Pion v. Bean

2003 VT 79, 833 A.2d 1248, 176 Vt. 1, 2003 Vt. LEXIS 160
CourtSupreme Court of Vermont
DecidedAugust 29, 2003
Docket02-179
StatusPublished
Cited by50 cases

This text of 2003 VT 79 (Pion v. Bean) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Vermont primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Pion v. Bean, 2003 VT 79, 833 A.2d 1248, 176 Vt. 1, 2003 Vt. LEXIS 160 (Vt. 2003).

Opinion

Skoglund, J.

¶ 1. Plaintiffs Leita and Roland Pion appeal from the trial

court’s order in this boundary dispute and tort action. Plaintiffs contend that the trial court erred in: (1) establishing the northern boundary of defendants’ lot; (2) finding for defendants on their claims of invasion of privacy, infringement of riparian rights, and conversion; and (3) awarding compensatory and punitive damages to defendants. We affirm.

¶ 2. Plaintiffs and defendants own adjoining residential lots in St. Albans, Vermont. Plaintiffs’ lot, less than one acre in size, resembles an upside-down “u.” It surrounds defendants’ one-quarter-acre lot (B/C lot). Both parcels front Vermont Route 36 on the south; the parties dispute the northern, western, and eastern borders of the B/C lot.

¶'3. In August 2000, plaintiffs filed a complaint to quiet title. They asked the court to establish the boundaries of the B/C lot consistent with a survey they had prepared. They also sued defendants for trespass and unlawful discharge of sewage. Defendants filed counterclaims against plaintiffs, raising allegations of trespass, infringement of riparian rights, intentional infliction of emotional distress, invasion of privacy, and nuisance. Defendants requested injunctive relief, compensatory damages, punitive damages, and attorneys’ fees. Defendants later amended their counterclaim to add a claim for removal of trees from their property.

¶ 4. Following a trial by court, in a March 2002 order, the court established the boundaries of the B/C lot consistent with a survey provided by defendants, rejecting the survey submitted by plaintiffs. The court also awarded defendants compensatory and punitive damages on their conversion and invasion of privacy claims, and granted injunctive relief *4 and compensatory damages on their infringement of riparian rights claim. This appeal followed.

¶ 5. Plaintiffs argue on appeal that the trial court erred in: (1) establishing the northern boundary of the B/C lot; (2) granting injunctive relief, and awarding damages for infringement of riparian rights based on a finding that plaintiffs were responsible for groundwater appearing in defendants’ basement; (3) awarding treble damages for conversion of two trees from defendants’ property; (4) holding them liable for invasion of privacy; and (5) awarding punitive damages. Given the multiple claims of error raised, we address each issue and its underlying facts in turn.

¶ 6. We first address the parties’ boundary dispute. The facts supporting this claim are as follows. The B/C lot was created in 1949 when Mrs. Pion’s grandfather subdivided his property. The deed describes a lot bounded by four iron posts, with the following dimensions: eighty-nine feet between the southwest and northwest comer pins, sixty-nine and one-half feet between the northwest and northeast comer pins, sixty feet between the northeast and southeast comer pins, and fifty-nine and one-half feet between the southeast and southwest comer pins. According to the deed, the northwest and northeast comers of the B/C lot are located at ninety-degree angles formed by the intersection of the northern boundary with the western and eastern boundaries.

¶ 7. The original posts marking the northeast and northwest comers of the lot no longer exist, and the parties presented conflicting evidence about the posts’ location. Plaintiffs argued that their survey, prepared by Steven Brooks in April 2000, accurately depicted the lot’s northeast and northwest comers. At trial, Brooks described the method he used to ascertain the property’s northern boundary. He testified that he began his survey at a buried iron marker in the southwest comer of the lot that had been pointed out by Mr. Pion. Following the distance specified in the deed, Brooks then installed a new iron marker eighty-nine feet north of the first marker. At that point, Brooks discovered that he could not “close” the survey using the distances, courses, and specific angles found in the deed. Brooks testified that, if the northern boundary of the property were to meet the western and eastern boundaries at right angles, the distances would be incorrect; if he followed the distances in the deed, the angles would be incorrect. Consequently, following surveying conventions, Brooks let the distances called for in the deed control over the angles, and prepared his survey accordingly.

¶ 8. In support of their claimed northern boundary, defendants submitted a 1995 survey map that had been prepared for the installation of a new septic system (Benchmark survey). The survey map, drawn to scale, *5 depicts two iron pins in the northwest and northeast comers of the B/C lot. The pins identified on the Benchmark survey are farther north than those depicted in the Brooks survey. Defendants maintained that the pins identified in the Benchmark survey accurately represented the missing northwest and northeast corner pins.

¶ 9. Defendant Bean, and four prior residents of the B/C lot, testified that they had observed the pins in locations consistent with the Benchmark survey map. Bean stated that, when he purchased the B/C lot in 1998, the pins were in the same location as depicted in the Benchmark survey. Bean stated that the northeast comer pin had been located eight feet north and two to three feet east of the northeast comer of his garage.

¶ 10. Previous residents of the B/C property testified similarly. Richard Buro, who lived in the B/C house between 1965 and 1986, testified that the northeast comer pin used to be located six feet north and two feet east of the B/C garage. Douglas Larson, who lived in the B/C house between 1990 and 1994, testified that the northeast comer of the lot had been marked by an iron pin about nine feet north and three feet east of the back of the B/C garage. Deborah Larson testified that the northeast corner pin had been located about three feet east and nine feet north of the B/C garage, and the northwest comer pin had been in a brook behind the B/C house. Ann Putnam, who owned the B/C lot between 1994 and 1997, testified that the northeast comer pin had been located about nine feet north and three feet east of the northeast comer of the B/C garage. She stated that the northwest comer pin had been located in the stream bed, two to three feet west of the north-south property line that had been defined by a stone wall. Mrs. Putnam testified that the Benchmark survey accurately depicted where she perceived the B/C lot boundaries to be.

¶ 11. In 1999, plaintiffs filled in the streambed behind the B/C house, and installed a culvert. Bean, Mrs. Putnam, and other prior residents of the B/C lot testified that the pins they had previously observed were missing when they visited the B/C lot in May 2000.

¶ 12. Based on this and other evidence presented at trial, the court established the B/C lot’s boundaries. The court concluded that the iron pins shown in the Benchmark survey were the original artificial monuments installed at the creation of the B/C lot, and that plaintiffs had removed these markers when they filled in the streambed. The court found the Benchmark survey’s depiction of the pins’ location consistent with testimony from defendants and prior owners of the B/C lot. The court therefore established the northern boundary of the B/C property as *6

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

Related

Fitzgerald v. Brady
Vermont Superior Court, 2026
Steinhausen v. Turner
Vermont Superior Court, 2025
Pinders v. Agency Educ
Vermont Superior Court, 2025
Rodriguez v. Philadelphia Indemnity
Vermont Superior Court, 2025
State v. Timothy Davis
Supreme Court of Vermont, 2024
schmidt v. ess
Vermont Superior Court, 2024
gates v. mack molding
Vermont Superior Court, 2024
Teitlebaum v. O'Neil
D. Vermont, 2024
Gennette v. Peacock
D. Vermont, 2021
State v. Philip M. Tetreault
2017 VT 119 (Supreme Court of Vermont, 2017)
Couture v. Holt
Vermont Superior Court, 2017
State v. Brian Kendall
Supreme Court of Vermont, 2016
Post and Beam Equity Group, LLC and Post and Beam of Mt. Snow, LLC
199 Vt. 313 (Supreme Court of Vermont, 2015)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
2003 VT 79, 833 A.2d 1248, 176 Vt. 1, 2003 Vt. LEXIS 160, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/pion-v-bean-vt-2003.