Vermont Shopping Center, Inc. v. Pettengill

211 A.2d 183, 125 Vt. 145, 1965 Vt. LEXIS 214
CourtSupreme Court of Vermont
DecidedJune 1, 1965
Docket312
StatusPublished
Cited by11 cases

This text of 211 A.2d 183 (Vermont Shopping Center, Inc. v. Pettengill) 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
Vermont Shopping Center, Inc. v. Pettengill, 211 A.2d 183, 125 Vt. 145, 1965 Vt. LEXIS 214 (Vt. 1965).

Opinion

Smith, J.

The plaintiff brought á bill in chancery asking that defendant Pettengill be enjoined from trespassing upon land belonging to the plaintiff, Vermont Shopping Center, Inc., in the Town of Berlin, and from interfering with the construction of buildings on said land, and from interfering with the activities of the plaintiff’s tenants and for damages. The defendant answered and filed a crossr bill. He asked that Amos C. King of the City of Barre and Richard M. and Lillian M. Cody of the City of Montpelier appear as parties to the action.

Plaintiff filed a replication to the answer and an answer to the cross-bill. The Codys and King filed answers to the plaintiff’s bill and to Pettengill’s answer and cross-bill. Subsequently, Amos C. King died and on petition of defendant Pettengill, the action was revived against Arthur N. McLeod as administrator of King’s estate. Hearing was had before a Master, Walter H. Cleary, former Chief Justice of this Court, in Montpelier. Findings of Fact were filed and the Court of Chancery for Chittenden Coúnty entered á decree establishing the boundary line between the .plaintiff and the defendant, finding a continuing trespass by defendant Pettengill on the lands of the plaintiff, and restraining the same, and entering a money judgment for the plaintiff against the. defendant. The cross-bill of the defendant against the plaintiff, as well as against the King Estate and Richard M. Cody and Lillian M. Cody were all dismissed with prejudice. Such decree was based upon the findings of fact made by the Master which were expressly approved and adopted in full by the Chancellor.

*147 The common predecessor in title to the properties now owned by the Vermont Shopping Center and Pettengill was Amos King. King gave a warranty deed to Richard M. Cody and Lillian M. Cody, dated the 22nd of September 1954, of the following described property:

“Being a parcel of land lying and being on the easterly side of the main highway leading from City of Barre to Montpelier and in the Town of Berlin, more particularly described as follows:
Commencing on the easterly line of the main highway where the northerly line of land belonging to one Sierra and the southerly line of the land herein being conveyed intersects said highway. Said point of beginning being in the center of a small stream of water which flows across the main highway and into the Stevens Branch of the Winooski River; then following the center of said stream in an easterly direction about 450 feet, be the same more or less, to its confluence with the Stevens Branch of the Winooski River; thence turning to the left and following the westerly bank of the Stevens Branch of the Winooski River in a general northerly and westerly direction a distance of 1300 ft., more or less, to an iron pin driven in the said westerly bank of said river; thence turning in an angle to the left and running in a westerly direction to a point on the easterly line of the main highway, which point measures 800 ft. more or less, northerly of the point of beginning.”

The deed was recorded in the land records of the Town of Berlin, September 23, 1954.

On August 14, 1958, Richard M. Cody and Lillian M. Cody conveyed by warranty deed the same described parcel of land to the Vermont Shopping Center, Inc., and such deed was recorded in the land records of the Town of Berlin, August 17, 1958.

The deed from Amos C. King to the defendant Ned Pettengill was dated March 19, 1960, and recorded April 6, 1960, and contained the following description:

“Commencing at a stone post set on the westerly line of the main highway leading from the City of Barre to Montpelier, where the southerly line of land now owned by Burnham Jones intersects the easterly line of said highway; then proceeding along the southerly line of the Jones property in an easterly direction, 187 ft. more or less, to an iron pin set in the westerly bank of the Winooski River; thence turning to the right and running along the westerly bank of the Winooski River, in a southeasterly direction, to land now owned by Vermont Shopping Center, Inc.; thence turning to the right *148 and running along the northerly boundary of the Vermont Shopping Center, Inc. property, in a westerly direction, 400 ft. more or less, to the easterly line of the main highway, thence turning to the right and running along the easterly line of the main highway in a northerly direction, 120 ft. more or less, to the place of beginning. Meaning to convey a parcel of land extending from the main highway easterly to the river from the Vermont Shopping Center, Inc. land on the south to the Jones land on the north.”

In the autumn of 1959, plaintiff started the construction of a shopping center consisting of a large building and parking lot. During the time that John Gardner was on the leased premises he had erected a high board fence near the northerly line of the premises in connection with a drive-in movie operation then conducted there. The plaintiff removed most of this fence during the course of its construction, later re-erecting part of said fence in the same location. A brook runs from the highway to the Winooski River a few feet northerly of the fence.

Defendant King was familiar with the location of the fence and the brook, visited the plaintiff’s property several times during the construction of the plaintiff’s building before his deed to Pettengill, but never complained about the location of the building or the parking lot.

Soon after defendant Pettengill purchased his land, he requested permission of an agent of the plaintiff’s to cover the brook to allow customers of defendant’s gasoline station to enter such station from the plaintiff’s parking lot. At that time, defendant made no claim that plaintiff’s building was partly over his boundary line, which is now his contention. However, defendant did later make this claim and bulldozed a four-foot high mound across the plaintiff’s parking lot, resulting in the equity action now brought here.

The defendant’s first briefed exceptions are to the findings of the Special Master as to the boundary line between the parties. The dispute is over the boundary line which is the northerly line of the plaintiff and the southerly line of the defendant, Pettengill. It will be recalled that the deeds from King to the Codys, and from the Codys to the plaintiff, were prior in both delivery and recording of the deed from King to Pettengill. It necessarily follows that the point at issue must be decided by determining the northerly boundary of the land of the plaintiff, for King, the common grantor to both parties, could convey to Pettengill only such part of the original premises as were left to him after his conveyance to the plaintiff’s predecessor in title, the Godys. Regardless of the descriptions and boundaries that may be de *149 scribed in the deed from King to Pettengill, the grantor, King’s, power to convey was confined to what he then owned. Barr v. Guay, 125 Vt. 1, 209 A.2d 304.

The parties are in agreement, as the Master found, on the westerly end of the boundary line between the parties at the edge of the highway.

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Bluebook (online)
211 A.2d 183, 125 Vt. 145, 1965 Vt. LEXIS 214, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/vermont-shopping-center-inc-v-pettengill-vt-1965.