Town of Fayette v. Manter

528 A.2d 887, 1987 Me. LEXIS 766
CourtSupreme Judicial Court of Maine
DecidedJuly 30, 1987
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 528 A.2d 887 (Town of Fayette v. Manter) 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
Town of Fayette v. Manter, 528 A.2d 887, 1987 Me. LEXIS 766 (Me. 1987).

Opinion

GLASSMAN, Justice.

Roberta J. Manter and her husband, David L. Manter, appeal from a declaratory judgment and a summary judgment entered by the Superior Court, Kennebec County, in favor of the Town of Fayette. The court determined that the Town discontinued the Young Road by abandonment pursuant to 23 M.R.S.A. § 3028 (Supp.1986) and retained a public easement as that term is defined in 23 M.R.S.A. § 3021 (1980). Although we disagree with the reasoning process employed by the Superior Court in reaching its conclusion, we nevertheless affirm the judgment.

I

David and Roberta Manter reside on the Young Road in the Town of Fayette. The Young Road was laid out by the Lincoln County Commissioners in 1791. On September 11,1945, on the petition of the town officers of the Town of Fayette, the Kenne-bec County Commissioners discontinued Young Road but retained public access rights to it as a “private way subject to gates and bars.” 1 In 1947 the Town con *888 veyed a portion of the land abutting Young Road now owned by David Manter to Lloyd Ingham. Ingham conveyed the parcel to Olive Mooney in 1952. Mooney conveyed the parcel to David Manter in 1971. In each of the relevant deeds the Young Road is described as “discontinued.” 2

The Manters soon began making improvements on the road, including placing gravel, leveling and grading. The road, however, was often damaged by logging operations carried out by abutting property owners along the Young Road. David Manter eventually requested the Town to reimburse him for expenses incurred in maintaining the road. The Town refused, arguing that although it retained a public easement in the road, the Town was not responsible for maintaining it, relying on the 1945 County Commissioners’ order whereby the road was discontinued “subject to gates and bars.”

The Town’s Complaint for Declaratory Judgment was filed April 4, 1984. The Town sought to have the Young Road declared discontinued by abandonment pursuant to 23 M.R.S.A. § 3028 and to declare the present status of the road to be that of a public easement. The Manters counterclaimed for compensatory damages alleged to have resulted from the failure of the Town to maintain the road and for punitive damages. In a pretrial order the court severed the declaratory judgment action from the counterclaims and ordered that a trial on the declaratory judgment action precede any trial on the counterclaims. A trial on the declaratory judgment action was held on August 5, 6 and 7, 1985 in the Superior Court, Kennebec County. In a decision and order dated January 10, 1986 the court declared the Young Road discontinued by abandonment and determined that the Town retained a public easement in the Young Road “as that term is defined in 23 M.R.S.A. § 3021.” 3

The Town subsequently moved for a summary judgment on the Manters’ counterclaims and the court granted the motion. The court’s rationale was as follows: because the Town, as a result of the January 10, 1986 order, had no legal obligation to maintain the road subsequent to 1976 and the Manters’ damage claim related only to the post-1976 period, the Town was entitled to judgment as a matter of law.

In this consolidated appeal, the Manters argue that the court incorrectly found an abandonment pursuant to section 3028 or, in the alternative, that even if the court’s interpretation was correct, section 3028 is unconstitutional on its face because it permits a town to retain a public easement in an abandoned public road without providing for “just compensation” as defined by article I, section 21 of the Maine Constitution.

II

Although the issue was addressed by the parties at trial, the court expressly declined to decide the effect, if any, of the 1945 County Commissioners’ order discontinuing the Young Road, on the section 3028 declaratory judgment action before it. 4 In *889 our view, an examination of the operative legal consequences of the County Commissioners’ 1945 order is a critical threshold step in resolving the current status of the Young Road.

Although various theories have been advanced by the parties concerning what effect the validity or invalidity of the 1945 order has on the current section 3028 litigation, the 1945 order may not, in any event, be attacked collaterally at this late date. The Commissioners had the power to discontinue the road in 1945 pursuant to R.S. 1944 Ch. 79, § 32. 5 Under that statute, the Commissioners were authorized to discontinue roads “leading from town to town” on the petition of “responsible persons.” The statute provided that in addition to a “discontinuance,” “an alternative action” could be requested of the Commissioners. “An alternative action” would, in our view, encompass the retention of a “private way subject to gates and bars,” or in modern parlance, a public easement.

Chapter 79, § 35 directed the Commissioners in the event of a discontinuance to “state in their return when it is to be done, the names of the persons to whom damages are allowed, the amount allowed to each, and when to be paid.” Parties aggrieved by the Commissioners’ decision had statutory rights of appeal to the Superior court with respect to both an order of discontinuance (Ch. 79, §§ 56, 57) and of damages (Ch. 79 §§ 36, 39). An appeal from an order of discontinuance had to be prosecuted “at any time after it [the order of discontinuance] has been placed on file and before the next term of superior court in said county ...” R.S. 1944 Ch. 79 § 56. An appeal from the estimate of damages by the Commissioners had to be taken

at any time before the 3rd day of the regular term succeeding that at which the Commissioners' return is made, to the term of the superior court, first held in the county where the land is situated, more than 30 days after the expiration of the time within which such appeal may be taken, excluding the 1st day of its session ...

R.S. 1944, Ch. 79 § 39. If no notice of appeal from the estimate of damages was filed in a timely manner the proceedings were to “be closed, recorded, and become effectual; all claims for damages not allowed by them be forever barred ...” R.S. 1944, Ch. 79, § 36.

We have previously held that a party’s right to appeal from the estimate of damages by County Commissioners is limited by statute. “Appeals from the decisions of county commissioners in the matter of laying out ways are regulated exclusively by statute, the provisions of which are mandatory and to be strictly construed.” Tuttle v. County Commissioners of Somerset County, 131 Me. 475, 478, 164 A. 541, 542 (1933) (construing R.S. 1930, Ch. 27, § 8, virtually identical predecessor statute to R.S. 1944, Ch. 79, § 39).

The record fails to disclose whether any appeals were taken from the 1945 Commissioners’ order discontinuing the road. The record is also silent with respect to whether appeals were taken from the Commissioners’ apparent failure to award any damages.

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Bluebook (online)
528 A.2d 887, 1987 Me. LEXIS 766, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/town-of-fayette-v-manter-me-1987.