Mabee v. Nordic Aquafarms Inc.

CourtSuperior Court of Maine
DecidedOctober 27, 2021
DocketWALre-19-18
StatusUnpublished

This text of Mabee v. Nordic Aquafarms Inc. (Mabee v. Nordic Aquafarms Inc.) 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
Mabee v. Nordic Aquafarms Inc., (Me. Super. Ct. 2021).

Opinion

STATE OF MAINE SUPERIOR COURT WALDO,ss Civil Action Docket No. RE-2019-0018

JEFFREY R. MABEE, et al.,

Plaintiffs DECISION AND JUDGMENT v.

NORDIC AQUAFARMS INC., et al.,

Defendants.

This litigation arose coincident to defendant Nordic Aquafarm Inc. 's (hereinafter referred to

as "Nordic") announcement of a plan to develop a commercial fish farm in Belfast, Maine near the

Penobscot Bay. This announcement stoked concerns among some community members, some of

whom are Plaintiffs in this litigation, over the development of the fish farm. The primary legal dispute 1 between the plaintiffs and Nordic in this case centers around title to a section of the intertidal flats

running along the Bay in the vicinity of the Little River and U.S. Route I. The particular disputed 2 flats adjoin the upland properties depicted on Belfast Tax Map 29 as Lots 35, 36, 37, and 38. Nordic

hopes to install underground pipes through Lot 36 to access the Bay and use the pipes to feed water

to the fish farm and carry water discharge from it. To facilitate this plan, Nordic negotiated an

agreement to purchase usage rights for the flats appurtenant to Lot 36 from the owners of the Lot,

defendants Janet and Richard Eckrote. Plaintiffs claim that the Eckrotes do not own the intertidal

flats along their Lot and have no right to permit Nordic to use the intertidal property. Plaintiffs assert

1 The term "intertidal flats" refers to the land along an ocean (or other tidally influenced water body) that lies

between the mean high-water line and mean low-water line of the ocean. Almederv. Town a/Kennebunkport, 2019 ME 151, ,i 8 & n. 7, 217 A.3d l ll l. The term is synonymous with "shore" and "wet sand." Almederv. Town of Kennebunkport, 2019 ME 151, ,i 8 & n. 7,217 A.3d llll. 2 At the time this action was brought, plaintiffs Jeffrey Mabee and Judith Grace were owners of the upland depicted on the tax map as Lot 38 and defendants Janet and Richard Eckrote were the owners of Lot 36. Lot 37 was owned by Donald and Wendy Schweikert and Lot 35 was owned by Lyndon Morgan.

1 that the rightful owners of these intertidal flats as well as those flats along the upland3 property of Lots

35, 36, and 37 are plaintiffs Jeffrey Mabee and Judith Grace, the current owners of Lot 38. Amongst

other claims, Plaintiffs also assert that a conservation easement that Mabee and Grace granted to

party-in-interest Upstream Watch, which was then assigned to plaintiff Friends of Harriet L. Hartley

Conservation Area, prohibits Nordic's planned usage of the land. Defendants dispute Plaintiffs'

claims to title over the intertidal land and their other claims concerning it. Finally, Plaintiffs contend

that the deed which conveyed title to the Eckrotes' predecessor in interest, Frederick Poor, contains a

restrictive covenant that prohibits use of the land for commercial purposes, including housing pipes

for a commercial fish farm.

Plaintiffs' have pied their claims against Defendants in a five-count complaint. Count I

(Declaratory Relief) and Count II (Quiet Title) seek a judgment from the Court declaring that plaintiffs

Judith B. Grace and Jeffrey R. Mabee are the rightful owners of this disputed section ofthe shore, that

a certain lease granted by the defendants Richard and Janet Eckrote to Nordic Aquafarms for use of

a section of the shore is invalid, and other related relief to quiet title to the disputed property. Count

III and Count IV both seek injunctions against Defendants and other parties in interest to prohibit

these parties from asserting title to the shore, from violating the provisions of Plaintiffs' conservation

easement, and taking other actions adverse to Plaintiffs' alleged property rights. Count V brings a

claim for slander of title against Nordic.

In turn, Nordic has brought counterclaims against Plaintiffs, which it pleads in two counts.

Count I seeks a declaratory judgment determining that Plaintiffs "have no property rights requiring

[Nordic] to obtain permission or a property interest from them in order to bury its seawater pipes for

aquaculture under the Eckrotes' upland and under the adjacent intertidal zone." (Nordic's Ans. at pg.

16 (Feb 10, 2020)). Count II brings a claim for tortious interference with an advantageous relationship

against Plaintiffs and party-in-interest Upstream Watch.

3The term Hupland," refers to "the land above the mean high water mark-that is, landward of the beach." Almeder, 2019 ME 151, ,i 8,217 A.3d 1111.

2 The Eckrotes have also brought their own counterclaims against Plaintiffs. Count I of their

counterclaims seeks a declaratory judgment that they have fee title to the intertidal land appurtenant

to their Lot and that Plaintiffs have no property rights in this disputed land. Count II asserts that the

Eckrotes have established title to this land through adverse possession. Count III brings a claim for

slander of title against Plaintiffs. Count IV asserts that Plaintiffs are liable under the common law of

torts and 14 M.R.S. § 7551-B for trespassing on the Eckrotes' intertidal land. Count V requests that

the Court find that the Eckrotes have established title to the disputed flats through boundary by

acquiescence. Count VI requests a court order quieting title to the disputed flats in the Eckrotes' favor

on the grounds described above. Count VII brings a claim for tortious interference with an

advantageous relationship against Plaintiffs and Upstream.

The parties have agreed that in the first phase of this jury-waived trial the parties will try

Counts I, II, III, and IV of Plaintiffs' complaint, Counts I, II, V, and VI of the counterclaims filed by

defendants Janet and Richard Eckrote, and Count I of the counterclaims filed by Nordic. (See "Order

on Motion to Bifurcate" entered on November 18, 2018.) The remaining counts will be tried in the

second phase of the trial, which will proceed at a later date. The first phase of the trial was held on

June 23, 24, and 25, 2021. The Court conducted a site visit on June 23, 2021 where the undersigned

justice viewed the land in dispute while accompanied by the parties' attorneys and the parties'

designated expert witnesses. After the presentation of evidence, the Court received post-trial briefs

from the parties presenting their arguments on the merits of their claims and defenses.

The following map provides a rough sketch of the area in dispute, it is based on Belfast Tax

Map 29 and is the same sketch that was provided in the Court's previous orders on Plaintiffs' motions

for summary judgment. The sketch is not in the trial record and is not relied on as evidence. It is

provided here only to assist the reader by providing a simplified visual of the area at issue.4

4 The Court further notes that Belfast Tax Map 29 is referenced in the survey plans produced by Defendants' expert, James Dorsky, which have been submitted into the record. (see e.g. Pl. 's Ex. 6, 9.) Those survey plans label the Eckrote, Schweikert, Morgan, and Mabee and Grace parcels with the same lot numbers used on the tax map.

3 11>18 g\cckh b b.,_,-,d 01' l'oi~ 20 (II lho neira,t 'fa1' }l,op¢ a.nd I• .,u,c\at.,,1 l,:, ~h~w tho r~bth·<'­ po,i\im> ur th~ ~· udon• rrot<'-rtlM ,itua!,ed nol u,~••l ,;a; <>f Utll~ Riv•r on l'~Mbscol nay.

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I. TRIAL RECORD

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