wsaa v. lyon

CourtVermont Superior Court
DecidedApril 2, 2024
StatusPublished

This text of wsaa v. lyon (wsaa v. lyon) 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
wsaa v. lyon, (Vt. Ct. App. 2024).

Opinion

STATE OF VERMONT

SUPERIOR COURT CIVIL DIVISION Caledonia Unit Docket # 100-4-12 Cacv (Appeal from Docket #215-8-11 Casc) we er West Shore Access Association E FIL ED Appellee v. APP 19 940 ERMONT SUPE fi Peter E. Lyon CALED RIOR Coy Appellant ONIA Uns ~ RT SMALL CLAIMS APPEAL Decision

Defendant/Appellant Peter Lyon appeals a small claims judgment issued on March 21, 2012. The Small Claims Court awarded $3,878.75 to Plaintiff/Appellee West Shore Access Association (WSAA) after determining that Mr. Lyon converted a gate that was the personal property of WSAA. On appeal, Mr. Lyon argues that the Small Claims Court erred in concluding that WSAA owned the gate and that he did not have permission to remove the gate. Alternatively, he argues that the conversion was not serious enough to warrant holding him liable. Finally, he argues that the Court erred in awarding the full replacement cost of the gate.

In appeals from Small Claims Court, the Superior Court’s review is based on the record below and is limited to questions of law. 12 V.S.A. § 5538; V.R.S.C.P. 10. This Court has reviewed the transcripts of the hearings held in Small Claims Court and both parties’? memoranda of law.

Facts

The Small Claims Court found the following facts. The gate in question was formerly located at the junction of Vermont Route 232 and West Shore Drive in Groton, Vermont. West Shore Drive is a private right-of-way located on land owned by the State of Vermont. It provides access to several residential lots on the west shore of Lake Groton. Each landowner along the west shore of the lake has an easement to pass over West Shore Drive. Mr. Lyon owns one of the lots on the lake and has an easement to use the road.

In the late 1980s, WSAA was formed to provide easement holders with an organization to maintain West Shore Drive. WSAA did not hold any easement or other ownership interest in the road. Mr, Lyon was one of the original organizers of WSAA, but he left the association in 2005. WSAA cutrently has 25 members, including Paul Sykas and David Smith.

In the mid 1990s, the State authorized construction of a new segment of West Shore Drive that would connect to Route 232. The State authorized Mr. Lyon to design and coordinate

1 the construction of the new road segment. Mr. Lyon was a member of WSAA at the time. The State paid for the construction, and intended the road to benefit WSAA.

The State then sought to exchange rights-of-way with the landowners, substituting access along the new segment for the access previously provided along the old road. Mr. Lyon exchanged his easement with the State so he could use the new segment of road.

A gate was installed near the entrance of the road where it intersected with Route 232. Mr. Lyon arranged for the design and installation of the gate in 1999 at the State’s expense. The Small Claims Court found that the State installed the gate for the sole use and benefit of WSAA and does not consider it to be State property. After its installation, the gate was not closed at any

time.

According to Mr. Lyon, there was a lease with the State regarding the gate that required removal of the gate after 10 years unless the State gave its permission to keep the gate in place. Mike Fraysier, the State Lands Director at the Vermont Department of Forests, Parks and Recreation, testified that he could find no record of any 10-year lease regarding the gate. Mr. Lyon was unable to produce a written agreement regarding the terms of the gate’s installation. Mr. Fraysier testified that there is no regulation concerning gates within State forests. The Small Claims Court concluded that there was no lease governing the gate.

After the new road and gate were installed, there was an internal dispute among the members of WSAA. As a result, Mr. Lyon and some other members left and formed a second road association called Functional Use of Nature at Groton Corporation.

In 2010, Mr. Lyon stopped by Mr. Fraysier’s office to ask whether the gate was State property. Mr. Fraysier told Mr. Lyon that the State did not consider the gate to be State property. He told Mr. Lyon that Mr. Lyon could do what he wished with the gate as long as he got prior permission from WSAA.

Mr. Lyon told a man named Tim Starr that he could remove the gate and use it for his own purposes. Mr. Starr removed the gate in the summer of 2010, modified it, and placed it in another location, making it impossible to reinstall at its former location on West Shore Drive. Mr. Lyon received no compensation for the gate. He did not notify WSAA that he was having the gate removed. The Small Claims Court found that the State never told Mr. Lyon that the gate was his property or that he could remove the gate without WSAA’s permission.

WSAA obtained an estimate for replacing the gate, including fabrication, priming, painting and delivery. A 54-foot replacement gate would cost $3,800.00.

The Small Claims Court ruled that Mr. Lyon converted the gate. The Court found that the State paid for the gate and gave it to WSAA. It also found that the work performed by Mr. Lyon in planning the road and installing the gate was performed in his capacity as the president of WSAA, not as an individual easement holder. Thus WSAA, and not Mr. Lyon, owned the gate. The Court held that Mr. Lyon had exercised dominion over the gate in exclusion and defiance of WSAA’s right by telling Mr. Starr to remove the gate. The subsequent modification of the gate made it impossible for WSAA to use the gate, constituting a dispossession. Accordingly, the Court awarded damages of $3,878.75 for the replacement cost of the gate and court costs. Analysis

Mr. Lyon advances several arguments on appeal. First, he argues that the evidence did not support the Small Claims Court’s finding that WSAA owned the gate, as required to prove

conversion.

“To establish a claim for conversion, the owner of property must show only that another has appropriated the property to that party’s own use and beneficial enjoyment, has exercised dominion over it in exclusion and defiance of the owner’s right, or has withheld possession from the owner under a claim of title inconsistent with the owner’s title.” Montgomery v. Devoid, 2006 VT 127, 4 12, 181 Vt. 154, The Vermont Supreme Court ruled that its definition of conversion is consistent with that of the Restatement (Second) of Torts § 222A(1), which defines conversion as “an intentional exercise of dominion or control over a chattel which so seriously interferes with the right of another to control it that the actor may justly be required to pay the other the full value of the chattel.” Jd.

Contrary to Mr. Lyon’s argument, WSAA did present evidence that it had an ownership interest in the gate. Although there was no written agreement regarding the gate, and WSAA held no easement rights regarding the right-of-way, the weight of evidence indicates that WSAA owned or had the right to control the gate. Mr. Smith testified that WSAA owned the gate. Mr. Fraysier testified that the State claimed no interest in the gate and considered WSAA to be the owner of the gate. Furthermore, Mr. Lyon stated that he did not consider the gate to be his personal property. Tr. 74:14-15. This evidence was adequate to support the Court’s finding that WSAA owned the gate.

Moreover, WSAA did not have to prove that it held full legal title to the gate in order to bring an action for conversion; all WSAA had to prove was that it had the right to possess the gate. See Paska v. Saunders, 103 Vt. 204, 217 (1931) (“Actual possession of personal property is cnough, prima facie, to sustain an action of trover against anyone except the true owner... .”)'; Restatement (Second) of Torts § 222A(1) (defining conversion as serious interference “with the right of another to control” the property).

Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI

Related

Montgomery v. Devoid
2006 VT 127 (Supreme Court of Vermont, 2006)
Mischke v. Mischke
571 N.W.2d 248 (Nebraska Supreme Court, 1997)
Paska v. Saunders
153 A. 451 (Supreme Court of Vermont, 1931)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
wsaa v. lyon, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/wsaa-v-lyon-vtsuperct-2024.