Romesburg v. Perkins

CourtSuperior Court of Maine
DecidedOctober 2, 2019
DocketPENre-17-00034
StatusUnpublished

This text of Romesburg v. Perkins (Romesburg v. Perkins) 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
Romesburg v. Perkins, (Me. Super. Ct. 2019).

Opinion

STATE OF MAINE SUPERIOR COURT PENOBSCOT, ss. DKT. NO. PENSC-RE-2017-34

RICHARD W. ROMESBURG, SR. and ) ANDREA L. ROMESBURG, ) ) Plaintiffs/ Counterclaim Defendants, ) ) V. ) ORDER ) MATTHEWJ. PERI

Hearing was concluded on the parties' complaint and counterclaims on May 17,

2019. The plaintiffs were present and represented by counsel, Jeremy Marden, Esq., while

the defendants were present and represented by counsel, Donald Brown, Esq. In the

complaint, plaintiffs allege statutory and common law nuisance, and statutory and

common law trespass. They have also brought a declaratory judgment count, asking the

Court to resolve their boundary dispute with the defendants. The defendants have

counterclaimed, alleging abuse of process, negligent and intentional infliction of

emotional distress, and intentional trespass. They also ask the Court to assess punitive

damages.

BACKGROUND

The Perkinses have owned a camp on Pushaw Lake since 2012. In 2016, the

Romesburgs bought the camp to the north. Minor disputes soon arose between the

parties over snow plowing and the placement of debris. In the winter of 2017, the

Romesburgs' son and some of his friends had disagreements with Mr. Perkins about their

placement of ice fishing traps in front of his camp. After one incident in which Romesburg

Jr. pointed a hand gun at Mr. Perkins after Perkins had pulled a Romesburg trap out of

its hole, the Romesburg-Perkins relationship became extremely adversarial. Following

1 this, Romesburg Jr. and guests engaged in harassing behaviors toward Mr. and Ms.

Perkins including making lewd gestures, yelling obscenities, and giving them the finger.

The Perkinses dealt with this provocation by installing a fence on the boundary line

between the two properties. The Romesburgs claim that this fence was built on their land

because the Perkinses are mistaken about the location of the common boundary, hence

the filing of the complaint for declaratory judgment.

ANALYSIS

A. Complaint

1. Declaratory Judgment

The first task for the Court is to locate the common boundary because the

plaintiffs' success in asserting some of the other counts rises and falls on the location of

the common boundary. The parties' surveyors have contrasting views on the location of

the boundary and provided somewhat complicated testimony in support of each opinion.

They fundamentally disagree only on the location on the earth of one common corner of

the parties' deed descriptions, the Romesburgs' southwest corner which is Perkinses'

northwest corner; otherwise their conclusions are consistent. Because of this, the

boundary dispute can be resolved by the Court's decision on the location of this corner.

The Romesburgs' property abuts the Perkinses' property to the north and they

share an east-west boundary line. The lake is directly to the west of both properties and

an easement used as a camp road runs between the lake and the west line of the

properties. The exact location of the common boundary is dependent on locating its

western end. The surveyors agree on the basic length and direction of the common

boundary from that point to the east, but, of course, its location is dependent on where it

starts. If the opinion of the plaintiffs' surveyor is correct, the Perkinses' fence is located

2 on the Romesburgs' property. If the opinion of the defendants' surveyor is correct,

however, the fence is placed exactly on the line.

When the defendants decided to install a fence, they were guided by a 2012 survey

in locating it. This so-called "Rice survey" placed their northwest corner on the edge of

the camp road. In 2017, the Romesburgs commissioned Allan Gordon to survey their

property and he determined that Rice's version of the common boundary was inaccurate,

and that the line was actually located a few feet to the south and several feet to the east

of the boundary Rice established. The relevant description from the Romesburgs' deed

is: "commencing at a stake on the easterly side of a right of way which follows the shore

of Pushaw Lake, and which said stake also marks the northwest corner of land heretofore

conveyed to Willis Osgood; thence from said point of beginning and in a northerly

direction along the easterly side of said right of way 75 feet to a point marked by a stake,

said stake being located 32 feet at right angles from the highwater mark of Pushaw Lake."

The relevant description from the Perkinses' deed indicates that its southwest corner is

marked by an iron pin, "said pin being thirty-five (35) feet from the high water mark of

Pushaw Lake and on the easterly side of a way," then to the east, then north, then west

back toward the lake to "the easterly side of the way, [this is the Romesburgs' southwest

corner], thence southerly by and along said way seventy-five (75), more or less, to an iron

pin and point of beginning."

A resolution of the difference between the opinions of McNally, the defendants'

expert who supports the Rice survey, and Gordon, who places the common boundary a

few feet to the south of the Rice-McNally version of the line, is controlled by locating the

proper high water mark of Pushaw Lake. Gordon uses the present high water mark, while

McNally uses the high water mark which would have been in existence at the time the

deed descriptions were formulated, before the installation of a dam which is now in place.

3 By using the former (lower) high water mark, the 32- and 35-foot measurements are taken

from a point that is now submerged, rather than from the present shore. This yields an

eastern boundary that is actually on the edge of the camp road, consistent with the

phrases found in the descriptions, "commencing at a stake on the easterly side of a right

of way" and "along the easterly side of said right of way" (Romesburg) as well as "said

pin being ... on the easterly side of a way" (Perkins) and "southerly by and along said

way." Gordon's opinion yields a strip of land between the eastern edge' of the way and

the western edge of the Romesburgs' and Perkinses' respective properties. '

Because the deeds refer to the high water mark of the lake at a time before dam

construction, the Court must use its location at that time in determining boundary

locations. Additionally, using the older high water mark yields a western boundary that

is consistent with other deed description referring to that boundary and is consistent with

the beliefs held by prior owners concerning the location of this line. The common

boundary between these parties is as depicted in the Rice survey

2. Nuisance Claims

The focus of plaintiffs' common law and statutory nuisance claims is the fence. "A

private nuisance consists in a use of one's own property in such a manner as to cause

injury to the property, or other right, or interest of another." Johnston v. Me. Energy

Recovery Co., Ltd. P'ship, 2010 ME 52, 'I[ 15, 997 A.2d 741. The elements of a nuisance claim

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