Stephen and Margaret Conant v. Chris Khamnei

CourtSupreme Court of Vermont
DecidedAugust 12, 2015
Docket2015-130
StatusUnpublished

This text of Stephen and Margaret Conant v. Chris Khamnei (Stephen and Margaret Conant v. Chris Khamnei) 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
Stephen and Margaret Conant v. Chris Khamnei, (Vt. 2015).

Opinion

Note: Decisions of a three-justice panel are not to be considered as precedent before any tribunal.

ENTRY ORDER

SUPREME COURT DOCKET NO. 2015-130

AUGUST TERM, 2015

Stephen and Margaret Conant } APPEALED FROM: } } Superior Court, Chittenden Unit, v. } Civil Division } } Chris Khamnei } DOCKET NO. 685-6-12 Cncv

Trial Judge: Dennis R. Pearson

In the above-entitled cause, the Clerk will enter:

Defendant in this boundary dispute between adjoining landowners appeals pro se from a superior court judgment in favor of plaintiffs. Defendant contends the court erred in: (1) denying a motion to amend; (2) finding plaintiffs’ survey to be accurate; (3) concluding that defendant had trespassed on plaintiffs’ property; (4) disregarding defendant’s measurements of the property; and (5) constraining the independent surveyor appointed by the court as a special master. We affirm.

Plaintiffs and defendant own adjoining properties on St. Paul Street in the City of Burlington. Both parties also own adjacent properties on Pine Street to the rear of the St. Paul Street properties. Plaintiffs’ St. Paul Street property, which is vacant, lies just to the south of defendant’s property, which contains a multi-unit residential building. In June 2012, plaintiffs filed a complaint against defendant for declaratory and injunctive relief, seeking a declaration as to the parties’ relative rights to a driveway lying between their St. Paul Street properties, and an order allowing them to remove a line of wooden posts located in the driveway on what they claimed was their side of the property. Plaintiffs also sought damages for defendant’s alleged trespass by parking, dumping snow, and—as later shown at trial—re-grading and dumping fill onto plaintiffs’ property. Plaintiffs relied on a survey of the property that they had commissioned in 2003 in connection with their purchase of the property, the so-called Robenstein survey. The surveyor had previously done surveys of the area in 1986 and 1993.

In December 2012, the trial court granted partial summary judgment in favor of plaintiffs. The court ruled that there was a genuine dispute over the location of the boundary line in the driveway—defendant claiming that it was two feet further south, or closer to plaintiffs’ property than the boundary line identified on the survey—which precluded summary judgment on that issue. Nevertheless, even accepting defendant’s line as true, the court found that all of the evidence showed that the wooden posts were on plaintiffs’ property and thus authorized plaintiffs to remove the posts. Following a two-day bench trial, the court issued a written decision and judgment in April 2014. The court determined that the 1993 Robenstein survey was generally accurate in all respects, except with respect to its location of the southeastern corner of defendant’s property, which the court found was not accurate or reliable, and appointed an independent licensed surveyor to set out and establish the boundary line between the parties’ St. Paul Street properties “using the 1993 Robenstein Canales survey plat for all necessary pin locations and lot corners, except for the purported location of the southeast corner of [defendant’s] lot.” The court also found that defendant had trespassed onto plaintiffs’ property by engaging contractors who repeatedly went onto plaintiffs’ property for re-grading and landscaping operations, and awarded damages of $2000. The special master’s report was filed with the court in December 2014, the court held a hearing on the matter in February 15, and shortly thereafter the court issued an order and final judgment adopting the report and setting the common boundary between the parties’ St. Paul Street properties as determined therein. This appeal by defendant followed.

Defendant first contends the trial court erred in denying a motion to amend his answer to raise a counterclaim of adverse possession. The background to the contention is as follows. Plaintiffs filed their complaint for declaratory and injunctive relief in June 2012. Although defendant’s answer did not expressly plead adverse possession, defendant asserts that it was tacitly raised. He notes, in this regard, that plaintiffs’ complaint itself stated that defendant had earlier claimed ownership through “adverse possession,” and defendant’s answer alleged that plaintiffs’ allegations were “not consistent with the physical use of the property.”

In December 2012, the court issued a ruling on plaintiffs’ motion for summary judgment. The court concluded that a genuine issue of material fact remained over the location of the boundary line, but also concluded that plaintiffs were entitled to remove a line of wooden posts located in the driveway because “all of the evidence show[ed] that the posts are on [plaintiffs’] property.” While the court observed that defendant “claims ownership of the land lying northerly of and including the wooden posts because this is ‘consistent with the historical use of the property,’ ” it further observed that defendant “has not brought an adverse possession claim or introduced any evidence to support such a claim.”

In March 2013, the court issued an order requiring that all discovery be completed and the case ready for trial within ninety days, or late June 2013. After a number of motions to compel discovery and an order granting plaintiffs’ motion to compel, the court issued an order in July 2013, granting plaintiffs’ motion for sanctions, ordering defendant to reimburse plaintiffs for certain attorney’s fees, and precluding defendant from calling an expert at trial. Shortly thereafter, defendant moved to amend his answer to add a claim for adverse possession; defendant did not seek to add any factual allegations, but merely to add an averment claiming adverse possession. The court denied the motion, recalling its prior order setting a deadline for discovery and trial in late June, and finding that the amendment would be “prejudicial to [plaintiffs] and futile, given the court’s ruling on summary judgment.” The court stated that the motion to amend “should have been filed long ago.”

We review the denial of a motion to amend “only for an abuse of discretion.” Haverly v. Kaytec, Inc., 169 Vt. 350, 355 (1999). We have cautioned, however, that “trial courts must be mindful of the Vermont tradition of liberally allowing amendments where there is not prejudice

2 to the other party.” Colby v. Umbrella, Inc., 2008 VT 20, ¶ 4, 184 Vt. 1. In addition to prejudice to the opposing party, factors that may support the denial of a motion to amend are undue delay, bad faith, and futility of amendment. Id.

Assessed in light of these standards, we find no abuse of discretion. By his own account, defendant was aware of, and indeed had effectively pled, a claim adverse possession as early as his answer to the complaint in June 2012. He was informed by the court’s ruling in December 2012, however, that the court did not believe that he had either pled or produced any evidence to support a claim of adverse possession. Yet not until the discovery deadline had passed, more than six months after the court’s ruling in December 2012, did defendant file a motion to amend, and the motion contained no new factual allegations. Given the delay, and the prejudice to plaintiffs of having to refocus after the close of discovery on issues relating to the elements of adverse possession, we find no basis to conclude that the court abused its discretion in denying the motion.

Defendant further contends the court’s findings concerning the accuracy of plaintiffs’ surveys are unsupported in two respects.

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

Related

Colby v. Umbrella, Inc.
2008 VT 20 (Supreme Court of Vermont, 2008)
Haverly v. Kaytec, Inc.
738 A.2d 86 (Supreme Court of Vermont, 1999)
In Re Wal Mart Stores, Inc.
702 A.2d 397 (Supreme Court of Vermont, 1997)
Obolensky v. Trombley
2015 VT 34 (Supreme Court of Vermont, 2015)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
Stephen and Margaret Conant v. Chris Khamnei, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/stephen-and-margaret-conant-v-chris-khamnei-vt-2015.