McCullough v. Waterfront Park Ass'n, No. Cv 91 0047677 S (Jan. 30, 1992)

1992 Conn. Super. Ct. 140
CourtConnecticut Superior Court
DecidedJanuary 30, 1992
DocketNo. CV 91 0047677 S
StatusUnpublished

This text of 1992 Conn. Super. Ct. 140 (McCullough v. Waterfront Park Ass'n, No. Cv 91 0047677 S (Jan. 30, 1992)) 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
McCullough v. Waterfront Park Ass'n, No. Cv 91 0047677 S (Jan. 30, 1992), 1992 Conn. Super. Ct. 140 (Colo. Ct. App. 1992).

Opinion

[EDITOR'S NOTE: This case is unpublished as indicated by the issuing court.] MEMORANDUM OF DECISION This is an action by the plaintiff by way of a substituted complaint alleging four counts of trespass and seeking an injunction against the defendant, Waterfront Park Association (Association), and several of its members to prevent future encroachments on property she claims she owns as well as compensatory and exemplary damages for past encroachments.

The defendants generally dispute the plaintiff's title to and possession of the piece of land in question. Additionally, by way of special defenses, they claim that the Association and its members have acquired rights to enter onto and use the disputed land through adverse possession and prescriptive easement.

On June 1, 1989, the plaintiff purchased a piece of property in Coventry known as 35 Shore Drive, and she has resided in a house on that property since that date. Her house overlooks a portion of Coventry Lake, also known as Lake Wamgumbaug, variously spelled Wangumbaug. The portion of the lake in front of her house is a cove formed by the natural curve of the western end of the lake and a spit of land which projects into the lake from the south shore of the lake. This projection of land is locally known as "the peninsula," this memorandum refers to it by that name.

The plaintiff contends that the eastern and western boundary lines of 35 Shore Drive extend to the high-water line of the lake. This interpretation would result in the high-water line being the northern boundary of the plaintiff's property. These putative property lines would encompass the western two-thirds of the peninsula for its entire length within the plaintiff's property.

Toward the end of May 1990, defendant Belcher, president of the Association, informed the plaintiff that a number of docks would be installed on the peninsula the next day so that she might expect to see workmen at the site. The plaintiff assumed that the docks were to CT Page 141 be installed on the eastern side of the peninsula, to which side the plaintiff makes no claim. Instead, five movable, wooden docks, approximately four feet by twenty feet, were installed on the western side of the peninsula. Each dock can moor two boats, and, by July 1990, up to ten boats were using these docks regularly.

Use of these docks was reserved by the Association for its members who did not own property directly on the lake and had signed up on a list. Each such member was assigned use of a specific side of a dock by the Association.

The plaintiff protested the installation of these docks at informal and formal meetings with association officers and members, by correspondence with the Association through her attorney, and by placing several "no trespassing" signs along the asserted eastern boundary of her property. The signs were promptly removed by unknown parties. Eventually, the plaintiff hired a surveying company who prepared an A-2 survey of the area. (Plaintiff's Exhibit 23.)

The docks were removed for the winter of 1990 to 1991, and four of them were re-installed on the western side of the peninsula in the spring of 1991. The fifth dock was re-installed on the eastern side of the peninsula at the tip. The Association plans to install the docks at the beginning of each boating season and remove them at the end.

The area of the southern shore of the lake, pertinent to this case, was first developed by James H. Fitzgerald in 1919. The parcel which eventually became 35 Shore Drive was first conveyed by Fitzgerald to Alvin V. Nelson by a warrantee deed (Plaintiff's Exhibit 22), dated August 7, 1931, which deed contained the following language:

". . . a certain piece or parcel of land situated in the Town of Coventry, County of Tolland and State of Connecticut comprising the easterly half of lot #4, and the westerly half of lot #5 block 2 on a plan known as `Map of Gerald Park and Vicinity, Lake Wangumbaug, South Coventry, Conn. by James H. Fitzgerald, C.E.' on file in the town records of said Town of Coventry, bounded and described as follows: to wit, Commencing at a point in the northerly line of Anger Avenue, said point being distant twenty-five (25) feet westerly from the westerly line of lot #6, as appears on said plan, the line runs thence northerly for a distance of one hundred and sixty (160) feet — more or less, to the shore of Lake Wangumbaug; thence westerly by said shore of said lake Wangumbaug for a distance of fifty (50) feet — more or less; thence southerly by land of the concourse and the CT Page 142 westerly half of lot #4 as appears on said plan, for a distance of one hundred and sixty-five (165) feet — more or less, to the northerly line of said Anger Avenue; thence easterly in the northerly line of said Anger Avenue for a distance of fifty (50) feet — more or less, to the first-mentioned point and place of commencement; together with the right to use in common with others, the bathing beach on the Concourse aforesaid. . . ."

Virtually identical language is repeated in each mesne conveyance and in the deed to the plaintiff. (Plaintiff's Exhibits 1 and 14 to 21.) Anger Avenue has become Shore Drive.

The pertinent portion of the Gerald Park map or plan (Plaintiff's Exhibit 25) referred to above depicts lots 4 and 5 of block 2 to be nearly rectangular in shape and bounded on the northerly side, not by the lake, but by a concourse. This concourse is an approximately twenty-five foot wide strip of land which abuts and runs generally parallel to the shore line shown on the map. An area designated as a bathing beach is located along this concourse a short distance to the east of the parcel in question. The dimensions of lots 4 and 5 are not specified on the map. The map does not display the peninsula which is the locus in quo.

The court finds, however, that this peninsula did exist with substantially the same size and shape in the 1920's and 1930's as it exists today. The issue of the date of creation of the peninsula was a contested one at trial. The court heard testimony from witnesses who recalled that the peninsula was created when the cove was dredged in 1957. However, the court also heard testimony from a witness (Beckwith) whose brother-in-law and whose parents owned the property now known as 35 Shore Drive in the early 1930's and who was familiar with this area in the 1920's. This witness' father built the stone retaining wall depicted in the plaintiff's survey (Plaintiff's Exhibit 23) and in numerous photographs (Plaintiff's Exhibits 2 and 3, and Defendants' Exhibits AA, BB, and CC) in the 1930's. Her testimony was corroborated by other witnesses who vividly recalled using the peninsula for recreation as children during the 1940's and early 1950's, including a witness whose father participated in dredging the cove.

But the strongest support for the continuing existence of the peninsula was three photographs (Defendants' Exhibits AA, BB, and CC), taken around 1938, 1945, and 1950 respectively, as well as an aerial photograph taken in 1955 (Defendants' Exhibit D) in which photographs the peninsula is clearly visible and extant. The 1938 photograph shows the peninsula covered with vegetation indicating to the court that the peninsula had existed, undisturbed, for some time before 1938. CT Page 143

The court also finds credible the testimony of Beckwith relating to her father, Alexis Caisse, Sr., who constructed the first cottage at the 35 Shore Drive property, and stated that he believed that the stone retaining wall he built coincided with his northerly boundary line.

On July 31, 1931, one week before Fitzgerald deeded the locus to Nelson, Fitzgerald conveyed most of the remainder of the development, including the concourse, to Gladys M.

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Bluebook (online)
1992 Conn. Super. Ct. 140, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/mccullough-v-waterfront-park-assn-no-cv-91-0047677-s-jan-30-1992-connsuperct-1992.