Means v. Bethune

CourtSuperior Court of Maine
DecidedNovember 14, 2002
DocketHANre-01-7
StatusUnpublished

This text of Means v. Bethune (Means v. Bethune) 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
Means v. Bethune, (Me. Super. Ct. 2002).

Opinion

STATE OF MAINE SUPERIOR COURT

HANCOCK, SS. CIVIL ACTION Docket No. RE-01-7, \o- Piss

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Merrill E. Means et al.,

Plaintiffs V. . Decision and Judgment DONALD L. GARBRECHT John L. Bethune, LAW LIBRARY Defendant

NOV 21 2002

Hearing on the complaint and counterclaim was held on August 27, 2002. The parties were present with counsel.

The parties are owners of abutting parcels of land located in Brooklin. Their parcels, and at least one other adjoining parcel, were formerly owned by Oscar Nicholson, who was the uncle of the defendant’s wife.. In late June 1969, Oscar conveyed a portion of his land to the defendant. See exhibit 22. Neither Oscar nor the defendant surveyed the parcel that was the subject of the outconveyance. The deed description identifies the northwesterly boundary of the conveyed premises by reference to the adjoining lot, known as the Flye lot. In the deed from Oscar to the defendant, the northwestern line is described as “[b]eginning at the southerly end of the Leola Flye gravel pit at an iron pipe driven in the ground at the northerly side line of the town road; thence northeasterly following the easterly line of said land of Leola Flye two hundred ninety-one (291) feet more or less, to an iron pipe at remaining land of the said Oscar M. Nicholson, the Grantor herein... .” In fact, the “easterly” (or, more precisely, the southeasterly) boundary of the Flye lot (which is the common boundary with the parcel

that Oscar conveyed to the defendant) is 13 rods and 12 links, which is 222 feet.’

Roughly one week after Oscar conveyed a portion of his land to the defendant, the owners of the Flye lot conveyed the Flye lot to the defendant. For purposes of reference, The deed from Oscar then describes the northeasterly boundary of the conveyed premises to run 225 feet to an iron pipe, then southwesterly 285 feet to a pipe on the town road, and then back along the road to the first point.

By June 1987, Frances Nicholson had become the record owner of the land that Oscar had retained.” At that time, she conveyed that property to the plaintiffs. See plaintiffs’ exhibit 27. The deed of conveyance describes the entire parcel that Oscar had originally owned and then excepts the several outconveyances — including the one to the defendant in June 1969 — that Oscar had transacted. .

In this action, the parties dispute the location of the northeasterly and southwesterly boundaries of the defendant’s parcel, which constitute the boundaries the parties have incommon. Additionally, the plaintiffs have brought a statutory action for trespass. See 14 M.R.S.A. § 7551 et seq.

The location of a boundary on the face of the earth is a question of fact. Hennessy v. Fairley, 2002 ME 76, J 21, 796 A.2d. 41, 48. To determine that location from a deed description, the court must determine the intent of the parties to that deed. Jd. If the facts extrinsic to the deed description are affected by a latent ambiguity, then a parcel’s boundaries are located by reference to monuments, courses, distances and quantity, in that priority. Jd. A “latent ambiguity” is “an uncertainty which does not appear on the face of the instrument, but which is shown to exist for the first time by matter outside the writing when an attempt is made to apply the language to the ground.” Slipp v. Stover, 651 A.2d 824, 826 (Me. 1983) (punctuation omitted). These standard rules of construction apply unless the result is “absurd... or... manifestly inconsistent with the intention of the parties to the deed... .” Wallingford v. Kennedy, 2000 ME 112, 18, 753 A.2d 493, 497-98.

“Monuments” are “visible marks or indications left on natural or other objects indicating the lines and boundaries of a survey. In this sense the term includes not only

posts, pillars, stone markers, cairns, and the like, but also fixed natural objects, blazed

in this opinion references to “the defendant’s property” means the parcel he received from Oscar.

2 Frances was the wife of Oscar’s son, Stanley. Both Oscar and Stanley had died prior to June 1987. trees, and even a watercourse.” BLACK’S LAW DICTIONARY 1159 (rev. 4" ed. 1969). An adjoining tract is a monument if it is identified as a boundary in the deed. Snyder v. Haagen, 679 A.2d 510, 514 (Me. 1996). “. . .[T]he physical disappearance of a monument terminates its status as a boundary marker unless its former location can be ascertained through extrinsic evidence.” Hennessy, 2002 ME 716, J 22, 796 A.2d at 48 (citation omitted).

The deed from Oscar to the defendant contains a latent ambiguity because, although that problem is not evident from the face of the deed itself, the length of northwesterly line as described in the deed is longer than the monument (i.e., the southeastly line of the Flye lot) that may be used to establish the location of the defendant’s line.? The northwesterly line of the parcel that Oscar conveyed to the defendant cannot follow the common boundary of the Flye lot for 291 feet, because that line of the Flye lot is only 222 feet. If the ordinary priority of criteria were applied, then the northwesterly boundary of the defendant’s parcel would be coextensive with the southeasterly line of the Flye lot, and thus it would be 222 feet in length rather than the 291 foot line urged by the defendant.

The controlling status of a monument would yield to other considerations if the result under the first approach were absurd or contraindicated by extrinsic evidence. Here, the result is not absurd. Further, it is not contrary to persuasive extrinsic evidence. The trial record contains conflicting evidence regarding Oscar’s intentions. On the one hand, the defendant and his wife testified that they accompanied Oscar as he walked the lines of the parcel that, they claim, he intended to convey to the defendant in 1969. On the other hand, an equally interested witness — plaintiff Merrill Means — testified that Oscar expressed an intention not to convey his blueberry land to the defendant. Because the disputed area largely consists of blueberry fields, this is probative evidence that Oscar did not intend to convey the land that the defendant claims here. Significantly, well into the 1980’s, Oscar and later Stanley, through a third party (David Webb), continued to

harvest blueberries on the land that the defendant argues was conveyed to him. Finally,

> The deed description makes reference to a pin at the end of the northwesterly line farthest from the road. That pin could not be found. The defendant’s surveyor set a pin where he (and the defendant) believes the terminus is located. the overstated measurement found in the deed is explained through evidence that Oscar had difficulty securing accurate measurements of land that he transferred through outconveyances. For example, Oscar conveyed a separate section of his land to a third- party, and the evidence demonstrates that the measurements used by Oscar in the deed description were incorrect by as much as 100 feet. Consequently, the probative force that otherwise might accompany evidence of a specific measurement is largely lost here. Therefore, the evidence in this case does not warrant a rejection of the well-established rules of construction because, at the very least, the evidence fails to demonstrate that Oscar intended to convey the disputed property claimed here by the defendant. Therefore, the court finds that the northwest boundary of the defendant’s property does not extend beyond the southeast boundary of the Flye lot.

The parties also dispute the length of the northeasterly boundary of the defendant’s property.

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Related

Wallingford v. Kennedy
2000 ME 112 (Supreme Judicial Court of Maine, 2000)
Slipp v. Stover
651 A.2d 824 (Supreme Judicial Court of Maine, 1994)
Snyder v. Haagen
679 A.2d 510 (Supreme Judicial Court of Maine, 1996)
Hennessy v. Fairley
2002 ME 76 (Supreme Judicial Court of Maine, 2002)

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Means v. Bethune, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/means-v-bethune-mesuperct-2002.