1 Conn. App. 481 | Conn. App. Ct. | 1983
This is essentially an action to quiet and settle title.1 The plaintiffs' complaint alleges record title and title by adverse possession to certain parcels of land. The defendant pleaded by special defense that the plaintiffs' record title had been acquired by one ousted *483 of possession,2 and by counterclaim that he had record title to a certain portion of the realty described in the plaintiffs' complaint and that the plaintiffs claimed an estate in that portion adverse to his title.3 The court found for the defendant on the complaint and rendered judgment quieting and settling title in the defendant to the two parcels of land as described in his counterclaim. The plaintiffs appeal from that judgment.4
The trial court found that the defendant had proved that the defendant's predecessor in title had acquired the land by adverse possession between 1936 and 1958 by ousting a predecessor in title of the plaintiffs. The facts relied on by the court for this conclusion were that the predecessor had walked the boundaries with his children, posted the property, prohibited trespassing on it, had received compensation in 1969 from the plaintiffs' predecessor in title for trees which were removed in 1969, and insisted that a barway be used only with his permission.5 *484
The issues raised by the plaintiffs on appeal are (1) whether the trial court used the wrong standard of proof in determining that the defendant's predecessor in title had acquired title by adverse possession; (2) whether the evidence was insufficient as a matter of law to support a finding of adverse possession and ouster;6 (3) whether the court must decide where record title lies before considering claims of adverse possession and ouster; (4) whether the court erred in excluding from evidence a certain map proffered as an ancient document; and (5) whether the plaintiffs established record title as a matter of law.7
Both parties agree that the standard of proof for proving title by adverse possession is "clear and positive proof." 8 Roche v. Fairfield,
Ordinarily, whether the elements of adverse possession have been proven are questions of fact for the trial court. Lucas v. Crofoot,
The trial court stated that "[t]he preponderance of the evidence" established that the defendant's predecessor in title acquired the disputed property by adverse possession between 1936 and 1958. The standard used was erroneous. Even if the court's subsequent words that the predecessor "in an extraordinary degree" continuously asserted ownership and insisted upon his exclusive right to use and enjoy the property are read as though the court used a higher standard than a preponderance of the evidence, that higher standard would apply to only two of the elements of adverse possession. In order to establish adverse possession, the claimant must oust an owner of possession and keep such owner out uninterruptedly for fifteen years by an open, visible and exclusive possession under a claim of right with intent to use the property as his own and without the consent of the owner. Whitney v. Turmel, supra; Arcari v. Dellaripa,
The trial court did not find that to an "extraordinary degree" the owner was ousted, the possession of the predecessor was open and visible, the defendant entered under a claim of right, or the possession was without the consent of the owner. It only found that to such a degree the predecessor asserted ownership and insisted on an exclusive right to use and enjoy the property.
The burden of persuasion in an ordinary civil case is met if the evidence induces a reasonable belief that *486
it is more probable than not that the fact in issue is true. This is the common preponderance of the evidence standard. In certain extraordinary circumstances, however, a higher degree of belief is required. Dacey v. Connecticut Bar Assn.,
A linguistic morass of standards of proof exists among those civil cases which require a higher standard of proof than the garden variety requiring persuasion by a preponderance of the evidence. Since the trial court erred in not using the test of "clear and positive proof," and since a new trial is necessary for that reason, a discussion of the definition of that standard is appropriate.
The parties have not cited any Connecticut case which equates "clear and positive proof," the standard for adverse possession, with "clear and convincing" proof, the standard for cases such as libel. Dacey v. Connecticut Bar Assn., supra. The Supreme Court, however, has stated that "clear, substantial and convincing" proof is the same as "clear and convincing proof. Lopinto v. Haines, supra, 534.
It could be argued that "clear and positive proof" may be an even higher level of proof than "clear and convincing" proof. Ballentine's Law Dictionary (3d Ed.) simply defines the latter as a degree of proof higher than that of preponderance of the evidence but does not define "clear and positive proof." "Positive" is *487 defined as "expressed clearly or peremptorily with no doubt" in Webster's Third New International Dictionary, whereas "convincing" is defined as "assuring by proof which so strongly supports that it seems conclusive" in the same source.
According to some legal scholars, there are only three categories of the degrees of proof. They are (1) the fact in issue probably has happened; (2) it is highly probable that the fact in issue has happened; and (3) the fact in issue has most certainly happened. McBaine, "Burden of Proof: Degrees of Belief," 32 Calif. L. Rev. 242 246-47 (1944). There are three measures of persuasion: proof by a preponderance of the evidence; proof by the stricter standard such as "clear and convincing"; and proof beyond a reasonable doubt. See 9 Wigmore, Evidence (3d Ed.) 2497, 2498. "Clear and convincing" evidence is a standard for which many phrases have been coined by courts to express the same thing, for example, "clear, cogent and convincing," "clear, precise and indubitable," "clear and irresistible," or "convincing beyond reasonable controversy." McBaine, op. cit., 253.
A quagmire of descriptive words for the quantum of proof in the exceptional civil case is not desirable. This court, therefore, holds that "clear and convincing" proof should be equated with "clear and positive" proof. The standard is a degree of belief that is between the belief required in the average civil case and the belief of guilt beyond a reasonable doubt required in a criminal action. Such a burden of persuasion requires a reasonable belief that "the facts asserted are highly probably true [or] that the probability that they are true . . . is substantially greater than the probability that they are false. . . ." Lopinto v. Haines, supra, quoting Dacey v. Connecticut Bar Assn., Supra, 537. *488
Since a new trial is needed because the trial court applied the wrong standard of proof, the remaining claims of error need only be considered to the extent that they will recur upon retrial.
The trial court did not expressly decide whether the plaintiffs had record title.9 Implicit in its decision, however, is that the defendant did not have record title since it found that the defendant had acquired title by adverse possession. Arcari v. Dellaripa, supra. The plaintiffs brought suit pursuant to General Statutes
The statute is construed by this court as requiring a determination of record title before the issue of adverse possession is reached. Such a construction is based on the fact that the statute lists things which fall into the same category, that of written documentation of title. If the words "sources of title" were broad enough to include facts comprising adverse possession, the words "determine the construction of the same" would make no sense. It is the written indicia of title to which the statute refers.
Where a party pursuant to General Statutes
The introduction of the ancient map was in the discretion of the court. State v. Piskorski,
There is error; the judgment is set aside and a new trial is ordered.
In this opinion the other judges concurred.