Lavoie, Jr. v. McRae

CourtMassachusetts Land Court
DecidedSeptember 2, 2021
DocketMISC 20-000183
StatusPublished

This text of Lavoie, Jr. v. McRae (Lavoie, Jr. v. McRae) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Massachusetts Land Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Lavoie, Jr. v. McRae, (Mass. Super. Ct. 2021).

Opinion

LAVOIE, JR. vs. MCRAE, MISC 20-000183

JOSEPH O. LAVOIE, JR., and MARILYN L. PETROWSKI Plaintiffs, v. JOHN A. McRAE, Defendant

MISC 20-000183

SEPTEMBER 2, 2021

MIDDLESEX, ss.

SPEICHER, J.

DECISION ON CROSS-MOTIONS FOR SUMMARY JUDGMENT

The present action is a dispute about parking access between owners of two adjacent properties in Somerville. Plaintiffs Joseph O. Lavoie, Jr. and Marilyn L. Petrowski are owners of property at 42 Allen Street in Somerville. John A. McRae is the owner of the adjacent property at 36 Allen Street. The front yards and the area between the buildings on the two properties are entirely paved, and utilized, in part, for parking as well as for what is referred to by the parties as the shared driveway. McRae's property at 36 Allen Street is improved with a curb cutm which provides a means of access to the public way, Allen Street, from the paved area of 36 Allen Street, and connects to the driveway that is entirely located on 36 Allen Street property. Lavoie and Petrowski claim the right to use this curb cut and driveway for access to the adjacent paved area on their property next door at 42 Allen Street. The Lavoie and Petrowski property at 42 Allen Street is improved with a two-family dwelling but does not have a separate curb cut or driveway despite its adequate frontage on Allen Street. A small section of the driveway and the curb cut located on the McRae property are the focus of the present dispute.

Lavoie and Petrowski asserted a claim for declaratory judgment that their property is benefitted by an easement by implication to access the parking area on their property by utilizing the driveway and curb cut on 36 Allen Street; they also bring associated trespass and nuisance claims arising out of McRae's efforts to prohibit such entry onto his record property. McRae moved for motion for summary judgment seeking a determination that there is no easement by implication because there is no evidence in the record of an intent of the last common owner of the properties to grant such an easement. Lavoie and Petrowski cross-moved for summary judgment on their claims. A hearing was held on plaintiffs' and defendant's cross-motions for summary judgment before me on May 11, 2021, at the conclusion of which I took the cross motions under advisement.

For the reasons set forth below, the defendant's motion for summary judgment on the plaintiffs' claims for recognition of an easement by implication will be ALLOWED; the plaintiffs' cross-motion for summary judgment will be DENIED; and the plaintiffs' remaining trespass and nuisance claims will be DISMISSED.

FACTS

The following material facts are found in the record, and are undisputed for the purposes of the pending motions for summary judgment:

1. On October 2, 1956, Daniel P. Lynch and Evelyn Lynch (the "Lynches") acquired adjacent properties at 36 Allen Street in Somerville, also known as Lot 38, and 42 Allen Street, also known as Lot 39, pursuant to a single quitclaim deed from Francis G, Ingraham and Julia B. Ingraham recorded on the same date at the Middlesex County South District Registry of Deeds (the "Registry") in Book 8825, Page 553. [Note 1]

2. When the Lynches acquired the properties, Lot 39 was improved with a two-story, two-family dwelling. Lot 38, which was improved by an existing masonry garage, was converted into a one-story, single-unit apartment by the Lynches in the late 1960s, which by all accounts was occupied continuously by the Enos family, as tenants of the Lynches. [Note 2] It is undisputed that at all times, the only curb cut on the two lots was located on what is now 36 Allen Street. [Note 3]

3. On October 22, 1974, Daniel and Evelyn Lynch deeded to themselves a life estate in 42 Allen Street and 36 Allen Street, with the remainder to their daughter, Ellen Enos. [Note 4] Enos became the owner outright following the passing of both Evelyn Lynch in 1992 and Daniel Lynch in 1996. [Note 5]

4. Prior to August 2001, Lot 38 (36 Allen Street) and Lot 39 (42 Allen Street) functioned as a single merged lot with the address 42 Allen Street. In June, 2001, Ellen Enos and Arthur Enos sought a special permit from the City of Somerville to legalize the converted masonry garage, which had been utilized, without the benefit of any permits, as a single-family dwelling since the late 1960s. The Somerville Planning Board issued a decision dated July 20, 2001 in which the Board approved the special permit to legalize the converted garage (recognized as a secondary principal dwelling), and further advised the Enoses that site plan approval was not required for the subdivision of the lot on which the converted garage was located. [Note 6]

5. On June 19, 2004, Ellen Enos, as donor, transferred 42 Allen Street and 36 Allen Street (still retained as merged lots) to Laurie Pandolfo, as Trustee of the Enos Realty Trust, by a quitclaim deed recorded with the Registry on September 17, 2004 at Book 43736, Page 389. [Note 7]

6. On September 28, 2006, Marco Del-Pinal acquired both 36 Allen Street and 42 Allen Street from Pandolfo, as Trustee, by way of two quitclaim deeds recorded with the Registry simultaneously on October 8, 2006 in Book 48287, Pages 317 and 410. [Note 8] Neither deed includes any reservation or grant of an easement of any kind (nor would it have been appropriate for them to do so, as the two lots remained in single ownership).

7. On October 27, 2006, Del-Pinal obtained a mortgage loan in the amount of $280,000 from Wells Fargo Bank, N.A. ("Wells Fargo"), secured by a mortgage on 36 Allen Street. The mortgage was recorded with the Registry on November 8, 2006 in Book 48468, Page 391. [Note 9]

8. On December 28, 2006, Del-Pinal obtained a mortgage loan in the amount of $320,000 from ACT Lending Corporation d/b/a ACT Mortgage Capital ("ACT Lending"), secured by a mortgage on 42 Allen Street. The mortgage was recorded with the Registry on January 3, 2007 in Book 48788, Page 506. [Note 10] Like the mortgage for 36 Allen Street, the mortgage does not include or refer to any reserved or granted right with respect to the driveway, curb cut, or any other specific and identified easement.

9. Following this acquisition of the two lots, Del-Pinal initiated plans to redevelop the lots, as evidenced by a special permit application submitted in 2007 for the proposed renovation of the two-family dwelling on 42 Allen Street. Those plans however, did not come to fruition and the special permit was never issued. Rather, in reviewing the application, the Somerville Planning Department concluded that it was unable to recommend approval of the special permit, and instead suggested conditions or measures Del-Pinal could take for possible approval of the special permit. Of note, one such condition was as follows: "[a]n easement (between 8-12 feet wide) must be recorded for the use of the shared driveway" and "[t]he paved area south of this designated driveaway must be replaced by landscaping." [Note 11]

10. There is nothing in the record to suggest that Del-Pinal occupied or rented out either of the two units at 42 Allen Street or the single-family dwelling at 36 Allen Street during his brief period of ownership while he attempted to redevelop the properties.

11. On October 24, 2007, GMAC Mortgage, LLC, assignee of ACT Lending and its nominee MERS, foreclosed on its mortgage on the 42 Allen Street property.

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Bluebook (online)
Lavoie, Jr. v. McRae, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/lavoie-jr-v-mcrae-masslandct-2021.