MacKie v. Hull, No. Cv 98 0078427s (Jan. 23, 2001)

2001 Conn. Super. Ct. 1437
CourtConnecticut Superior Court
DecidedJanuary 23, 2001
DocketNo. CV 98 0078427S
StatusUnpublished

This text of 2001 Conn. Super. Ct. 1437 (MacKie v. Hull, No. Cv 98 0078427s (Jan. 23, 2001)) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Connecticut Superior Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
MacKie v. Hull, No. Cv 98 0078427s (Jan. 23, 2001), 2001 Conn. Super. Ct. 1437 (Colo. Ct. App. 2001).

Opinion

[EDITOR'S NOTE: This case is unpublished as indicated by the issuing court.]

MEMORANDUM OF DECISION
STATEMENT OF THE CASE:

The plaintiffs, Randal D. Mackie and Joanna Mackie, are the owners of a parcel of land located at and known as 307 Bantam Lake Road in the town of CT Page 1438 Morris. The defendants are Richard A. and Catherine A. Hull of 301 Bantam Lake Road, in Morris, prior owners of the plaintiffs' property and National Bank Mortgage Corp., successor mortgagee of the plaintiffs' property at 307 Bantam Lake Road.

In this action, the plaintiffs seek: (1) a determination of the common boundary line between their property and that of the defendants, each side asserting a different line; (2) to quiet title to the disputed area, being the land lying between the two disputed boundary lines; and (3) a permanent injunction prohibiting and restraining defendants from entering onto the disputed area.

The defendants claim by way of special defense that they are the owners of the disputed area or, in the alternative, claim this area by: (1) adverse possession; (2) prescriptive easement; or (3) a right of way pursuant to General Statutes § 13a-55.

FINDINGS OF FACT:

1) The plaintiffs acquired the property at 307 Bantam Lake Road, Morris, Connecticut by warranty deed (the "Beaudoin deed") dated May 23, 1991, and recorded May 24, 1991, from Charles J. and Patricia A. Beaudoin ("Beaudoin").

The description of the parcel (the "property") conveyed is as follows:

Beginning at a point in the westerly line of said highway, which marks the northeasterly corner of land of Richard A. Hull, et ux, and running thence westerly in the southerly line of an abandoned highway 730 feet +/- to a point at the southeasterly corner of land of Leonard J. Rothman, et ux; thence northerly along land of said Rothman, et ux, 195.5 feet +/- to a point in the southerly line of land of Michael Somma, et ux; thence along land of said Somma, et ux, 480 feet +/- to the northwesterly corner of land of Charles J. Beaudoin, et al; thence southerly along land of said Beaudoin, et al, 150 feet +/- to a point; thence easterly along the southerly line of land of said Beaudoin, et al, 267 feet +/- to a point in the westerly line of said highway; thence southerly along said highway, 35 feet +/- to the point and place of beginning.

Being the same premises conveyed to Charles J. Beaudoin and Patricia A. Beaudoin from Richard A. Hull CT Page 1439 by Warranty Survivorship Deed dated December 30, 1987 and recorded December 31, 1997 in Volume 49, Page 843 of the Morris Land Records.

2) Beaudoin acquired the property by warranty deed dated December 30, 1987, and recorded December 31, 1987, from defendant Richard A. Hull (the "Richard Hull deed").

3) Defendant Catherine A. Hull conveyed her interest in the property to Richard A. Hull by quit claim deed dated May 18, 1985, and recorded May 24, 1985 (the "Catherine Hull deed").

4) Defendants Catherine A. and Richard A. Hull acquired the property by warranty deed dated April 17, 1984, and recorded May 1, 1984, from David W. Gardiner ("Gardiner") (the "Gardiner deed").

5) The property descriptions in the Beaudoin deed, the Richard Hull deed and the Catherine Hull deed and the Gardiner deed (the "southerly line boundary deeds") all refer to the southerly boundary of the property as "the southerly line of an abandoned highway".

6) The defendants, prior to the conveyance to Beaudoin, had title to the entire abandoned highway (the "abandoned highway") as set out in the Gardiner deed, the warranty deed from Charles E., Jr. and Martin K. LeSan, dated August 25, 1977, and recorded August 22, 1977, (the "LeSan deed") and the quit claim deed from Marion K. LeSan to the defendants dated July 7, 1985, and recorded August 14, 1985 (the "LeSan quit claim deed").

7) The abandoned highway was discontinued by the town of Morris at a town meeting on October 1, 1923.

8) The defendants did not question or dispute the description of the property in the Gardiner deed, the Richard Hull deed, the Catherine Hull deed, and the Beaudoin deed.

Defendants argue that there are conflicting calls in the southerly line boundary deeds in that the closing distance call of 35 feet more or less is not adequate to close the easterly boundary at the southerly line of the abandoned highway but sets the southerly line of the property at the centerline of the abandoned highway. The question for the court is which of the calls in the deed control the distance: 35 feet more or less or the adjoinder to the terminus at the southerly line of the abandoned highway.

The law on this question is clear: known and fixed monuments will CT Page 1440 control over courses and distances. Frank Towers v. Laviana, 140 Conn. 45,50 (1953). "The words `more or less', when related to the description of the property in a deed, are . . . words of precaution and safety. . . .[If] calls for distance that are qualified by words relieving exactness also call for a monument or adjoinder as a terminus . . . [they] render the qualifying words meaningless. 23 Am.Jur.2d 279-80, Deeds § 308 (1983). "[T]he physical disappearance of a monument does not terminate its status as a boundary marker, provided that its former location can be ascertained through extrinsic evidence." Koennicke v. Maiorano,43 Conn. App. 1, 12 (1996). "A highway has always been regarded as a fixed monument." Frank Towers Corp. v. Laviana, supra, 140 Conn. 51. There is no reasonable doubt, in law or in fact, concerning the location of the southerly boundary of the abandoned highway.

DISCUSSION:

In order to address the conflicting claims of the parties in a systematic fashion, the court will first address the issue of the respective title claims advanced by the parties. The plaintiffs rely on the property description contained in the Mackie deed, the Beaudoin deed, the Richard Hull deed, the Catherine Hull deed, and the Gardiner deed to support their position that the southerly boundary of the property is the southerly line of the abandoned highway. The defendants argue that these four southerly boundary deeds contain a scrivener's error as to the southerly boundary of the property and that the correct southerly boundary of the property is the center line of the abandoned highway.

I
The purpose of a property description is to specify the subject of the conveyance. "In order to be adequate, a property description must contain a sufficiently full and certain depiction of the land so as to afford a means of identifying the property which will distinguish it, from all other." 14 R. Powell, Real Property § 81A.05[1]. Each of the deeds relied upon by the plaintiffs is clear and unambiguous on its face. "When determining a boundary line in a deed, if the description in the deed is clear and unambiguous, it must be given effect." McCullough v. WaterfrontAssociation, Inc., 32 Conn. App. 746, 750, cert. denied, 227 Conn. 933 (1993). "In such a case, there is no room for construction. The inquiry is not the intent of the parties but the intent expressed in the deed."Koennicke v. Maiorano, supra, 43 Conn. App. 10; see also McCullough v.Waterford Park Association, supra, 750.

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Bluebook (online)
2001 Conn. Super. Ct. 1437, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/mackie-v-hull-no-cv-98-0078427s-jan-23-2001-connsuperct-2001.