Rittersdorf v. Whiffen

CourtSuperior Court of Maine
DecidedAugust 31, 2001
DocketKNOre-00-007
StatusUnpublished

This text of Rittersdorf v. Whiffen (Rittersdorf v. Whiffen) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Superior Court of Maine primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Rittersdorf v. Whiffen, (Me. Super. Ct. 2001).

Opinion

. vate

STATE OF MAINE anox. 8.5,, Clerks Office

SUPERIOR COURT STATE OF MAINE SUPERIOR COURT AUG 31 200) CIVIL ACTION KNOX, ss. DOCKET NO. RE-00-007 JRA~KNO- 6/21 [200] RECEIVED AND FILED

GERALD L. RITTERSDORF §yshn Guillette, Clerk PATRICIA L. RITTERSDOREF,

Plaintiffs

V. DECISION AND ORDER

JONATHAN D. WHIFFEN and DARLENE WHIFFEN,

Defendants and

JOSEPH SUTTON and MAINE STATE HOUSING AUTHORITY,

Parties-in-Interest

I. Introduction.

This matter is essentially a dispute over the location of the common boundary between two lots in Rockland which are owned by the plaintiffs, the Rittersdorfs, and the defendants, the Whiffens. The parties-in-interest are mortgagees of the defendants and have taken no active role in this litigation.

The plaintiffs seek to establish the boundary they favor in the traditional way by asking the court for a declaratory judgment establishing the location of the line via count I of their complaint.

In counts I and III they also promote adverse possession theories to support the claim that they are entitled to the property within the boundary line they cite.

In count IV, they assert an alternative theory of law that the boundary they

espouse has been established by acquiescence or agreement. In count V they plead a cause of action in trespass which complains that defendant Jonathan Whiffen entered on their property to place posts marking the line - he favors.

In another count labeled V, the plaintiffs assert that the defendants are maintaining a nuisance by operating an auto repair facility on their property in violation of Rockland's zoning ordinance.

For their part, the defendants have answered and filed a counterclaim in five counts. In count I they allege that the plaintiffs are trespassing on their property by their location of a fence on the land the defendants claim. As a result, they seek injunctive relief, namely the removal of the fence.

In count I, they reallege the trespass claim and ask for damages, including punitive damages, because they say the trespass is intentional.

The three remaining counts alleging common law adverse possession, statutory adverse possession, and boundary by acquiescence were abandoned at trial.

A two-day nonjury trial was conducted, the parties have submitted post-hearing proposed findings of fact and conclusions of law, and the case is in order for disposition. Il. Discussion.

The Rittersdorfs and the Whiffens are next door neighbors who have adjoining lots on Birch Street in Rockland. The Rittersdorfs are at number 7 Birch Street, the Whiffens at 99 Cedar Street -- the latter reflects a Cedar Street address because the Whiffens' property is the corner lot where Cedar meets Birch Street.

The Rittersdorfs purchased their property in 1981 from Ellen Cummings. That year they erected a stockade fence for which they received a permit from the City of

Rockland. The fence runs along the westerly side of their lot from a utility pole by the street to a stake at the rear, southwest corner of the lot. These two points, the utility pole and the stake, had been pointed out as the ends of this westerly line to the | Rittersdorfs by Ellen Cummings.

The Whiffens bought the lot next to, and westerly of, the Rittersdorfs, from Joseph Sutton in 1992. Thereafter, a previous owner of the lot, John Sanford, told Jonathan Whiffen that the Rittersdorf fence was on his, Whiffen's, property. As a result, Jonathan Whiffen made a variety of efforts to measure his frontage along Birch Street to see if the Rittersdorf fence encroached on his property.

Because his deed told him he had 130 feet along Birch Street, he measured that distance in a variety of ways from the intersection of Cedar and Birch, and found that these measurements put his line easterly of the Rittersdorf fence, convincing him that the fence was on the Whiffen's property. When he got no satisfaction from Gerald Rittersdorf as to his claim that the fence encroached on the Whiffen's lot, he retained a surveyor, Joseph LaBranche. LaBranche confirmed Whiffen's contentions and produced a survey, defendant's exhibit 2, which showed that the Whiffen's lot had 130 feet of frontage on Birch Street, running from a pipe at its intersection with Cedar Street to a point 8.6 feet easterly of and beyond the Rittersdorf fence. LaBranche also found a flat bar deep in the ground a short distance beyond his measurement of 130 feet. From this LaBranche and Whiffen concluded that the Whiffen property ended east of the Rittersdorfs' fence and that their fence intruded into the Whiffen's property by 8.6 feet.!

Jonathan Whiffen gave Gerald Rittersdorf a copy of the LaBranche survey but

was still unsuccessful in convincing his neighbor as to the merits of his claim. Perhaps

1 The contention between the parties as to the differences in the lines they assert are proper is 9.6 feet rather than 8.6 feet. The one foot difference is due to the Rittersdorfs' contention that they own another foot to the west of their fence.

Oo as a result, Whiffen obtained a permit from the City of Rockland to erect a fence easterly of the Rittersdorf fence. Consistent with the issuance of that permit, he installed at least two posts near the line he claims, and east of the fence, with the result that these structures were on lawn the Rittersdorfs claim and blocking a truck and boat they kept there from access to Birch Street.

In the meantime, the Rittersdorfs retained a surveyor, Nathaniel Beal, who confirmed their version of where the line is sited, and also determined that the Whiffen frontage on Birch Street was 120 feet, not the 130 feet reflected in the Whiffens' deed. Persuaded by Beal's analysis, this court (Mead, C.J.), issued a preliminary injunction barring the defendants from entering on the plaintiffs' property which the court found to be bounded on the west as surveyor Beal had asserted. Accordingly, the posts erected by the Whiffens were found to be on the plaintiffs’ property and were, presumably, removed by them until this dispute could be finally resolved.

As this exposition suggests, the question presented by the parties’ dispute is a simple one -- is the Whiffen's line along Birch Street 130 feet as they claim, or is it 120 feet as the plaintiffs assert? If the latter, then the Rittersdorf fence is properly placed; if the former, then it is not, and the Whiffens’ lot is larger than earlier believed. While the question is a simple one, reaching the proper answer is a more complex undertaking. -

In this regard the court finds the analysis of surveyor Nathaniel Beal persuasive and his testimony credible as to the proper measurements of these lots.

He found, as does this court, that the legal source for the existence of these lots was the deed of partition of the Estate of Nancy Perry. She owned a parcel of property in Rockland which now encompasses these lots. At her death, circa 1863, the Probate

Court appointed commissioners to divide her property up so that it could be distributed to her heirs. The commissioners did as they were asked, and a deed of partition was created dividing this particular tract into eight lots. Each lot was given .- appropriate measurements, and the court concludes, as did surveyor Beal, that the plan created by O.H. Tripp in July, 1931, plaintiffs’ exhibit 6, properly describes these eight lots, and therefore the lots which ultimately became, in part, the lots of the parties.

More specifically, the lot conveyed by this partition to Sophia C.

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