Leslie Fissmer v. David D. Smith

CourtSuperior Court of Maine
DecidedOctober 10, 2023
DocketCUMcv-16-292
StatusUnpublished

This text of Leslie Fissmer v. David D. Smith (Leslie Fissmer v. David D. Smith) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Superior Court of Maine primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Leslie Fissmer v. David D. Smith, (Me. Super. Ct. 2023).

Opinion

STATE ORB MAINE SUPERIOR COURT CUMBERLAND, ss. CIVIL ACTION Docket No. RE-2016-292

LESLIE FISSMER, Individually and as Trustee of the LESLIE S. FISSMER REVOCABLE TRUST, PATRICIA GRAMSE and R. REED GRAMSE, KAREN BURKE and WILLIAM BURKE, and ROBERT SIEGEL, DECISION Plaintiffs,

Vv.

DAVID D. SMITH, CUNNER LANE, LLC, and CUNNER LANE IL, LLC,

Nema Meee ee See eel el ne ee” Ne ie ce! ee Ne! Spe Seger

Defendants.

Bench trial was held in this matter on May 30, 2023.' Trial was limited to an adverse possession claim brought by Plaintiff Leslie Fissmer, individually and as Trustee of the Leslie 5. Fissmer Revocable Trust (“Ms. Fissmer”), regarding a smali parcel of real property abutting her driveway and yard to which Defendants Cunner Lane II, LLC, and David Smith (“Mr. Smith” and, collectively, “Defendants”) hold record title (“the Disputed Area”).? The Court makes the following findings of fact and conclusions of law. I. Procedural History

The unusual procedural history of this case warrants brief explanation. Justice Lance Walker presided over a trial in this matter in the Superior Court on June 18, 2018 (“the First Trial”). Principally at issue in the First Trial was the location of a private road

called Cunner Lane, title to the paved road known as Cunner Lane and the twenty-foot-

1 The Court took a view of the disputed parcel of real property and immediate surroundings in advance of trial.

? To be clear, Mr. Smith holds record title individually to a portion of the Disputed Area, and Cunner Lane TL, LLC holds record title to the remainder.

Page 1 of 12

wide Cunner Lane corridor depicted on a 1929 subdivision plan, and title to a five-foot- wide strip of land running parallel to and between the Cunner Lane corridor and the boundaries of Plaintiffs’ properties? Plaintiffs alleged that they had obtained title to portions of the Cunner Lane corridor and the five-foot-wide strip abutting each of their properties by adverse possession or through the Paper Streets Act, 23 M.R.S. §§ 3027, 3031-3035 (2018); 33 M.R.S. §§ 460, 469-A (2018).*

The Superior Court issued a written Judgment and Order dated October 11, 2018 (“the 2018 Judgment”), concluding, in pertinent part:

On Count V [of Plaintiffs’ Complaint against Defendants Cunner Lane, LLC and David D. Smith], judgment is entered for Plaintiffs. Plaintiffs have obtained fee simple title by adverse possession to the property abutting the western and northwestern edge of the paved road known as Cunner Lane.

As to Defendant Cunner Lane II, LLC’s complaint, judgment is entered for Defendant in part and for Plaintiffs in part... . Cunner Lane II, LLC holds title in fee simple to the paved road known as Cunner Lane up to the western and northwestern edge of the pavement. To the extent the property deeded to Defendant Cunner Lane IL LLC extends to the west and northwest beyond the western and northwestern edge of the pavement, Cunner Lane I, LLC has no ownership rights in the property.

As to Plaintiffs’ complaint against Cunner Lane IT, LLC, judgment is entered for Plaintiffs. To the extent the property deeded to Defendant Cunner Lane Il, LLC extends to the west and northwest beyond the western and northwestern edge of the paved road known as Cunner Lane, Plaintiffs have obtained fee simple title to this property by adverse possession.

Fissmer v. Smith, No. RE-16-292, 2018 WL 6345056, at “10-11 (Me. Super. Ct. Oct. 11, 2018). Mr. Smith, Cunner Lane, LLC, and Cunner Lane II, LLC timely appealed. Plaintiffs

cross-appealed regarding the determination that Cunner Lane II, LLC the owner of the

paved road known as Cunner Lane up to the northwestern and western edge of the

3 As discussed in the 2018 Judgment, the paved road called Cunner Lane occupies a different location than the twenty-foot-wide Cunner Lane corridor depicted in the 1929 plan. The Court will hereinafter refer to the contemporary paved road as “the road” or “Cunner Lane.”

4 This case also formerly involved private roads known as Brook Road and Sunrise Drive.

Page 2 of 12

pavement.

On appeal, the Law Court summarized its conclusions as follows, in relevant part:

¢ The court correctly concluded that Fissmer, the Burkes, and the Gramses had acquired title, by adverse possession, to the disputed property that they have used as their lawns, gardens, and driveways up to the paved edge of present-day Cunner Lane.

* Any adverse possession claim by Fissmer concerning the southernmost portion of the twenty-foot-wide corridor designated as Cunner Lane— the portion of that corridor to the south of her driveway—will require additional litigation.

* Any “additional litigation” undertaken may require the trial court to address the issue of res judicata.

Fissmer v. Smith, 2019 ME 130, { 50, 214 A.3d 1054. The “southernmost portion of the twenty-foot-wide corridor designated as Cunner Law” to which the Law Court refers is the Disputed Area.

On remand from the Law Court, the matter was assigned to the undersigned. Defendants and Ms. Fissmer separately moved for entry of judgment regarding the Disputed Area. The Court denied both motions, concluding that Ms. Fissmer’s claim to the Disputed Area was not barred by the doctrine of res judicata and that it would be necessary to reopen the evidence to resolve Ms. Fissmer’s claim.

Mr. Smith continues to object to the Court's decision to reopen the evidence. “The trial court has discretion in determining whether a party may reopen its case after the close of the evidence.” Dalphonse v. St. Laurent & Son, Inc., 2007 ME 53, { 16, 922 A.2d 1200 (quoting In re Danielle S., 2004 ME 19, { 2, 844 A.2d 1148). In deciding whether to permit presentation of additional evidence, the Court should consider whether doing so would prevent an unfair result or inaccurate adjudication, give the Court a more complete picture, or create an unfair disadvantage to any party. Dalphonse, 2007 ME 53, { 16, 922

A.2d 1200.

Page 3 of 12

Given the passage of time since the first trial and the reassignment of the case to the undersigned after remand from the Law Court, the Court concludes that reopening the evidence was appropriate. See id. {{ 17-18 (holding that trial court abused its discretion in declining to reopen evidence when three years passed between trial and entry of judgment). The Court will, of course, consider any inconsistencies in testimony at the two trials in evaluating the credibility and weight of the testimony.

il. Findings of Fact

Mr. Smith purchased his real property on Cunner Lane in 1998. (Trial 2 Tr. 166.) Mr. Smith owns Cunner Lane II, LLC, which was formed to purchase the fee under the paper streets Cunner Lane and Sunrise Drive. (Trial 2 Tr. 142.) Prior to 2018, Mr. Smith visited his property for about thirty days out of the year. (Trial 2 Tr. 167.) He began visiting more frequently when he constructed a second home on his property. (Trial 2 Tr. 166-67.)

Ms. Fissmer purchased her home on Cunner Lane in 1985.5 (Trial 2 Tr. 18.) She has lived in the home seasonally from 1985 to the present, except from 1997 to 2006 or 2007, during which time she lived in the home full-time. (Trial 2 Tr. 19.) Ms. Fissmer now resides in Florida and continues to visit her home in Maine during the summer. (Trial 2 Tr. 16.)

Ms. Fissmer has been familiar with the surrounding neighborhood since 1947 because she would spend every summer at other homes in the neighborhood with her grandparents or parents. (Trial 1 Tr. 21-22; Trial 2 Tr. 19.) Since her earliest memories of Cunner Lane, the homes that belong to Ms. Fissmer and Mr. Smith® have stood in the

same locations as they do now. (Trial 2 Tr. 21.)

5 The present owner of record is the Leslie S. Fissmer Revocable Trust. 6 Mr.

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Leslie Fissmer v. David D. Smith, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/leslie-fissmer-v-david-d-smith-mesuperct-2023.