weston v. mcmahan

CourtVermont Superior Court
DecidedJanuary 26, 2024
Docket23-cv-2678
StatusPublished

This text of weston v. mcmahan (weston v. mcmahan) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Vermont Superior Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
weston v. mcmahan, (Vt. Ct. App. 2024).

Opinion

Vermont Superior Court Filed 01 25 24 Grand Is e nit

VERMONT SUPERIOR COURT $4 CIVIL DIVISION Grand Isle Unit Case No. 23-CV-02678 PO Box 7 North Hero VT 05474 802-372-8350 WWW.Vermontjudiciary.org

James Weston, et a1 V. Jeffrey McMahan, et a1

DECISION ON CROSS-MOTIONS FOR PRELIMINARY INJUNCTION

This is a neighborhood dispute concerning the location, scope, and nature of claimed easements. Plaintiff James Weston moved for a preliminary injunction to require Defendants Jeffrey

McMahan and Heather Ross “to immediately discontinue their unlawful obstruction and interference of Plaintiff ’s deeded right of way over the Defendants’ property ‘for access to Lake Champlain for ” The recreational purposes.’ remaining Plaintiffs subsequently joined the motion. They were met shortly thereafter with Mr. McMahan and Ms. Ross’s cross-motion, seeking a preliminary injunction restricting Plaintiffs to use of the “Original ROW” as depicted on Exhibit l to the Complaint, and limiting use of that easement to people lawfully residing on Plaintiffs’ properties. The court held a hearing over the course of two days, and invited post-hearing briefing. Having received and reviewed that briefing, the court now grants each motion in part and denies it in part.

The standard for issuance of a preliminary injunction is familiar. It requires that the court consider four factors: “(1) the threat of irreparable harm to the movant; (2) the potential harm to the other parties; (3) the likelihood of success on the merits; and (4) the public interest.” Taylor v. Town 0f

Cabot, 2017 VT 92, 11 l9, 205 Vt. 586. The burden “of establishing that the relevant factors call for imposition of a preliminary injunction” falls on the moving party. Id. Disputes concerning possession and occupancy of real estate are particularly suited to injunctive relief. In Vermont, landowners have

“the right to exclusive possession of [their] land.” John Larkin, Inc. v. Marceau, 2008 VT 61, 11 16, 184 Vt. 207. Denying a landowner this right constitutes irreparable harm. Evans v. Cote, 2014 VT 104, 11 8, 197 Vt. 523 (“A permanent injunction may be awarded in response to a continuing trespass because

damages are inadequate to address the wrong”) In cases involving allegations of continuing trespass,

“[d]amages are inadequate relief” because a damages remedy “fails to accord the obstructed party his rightful access” to his property. Begin v. Barone, 124 Vt. 421, 422 (1965). Indeed, “Vermont law is clear that even the threat of continuous trespass entitles a party to injunctive relief.” State v. Preseault, 163 Vt. 38, 43 (1994).

Decision on Cross—Motions for Preliminary Injunction Page 1 of 10 23—CV—02678 James Weston, et a1 v. Jeffrey McMahan, et al With these standards in mind, the court turns to the facts established at the hearing on these motions. The properties at issue were all part of a farm on the east shore of North Hero owned at one time by Grace and Joseph Ratta. Over time, the Rattas carved off Plaintiffs’ properties (and others); with each conveyance, they granted an easement over their retained lands for access to Lake Champlain. Eventually, Joseph Ratta having passed, Grace Ratta conveyed part of the retained lands over which the deeded easements passed to Defendants’ predecessor in title. The deeds out from the Rattas created something of a mish-mash of easements. The first of the deeds out—at least with respect to the properties at issue here—was to Plaintiff Terrence Martin’s predecessor in title, on May 1, 1964. That deed conveyed a right of way to the subject lot; it also conveyed the right [in common with others] to go from this Lot to Lake Champlain over existing roads and paths on foot or by bicycle for purposes of swimming, boating, fishing and other uses of the Lake and water front. Notably, the deed nowhere described the location of the “existing roads and paths.” Next, on October 22, 1968, the Rattas conveyed the parcel now owned by Plaintiff Hannah Rose. That deed described the easement to the lake differently: Also conveyed is a right of way in common with the Grantees over the Grantors’ dirt road situated Northerly of this subject matter lot, for purposes of ingress and egress to and from the portion of the Grantors’ beach set off for the use and enjoyment of their Grantees. This area is located approximately three hundred feet from the South-east corner of the Grantors’ premises. Notably, the evidence failed to establish that any part of the beach located on Defendants’ property is located “approximately three hundred feet from the South-east corner of [the Rattas’] premises.”1 Next, on November 1, 1988, the Rattas conveyed the parcel now owned by Mr. Weston. That deed contained yet another description of an easement: Also conveyed herewith is an easement 15 feet in width for access to Lake Champlain for recreational purposes and for the installation

1 In defiance of common usage, Plaintiffs argue that “premises” refers to the Rattas’ house, while Defendants argue that it

refers instead to the underlying real estate. The court need not resort to a dictionary or other secondary source to resolve this dispute. Instead, the deed itself makes clear that by “premises,” the Rattas meant not buildings but land. The deed by its express terms conveyed “[a] lot of land with buildings thereon”; the “lot,” in turn, is described as “a portion of the premises conveyed to the grantors . . . .” Clearly, then, “premises” can only have meant land. Indeed, each deed subsequent to the original deed out from the Rattas reflects the drafter’s interpretation to this effect; the deeds substitute “lands now or formerly of Joseph J. Ratta and Grace J. Ratta” for “the Grantors’ premises.” This dispute, however, is moot, because Plaintiffs have introduced no evidence that would suggest that any part of Defendants’ beach is close to 300 feet from the southeast corner of what was then the Rattas’ house; indeed, application of a ruler to the surveys that are in evidence would appear to disprove any such assertion. Equally, while the location of the southeast corner of the Rattas’ land in 1968 does not appear, there is no evidence that any part of Defendants’ beach is close to 300 feet from any point that the court could conceivably determine to have been that corner. Decision on Cross-Motions for Preliminary Injunction Page 2 of 10 23-CV-02678 James Weston, et al v. Jeffrey McMahan, et al and repair of a water line over the adjacent lands or land now or formerly of Joseph J. Ratta and Grace M. Ratta, extending from the northeast corner of the within conveyed parcel to Lake Champlain. Said easement may be extended temporarily to twenty feet in width, if necessary, for the travel or parking of construction vehicles or the piling of earth and other materials in connection with the installation, repair, or replacement of said waterlines. As far as appears, neither Mr. Weston nor his predecessor in title ever installed a water line. Rather, one of them appears at some indeterminate time to have tied into an existing water line, shown generally as the blue line on Plaintiffs’ Exhibit 1. At that time, that line provided water service to all of the houses then in the neighborhood. Twice since that time—once about 15 years ago, in concert with Grace Ratta’s son, and hence with her implicit acquiescence, and again in 2022—Mr. Weston has replaced the part of that water line that runs from Lake Champlain to the “pump house” shown on Exhibit 1. Three years after the conveyance to Mr. Weston’s predecessor, on September 11, 1991, the Rattas conveyed the parcel now owned by Messrs. Hayes and Jackson. Again, the deed set forth yet another description of an easement: An easement over lands presently owned by Joseph J. Ratta & Grace J. Ratta on a designated drive to Lake Champlain for recreational uses and activities.

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Related

John Larkin, Inc. v. Marceau
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334 A.2d 410 (Supreme Court of Vermont, 1975)
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Evans v. Cote
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weston v. mcmahan, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/weston-v-mcmahan-vtsuperct-2024.