Vingiano v. Vitolo

253 A.2d 681, 5 Conn. Cir. Ct. 360, 1968 Conn. Cir. LEXIS 220
CourtConnecticut Appellate Court
DecidedJune 14, 1968
DocketFile No. CV 8-662-4396
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 253 A.2d 681 (Vingiano v. Vitolo) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Connecticut Appellate Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Vingiano v. Vitolo, 253 A.2d 681, 5 Conn. Cir. Ct. 360, 1968 Conn. Cir. LEXIS 220 (Colo. Ct. App. 1968).

Opinion

Dearington, J.

We first consider a motion made to this court to set aside the judgment on the grounds that the plaintiffs have failed to file their briefs within the time provided for by our rules. Practice Book § 1015. The motion was heard and decision reserved, and the parties were permitted to argue the merits of the appeal. In support of their motion, the defendants cite § 696 of the Practice Book, which section has been incorporated by reference as a rule of this court. Practice Book § 1023. Since the case, however, has been heard upon its merits and the plaintiffs’ brief was then a part of the record, the motion is denied. See Vuono v. Eldred, 155 Conn. 721; Clements v. Goodkofsky, 152 Conn. 747. In denying the motion, we do not mean to imply that a precedent is being made in this respect.

The plaintiffs’ complaint contains two counts, the first alleging interference with a prescriptive easement and the second alleging a “spite fence” between the premises of the parties, which allegations the defendants have generally denied. Judgment having been rendered for the plaintiffs, the defendants have appealed, assigning error in that the trial court rendered judgment on the theory of a prescriptive right having been established when the complaint alleged a cause of action sounding in easement by implication. Error is also assigned in the denial of the defendants’ motion to correct the finding; in the conclusions; and in that there was no evidence of hostile, exclusive and continuous use. The defendants, however, have briefed but two assignments of error, and in accordance with our rules we treat the [362]*362remaining claims as having been abandoned. Martino v. Grace-New Haven Community Hospital, 146 Conn. 735, 736; Maltbie, Conn. App. Proc. § 327 n.1a (Sup. 1961), and cases cited.

The court found, in brief, that prior to July 31, 1924, the properties in question, that is, the parcels located at 90-92 Bristol Street (plaintiffs) and at 86-88 Bristol Street (defendants) were owned by Sarah and Albert Hurwitz. The parcels adjoined each other, and there was a two-family house located on each. ' The houses were separated by a strip of land, approximately thirteen feet wide, which served as a common driveway and was used by pedestrians and motor vehicles. By mesne conveyances, the property located at 90-92 Bristol Street came into the ownership of the plaintiffs in 1949, and in 1955 the property located at 86-88 Bristol Street came into the sole ownership of the defendants. The mesne conveyances had all been between members of the same family, to which both the plaintiffs and the defendant Paul were related. The driveway separating the two houses extended upon the plaintiffs’ property for a distance of eight feet and upon the defendants’ property for a distance of five feet. The driveway had been used in common by the occupants of the adjoining houses for more than twenty years. In 1964 the relationship between the plaintiffs and the defendants became strained, and in 1965 the defendants erected a chain link fence, four feet high, along their property line as it extended along the driveway. The fence has restricted and limited the plaintiffs’ use of the driveway by diminishing its width.

The court concluded that the plaintiffs had acquired a prescriptive right to use the driveway, it having been used in common by the occupants of both houses for more than fifteen years openly, [363]*363visibly, continuously, and without interruption. Nothing had been done during a period of more than fifteen years by either party, as prescribed by statute, to prevent the acquisition of a prescriptive right. The defendants were ordered to remove the fence and restore the driveway.

The basic claims of the defendants are, first, that the court went outside the framework of the pleadings in its rendition of judgment on the ground that prescriptive rights had been established by the plaintiffs, and second, that even if it is assumed that the plaintiffs’ intent was to establish an easement by prescription, the subordinate facts do not support a conclusion that such an easement was created. The defendants contend that the case was tried upon the theory of showing an easement by implication rather than showing an acquisition of an easement by prescription, a contention not shared in by the court. For easements created by implication, see such cases as Rischall v. Bauchmann, 132 Conn. 637, 642; D’Amato v. Weiss, 141 Conn. 713, 716; and Schroder v. Battistoni, 151 Conn. 458, 460. The plaintiffs alleged in their first count that for over thirty years a common driveway existed along the common boundary and that the plaintiffs and their predecessors in title have used the driveway for purposes of passage by man and vehicle for more than fifteen years, to wit, for a period of at least thirty years, continuously, uninterruptedly and with the knowledge of the defendants and their predecessors in title. Although it is true that the complaint could have been drafted with greater accuracy and precision; see Practice Book, Form 309; it was sufficient to embrace a claim of an easement by prescription and put the defendants fairly upon notice of the plaintiffs’ intent. Whether there was evidence showing a unity of title at some time prior to the plaintiffs’ ownership would not be controlling [364]*364when the pleadings warranted the plaintiffs’ proceeding on the theory of an easement by prescription. The court was justified in determining that the case was being tried on the theory that the plaintiffs were claiming an easement by prescription.

The essential elements required to establish an easement by prescription are set forth in Klein v. DeRosa, 137 Conn. 586, 588, as follows: “To acquire a right of way by prescription, there must have been a use which was open and visible, continuous and uninterrupted for fifteen years, and made under a claim of right. . . . The use must have been so open, visible and apparent that it gave the owner of the servient land knowledge and full opportunity to assert his own rights. . . . Whether a right of way by prescription has been acquired presents primarily a question of fact for the trier after the nature and character of the use and the surrounding circumstances have been considered.” See Zavisza v. Hastings, 143 Conn. 40, 45, and cases cited.

The defendants contend that even though it be assumed that the case was tried upon the theory of establishing an easement by prescription, “the finding of the court that the use was under a claim of right is not supported by the subordinate facts.” The defendants are correct in their analysis of the problem, for they concede that “[w]here, therefore, as in the instant case, there is neither, on the one side, proof of an express license or permission from the landowner, nor, on the other, proof of an express claim of right by the person using the way, the character of the use, whether adverse or permissive, is left to be determined as an inference from the circumstances of the parties and the nature and character of the use.” Phillips v. Bonadies, 105 Conn. 722, 727; Poliner v. Fazzino, 105 Conn. 350, 355. It is, of course, an essential element in the acquisition [365]*365of an easement by prescription that there be an adverse nse under a claim of right; Klein v. DeRosa,

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
253 A.2d 681, 5 Conn. Cir. Ct. 360, 1968 Conn. Cir. LEXIS 220, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/vingiano-v-vitolo-connappct-1968.