Mizla v. Depalo
This text of 438 A.2d 820 (Mizla v. Depalo) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Connecticut primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.
Opinion
This is an action involving the Connecticut Marketable Record Title Act, General Statutes §§ 47-33b through 47-331. The plaintiff challenged, in the first count of his complaint, 1 the validity of a notice of claim filed in the Norwich land records by the defendants pursuant to General Statutes § 47-33f (a). 2 Both parties filed motions *61 for summary judgment on this issue. 3 Judgment was rendered in favor of the plaintiff on both motions. The defendants have appealed from the final judgment rendered on the summary judgment motions.
The defendants are the owners in fee simple of a parcel of land situated generally northwesterly of the plaintiff’s land. They contend that attached to their land is a twenty-five foot wide easement running along the westerly boundary of the plaintiff’s land. In claiming that this easement is a valid easement over the plaintiff’s land, the defendants also argue that the root of title of the plaintiff’s land over which the easement is claimed is a warranty deed recorded on June 5, 1885, in the Norwich land records. The warranty deed creating the easement was recorded in the Norwich land records on May 9, 1895, and it conveyed the premises presently owned by the defendants together with this easement of a right of way across land remaining in the grantor of the deed of May 9, 1895. On July 18, 1974, the defendants’ decedent and predecessor in title recorded in the Norwich land records an instrument entitled “Notice of Interest in Land” in which she *62 claimed that the plaintiff’s land was servient to the easement of a right of way created by the warranty deed recorded on May 9, 1895. 4
The plaintiff brought this action contesting the legal viability of the defendants’ easement as a burden on his land. He claimed that the recording of the “Notice of Interest in Land” on July 18,1974, was ineffective as against his land because the notice was not filed on or before July 1, 1971, in accordance with General Statutes $ 47-33L. 5
The trial court ruled in favor of the plaintiff’s motion for summary judgment. In its memorandum of decision, the court apparently believed that both parties agreed that the plaintiff’s root of title was a deed recorded in 1895. In its memorandum, the court said, “[t]here are no disputed facts in this action. Both parties have sought summary judgments. The Defendant admits in paragraph eight of its submitted affidavit [on the defendants’ motion for summary judgment] and in paragraph one of its memorandum that the Plaintiff’s root of title is a deed recorded in 1895. . . . The Defendants themselves have conceded that the true ‘root of title’ of the Plaintiff exists in the 1895 recording. . ." 6 *63 Upon review, the defendants’ motion for summary judgment shows that the defendants claimed that the plaintiff’s root of title was not recorded in 1895, hut was recorded in 1885. In fact, there is nothing before us to indicate that either party alleged in the trial court that the plaintiff’s root of title was recorded in 1895. Since the trial court’s decision on the summary judgment motions was based on the mistaken belief that the plaintiff’s root of title was recorded in 1895, it was clearly erroneous. See Practice Book § 3060D; see also Stoni v. Wasicki, 179 Conn. 372, 377, 426 A.2d 774 (1979). 7
In his motion for summary judgment, the plaintiff did not set forth what he claimed as his root of title. For the first time, he now strongly argues in this court, on the basis of a sketch of the property involved introduced by the defendants in the trial court, that his root of title is “a title transaction recorded in [the] Norwich Land Records, Book of Wills, Page 90” in 1896, and referred to in a deed recorded on February 18, 1905.
The date of the plaintiff’s root of title of that land over which the defendants claim the easement (hereinafter servient estate) is dispositive of this appeal. 8 The Marketable Record Title Act provides that: “ ‘Root of title’ means that conveyance or other title transaction in the chain of title of a *64 person, purporting to create or containing language sufficient to transfer the interest claimed by such person, upon which he relies as a basis for the marketability of his title, and which was the most recent to be recorded as of a date forty years prior to the time when marketability is being determined. The effective date of the root of title is the date on which it is recorded.” General Statutes § 47-33b (e). 9 In the present action, the date “when marketability is being determined” is July 18, 1974. Under the act, any person who has an unbroken record chain of title to an interest in land for a period of forty years, plus any additional period of time necessary to trace the title back to the latest connecting title instrument of earlier record (which is the “root of title” under the act) has a “marketable record title” subject only to those pre-root of title matters that are excepted under the statute or are caused to reappear in the latest forty year record chain of title. General Statutes § 47-33c. 10 *65 Therefore, if the plaintiff’s root of title of the servient estate is a “conveyance or other title transaction” recorded after the date when the “conveyance or other title transaction” granting the easement in question to the defendants’ predecessor in title was recorded, then unless one of the exceptions listed in § 47-33d apply, the defendants would have had to file a notice of claim by July 1,1971, in order to preserve their interest. General Statutes §§ 47-33e, 11 47-33c, 47-33f, 47-33l. If, however, the “conveyance or other title transaction” creating the easement was recorded after the date of the plaintiff’s root of title, then the defendants’ interest in the easement is still valid. General Statutes § 47-33d. 12
*66 An examination of the record, brief s and exhibits before us leads us to the conclusion that the plaintiff’s root of title of the servient estate, i.e., the land over which the defendants’ easement runs, is the deed recorded in June, 1885. Concerning the 1896 “title transaction” upon which the plaintiff relies as his root of title, it suffices to point out that it relates to other land now owned by the plaintiff but not to the servient estate. 13
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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack
438 A.2d 820, 183 Conn. 59, 1981 Conn. LEXIS 435, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/mizla-v-depalo-conn-1981.