Vinal v. Mayo

CourtSuperior Court of Maine
DecidedApril 12, 2018
DocketAROre-14-11
StatusUnpublished

This text of Vinal v. Mayo (Vinal v. Mayo) 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
Vinal v. Mayo, (Me. Super. Ct. 2018).

Opinion

STATE OF MAINE SUPERIOR COURT AROOSTOOK, ss. DKT. NO. HOUDC-RE-14-11

) NANCY E. VINAL, ) ) Plaintiff & Counterclaim-Defendant, ) ) ORDER DENYING ) DEFENDANT/COUNTERCLAIM­ V. ) PLAINTIFF'S PARTIAL MOTION ) FOR SUMMARY JUDGMENT ) WAYNER. MAYO, ) ) Defendant & Counterclaim-Plaintiff. )

This case began as a quiet title action and concerns a piece of property located in Silver

Ridge Township, Aroostook County, Maine. The only remaining issue is whether or not

Plaintiff/Counterclaim-Defendant Nancy E. Vinal (hereinafter "Plaintiff' for ease of reading) has

title to the entire property, or whether Defendant/Counterclaim-Plaintiff Wayne R. Mayo

(hereinafter "Defendant" for ease of reading) owns a one-fifth interest as a tenant in common with

Plaintiff. The parties are both heirs to Anginetta McEwen, with whom title in the property

originated as it pertains to this matter.

On November 20, 2017, Defendant filed a Pmiial Motion for Summary Judgment on Count

I of His Counterclaim (Petition for Partition). Plaintiff, who is currently proceeding prose in this

matter, filed an informal letter with the Court on December 7, 2017, disputing Defendant's claim

to one-fifth of the prope1iy. Despite Plaintiffs failure to respond in the fo1m required by M.R.

Civ. P. 56, the Court does not find that Defendant carried his bmden to show that there are no

genuine issues as to any material fact pertaining to his claim for one-fifth of the property.

Further, Plaintiff has strenuously relied on an April 21, 2015 Order 1 entered by Judge

1 Plaintiff refers to it as a June 21, 2015 Order, but the file shows Judge O'Mara signed it on April 21, 2015. This case was transfen:ed to the Superior Court on December 5, 2016. Although Plaintiff appears to be under the impression

I O'Mara to argue that she was granted complete title-free and clear of any other possible claims­

to the property at issue. That Order appears to be the source of much uncertainty in the case,

mainly because of the non-specific nature in which it refers to the defendants that judgment was

entered against. As the 01·der is written, it does read as Plaintiff asserts. That being said, it is clear

the parties and Judge O'Mara were operating on the presumption that the Order excepted the

Defendant here, despite the plain words reading otherwise. The Court has extensively reviewed

the case file to establish a procedural timeline because of the convoluted nature of how the case

reached its current posture. It has also listened to the audio of all available hearings that occurred

before Judge O'Mara.

PROCEDURAL HISTORY

Plaintiff filed this quiet title action on June 23, 2014, alleging that she was entitled to legal

and equitable title of the property due to adverse possession and maintenance of the property since

1949. Defendant is the only heir who appeared and defended in this case, and he filed a

counterclaim on August 20, 2014, asserting a right to one-fifth of the property. Plaintiff answered

Defendant's counterclaim on September 5, 2014. Plaintiff then filed a motion for summary

judgment on October 8, 2014, against "All Heirs, Successors, [and] Assigns of Anginetta

McEwen" because they "failed to appear, plead or otherwise defend this action." The motion

papers did not reference Defendant Mayo despite the fact that he clearly had appeared and

defended prior to the filing of that motion for summary judgment. This appears to the Court to be

an oversight for a couple of reasons.

First, on March 23, 2015, the parties appeared at a hearing before Judge O'Mara with

respect to that motion for summary judgment. At the hearing, Plaintiffs attorney informed Judge

that this Court may not have visibility into what transpired prior to the transfer to Superior Court, the Comt assures the paities that it has the entire case file, including all documents filed prior to the transfer.

2 O'Mara that Defendant had appeared and "[was] not included in this; we're not~we're only

asking for~against the unknown in the estates right now." As a result of the hearing, Judge

O'Mara determined that Plaintiff's affidavit did not sufficiently establish the facts supporting her

adverse possession claim, but he granted Plaintiff twenty days to supplement her affidavit. Judge

O'Mm·a issued a brief written order to that effect on the same day, and he made a notation that

Plaintiff's summary judgment motion then at issue was "[n]ot claim v. Mayo." Second, Plaintiff

filed this supplemental affidavit on April 8, 2015, and Paragraph 12 explicitly acknowledges

Defendant Mayo's exception to the defaulting status of the other unknown defendants.

On April 21, 2015, Judge O'Mara signed the "Proposed Judgment" Plaintiff had submitted

with her motion for summary judgment. This is evident because the word "Proposed" is crossed

out with pen before the word "Judgment." Paragraph 2 states that "Defendants[] have failed to

appear or defend," and paragraph 4 clearly states that the "Cami awards Plaintiff, Nancy English

Vinal, title to [the propetiy] ... free and clear of all claims of Defendants ...." It makes no

exception for Defendant Mayo, even though it seems abundantly clear based on the record that the

pmiies intended otherwise. To anyone reading that Order in isolation, it undoubtedly reads that

Plaintiff was awarded title free and clear of all other claims. Not surprisingly, however, the case

proceeded forward because the pm·ties intended for that Order to only operate against the heirs that

had not appeared in the action.

From there, Plaintiff filed a motion for summary judgment on May 13, 2016, in an attempt

to obtain a judgment specifically against Defendant. Judge O'Mm·a denied that motion on August

2, 2016. The case was then transferred to the Superior Court on December 5, 2016, because the

pmiies expected trial to take more than two hours. Martha Broderick, Plaintiff's former attorney

for this case, filed a motion to withdraw due to a rift in the relationship between Ms. Broderick

3 and Plaintiff. This Court granted Ms. Broderick's motion to withdraw on June 19, 2017. Nothing

substantive happened in the case until November 20, 2017, when Defendant filed the Motion that

precipitated this Order.

LEGAL DISCUSSION

Rule 60(a) Correction

First, the Court corrects what it finds to be a clear oversight in the April 21, 2015 Order

that appears to award Plaintiff the property outright. The Rules of Civil Procedure authorize the

Court to correct "[ c]Jerica! mistakes in judgments, orders or other parts of the record and errors

therein arising from oversight or omission ... at any time of its own initiative ...." M.R. Civ. P.

60(a) (emphasis added). As the Procedural History section above lays out in detail, the purpose of

that 2015 motion for summary judgment was to obtain a judgment against the unknown heirs who

had not appeared or defended against the action. Both Plaintiffs attorney and Judge O'Mara

shared an understanding that Defendant was excepted from Plaintiffs motion. However, the

"Proposed Judgment" provided to Judge O'Mara that he ultimately signed did not make this

exception for Defendant obvious. Instead, only the record surrounding the April 21, 2015 Order

makes the intended effect apparent.

Accordingly, the April 21, 2015 Order is amended to reflect that Defendant Wayne Mayo

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