Rock of Ages Corp. v. Bernier

CourtVermont Superior Court
DecidedApril 22, 2015
Docket68
StatusPublished

This text of Rock of Ages Corp. v. Bernier (Rock of Ages Corp. v. Bernier) 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
Rock of Ages Corp. v. Bernier, (Vt. Ct. App. 2015).

Opinion

Rock of Ages Corp. v. Bernier, No. 68-2-14 Wncv (Teachout, J., April 22, 2015)

[The text of this Vermont trial court opinion is unofficial. It has been reformatted from the original. The accuracy of the text and the accompanying data included in the Vermont trial court opinion database is not guaranteed.] STATE OF VERMONT

SUPERIOR COURT CIVIL DIVISION Washington Unit Docket No. 68-2-14 Wncv

ROCK OF AGES CORPORATION and NORTH EAST MATERIALS GROUP, LLC Plaintiffs

v.

LORI BERNIER AND MARC BERNIER Defendants

DECISION Defendants’ Motion for Summary Judgment, and Defendants’ Motion to Strike

Oral argument was heard on the above motions on February 17, 2015. Plaintiffs were represented by Attorney Alan P. Biederman. Defendants were represented by Attorney Daniel P. Richardson.

Defendants Lori and Marc Bernier own residential property in Barre Town. A provision in their deed prohibits them from deeming Plaintiff Rock of Ages’ industrial and quarrying pursuits “a hindrance or nuisance to their possession and enjoyment” of their land. In the complaint, Rock of Ages1 claimed that the Berniers are in violation of this deed restriction by complaining about noise, dust, and truck traffic to “various authorities,” including the Town of Barre, the State of Vermont, and bodies conducting permit proceedings related to Rock of Ages’ operations. Based on the alleged violations, Rock of Ages filed suit seeking a declaration of the parties’ respective rights and obligations under the deed provision. It also sought compensatory damages for the violations alleged, and injunctive relief to prevent further such violations.

The Berniers responded with a counterclaim also seeking declaratory relief on the scope and validity of the deed provision. In addition they claim that the complaint is an improper attempt by Rock of Ages to chill their rights to free speech and public participation, and that as such it is both an abuse of process and a violation of 12 V.S.A. § 1041, Vermont’s anti-SLAPP (Strategic Lawsuit Against Public Participation) statute. They also claim slander of title. They seek declaratory and injunctive relief, compensatory and special damages, and attorney fees.

The Berniers filed a Motion for Summary Judgment on the meaning of the deed provision and a Motion to Strike the complaint as a SLAPP suit. By the time of the oral argument on these

1 Plaintiff North East Materials Group is Rock of Ages’ lessee. It conducts or anticipates conducting certain quarrying and industrial activities, operates an asphalt plant, and crushes waste rock. For purposes of this decision, there is no need to distinguish between Plaintiffs. For ease of reference, the court will refer to Rock of Ages alone. motions, the case had evolved. At the hearing, Rock of Ages limited its claim to one seeking declaratory relief on the scope of the deed provision and clarified that it is no longer seeking compensatory damages. The Berniers accepted that the complaint—so limited—is not a SLAPP suit within the contemplation of 12 V.S.A. § 1041. They argued, however, that up until the hearing, the complaint was not so limited.

Subsequent to the oral argument, Plaintiff has filed a Motion to Amend Complaint, seeking to formally amend the complaint to one for declaratory and injunctive relief only. The time for response has not yet ended. The filing of the Motion to Amend does not change the need for legal ruling on the pending motions.

The deed provision

In this suit, both parties seek a declaration of the meaning of the deed language at the heart of this case. The Berniers argue that the provision embeds into the chain of title a binding version of the “coming-to-the-nuisance” doctrine: that someone who purchases real estate knowing that it may be affected by activities of a neighboring owner that could be the basis of a nuisance claim cannot thereafter assert a valid nuisance claim. See Restatement (Second) of Torts § 840D (“The fact that the plaintiff has acquired or improved his land after a nuisance interfering with it has come into existence is not in itself sufficient to bar his action, but it is a factor to be considered in determining whether the nuisance is actionable.”). The Berniers claim that the provision means only that they are barred from private claims against Rock of Ages sounding in nuisance. Rock of Ages contends that the provision prohibits the Berniers from engaging in a range of activities broader than simply asserting a private cause of action for nuisance, although Rock of Ages no longer contends that it prevents them from participating in public permitting proceedings.

The provision itself reads as follows:

By acceptance of this deed, [1] the Grantees acknowledge that they are familiar with the quarrying and industrial operations of the Grantor and [2] take title to this property with reservation on the part of the Grantor and its successors and assigns that it will continue and may enlarge its quarrying and industrial activities on its remaining lands in the vicinity of the land and premises described above, and [3] that such activities shall not be deemed by the Grantees or their successors and assigns, a hindrance or nuisance to their possession and enjoyment of the land and premises as described above.

Construction of the paragraph shows three operative statements: (1) Grantees acknowledge that they know about Rock of Ages’ quarrying and industrial operations; (2) Grantees take title subject to an interest reserved by Rock of Ages for itself and its successors and assigns as owners of nearby property; and (3) Grantees agree for themselves and their successors and assigns not to “deem” existing or enlarged quarrying and industrial activities a hindrance or nuisance with respect to the purchased property.

2 The first clause appears to be a predicate for application of the “coming to the nuisance doctrine”: it sets the stage for Rock of Ages to show that no grantee would have a basis for asserting a nuisance claim for the identified activities because of their knowledge in “coming to” any nuisance resulting from quarrying and industrial operations. This statement does not by itself create any particular rights or obligations on the part of any party, but is merely a statement.

The second clause utilizes the language of property conveyancing: it reserves from the conveyance a property interest in the parcel conveyed, and identifies the property that carries the benefit of the reserved right as well as the fact that the reserved right runs with the land to benefit Rock of Ages’ successors and assigns. The interest reserved is not an ownership interest, but an easement: the right to affect Grantees’ property by imposing on it effects from quarrying and industrial operations, which might include such effects as noise, dust, traffic, and the like.

The third clause utilizes the language of contract: the Grantees agree to give up a right that they would otherwise have. It is a right related to their use and enjoyment of the purchased property, and they agree to give it up for themselves and their successors and assigns. This is the language of contract, but because the right is given up not only for the Grantees personally but also on behalf of their successors and assigns, it is a covenant obligation that runs with the land.

The issue in the case is, what is the right that is given up in the covenant? The right is defined as “deeming” quarrying and industrial activities (then existing and to be expanded) “a hindrance or nuisance to their possession and enjoyment of the land.”

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
Rock of Ages Corp. v. Bernier, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/rock-of-ages-corp-v-bernier-vtsuperct-2015.