington’s property. All parties agree that in order to follow the current path of the woods road, it is necessary to travel on Powell’s property for seventy-five feet. Both Laux and Powell testified at trial that Laux did no more than make Powell aware that Harrington intended to begin using the road to haul timber. Three days after that, Powell went to Harrington’s house and told him that he did not have permission to cross his property. Powell said that he did so because he wanted to stay out of the dispute between his neighbors.

[¶ 9] The case went to trial March 22-25, 2011, without a jury. On the third day, the court granted Harrington’s M.R. Civ. P. 50(d) motion for judgment as a matter of law as to part of Laux’s complaint, finding that a 1990 quitclaim deed from Gerald Harrington to Erik Nelson did not [323]*323extinguish the easement claimed by Ralph Harrington. The trial then continued on the issue of whether the easement had been abandoned. In June 2011, the court entered its judgment, finding for Harrington on both Laux’s complaint and Harrington’s counterclaim. The court awarded Harrington nominal damages of $100, declined to award any punitive damages, entered an injunction against Laux, and issued a declaration specifying in detail the nature and location of the easement.

II. DISCUSSION

A. The Quitclaim Deed

[¶ 10] Laux’s primary contention is that a 1990 quitclaim deed given by Gerald Harrington, Ralph Harrington’s father and predecessor-in-title, to Erik Nelson, Laux’s predecessor-in-title, extinguished the easement conveyed to Gerald Harrington in 1962. In the part relevant to this appeal, the quitclaim deed provides:

GERALD HARRINGTON and LINDA J. HARRINGTON, husband and wife, both of Newry, County of Oxford and State of Maine, for consideration paid, release to ERIK R. NELSON and PAMELA NELSON, husband and wife, both of Hanover, County of Oxford and State of Maine, as joint tenants, land in Newry, County of Oxford and State of Maine.
A certain lot or parcel of land situated Northerly of, but not adjacent to Route 2 in the Town of Newry, County of Oxford and State of Maine, being any right, title or interest that I may own in land Southerly of the following described property line:

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Bluebook (online)
2012 ME 18, 38 A.3d 318, 2012 Me. LEXIS 18, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/laux-v-harrington-me-2012.