Whitehouse v. Wachowski
This text of Whitehouse v. Wachowski (Whitehouse v. Wachowski) 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.
Opinion
STATE OF MAINE SUPERIOR COURT LINCOLN, SS. Civil Action Docket No. RE-2017-18
ERNEST A. WHITEHOUSE, ) et al., ) Plaintiffs ) ) ) v. ) JUDGMENT ) ) DALEE. WATCHOWSKI, et al, ) Defendants. )
A bench trial in this matter was conducted over five days - October 29, 2019;
October 31, 2019; November 1, 2019; June 13, 2019; and June 14, 2019 1• The following
judgment is based on the evidence presented at trial, the stipulations agreed to by the
parties, and the view conducted by the court on June 13, 2019.
The Plaintiffs have presented proposed findings of fact which are adopted by the
court with the exception of the following numbered proposed findings of fact which
this court specifically declines to adopt as fact: 11 - 17; 41 - 45; 51; 56 - 57; 60 - 61; 65
67; 70 - 71; 86 - 87; 90; 96 - 97; 104; and 115.
Count I - Declaratory Judgment
In this count, the Plaintiffs seeks a judgment declaring that the Nubbles, as
depicted on the Capen Plan and described in the Original Nubbles Deed, includes all of
the land between the Watchowski/Williams property on the west and the mean low
tide of the Atlantic Ocean on the east and is owned exclusively by the Plaintiffs.
1 Counsels' original estimate for time needed for trial was three days. Scheduling the additional two days needed was made difficult by the availability of the parties and witnesses.
I The court finds the Original Nubbles Deed to be ambiguous, but that no
reasonable interpretation of the deed would implicate any property adjacent to the
Watchowski/Williams property. In addition, the court finds unpersuasive the
testimony of the Plaintiffs' surveyor regarding the meaning of the Original Nubbles
Deed.
Therefore, because the Plaintiffs, as the party bearing the burden of proof on this
count, have failed to convince the court that they are entitled to the relief sought by the
preponderance of the evidence, judgment is entered for the Defendants on Count I of
the Plaintiffs' Complaint.
Count II - Declaratory Judgment
In this count, the Plaintiffs seeks a judgment declaring that the Plaintiffs are the
exclusive owners of the land south of the 1975 Boundary Line from the western edge of
Lots 2 and 5 and running east as a straight line to the mean low water line of the
Atlantic Ocean.
This court is convinced that the Law Court's holding in Lamson v. Cote, 2001 ME
109, establishes that the Paper Streets Act is not applicable to a case such as this one
when the plan was recorded after the first conveyance of a lot shown on a subdivision
plan. In addition, to the extent it could be found that the Plaintiffs properly pied a
claim of adverse possession of the land in question, the court finds that the evidence
presented falls short of what would be required to establish such a claim.
Therefore, because the Plaintiffs, as the party bearing the burden of proof on this
count, have failed to convince the court that they are entitled to the relief sought by the
preponderance of the evidence, judgment is entered for the Defendants on Count II of
2 Count III - Declaratory Judgment
In this count, the Plaintiffs seeks a judgment declaring that the October 13, 2010
default judgment entered by the Lincoln County Superior Court in Docket No. RE-201
47 is invalid as to the boundary lines of the Plaintiffs' property and to any other
property rights held by the Plaintiffs.
It is undisputed that the Plaintiffs were not served or made a party to the 2010
litigation. Therefore, the judgment entered is in no way binding on the Plaintiffs and
judgment is entered for the Plaintiffs on Count III of the Plaintiffs' Complaint.
Count IV - Injunctive Relief
The Plaintiffs' have withdrawn this count.
Counterclaim Count I - Declaratory Judgment
In this count, the Defendants/Counterclaim Plaintiffs ask for a Declaratory
Judgment that the Nubbles lot does not include or relate to any of the earth in front of
the Watchowski/Williams property including the earth declared to be owned by the
Defendants by virtue of the 2010 judgment and for injunctive relief.
The court is convinced that the Nubbles deed does not include or relate to any of
the earth in front of the Watchowski/Williams property and that the Whitehouses have
failed to establish any legal claim to the disputed area. Therefore, judgment is entered
for Defendants/ Counterclaim Plaintiffs on Count I of their counterclaim.
The court declines to enter injunctive relief, except the Plaintiffs are ORDERED to
remove the portion of their fence that extends beyond the boundary expressed in the
1975 deeds.
Counterclaim Count II - Declaratory Judgment
In this count, the Defendants/Counterclaim Plaintiffs ask for a Declaratory
Judgment that they by their own use and the use of their predecessors in title have an
3 easement over the Whitehouse property along and over the long term driveway as it
has always existed.
It is the court's view that the evidence presented was insufficient to establish a
prescriptive easement on the Whitehouse property. Therefore, because the
Defendants/Counterclaim Plaintiffs, as the party bearing the burden of proof on this
count, have failed to convince the court that they are entitled to the relief sought by the
preponderance of the evidence, judgment is entered for the Plaintiffs on Count II of the
Counterclaim.
Counterclaim Count III - Spite Fence
In this count, the Defendants/ Counterclaim Plaintiffs allege that the Plaintiffs
have created a vegetative spite fence and seek an order that it be removed.
Pursuant to 17 M.R.S. § 2801, "Any fence or other structure in the nature of a
fence, unnecessarily exceeding 6 feet in height, maliciously kept and maintained for the
purpose of annoying the owners or occupants of adjoining property, shall be deemed a
private nuisance." Defendants/Counterclaim Plaintiffs bear the burden of
demonstrating each of these elements by a preponderance of the evidence. See Ma v.
Bryan, 2010 ME 55, 'l[ 6, 997 A.2d 755 (stating that it is the plaintiff's burden of proof to
establish the elements of a cause of action); see also State v. Gagne, 2019 ME 7, 'l[ 30, 199
A.3d 1179. "For purposes of the [spite fence] statute, a plaintiff need not prove that
malice, the purpose to annoy, was the sole motive for building the fence. The plaintiff
need only prove that such was the dominant motive, meaning that without that
malicious motive, the fence would not have been erected or maintained." Peters, 2011
ME 106, 'l[ 16, 30 A.3d 825 (citation, quotation marks, and emphasis omitted).
In this case, the court finds that the Plaintiffs' dominant motives in installing the
vegetation at issue in this case were privacy, wind break, and personal aesthetic
4 enjoyment. The court finds credible the Plaintiffs' testimony regarding their
motivations for planting the vegetation in question. Though the Defendants, and the
court, may not share the Plaintiffs' view of the aesthetic value of the vegetation in
question, that is not a justification to order its removal.
Therefore, because the Defendants/ Counterclaim Plaintiffs, as the party bearing
the burden of proof on this count, have failed to convince the court that they are entitled
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