McGrath v. Hills

662 A.2d 215, 1995 Me. LEXIS 154
CourtSupreme Judicial Court of Maine
DecidedJuly 19, 1995
StatusPublished
Cited by8 cases

This text of 662 A.2d 215 (McGrath v. Hills) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Judicial Court of Maine primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
McGrath v. Hills, 662 A.2d 215, 1995 Me. LEXIS 154 (Me. 1995).

Opinion

RUDMAN, Justice.

Leslie Hills appeals from the judgment entered in the Superior Court (Waldo County, Mills, J.) in favor of Margaret and John McGrath. By them amended complaint, 1 the McGraths had requested the court 2 to order *217 Hills to show cause why he should not bring an action to try his title to certain disputed property and had sought trespass damages for gravel removed from their property without their permission. 3 In his answer, Hills included a request that the McGraths be ordered to try their title.

Following a hearing, the court (Waldo County, Browne, A.R.J.) granted the McGraths’ request and denied Hills’s request by ordering Hills to bring the action to try title. The trial court considered whether Hills could prove, as against the McGraths, title to that portion of property described in his deed as the Sewall Lancaster lot. Hills claimed that this lot is the most westerly portion of his land and that it abuts the eastern boundary of the McGrath property. In the course of Hills’s presentation, and subsequently in that of the McGraths, each party submitted evidence of title. The court found that the McGraths had established their title in fee simple as against Hills.

The court then considered the location of the boundaries for the purpose of resolving the trespass claim, and found that Hills willfully damaged the McGraths’ property without license and awarded treble damages for the gravel removed and wood cut ($15,664 x 3 for a total of $46,992), survey costs ($11,-800), and attorney fees ($17,396.69).

I. The assignment and weight of the burden of proof

a. The assignment

Hills claims to have been prejudiced by the court’s assigning to him the burden of proof. We have previously stated, and we reiterate now, that section 6651 of title 14 M.R.S.A. is not the most appropriate vehicle to resolve boundary disputes. A declaratory judgment action would have been the more fitting procedure. See Hodgdon v. Campbell, 411 A.2d 667, 669-70 (Me.1980) (“An action for declaratory judgment is an appropriate vehicle for establishing rights in real property.”); Chickering v. Yates, 420 A.2d 1219, 1222-24 (Me.1980) (discussing inappropriateness of proceeding pursuant to section 6651 when, for example, location of boundaries is disputed); see also Comment, Maine’s Actions to Try Title: A Historical Perspective, 32 Me.L.Rev. 355, 387-88 (1980) (explaining the centrality of the possession requirement to the availability of the statute). Nevertheless, in this proceeding no prejudice accrued to Hills because the court had sufficient evidence before it as to both parties’ claims of title and rendered what is in essence a declaratory judgment.

“Showing no title in themselves, the plaintiffs cannot prevail even if it turned out that the defendants had no title.” Smith v. Varney, 309 A.2d 229, 233 (Me.1973) (per curiam). Whether the action was tried as a declaratory judgment or pursuant to section 6651, Hills at some point would have had to come forward with better proof of title to the property claimed than the McGraths. Testimony proffered in this case permits the following conclusions: the Searsport-Stockton Springs town line was the western boundary of the McGraths’ property. The McGraths’ chain of title could be traced back to a deed dated 1871 from George Staples to David Berry. No title in the property could be found for Gertrude Lancaster, the source of Hills’s title with respect to the Sewall Lancaster lot. No title could be found into the sources of Hills’s title with respect to two other lots he claimed. A deed from G.W. Staples and others to S.A. Rendell (dated 1905), the source of Hills’s title to property immediately north of the McGrath property, allowed one surveyor to conclude that “the southerly boundary of the Hills property as disclosed by this description was reasonably consistent with the location of the northerly *218 line of the McGrath property as described in their deeds.” Hills’s problem was his proof, not the burden. We discern no error in the court’s conclusion that Hills failed to satisfy the burden.

Contrary to Hills’s assertion, the trial court’s decision did not establish a rule that a defendant in a section 6651 action must proffer expert testimony. The trial court simply found the evidence presented by the McGraths more persuasive than that presented by Hills.

b. The weight

Hills contends the trial court essentially required him to prove title as against all the world rather than requiring him merely to prove that he had better title to the disputed property than did the McGraths. He contends that the court erred in stating that no evidence supported a link between the Lancaster-Woods deed and the Park-Laneaster deed.

Hills’s burden was to prove better title than the McGraths. The court found that Hills failed because he could not establish a connection between his deeds and his various source deeds while the McGraths could show an unbroken chain of title and proffered a surveyor, Richard Day, whose work and explanation the court reasonably could and apparently did find credible.

II. Richard Day’s plan

Hills contends that Richard Day’s plan does not follow the rules of construction and leads to an absurd result. He contends Day improperly disregarded the starting point of the description in the McGrath’s deed, the northeast corner of the John Park land, and further, that Day’s plan leaves two ownerless parcels, the northern half of the Parker Gray lot and the northern half of the Sewall Lancaster lot.

The weight to be given to a survey- or’s opinion is the prerogative of the factfinder. See Perkins v. Graves, 642 A.2d 1349, 1350-51 (Me.1994). The location of boundaries on the face of the earth is a question of fact, which we will disturb only if clearly erroneous. Id. at 1350. A factual finding is clearly erroneous only if no competent evidence supports it. Tremblay v. DiCicco, 628 A.2d 141, 143 (Me.1993), cert. denied, — U.S. —, 114 S.Ct. 1062, 127 L.Ed.2d 382 (1994). It is clear' that the trial court found Day’s explanation and plan the most complete and reasonable. Day did not deny the existence of ambiguities and discrepancies. He, to the more complete satisfaction of the court, reconciled the ambiguities. Competent evidence supports the court’s findings.

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Bluebook (online)
662 A.2d 215, 1995 Me. LEXIS 154, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/mcgrath-v-hills-me-1995.