]MatterofBemisvTownofCrownPoint

CourtAppellate Division of the Supreme Court of the State of New York
DecidedOctober 30, 2014
Docket517633
StatusPublished

This text of ]MatterofBemisvTownofCrownPoint (]MatterofBemisvTownofCrownPoint) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Appellate Division of the Supreme Court of the State of New York primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
]MatterofBemisvTownofCrownPoint, (N.Y. Ct. App. 2014).

Opinion

State of New York Supreme Court, Appellate Division Third Judicial Department Decided and Entered: October 30, 2014 517633 517634 ________________________________

In the Matter of ALFRED BEMIS JR. et al., Appellants, v

TOWN OF CROWN POINT et al., Respondents.

(Proceeding No. 1.) ________________________________ MEMORANDUM AND ORDER In the Matter of ALFRED BEMIS JR. et al., Appellants, v

EDMUND CUMMINGS, Respondent.

(Proceeding No. 2.)

(And Two Related Actions.) ________________________________

Calendar Date: September 8, 2014

Before: McCarthy, J.P., Rose, Egan Jr., Devine and Clark, JJ.

__________

Cory E. Friedman, Crown Point and Lemery Greisler, LLC, Albany (James E. Braman of counsel), for appellants.

Stafford, Piller, Murnane, Plimpton, Kelleher & Trombley, PLLC, Plattsburgh (Justin R. Meyer of counsel), for Town of Crown Point and others, respondents. -2- 517633 517634

Breedlove & Noll, LLP, Clifton Park (Brian H. Breedlove of counsel) and Viscardi, Howe & Rudgers, LLP, Ticonderoga (Dominic J. Viscardi of counsel), for Edmund Cummings, respondent.

Clark, J.

Appeals from an order of the Supreme Court (Meyer, J.), entered December 26, 2012 in Essex County, which, among other things, dismissed petitioner's application, in proceeding No. 2 pursuant to Judiciary Law § 756, to hold respondent in contempt.

These appeals involve cases that have been ongoing since 1996 and concern a longstanding dispute between petitioners1 and respondent Edmund Cummings over the use and status of a road known as "Narrowtown Road" located in the Town of Crown Point, Essex County. The road, which traverses Cummings' property, is an efficient means of ingress and egress for petitioners to access their undeveloped real property parcel. Despite the lengthy history of litigation in this matter, there has yet to be a judicial determination regarding ownership of the road or the respective rights of petitioners and Cummings.

By way of background, in August 1996, petitioners commenced action No. 1 by filing a complaint and an amended complaint

1 Petitioner Alfred Bemis Jr. passed away on January 7, 2014. By operation of law, however, his wife, petitioner Glendine L. Bemis, became the sole owner of the share she previously owned with him (see Matter of Violi, 65 NY2d 392, 395 [1985]). "Accordingly, the [proceedings] can proceed without a substitution with the death simply being noted on the record" (Thibodeau v Martin, 119 AD3d 1015, 1015 n 1 [2014] [internal quotation marks and citations omitted]). References in this decision to petitioners will include Alfred Bemis Jr. -3- 517633 517634

against Cummings and Sylvia Caldwell2 seeking a judgment establishing that they had a prescriptive easement over the road or, in the alternative, that they had a right to use the road, pursuant to Highway Law § 205, because it had been abandoned by respondent Town of Crown Point.

In December 1997, petitioners sought and obtained a resolution from the Town's board declaring that Narrowtown Road was, in fact, a town road. In March 1999, after Supreme Court had denied their application for a preliminary injunction in action No. 1, petitioners commenced proceeding No. 1, pursuant to CPLR article 78, against the Town and some of its employees (hereinafter collectively referred to as respondents), seeking to compel respondents to maintain the subject road. Soon thereafter petitioners and respondents executed a stipulation of settlement (hereinafter referred to as the 1999 stipulation) wherein respondents agreed to, among other things, map Narrowtown Road as a town highway and repair a portion of it. The 1999 stipulation was subsequently so-ordered by Supreme Court.

Thereafter, the Town commenced action No. 2 against Cummings seeking to enjoin him from preventing petitioners' access, use and maintenance of the road. Cummings, among other things, answered, filed third-party complaints against petitioners and moved, by order to show cause, to intervene in the then-concluded proceeding No. 1, vacate the underlying 1999 stipulation and obtain injunctive relief. Supreme Court denied Cummings' requested relief in all respects. An appeal by Cummings ensued and this Court affirmed (Town of Crown Point v Cummings, 300 AD2d 873, 874 [2002]).

In March 2010, petitioners commenced proceeding No. 2, pursuant to Judiciary Law § 756, seeking to hold Cummings in contempt for his failure to obey the settlement agreement issued by Supreme Court in 1999 and for his interference therewith (see

2 In 1999, Caldwell conveyed her interest in the property to Cummings rendering him the sole owner. Caldwell is not a party to the instant appeals. -4- 517633 517634

Judiciary Law § 756). In Cummings' answer, he moved to dismiss the petition and cross-moved for, among other things, a declaratory judgment establishing that the eight-foot-wide road traversing his property is not, and was never, a town road.

As is relevant to the instant appeals, in reviewing the actions and proceedings, Supreme Court considered five motions that were pending in proceeding Nos. 1 and 2 and action No. 2.3 Specifically, Supreme Court reviewed (1) petitioners' motion in proceeding No. 1 to hold respondents in contempt for purportedly violating the 1999 stipulation, (2) a cross motion by respondents to consolidate proceeding No. 1 and action No. 2, (3) petitioners' motion for summary judgment dismissing Cummings' affirmative defenses and counterclaims in action No. 2, (4) respondents' cross motion in action No. 2 for summary judgment dismissing Cummings' counterclaims, and (5) the application by petitioners in proceeding No. 2 to hold Cummings in contempt for his alleged willful and intentional interference with respondents' attempt to comply with the 1999 stipulation. First, Supreme Court denied petitioners' summary judgment motion in action No. 2 as moot. Second, in granting respondents' cross motion to consolidate, the court did not merely consolidate proceeding No. 1 and action No. 2, but, rather, consolidated all four unresolved matters for purposes of trial. Last, Supreme Court denied petitioners' contempt motion against both respondents in proceeding No. 1, the application for an order of contempt against Cummings in proceeding No. 2 and respondents' cross motion for summary judgment in action No. 2. Only petitioners appeal.

Initially, petitioners' notices of appeal only reference the index numbers for proceeding Nos. 1 and 2 and, as such, this Court's review is limited to only the issues raised therein. Specifically, only the issues raised in connection with petitioners' applications to hold respondents and Cummings in

3 In its decision, Supreme Court identified the matters pending before it simply as actions 1 through 4. Inasmuch as "action 2" and "action 4" are actually proceedings, this Court has identified the matters differently for accuracy. -5- 517633 517634

contempt, as well as respondents' cross motion to consolidate, are properly before this Court.4 Further, to the extent that petitioners have now abandoned any challenges that they may have had to the order granting the cross motion to consolidate by failing to raise any arguments regarding the order in their brief, that issue also escapes our review (see Matter of Birchwood Neighborhood Assn. v Planning Bd. of the Town of Colonie, 112 AD3d 1184, 1185 n 2 [2013]; Matter of Smith v O'Donnell, 107 AD3d 1311, 1312 n [2013]). Thus, despite the complex procedural history of these proceedings and actions as a whole, the issues before this Court are limited.

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