Pettee v. Young

2001 ME 156, 783 A.2d 637, 2001 Me. LEXIS 159
CourtSupreme Judicial Court of Maine
DecidedNovember 9, 2001
StatusPublished
Cited by26 cases

This text of 2001 ME 156 (Pettee v. Young) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Judicial Court of Maine primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Pettee v. Young, 2001 ME 156, 783 A.2d 637, 2001 Me. LEXIS 159 (Me. 2001).

Opinion

RUDMAN, J.

[¶ 1] Maynard Pettee appeals from a judgment entered in the Superior Court (Hancock County, Hjelm, J.), affirming a judgment of the District Court (Bar Harbor, Gunther, J.) in Pettee’s action against Young. 1 The District Court found the deed from Young to Pettee to be ambiguous. We disagree and vacate the judgment in part.

I.

[¶2] Young and Pettee own adjoining properties in the Seal Harbor Village section of the town of Mt. Desert. Pettee has two buildings on his property. One is a finished cottage with full utilities and the other is an unfinished “carpenter’s shop” without utilities. The first cottage has a sewer line that traveled through Young’s property (including through the basement of her residence) to the main sewer line on Jordan Pond Road. The easement was not of record, but was undisputed.

[¶8] Pettee regularly rented the first cottage during the summer months, and periodically stayed there himself. He decided to renovate the carpenter’s shop and add utilities so that he could begin renting it. The applicable zoning ordinance did not allow more than one residential budding on the property, but it would allow a single building with more than one residential unit. 2 Pettee sought .to solve his problem by building a “connector” between the cottage and the outbuilding so that they would be one building with two units. In order to obtain a permit to rent the building, however, Pettee still needed to install a new sewer line from the carpenter’s shop to the main street. Accordingly, Pettee had his attorney draft an easement deed, which provided, in pertinent part:

Be it known by these men present, that We, Ralph Young and Louine Young ... for One Dollar and other valuable consideration, do grant to Maynard L. Pettee and Karen K. Pettee (The Pettees) ... as joint tenants, their *639 heirs and assigns, an easement across our land on the easterly side of the Jordan Pond Road at Seal Harbor in the Town of Mount Desert, County of Hancock and State of Maine (Our land) for the purposes of i) extending overhead lines of lines of [sic] communication and electricity across Our Land from land owned by The Pettees easterly of Our Land to the public utility lines in the Jordan Pond Road and ii) laying and maintaining underground lines of sewer pipe across Our Land from land owned by The Pettees to the public sewer in the Jordan Pond Road.
The easement hereby granted is to confirm a prior easement which we granted The Pettees and to grant to The Pettees, their heirs and assigns, the right to make such adjustments and additions to the location of the overhead Unes and underground pipes as they deem necessary to properly serve the land owned by The Pettees.
The Pettees, for themselves, their heirs and assigns, agree that, upon completion of and laying or maintaining of the underground line or lines which may have disturbed the surface of the earth, they will restore the grade of the earth to that which it was prior to the work undertaken.

The deed as proposed was signed by Young 3 and delivered to Pettee. 4

[¶4] Pettee began renovating the carpenter’s shop in the summer of 1996. Young became aware that he was renovating the shop in 1997. She became concerned about and agitated with the traffic that the construction project was creating. Young first took the matter to the Town’s Zoning Board, which sided with Pettee. Young appealed that decision to the Superior Court, which affirmed the Zoning Board’s decision in April 1998.

[¶ 5] In May 1998 Pettee informed Young that he was going to install the new sewer pipe through her property. Young contacted her son, Nathan Young, who was the chief of the nearby Bar Harbor Police Department, and asked him to call the Mount Desert Police Department. Nathan called Sergeant Arthur Lawrence, and Lawrence paid Pettee a visit as a result. Lawrence reported that Pettee was cooperative, and as a result of the visit from Lawrence, Pettee ceased all construction activities. After a final unsuccessful attempt to persuade Young to voluntarily allow him to install the sewer line, he instituted this litigation.

[¶ 6] The District Court found the easement deed to be ambiguous and accordingly considered extrinsic evidence of the parties’ intent. The court concluded that Young had intended only to confirm the already-existing rights of the Pettees, not to give them new rights to lay additional pipes or relocate the present pipe. The court interpreted the language in the deed that referred to the laying of new pipes to allow Pettee to do what was necessary to repair or replace the pipe if it failed or needed to be replaced for some other compelling reason. Thus, the District Court entered a declaratory judgment that the deed described an easement over the present course of the sewer line and forbade Pettee from moving or expanding the line unless relocation was the only solution for some failure in the line, and also entered judgment in favor of Young on slander of title and punitive damages counts.

[¶7] Pettee filed an appeal with the Superior Court, which affirmed the Dis- *640 triet Court’s decisions on all three counts. We affirm in part and vacate in part.

II.

[¶ 8] The construction of a deed is a question of law that we review de novo. Bennett v. Tracy, 1999 ME 165, ¶ 7, 740 A.2d 571, 573. A court construing the language in a deed must give the words their “general and ordinary” meaning, Rhoda v. Fitzpatrick, 655 A.2d 357, 360 (Me.1995), and must first attempt to construe the language of the deed by looking only within the “four corners” of the instrument. Rancourt v. Town of Glenburn, 635 A.2d 964, 965 (Me.1993). If the language of the deed is unambiguous, then the court must construe the deed without considering extrinsic evidence of the intent of the parties. Id. If the deed is ambiguous, then the court may admit extrinsic evidence of the parties’ intent. Northern Utils., Inc. v. City of S. Portland, 536 A.2d 1116, 1117 (Me.1988).

[¶ 9] The District Court concluded that the deed language was ambiguous for three reasons: (1) there was tension between the language indicating that the deed “confírm[ed] a prior easement” and the language in the same sentence that granted Pettee new rights, (2) the location of the easement was not stated with particularity, and (3) the phrase “adjustments and additions” was modestly worded. The reasoning of the District Court is unpersuasive and does not survive a careful parsing of the language of the deed.

[¶ 10] Although the District Court did not err in determining that the deed in question confirms the existing easement, we conclude that the deed also grants additional rights.

Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI

Related

Kinderhaus North LLC v. Karl Nicols
2024 ME 34 (Supreme Judicial Court of Maine, 2024)
Plummer v. Edwards
Maine Superior, 2018
Charles D. Wardwell v. John R. Duggins
2016 ME 55 (Supreme Judicial Court of Maine, 2016)
Clark v. Leblanc
Maine Superior, 2013
Seacoast RV, Inc. v. Sawdran, LLC
2013 ME 6 (Supreme Judicial Court of Maine, 2013)
Stanton v. Strong
2012 ME 48 (Supreme Judicial Court of Maine, 2012)
Roux v. Gammon
Maine Superior, 2011
Connors v. Kennison
Maine Superior, 2010
Flaherty v. Muther
Maine Superior, 2009
Silsby v. Belch
2008 ME 104 (Supreme Judicial Court of Maine, 2008)
NORTH SEBAGO SHORES, LLC v. Mazzaglia
2007 ME 81 (Supreme Judicial Court of Maine, 2007)
Nightingale v. Myshrall
Maine Superior, 2007

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
2001 ME 156, 783 A.2d 637, 2001 Me. LEXIS 159, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/pettee-v-young-me-2001.