Stickney v. City of Saco

CourtSuperior Court of Maine
DecidedMarch 30, 2000
DocketYORre-97-077
StatusUnpublished

This text of Stickney v. City of Saco (Stickney v. City of Saco) 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
Stickney v. City of Saco, (Me. Super. Ct. 2000).

Opinion

STATE OF MAINE SUPERIOR COURT CIVIL ACTION YORK, ss. DOCKET NO. RE-97-077

PAF -YorR - 2)30/3,e00

MARION STICKNEY and WILLIAM P. CASAVANT, JR.,

Plaintiffs ORDER, DECISION Vv. AND JUDGMENT CITY OF SACO, et al., - Defendants 1. THE PARTIES. A. _ The plaintiffs are Marion Stickney who owns real estate located at 167

Lincoln Street in Saco, Maine which is described in a deed from Theophilus Fitanides and Fred Fitanides dated August 18, 1995 and recorded at Book 7529, page 114 and William P. Casavant, Jr. who owns real estate located at 153 Lincoln Street in Saco, Maine which is described in a deed from Germaine J. Trakas dated December 14,1996 and recorded at Book 8100, page 262. They were represented by Attorney Bruce A. McGlauflin of Portland, Maine. Their properties are at the south- west and south-east ends of Tasker Lane in Saco.

B. The defendants include the City of Saco which was represented by Attorneys Timothy Murphy of Saco, Maine and John J. Wall, III of Portland, Maine.

The defendants also include the heirs of Rishworth Jordan and the heirs of Joseph Hill all of whom were defaulted and against whom a default judgment was

entered. The defendants also include Gary Ribaudo of Saco; Maine who represented himself and William and Tammy Desjardins who own real estate on Tasker Lane in Saco, Maine. See deed of February 9, 1990 from Energy Homes, Inc. at Book 5331,

page 314. They were represented by Attorney S. James Levis, Jr. of Biddeford, Maine.

2. DOCKET NUMBER

The docket number is RE-97-077 of the York County Superior Court. 3. NOTICE

All parties received notice of the proceedings in accordance with the applicable provisions of the Maine Rules of Civil Procedure and, if the notice was served or given pursuant to an order of a court, including service by publication,

that the notice was served or given pursuant to the order.

4. DESCRIPTION OF THE REAL ESTATE

The primary issue in this case is whether Tasker Lane in Saco, Maine is a public or private way. The secondary issue is whether the plaintiff William P. Casavant, Jr. has an easement over the property of the defendants William and Tammy Desjardins whose property abuts his and also has frontage on Tasker Lane. Tasker Lane connects Lincoln Street and Hill Street in Saco and is about 100 yards in length. The abutting property owners are the plaintiffs Stickney and Casavant and the defendants Desjardins and, in separate parcels on both sides of the northern end of Tasker Lane, Gary Ribaudo.

The plaintiffs have filed an amended complaint in ten counts against the

defendants City of Saco, the defaulted heirs of Rishworth Jordan and Joseph Hill,

Gary Ribaudo and William and Tammy Desjardins. Count I has been brought as a quiet title action regarding the ownership of Tasker Lane but will be treated as a declaratory judgment action. The plaintiffs seek a declaration that Tasker Lane is privately owned and seek ancillary relief once that finding is made. In Count II they seek a similar result through a claim of easement by prescription. Count III is a trespass action against the City for damaging their property, which is at the edge of Tasker Lane, through the widening of Tasker Lane. Count IV is a taking claim against the City under the doctrine of inverse condemnation. Count V is a claim against the City under 42 USC §1983 for a due process violation in taking their property. Count VI is a quiet title action against the heirs of Jordan and Hill which has been resolved. Counts VII and VIII are quiet title actions against the defendants Desjardins and against Gary Ribaudo respectively which will be treated as declaratory judgment actions. Count IX is a claim by Mr. Casavant regarding an alleged easement over the property of the Desjardins. In Count X Mr. Casavant seeks trespass damages or nuisance damages for the obstruction of the easement. A three day non-jury trial has been held, a view was conducted, motions under Rule 50(d), M.R.Civ.P. were made and lengthy briefs submitted.

The primary issue is what is the nature of Tasker Lane. The plaintiffs contend that they own the fee in Tasker Lane for that length of the lane that abuts their households, that they enjoy easement rights to travel over the entire length of

the lane and that the City has no right, title or interest in or to the lane.

The early history of Tasker Lane is not disputed. The lane was first established as a “private passageway” to the Joseph Hill Homestead Farm which included all of the properties involved in this case. The Stickney houselot was conveyed out in 1851 and land on the other side of the lane was conveyed in 1860 with a reference to a reserved street. The boundaries of the Casavant lot were established in 1915.

Members of the Fitanides family have lived on the lane since about 1928 while the other parties are all more recent arrivals acquiring their properties between 1986 and 1996. Marion Stickney is a Fitanides daughter.

It does appear that at least through the 1930’s and 1940’s the lane was only a car width wide and was not developed. The lane was apparently used for a time by the Fitanides family and their neighbors across the lane, in what is now the Casavant property, as a mostly private drive. The Fitanides, now Stickney, home is very close to the lane. The issue becomes not whether the lane was once private under one or more theories, which it probably was, but rather whether the lane has become a public way because of actions of the City of Saco; See Striefel v. Charles- Keyt-Leaman Partnership, 1999 Me. 111, 733 A.2d 984 and Longley v. Knapp, 1998 Me. 142 414, 713 A.2d 939, 943-4. The City has not established title under the doctrine of an incipient dedication to the public because any acceptance was far too slow in coming since the dedication was in the 1860’s. See Ocean Point Colony

Trust, Inc. v. Town of Boothby, 1999 Me. 152, 739 A.2d 382.

Has the City established a public way by prescriptive use? The answer is yes. D The City has maintained and plowed the lane for ‘well beyond the required time. Members of the general public could drive over the street. People from nearby streets have used the lane as if it was a public way. The City paved the street. While the intensity of City control increased in 1995, I find that for about 40 years all of the requirements for creating a public way by prescriptive use existed. The City’s plow truck driver was generally convincing to me and the claim that plowing was done as a favor to owners of private ways reflects at most a temporary unofficial policy of the City which is not necessarily even applicable to Tasker Lane. One cannot accept all of the benefits of a public way and then when it no longer becomes convenient to accept the responsibilities that go with it, complain that the way is really private.

The plaintiffs second count based on an easement by prescription likewise

D fails. Also see Flower v. Town of Phippsburg, 644 A.2d 1031, 1032 (Me. 1994) to the extent it is directed at the City rather than the heirs of Jordan or Hill.

Count III fails as I find no evidence to support a trespass onto land not usable by the City and find no evidence of compliance with the requirements of the Maine Tort Claims Act prior to suit being brought. Neither Count IV for inverse condemnation nor Count V for a due process violation is supported by the legal requirements for the claim or on the facts. Count VI was previously resolved and Counts VII and VIII follow Count I.

The final Counts, IX an X of the amended complaint, involve a ten foot right

of way. Before 1915 the Desjardins and Casavant lots comprised a single parcel. In

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Related

Longley v. Knapp
1998 ME 142 (Supreme Judicial Court of Maine, 1998)
O'NEILL v. Williams
527 A.2d 322 (Supreme Judicial Court of Maine, 1987)
Flower v. Town of Phippsburg
644 A.2d 1031 (Supreme Judicial Court of Maine, 1994)
Chase v. Eastman
563 A.2d 1099 (Supreme Judicial Court of Maine, 1989)
Striefel v. Charles-Keyt-Leaman Partnership
1999 ME 111 (Supreme Judicial Court of Maine, 1999)
Ocean Point Colony Trust, Inc. v. Town of Boothbay
1999 ME 152 (Supreme Judicial Court of Maine, 1999)

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Stickney v. City of Saco, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/stickney-v-city-of-saco-mesuperct-2000.