Nancy E. Fields Revocable Trust v. Rubinstein

CourtVermont Superior Court
DecidedJuly 14, 2020
Docket607-10-16 Wncv
StatusPublished

This text of Nancy E. Fields Revocable Trust v. Rubinstein (Nancy E. Fields Revocable Trust v. Rubinstein) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Vermont Superior Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Nancy E. Fields Revocable Trust v. Rubinstein, (Vt. Ct. App. 2020).

Opinion

Nancy E. Fields Revocable Trust v. Rubinstein, No. 607-10-16 Wncv (Tomasi, J., July 14, 2020).

[The text of this Vermont trial court opinion is unofficial. It has been reformatted from the original. The accuracy of the text and the accompanying data included in the Vermont trial court opinion database is not guaranteed.]

VERMONT SUPERIOR COURT

SUPERIOR COURT CIVIL DIVISION Washington Unit Docket No. 607-10-16 Wncv

│ Nancy E. Fields Revocable Trust, │ Plaintiff, │ │ v. │ │ Kenneth Rubinstein and │ Five Ways Farm, LLC, │ Defendants. │ │

Opinion and Order on Cross-Motions for Summary Judgment, MPRs #3 and #22

In this case, Plaintiff Nancy E. Fields, Trustee of the Nancy E. Fields

Revocable Trust (Ms. Fields) claims that Defendants Kenneth Rubinstein and Five

Ways Farm, LLC, (collectively, Mr. Rubinstein) have obstructed Ms. Fields’ use of a

right of way (ROW) crossing property of Mr. Rubinstein. The contested ROW

extends from a parcel (frontage lot) that does not abut but has uncontested public

highway access to a separate “mountain lot” parcel, both owned by Ms. Fields. The

Rubinstein parcel that the ROW crosses sits between and is contiguous with both

Fields parcels.

I. Procedural Posture

In earlier proceedings in this case, Mr. Rubinstein simultaneously filed three

separate motions for summary judgment. The Court (Teachout, J.) granted one to

the effect that the only plaintiff who is a real party in interest is Ms. Fields in her capacity as Trustee for the Plaintiff Trust. The Court denied the second addressing

“prescriptive termination.” And the Court denied the third in which Mr. Rubinstein

argued that there is no effective “deed basis” for any ROW providing access to Ms.

Fields’ mountain lot. See generally Summary Judgment Decision (filed August 28,

2019).

With regard to Mr. Rubinstein’s “deed basis” argument, the Court ruled as

follows:

Defendants [Rubinstein] claim Plaintiff Trust [Fields] has no easement because no easement was ever originally created by either grant or reservation in a deed. However, land records show that the easement right has been granted to all holders in Plaintiff Trust’s chain of title since 1965 and was excepted from what Defendants acquired in their original acquisitions in 1997 and 1998 and was previously an exception in their chain of title. A survey of it was recorded in 1965. The land contract recorded in the land records in 1961, with Goves as parties, demonstrates that a physical roadway existed on the land as of that time and there is no dispute as to its original location and that it led from the Trust’s frontage lot to the mountain lot. The Goves conveyed the intervening land in 1963, reserving and excepting the easement.

There may well be legal bases to support the Trust’s current ownership of the easement right. The court is not satisfied that all facts pertinent to possible claims (such as adverse possession with or without color of title, acquiescence, estoppel, marketable record title) have been presented such that the issue may be decided on Defendants’ motion for summary judgment. The court cannot conclude that there is no basis for Plaintiff Trust’s claim of an easement right to the mountain lot. The Defendants’ Motion for Summary Judgment on the basis of deeds is denied. Plaintiff Trust is not foreclosed from the opportunity to prove its claims.

Id. at 5 (footnote omitted). The Court denied Mr. Rubinstein’s efforts at

reconsideration, denied Ms. Fields’ later filed summary judgment motion as

untimely, and attempted to steer the case towards trial.

2 Following a rotation of judges and difficulties scheduling a bench trial

convenient to the Court and the parties, the parties presented the Court with a

stipulation contemplating that the Court would reconsider those cross-motions for

summary judgment disposed of by Judge Teachout that addressed what Mr.

Rubinstein characterizes as the “deed basis” for the existence of the easement

claimed by Ms. Fields.1 At a status conference, both sides expressed their view that

the summary judgment record before Judge Teachout was fully sufficient to support

summary judgment, with, of course, each side believing that judgment should be

entered in its favor.

The issue of the lawful existence of a deeded ROW is central to the case and

awarding judgment on that issue pretrial would dramatically simplify (or

potentially eliminate the need for) a trial. At the parties’ urging, and with

additional briefing anticipated, the Court agreed to take a fresh look at their

motions. See Scheduling Stipulation (filed Feb. 13, 2020). Having now done so, the

Court makes the following determinations.

II. Mr. Rubinstein’s “Deed Basis” Theory/the “Deed Issue”

Mr. Rubinstein asserts that, upon close reading, the relevant deeds do not

support the existence of Ms. Fields’ claimed ROW. Specifically, his argument

1 While Ms. Fields’ motion also raises the way of necessity issue, that matter

appears to be outside the scope of the parties’ stipulation, and Ms. Fields admits that the “deed theory” is the “sole” issue upon which she is seeking summary judgment. In any event, to the extent discussed below, the Court is satisfied that there are material disputes of facts concerning that issue that would preclude entry of summary judgment on that basis. 3 proceeds essentially as follows.2 (1) By no later than 1961, the Robinsons had come

to own all contiguous parcels relevant to this case that now are owned by Ms. Fields

and Mr. Rubinstein.3 (2) If any deeded ROW from the frontage lot to the mountain

lot pre-existed the Robinsons’ common ownership of these contiguous parcels,

common ownership terminated it. (3) On October 25, 1961, the Robinsons conveyed

property to the Ricketts that would have been burdened by the ROW if it still

existed but the Robinsons did not retain any right of access to the mountain lot.

The very next day, this property was conveyed to the Goves and eventually came to

be owned by Mr. Rubinstein.4

(4) On November 1, 1963, the Robinsons conveyed the frontage and mountain

lots to the Ricketts, purporting to also convey a ROW between them. This property

eventually came to be owned by Ms. Fields. (5) Because the historical ROW, if it

ever existed, was terminated by the Robinsons’ common ownership of all relevant

parcels, and the Robinsons then conveyed away the property that would have been

2 Mr. Rubinstein’s numerous additional arguments largely follow from his “core”

argument, as described here, and quickly descend into disputes of fact and rely on factual inferences inappropriate for summary judgment.

3 Mr. Rubinstein asserts this fact of common ownership, and his expert adopts it,

but in a somewhat conclusory fashion. Ms. Fields agrees with that fact. The Court thus accepts it as undisputed for purposes of this decision. The Court is not able, however, to track the language of the deeds in the record and independently arrive at the same conclusion. That could be because the record is missing evidence that would fill in some gaps or because certain deed language requires further explanation to be better understood.

4 A signed contract made in connection with the conveyances, however, indicates an intention to maintain the ROW through a process of conveyance and retention. 4 burdened by a ROW to Mr. Rubinstein’s predecessors in title without retaining any

right to a ROW, the Robinsons had no ownership of any ROW to later convey to Ms.

Fields’ predecessors in title.

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Nancy E. Fields Revocable Trust v. Rubinstein, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/nancy-e-fields-revocable-trust-v-rubinstein-vtsuperct-2020.