rappaport v. banfield

CourtVermont Superior Court
DecidedNovember 7, 2023
Docket80-2-03 wncv
StatusPublished

This text of rappaport v. banfield (rappaport v. banfield) 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
rappaport v. banfield, (Vt. Ct. App. 2023).

Opinion

Ae) Ie) Vi 447 O Cl

STATE OF VERMONT WASHINGTON COUNTY, SS.

riLeED 00 MAY-1 A 28

\

SUPERIOR COURT

———_ ) WASHINGTON COUNTY VS. ) Washington Superior Court

| ) Docket No. 80-2-03 Wncv -

LAURA BANFIELD AND )

DUANE WELLS )

ft

Findings and Conclusions Motion for Preliminary Injunction

Plaintiff Jerome Rappaport, holder of a right of first refusal ona portion of the lands’. owned by Defendant Laura Banfield, seeks to enjoin the sale of all her real estate to a prospective purchaser, Defendant Duane Wells, on the grounds that the price allocation between the two contracts for the sale of her property (portions of her holdings which are and are not ‘ subject to his right of first refusal) is unjustifiable, and deliberately and wrongfully designed to defeat his exercise of the right he holds. He seeks a preliminary injunction and court intervention-to-correct the alleged disproportionate price allocation..

This matter came before the court for hearing:on the request fora preliminary injunction on April 7,.8, and 17, 2003.: Plaintiff is represented by Michael Marks, Esq. Defendant Laura Banfield is represented by Oreste V. Valsangiacomo, Esq., and Defendant Duane Wells is represented by Bernard D. Lambek, Esq. ©

Plaintiff Jerome Rappaport is a resident of Florida, and the owner of approximately 600- 700 acres of fatmland located.in East Montpelier, Vermont, which he has acquired in various purchases starting in 1970. He is a 1949 graduate of Harvard Law School who has been a successful lawyer and real estate developer in Boston. He has maintained farming operations on his East Montpelier lands, and has cherished the time he spends in Vermont for a variety of reasons. A portion of his property is adjacent to lands and a house that was owned by Ed and Laura Banfield until Ed Banfield died some time ago, and is now owned solely by Laura Banfield. He met Ed Banfield in 1963 when he was a student working on a Masters in Public Administration at the Littauer Center (now the Kennedy School of Government) in Cambridge, Massachusetts, and Ed Banfield was his professor. A strong relationship developed, and Mr. Rappaport visited the Banfields in Vermont regularly at their second home property in East Montpelier over many years. For several years he lived in the Banfields’ Vermont house for part of each year. Mr. Rappaport and the Banfields shared a love for their properties in Vermont and held other interests in common as well as having a long term friendship. O Q)

‘Defendant Laura Banfield is a resident of New York, New York, and the present owner of the property in East Montpelier, Vermont that is the subject of this suit: She is the surviving spouse of Ed Banfield. It has become difficult for her to travel to Vermont to enjoy the property, and she wishes to sell it. The property consists of a house on a 1.8 acre parcel (Parcel 4), an adjacent 1.0 acre parcel (Parcel 3), another adjacent parcel of 25.1 acres (Parcel 2), and a fourth parcel across the road consisting of 50.4 acres (Parcel 1), for a total of 78.3 acres. The house is ‘an elegant 1790 federal house and is situated about 60-75 feet away from the boundary line of the 25.1-acre parcel. From the house one looks out over the 25.1 acre piece, which is: open land in agricultural use, toward spectacular long distance views of open land with the. Worcester range, Camel’s Hump, and other mountains in the background. There is also a pond on the 25.1 acre piece. The 50 acres across the road and on the opposite side of the house is mostly woods and there is no view in that direction. Ed and Laura Banfield spent considerable time at the property over the years.. They purchased the house parcel in 1951, the 50 acres ACTOSS the road in 1953, the one acre adjacent to the house parcel in 1955, and the 25.1 acres which _ provides the spectacular views in 1963. While the acreages and boundaries can now be identified because of a recent survey, none of the parcels were surveyed before November 2002. The property was listed in town records as consisting of 84 acres.

Defendant Duane Wells is a resident of East Montpelier, Vermont. He grew up and attended school and college in central Vermont, and liked the Banfield property from the time-he was a child, when he called it the “Captain Kidd place.” He was an elementary school principal before becoming a builderin 1975, which has been his occupation since. He met the Banfields in approximately 1980 when he did some work for them on their house. He was employed by them between 1980-and 2002 to work on their house and pond at various times. He shared with them their attachment to the property and became friends with them. He found them interesting people and enjoyed their guests. The Banfields rented their house to his present wife for a short period of time when she was in transition, and she is also fond of the property. He had expressed to the Banfields his interest in buying their property at some point.

In 1963, the: Banfields bought the 25.1 acre piece (then unsurveyed) from Alfred Knowles, a local farmer who used it for animals and crops. Mr. Knowles conveyed it to the Banfields subject to a reserved right of first refusal and agricultural easement. The conveyance . from Knowles to Banfield is dated October 31, 1963 and recorded in Volume 20 at Page 499 of the East Montpelier Land Records. The reservation of the right of first refusal is set forth in the following language:

In the event of the sale of this property by the grantees, their heirs or assigns, the grantors and their heirs and assigns are to have the first, - right to purchase said property at the highest price offered ‘to the grantees and their successors and assigns, said right to be exercised within thirty days after notice in writing of any offer to purchase.

The conveyance also reserved the following easement interest: The grantors herein for themselves and their heirs, successors and assigns, reserve the right to grow and harvest crops and to pasture cattle on the land hereby conveyed . . .The right of grantors and their

2 OQ. . ©

heirs and assigns to grow and harvest crops and to pasture cattle shall not be interpreted to prevent the erection by the grantees or their heirs or assigns of a permanent structure on the land so conveyed.

In 1969 or 1970, the Banfields learned that a real estate developer was seeking to buy the balance of the Knowles farm, adjacent to their 25.1 acres, and they approached their friend Mr. Rappaport with the opportunity to buy the Knowles farm. In a warranty deed dated March 23; 1970, and recorded in the Town of East Montpelier Land Records, Alfred W. and Pearl M. Knowles conveyed to Jerome Rappaport certain land and premises in the Town of East Montpelier adjacent to the Banfields’ lands. Included in this conveyance was the Knowles’ previously reserved right to harvest crops and pasture cattle on the land that the Banfields had bought in 1963 adjacent to their house; and the right of first refusal on the same lands. Thus, Mr. Rappaport held, and still holds, the right of first refusal on the 25.1 acre parcel, as well as the right to use that parcel to harvest crops and pasture cattle. He has done so and continues to do © so. During the 1980's, his farms were used for the breeding of cattle, and his animals fetched very high prices at auctions, although overall the farms were not profitable. He takes good care of his farmlands, and the 25.1 acres has remained open and in active agricultural use. The Banfields benefitted from Mr. Rappaport’ s ownership in that his agricultural use not only maintained the views by keeping the land open, but it maintained the agricultural character ofthe landscape surrounding their property.

Mr.

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