Morest v. Andrews

CourtSuperior Court of Maine
DecidedMarch 28, 2007
DocketYORre-05-120
StatusUnpublished

This text of Morest v. Andrews (Morest v. Andrews) 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
Morest v. Andrews, (Me. Super. Ct. 2007).

Opinion

STATE OF MAINE SUPERIOR COURT CIVIL ACTION YORK, ss. DOCKET NO. RE-05-120 -- ,+:: , ,/? r

RICHARD J. MOREST,

Plaintiff

DECISION AND JUDGMENT (TITLE TO REAL ESTATE AFFECTED)

CARL ANDREWS and KAREN ANDREWS,

Defendants

PARTIES - The plaintiff is Richard J. Morest of 1 Alvin Street in Allenstown, New

Hampshire. He was represented by Bruce A. Whtney of South Berwick, Maine.

The defendants are Carl R. Andrews and Karen R. Andrews of 139 Frye's Bridge Road

in Lyman, Maine. They were represented by Thomas Danylik of Biddeford, Maine.

DOCKET NUMBER - The docket number is RE-05-120.

NOTICE - All parties have received notice of the proceedings in accordance with the

applicable provisions of the Maine Rules of Civil Procedure.

DESCRIPTION OF THE REAL ESTATE - The plaintiff and his then wife Donna Morest

purchased approximately 16 acres of woodlands without road frontage from Lawrence

P. Snow in a deed of September 30, 1987 which is recorded at Book 4485, Page 178. The

beginning of the land is set back about 1200 feet from what is called Mast Hill Road and

sometimes described as Mast Road in Lyman. T h s is the same property as that

described in a deed from Donna Morest to Richard Morest of August 30, 1991, at Book

5826, Page 86, where she conveyed her interest to h m as part of a divorce. The plaintiff owns land on Mast Road and Goodwins Hill Road in Lyman which

is described in a deed from Lawrence P. Snow of October 23, 1998 at Book 9134, Page

214. The property is described as containing three parcels and it and a portion of the

Morest property are set forth on a "Plan Showing a Standard Boundary Survey Made

for Carl R. & Karen R. Andrews by Dow & Coulombe, Inc. of July 1, 1999 with four

revisions the most recent of November 21, 2006.

The Morest property is landlocked and both sides agree that he is entitled to an

easement by necessity. The parties disagree as to where the location should be. The

plaintiff believes that the easement should be along the southerly boundary of the

defendants' property of what is called Parcel 11. An easement there would, in the

plaintiff's judgment, provide him with the most direct and least expensive access to

Mast Road. The Dow & Coulombe survey shows the location in the upper right corner

bordering the land of Demers & Nadeau and the land formerly of Gould.

The defendants believe that tlus location would pass very close to a mobile home

along Mast Road on a 1.1 acre parcel that is now in separate ownership of Carl R.

Andrews, see deed of June 24,2005 at Book 14523, Page 230, and that they hope to sell.

It would go near or over the well and perhaps, if 50 feet in width, infringe upon their

garage. The defendants also own a larger parcel of land, about 6.3 acres, directly in

back of the 1.1-acre parcel along the road. They have built a new home there and hope

to move into the new home in the near future.

The plaintiff's proposed location would go within 75 feet or so of the edge of

their new house and go over their leach field. They are concerned that if the easement

is located where the plaintiff would like, or even if part of the easement is located on the

land of Demers and Nadeau, with their consent, their privacy would be seriously

eroded and the value of their properties diminished. The plaintiffs have offered to allow a road to be constructed over an easement to

be located further down Goodwins Hill Road, also called Roberts Pond Road at a point

on the bottom left corner of the survey designated "found 5 / 8 " 0 drill hole in granite

stone" continuing along the boundary of the land formerly of James Smith to a point

designated "found crows foot atop 4'2 x 5' 2 ... boulder marked ..." on a straight line to

two set iron rods with cap the second of whch is at the edge of the Morest property.

They claim that h s location protects their privacy and property values and allows

reasonable access to the plaintiff for approximately the same cost. The plaintiff

disagrees and argues that it would be far more costly as his proposed location is

partially built, a shorter distance and cheaper and does not involve travel over an

unimproved portion of Goodwins Hill Road.

The plaintiff purchased his land from a family friend, Mr. Snow, without a

survey or any deeded easement. He has provided no estimates of the construction costs

at either location. Mr. Andrews works in construction with heavy equipment and

testified that the costs were comparable, though he provided no written documentation

to show how he reached that conclusion.

Photographs indicate that both routes may have added costs because of areas of

ledge or water. Neither route is problem free.

It is not possible to quantify the costs of building a road at either location though

it appears that construction at the defendants' proposed location would be more costly

as it would involve a greater distance and the costs for extending electricity would also

be greater. No cost estimates for line extensions for either route were, however,

obtained from Central Maine Power Company. Likewise there are no cost estimates for

any costs involving the relocation of the well, leach field or garage. The defendants have cited a brief case. Rumill v. Robbins, 77 Me. 193, 194 (1885)

for the proposition that, in cases of easements by necessity, ". .. the owner of the

servient estate has the first right to locate the way, and if he refuses to do so upon

request, the owner of the dominant estate may locate the way. The location by either

must be reasonable ..."

The plaintiff has cited a longer and more recent case Perkins v. Perkins, 158 Me.

345 (1962), from what is now the Town of Ogunquit, regarding the determination of the

location of a "rights of passage" that had been devised. See 348. The Superior Court

opinion was quoted at length by the Law Court. In the context of attempting to

determine what the testatrix intended and considering the location of the land and

buildings, the Superior Court Justice found that, ". .. the grantees of the dominant lot

are entitled to have the use and enjoyment of a way located upon the servient lot in

such a manner that it would not be unreasonably inconvenient or injurious to the owner

of the servient lot and at the same time be reasonably suitable and convenient to the

owners of the dominant lot ..." The appellants failed to demonstrate that the decision

was clearly erroneous and the appeal was denied.

The Rumill case is more directly related to the issues in this case of where an

easement of necessity should be located, who gets to choose the location and what the

judicial role should be. Rumill suggests that in h s case the defendants should choose

the location and the Court should approve it if the choice is reasonable. Using that test

the defendants' choice is a reasonable one. Their choice would provide access and not

necessarily be significantly more expensive. The plaintiff's choice, while perhaps less

expensive for him, would impose undue burdens on the defendants by passing close by

their present and future homes. The Perkins case differs from this one. There the testatrix wanted to provide

access but it was not clear what the exact location and scope would be. In this case

there is no express easement contained in the deeds to the plaintiff. Even if we were to

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Related

Perkins v. Perkins
184 A.2d 678 (Supreme Judicial Court of Maine, 1962)
Rumill v. Robbins
77 Me. 193 (Supreme Judicial Court of Maine, 1885)

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