Worth v. Gonyaw

CourtVermont Superior Court
DecidedDecember 21, 2011
Docket49
StatusPublished

This text of Worth v. Gonyaw (Worth v. Gonyaw) 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
Worth v. Gonyaw, (Vt. Ct. App. 2011).

Opinion

Worth v. Gonyaw, No. 49-3-06 Oscv (Tomasi, J., Dec. 21, 2011)

[The text of this Vermont trial court opinion is unofficial. It has been reformatted from the original. The accuracy of the text and the accompanying data included in the Vermont trial court opinion database is not guaranteed.] STATE OF VERMONT

SUPERIOR COURT CIVIL DIVISION Orleans Unit Dkt No. 49-3-06 Oscv

Thomas J. and Sandra Worth,

Plaintiffs,

v.

Ronald and Edith Gonyaw,

Defendants.

Findings of Fact, Conclusions of Law, and Order

This matter came before the Court for a trial on August 15 and 22,

2011. Both parties appeared and provided documentary and testimonial

evidence. Both were represented by able counsel. Post-trial memoranda

were also filed by the parties.

The remaining1 disputes between the parties focus on the ownership of

a narrow strip of land, the location and width of a right-of-way that crosses

1 A number of additional issues divided the parties at the beginning of this case. Those issues have been resolved by agreement or concession. At trial, Plaintiffs conceded two issues. First, they conceded that, through adverse possession, Defendants have acquired ownership of the parcel of land that lies within the lines formed by joining marker M6 (to the southeast), marker M7 (to the northeast), the point roughly midway between markers M7 and M32 (to the northwest), and marker M4 (to the southwest). See Exhibits 3 & A. Second, Plaintiffs agreed that that Defendants have ownership of a right- of-way to use a parcel of land that is known as the “short drive” and that allows Defendants direct access to East Echo Lake Road. See Exhibits EE & FF (conveying such a right-of-way in Defendants’ chain of title); Exhibits 3 and A (showing such a driveway with a dotted line); Exhibit H (picture of that land, and whether Plaintiffs have acquired a prescriptive easement to

use a portion of the right-of-way. Based on the evidence submitted at trial,

the Court makes the following Findings of Fact and Conclusions of Law.

Findings of Fact

1. Both parties own land near Echo Lake in Charleston, Vermont.

Plaintiffs have resided in New York and Florida but are frequently at their

property on weekends, for some weeks in the summers, and for portions of

the winters. Defendants bought land near the lake in 1987 and built a home

on that land in 1990. They moved there on a permanent basis in 1998.

2. The land both parties own (and adjacent properties) was

previously owned by members of Plaintiff’s2 family. Plaintiff’s connection to

the land is strong and longstanding. He has been visiting the area for over

sixty-five years. He has been going there either for visits or to stay for

extended periods his whole life.

short drive). For their part, Defendants conceded that they make no claim and renounce any claim to ownership of any of Plaintiffs’ lands or to Whitcomb Lane easterly of the line formed between markers M7 and M30. The parties agree, however, that Defendants retain a right-of-way over Whitcomb Lane, east of that same line, to access their land from East Echo Lake Road. Any revised deeds or documents prepared at the end of this case should reflect those concessions.

2For ease of reference, the Court will sometimes refer to Plaintiff and Defendant in the singular. In those instances, the references will be to Thomas Worth and Ronald Gonyaw, respectively.

2 3. There is no dispute that from 1943 to 1970, Plaintiff’s

grandparents, Joel and Ila Whitcomb, owned the land on which the

northwesterly portion of Defendant’s home is situated. Exhibit JJ & II.

4. The Whitcombs sold the land to their daughter, Erma Worth, in

1970. Exhibit II. Erma Worth was Plaintiff’s mother.

5. Erma Worth sold the land to Sharon Morehead in 1979. Exhibit

HH. Ms. Morehead was Plaintiff’s sister-in-law.

6. Ms. Morehead sold the land to Plaintiffs in 1983. Exhibit GG.

7. Plaintiffs sold the property to William and Louise Hill in 1984.

Exhibit FF.

8. The Hills sold the property to Defendants in 1987. Exhibit EE.

9. The property sold to Defendants contained a deeded right-of-way

that would allow access to the parcel from East Echo Lake Road. The precise

location and width of the right-of-way was not specified in the deed. Id.

Other property owners to the southwest of the parties’ land—currently, the

Wagners and the Slasons—also use the right-of-way to access their parcels.

Plaintiff has no deeded right to use Whitcomb Lane to the west of marker

M6.

10. The parties do not dispute that Whitcomb Lane has functioned

as the right-of-way described in the preceding paragraph. Cf. Exhibits 3 & A.

They do dispute the rightful location and width of the right-of-way to the

west of marker M6. Plaintiff asserts that the existing Whitcomb Lane is the

3 proper location of the right-of-way at that point and that its width should

vary between 10 and 16 feet as it progresses to the southwest. Plaintiff

concedes that the travelled portion of the road may have moved

northeasterly, i.e, closer to Defendants’ property, over the years. But,

Plaintiff believes the Lane has moved no more than approximately six inches

in that direction. Defendant agrees that the travelled portion of Whitcomb

Lane has moved closer to his property over the years. He claims, though,

that it has moved somewhere between six and twelve feet. He would like to

move the travelled portion of Whitcomb Lane roughly 2 feet closer to the lake

and would like to set the width of the right-of-way at 12 feet.

11. The deeds provide little guidance as to the parameters of the

right-of-way. The right-of-way is referred to in Defendants’ deed, but it is not

set with particularity. See Exhibit EE (right-of-way runs across “the existing

roadway”). Some earlier deeds describe the right-of-way as being 12 or 16

feet wide.

12. In an attempt to establish the bounds of the right-of-way, both

parties and a number of witnesses testified at trial as to the historic location

of the travelled portion of Whitcomb Lane. The testimony was not consistent.

The Court believes that all of the witnesses testified honestly. The Court

ascribes the variances among their testimonies more to faulty memories as to

the precise location of a very short sweep of a tire-track road, than to any

intentional misrepresentations. Given the Court’s ultimate resolution of this

4 matter, it need not fully resolve the differences between the testimony of the

witnesses on this point. For purposes of this opinion, the Court finds that, for

the fifteen years that preceded the filing of this lawsuit and to a point twenty

feet to the southwest of marker M6, the current travelled portion of

Whitcomb Lane has remained relatively consistent.

13. Until a survey was completed in or about 2004, the testimony

shows that Plaintiffs did not dispute that Defendants’ parcel (the “Gonyaw

Parcel”): (a) included the land to the north and northeast of a line that runs

ninety feet from and roughly parallel to the shoreline of Echo Lake, i.e., from

marker M11 to marker M36; and (b) had a northeastern boundary that ran

from marker M7 to marker M11. See also Exhibit M, at 60. This included a

strip of land that contains Whitcomb Lane and that is today bounded

approximately by a stone wall and the northerly property line of a parcel

owned by the Slason family. See Exhibits 3 & A. Specifically, this narrow,

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