Pender v. Matranga, No. 31 91 29 (Sep. 24, 1998)

1998 Conn. Super. Ct. 10826
CourtConnecticut Superior Court
DecidedSeptember 24, 1998
DocketNo. 31 91 29
StatusUnpublished

This text of 1998 Conn. Super. Ct. 10826 (Pender v. Matranga, No. 31 91 29 (Sep. 24, 1998)) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Connecticut Superior Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Pender v. Matranga, No. 31 91 29 (Sep. 24, 1998), 1998 Conn. Super. Ct. 10826 (Colo. Ct. App. 1998).

Opinion

[EDITOR'S NOTE: This case is unpublished as indicated by the issuing court.]

MEMORANDUM OF DECISION
The plaintiffs, John Pender, Mary Pender, Nancy Simmons and Dorothy Kemp, instituted this action against the defendants, Joseph Matranga, Christina Matranga and Chris Wallace, returnable December 27, 1994.

John and Mary Pender are the owners of Lots 6A and 7 as shown on a certain map entitled "MAP SHOWING SUBDIVISION OF PROPERTY OF BURTON F. SHERWOOD LOCATED ON THE WEST SHORE OF LAKE CANDLEWOOD IN THE TOWN OF NEW FAIRFELD[,] FAIRFIELD COUNTY CONNECTICUT" prepared and certified substantially correct by Sydney A. Rapp. CT Page 10827 (Exhibit 5.)

Exhibit 5 was recorded in the office of the Town Clerk of New Fairfield as record map #441, on December 7, 1953.

The plaintiffs, Nancy Simmons and Dorothy Kemp, are the successors in title of Louise F. Taylor, one of the signatories to a certain agreement dated October 23, 1944, recorded in the land records of the Town of New Fairfield both at Vol. 29 p. 159, and Vol. 38 p. 523 (Exhibit 4).

The defendants, Joseph Matranga and Christina Matranga, own Lot 6 as shown on Exhibit 5, a 10 acre parcel which overlooks Candlewood Lake. They have indicated plans to construct a dwelling on the parcel.

The defendant, Chris Wallace, constructed a road on behalf of the Matrangas, which bisects the property owned by the plaintiffs, John and Mary Pender.

The Penders bring this action seeking to enjoin the Matrangas from using and/or improving a roadway which runs through the rear of their property, thus providing access to Lot 6.

The Matrangas filed an answer to the complaint on December 16, 1996, including four special defenses.

The plaintiffs' reply pleading, dated December 18, 1996, admitted that the defendants have "the right to pass and repass over a right of way traversing their [Penders'] property," but denied that the defendants have a right to construct, maintain or use the road on their property.

The defendants claim an express easement through the record map, agreement (Exhibits 5 and 4), and deeds to the property.

They also claim an easement of necessity and an easement by implication over the land of John and Mary Pender, Lots 6A and 7 on the Rapp Map (Exhibit 5).

Although both the Penders and the plaintiffs, Nancy Simmons and Dorothy Kemp, seek money damages in their complaint, no evidence of money damages was presented at trial by any of the plaintiffs, and the claim was abandoned by counsel during the trial (Tr. p. 100). CT Page 10828

Nancy Simmons and Dorothy Kemp, as successors in title to Louise F. Taylor, seek to enjoin construction of a dwelling on Lot 6 by the Matrangas.

On August 9, 1995, the Honorable Morton I. Riefberg, after hearing, issued a temporary injunction in favor of the plaintiffs, enjoining the defendants from "performing any and all acts outside an area [four feet] . . . from either side of the center line of the right-of-way," located on the Pender property.

The injunction also applied to a companion case, McEachern v.Matranga, Docket No. 319038.

Trial was held on July 9, 1998 and July 17, 1998.

Before addressing the particular facts of this case, it is necessary to review the history of the area, with particular reference to record map #441 (Exhibit 5) and the agreement, dated October 23, 1944, between Burton F. Sherwood, the common grantor, and a group of landowners referred to as the Kellogg Point Residents (Exhibit 4).

The Penders and Matrangas both trace title to their property to a common grantor, Burton F. Sherwood.

The "Rapp Map" (Exhibit 5) was prepared for Burton F. Sherwood and recorded on December 7, 1953.

The map shows properties of various "Kellogg Point Residents" many of whom are also signatories to an agreement between Burton F. Sherwood and the Kellogg Point Residents dated October 23, 1944 (Exhibit 4). The agreement is recorded in two places in the New Fairfield land records.

The map identifies a "Wood Road" with parallel dotted lines, beginning at a location where it joins an existing private road.

Wood Road runs through Lots 6A and 7, currently owned by John and Mary Pender, and ends at Lot 6, the 10 acre parcel owned by the Matrangas.

David L. Ryan, a licensed land surveyor called by the defendants as an expert witness, explained that double dotted lines on a map designate a traveled way or road, while a single CT Page 10829 dotted line indicates a path (Tr. p. 103).

Although testifying that he observed the road to be between 7 and 10 feet wide in 1991, when he drove up the road in a S-10 Blazer, Ryan testified that the road, as it bisects the Pender property, scales to 8 feet wide, according to the Rapp Map (Tr. p. 115).

Ryan also examined the agreement with the Kellogg Point Residents (Exhibit 4), and compared that agreement with the map.

Exhibit 4 contains a paragraph "SECOND," which gave to Burton S. Sherwood "the right to pass and repass for all purposes whatsoever over the existing roadway 14 feet in width from a point marking the common bound of land of the Estate of Stanley T. Kellogg, land formerly of Rosalind D. Martel, now of said Sherwood, and the 440 foot contour line of The Connecticut Light Power Company's Rocky River Datum, over and across land of the Kellogg Point Residents to a point on land of Louise F. Taylor, and thence in a Northerly direction in a course marked by iron pipes to other land of said Sherwood at a point approximately 100 feet Southerly of land of Neil G. Hayes."

In the opinion of Ryan, the road referred to in the paragraph is the Wood Road on the Rapp Map.

While conducting field work, the surveyor located an iron pipe at a location where the Wood Road begins a generally Northerly path toward Lot 6 (Tr. p. 100).

Ryan also stated that the land referred to in the fifth paragraph of Exhibit 4, land "Northerly and Northwesterly of land of Helen O. Hegeman," is the land designated Lot 6 on the Rapp Map.

The deed from Burton F. Sherwood to David A. Laveson (Exhibit 1), which conveyed Lot 7 and Lot 6A on the Rapp Map, made specific reference to the covenants and restrictions in Exhibit 4.

The plaintiffs, John and Mary Pender, took title to the property by way of an Executor's Deed (Exhibit 2), and mortgaged the property in 1971 (Exhibit 3). In both the Executor's Deed and the mortgage instrument, the covenants and restrictions are mentioned. CT Page 10830

There is no question that the plaintiffs, John and Mary Pender, took title to their property subject to the covenants in Exhibit 4.

It is equally clear that the defendants, Joseph and Christina Matranga, are the successors of Burton F. Sherwood (Exhibits A, B and C).

The Matrangas claim an express easement giving them the right to pass over the Pender property, based upon the 1953 Rapp Map (Exhibit 5) and covenants in the 1944 agreement between Burton F. Sherwood and the Kellogg Point Residents (Exhibit 4).

The Penders contend that Wood Road is a mere foot path, and cannot be expanded or improved to accommodate vehicular traffic.

The testimony at trial was contradictory and mostly anecdotal.

Witnesses testified that the "Wood Road" was a foot path both before and after the recording of the 1953 map.

Others testified that the road was wide enough to accommodate automobile travel before the defendant, Chris Wallace, began building the road on behalf of the Matrangas.

Having abandoned any claim for money damages, the plaintiffs seek a declaratory judgment determining the width of Wood Road through the Pender property.

They also seek to restrain the defendants from trespassing upon and damaging their property.

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Bluebook (online)
1998 Conn. Super. Ct. 10826, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/pender-v-matranga-no-31-91-29-sep-24-1998-connsuperct-1998.