Witty v. Hartland Planning Zoning Com., No. Cv 96-0072389 S (May 31, 2000)

2000 Conn. Super. Ct. 6450
CourtConnecticut Superior Court
DecidedMay 31, 2000
DocketNo. CV 96-0072389 S
StatusUnpublished

This text of 2000 Conn. Super. Ct. 6450 (Witty v. Hartland Planning Zoning Com., No. Cv 96-0072389 S (May 31, 2000)) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Connecticut Superior Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Witty v. Hartland Planning Zoning Com., No. Cv 96-0072389 S (May 31, 2000), 2000 Conn. Super. Ct. 6450 (Colo. Ct. App. 2000).

Opinion

[EDITOR'S NOTE: This case is unpublished as indicated by the issuing court.]

MEMORANDUM OF DECISION
This case is about a road. In 1731 Abner Banning gave land to the Town of Hartland 135 rods in length for it to use as a public road going primarily north and south. The Town accepted the land and built a road on it which came to be known as the Pel Daniels Road.1 One hundred thirty-nine years later, in 1870, the Town and its Selectmen voted to discontinue the road.2 One hundred thirty years thereafter, in the year 2000, the owner of 85 acres of land abutting much of the eastern side of the southern 2300 feet of that road now asks this court to determine whether that discontinuance was valid. It is undisputed that the Town today maintains approximately .23 miles of the southern end of the road as a public road. It is also undisputed that the portion of the road north of the plaintiffs' property is no longer a public road. This CT Page 6451 court must decide whether the remaining approximately 1,450 feet of that road, from the end of the paved and maintained public road north to the northwest corner of the plaintiffs' property, was properly discontinued.3 The evidence on that question is contradictory and ambiguous. For the reasons stated below, the court finds for the defendants.

The parties tried this case before the court on divers days in August and September of 1999. After completion of the trial transcript, submission of trial briefs, and final argument, the court now enters judgment for the defendant.

The central point in contention revolves around the location of the southern terminus of the discontinued road as the "road" or "highway" "from Richmond Bannings North," as it was so described in the vote of both the town meeting and the discontinuance resolution passed by the Hartland Board of Selectmen in 1870.4 It is undisputed that one Richmond Bannings owned land and a homestead in that year bordering the east side of the Pel Daniels Road. The Pel Daniels Road ran from Old Town Road north until it intersected with a road shown on a map of Hartland in an 1869 Atlas of Hartford County (Plaintiff's Exhibit D) as going from "L. Emmons" homestead west and then northwest to the "Wm Roberts" homestead and then north to the Massachusetts border. The land owned by the plaintiffs today roughly approximates the land owned by Richmond Banning then, with the exception of two small parcels of land (one acre and ten acres) since conveyed out and the possible exception proposed by the defendant's expert that Richmond Bannings also owned additional land south of the plaintiffs' current property abutting the road and extending south to Old Town Road.

The parties and their experts variously contend that this language means that the southern end of discontinued road was (1) the northern edge of Banning's property, or (2) the southern edge of the Banning property, or (3) the actual Richmond Banning house, which was on the eastern side of the road approximately 300 feet north from the southern tip of his property.

The plaintiffs assert that "from Richmond Bannings North" is the language of abutment and that the southern terminus of the discontinued road must therefore be north-most boundary of Banning's land. Under this theory, all of the road south, from that northern tip of what is today the plaintiffs' property, is still a public road. The defendants assert that while this might be language of abutment, it is also ambiguous, and that other evidence shows that the intent of the discontinuance votes was to discontinue the road at either the southern edge of the Banning property, or possibly even further south than that if Banning or a family member, as the defendants' expert believes, in fact owned land abutting CT Page 6452 the road all the way down to Old Town Road. The Town also argues that "from Richmond Bannings North" might also mean from the Banning Homestead, today occupied by David Barrett.

For a variety of reasons, the court finds the defendants' arguments are more persuasive. While the defendants' own expert agreed that the terminology "from Richmond Bannings North" used the language of abutment, the question is still — abutting what? While it may have been common in the 1800s, as the defendants' expert testified, to use abutting properties in land descriptions, the language does not say "the property of Richmond Bannings." Richmond Bannings also owned a house on Pel Daniels Road that is distinctly marked on the map of Hartland in the 1869 Atlas of Hartford County (Plaintiffs' Exhibit D) and the 1870 of Map of the Hartland Business Directory (Plaintiffs' Exhibit C) while the boundaries of his entire property is not.

The discontinuance language adopted by the October 3, 1870, town meeting and in the October 22, 1870, resolution of the Board of Selectmen identified the other ending points of the roads being discontinued with reference to a homestead. The first road discontinued in the 1870 town meeting and resolution ran east and west. The town vote described this road as "the Highway commencing at Henry A. Browns to the road near Jeremiah Emmons." The board of selectmen described it as consisting of two segments: "[1] the Highway commencing near Henry A. Browns House running east to the Pel Daniels road so called [2] Also the Highway from said Pel Daniels road east to the North and South road near Jeremiah Emmons' it being the Shipman road. . . ." As the attached picture, Figure 1,* taken from the 1869 Hartford County Atlas shows, that language aptly describes two segments of a road intersected in the middle by the Pel Daniels road with the homesteads of H. Brown and J. Emmons near the road's two terminal points.

The descriptions of the Pel Daniels road in the town vote and Board resolution also used homesteads to describe the northern end of the road. Both the town vote and the Board resolution identify the road begin discontinued as going from Richmond Bannings North to "the Road coming from Leverett Emmons to Roberts" (Town vote), or to "the Road running past Leverett Emmons to the William Roberts place" (Board vote). The 1869 Hartford County Atlas (depicted in Figure 2)** identifies a "Wm Roberts" homestead located just south of the Massachusetts border on a road coming from that border and headed in a general south, then southeast, then easterly direction to the "L. Emmons" homestead located on the same North-South Shipman Road referred to in the discontinuance of the first road.

In all these instances, the board resolution varied the language of the CT Page 6453 town vote by using language the selectmen apparently regarded as synonyms for the terminology in the town vote. Under the presumption of regularity — "that the defendant, as a public body, had properly performed its duty and had acted in conformity with the requirements of law"; Scovil v.Planning Zoning Commission, 155 Conn. 12, 19, 230 A.2d 31 (1967); this court may assume that the board of selectmen was aware and intended to comply with legal requirements in carrying out its official duties. In the absence of contrary evidence, this court thus assumes that the board was aware that, for the discontinuance to be effective, the description of the road being discontinued in its resolution must be "in conformity to the recited vote" of the town; Greist v. Amrhyn

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Bluebook (online)
2000 Conn. Super. Ct. 6450, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/witty-v-hartland-planning-zoning-com-no-cv-96-0072389-s-may-31-2000-connsuperct-2000.