Stickney v. City of Saco

2001 ME 69, 770 A.2d 592, 2001 Me. LEXIS 81
CourtSupreme Judicial Court of Maine
DecidedMay 2, 2001
StatusPublished
Cited by81 cases

This text of 2001 ME 69 (Stickney v. City of Saco) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Judicial Court of Maine primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Stickney v. City of Saco, 2001 ME 69, 770 A.2d 592, 2001 Me. LEXIS 81 (Me. 2001).

Opinion

RUDMAN, J.

[¶ 1] Marion Stickney and William Casa-vant Jr. 1 appeal from a judgment entered *598 in the Superior Court (York County, Fritz-sche, /.), that (1) declared Tasker Lane in the City of Saco to be a public way; (2) granted the City of Saco a prescriptive easement in land beyond the paved area of Tasker Lane; and (3) dismissed plaintiffs’ § 1983 claim. William and Tammy Des-Jardins appeal from that portion of the court’s judgment concluding that Casavant has an easement, ten feet in width, on the portion of the DesJardinses’ property at which the parties share a common boundary. We disagree with parties’ contentions and affirm the judgment of the Superior Court.

I. FACTS & PROCEDURAL HISTORY

A. The Lane

[¶ 2] This consolidated action involves (1) the determination of the status of Tasker Lane, the narrow road — roughly 100 yards in length — connecting Hill and Lincoln Streets in the City of Saco, and (2) the status of a right-of-way reserved in a 1915 deed across the DesJardinses’ property. Tasker Lane was first established as a “private passageway” to the Homestead Farm of Joseph Hill, the common grantor of all the property at issue. The Hill homestead, which sat on what is now the Casavant property, was destroyed in the 1960s.

[¶ 3] The area in question is essentially triangular in shape, bounded on the northwest by Hill Street, on the south by Lincoln Street (formerly known as the “Boom Road”), and on the east by a strip of land owned by parties not involved in this action. Tasker Lane diagonally severs this area in two. Although the City did not pave the lane until 1985, it had maintained the road for over forty years. The Fitan-ides family helped to plow the lane since the 1940s. Within the past 40 years, however, the family’s plowing has been infrequent and undefined in scope. Presently, Tasker Lane is a one-lane, paved road with no sidewalks or curbs. There are no sewer or storm drainage facilities on the road, but there is a water line servicing the area.

B. The Abuttors

[¶ 4] Since 1928, members of the Fitan-ides family have owned the southern parcel on the west side of Tasker Lane. Predeceased by her husband roughly 20 years earlier, Viola Fitanides lived there until she died in early 1995. Mrs. Fitanides left the property to her sons, Fred and Theo-philus Fitanides. Stickney, Mrs. Fitan-ides’s daughter, purchased the property from her brothers, and, in June 1995, Stickney’s daughter and Casavant moved into the Fitanides homestead. As of the date of the trial, they continued to reside there.

[¶ 5] Title to the Casavant and DesJar-dins lots, located directly across from the Fitanides homestead on the east side of Tasker Lane, was derived from a common grantor, Rishworth Jordan Jr. By deed dated April 6, 1865, Jordan conveyed the property comprising those lots to Samuel F. Tasker. After Samuel’s death, his wife — Nellie Tasker — lived there until she died in the early 1950s. 2

[¶ 6] In 1915, however, Nellie Tasker conveyed the northern portion of her property to Clarence Young. In 1927, Young sold the property to Howard “Harry” Cousens, who later sold it to Walter Cous- *599 ens. Theophilus Fitanides, one of Stick-ney’s brothers, bought the property in 1965, and conveyed it to John and Sharon Sevigny in 1972. The Sevignys conveyed the property to Energy Homes in 1989. In 1990, Energy Homes sold the property to its current owners, the DesJardinses.

[¶ 7] Nellie Tasker lived on the remaining lot, intending to will it to George Conley, a second cousin who lived with and cared for her until she died. 3 Nellie Task-er lost title to the remaining parcel in 1927, however, having failed to pay the accrued property taxes; the City, the highest bidder, purchased the property for the amount of taxes then owing. The City allowed Nellie Tasker and George Conley to live there until both died. 4 In 1970, the City sold the remaining Tasker parcel to Charles and Germaine Trakas. Casavant then purchased the property in December 1996 from Germaine Trakas.

[¶ 8] In 1867, Jordan conveyed to Elijah Young the property comprising the parcels currently owned by Garry Ribaudo and Carole Fortin. 5 Ribaudo’s property abuts Hill Street and extends to both sides of Tasker Lane. A portion of his property is situated immediately north of Stickney’s parcel on the west side of Tasker Lane. The other portion is situated to the northwest of the DesJardinses’ property on the east side of the lane. Fortin’s property is situated- to the northwest of the DesJar-dinses’ parcel and does not touch upon Tasker Lane. Although Ribaudo was a party defendant in this action, neither he nor Fortin are involved in this appeal and shall not be further mentioned herein.

[¶ 9] The conveyances from Jordan to the Taskers and Elijah Young refer to a reserved street — Tasker Lane — along the southwesterly bounds of the parcels conveyed. Neither the plans nor descriptions, however, provide a width for the private way or reserved street. According to the undisputed testimony of Paul Ruopp, a licensed land surveyor hired by the plaintiffs, the width of Tasker Lane is 20.6 feet. The lane has been defined in the City’s tax maps from 1938 to the present as a city street. In August 1995, the City formally took control of Tasker Lane.

[¶ 10] In response, plaintiffs commenced this action against, inter alia, the City, Garry Ribaudo, and the DesJardinses, 6 alleging eight counts. Counts I — V are against the City, including an action for quiet title (Count I), action for easement by prescription (Count II), action for trespass (Count III), action for a taking without the payment of just compensation under the doctrine of reverse condemnation *600 (Count IV), and an action pursuant to 42 U.S.C. § 1983 7 alleging procedural due process violations (Count V).

[¶ 11] Count VI is an action to quiet title against the heirs of Rishworth Jordan and Joseph Hill. Count VII is a quiet title action against the DesJardinses and Sevig-nys. Count VIII is a quiet title action against Ribaudo. By an answer, the City denied the material allegations in the complaint and asserted four affirmative defenses, including the Maine Torts Claims Act and the failure to state a claim upon which relief may be granted.

[¶ 12] On September 17, 1998, plaintiffs filed an amended complaint adding two counts. Count IX is a claim alleging that Casavant has an easement over the Des-Jardinses’ property. Count X is a request for damages for trespass or nuisance arising out of the DesJardinses’ obstruction of the easement. The trial court concluded that Tasker Lane was a public way and found for each of the defendants on Counts I, II, VII, and VIII.

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Bluebook (online)
2001 ME 69, 770 A.2d 592, 2001 Me. LEXIS 81, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/stickney-v-city-of-saco-me-2001.