This disрute centers around defendant’s obstruction of certain easements granted to plaintiffs’ predecessors in title by the developer of the now abandoned Glendale Park subdivision. Plaintiffs brought an action in the superior court, seeking injunctivе relief and damages. The court concluded that the easements had not been extinguished through the abandonment of the subdivision and awarded plaintiffs compensatory and exemplary damages. Defendant appeals; we affirm.
In 1957, a subdivisiоn plat of Glendale Park was filed in the South Burlington land records. The plat depicted residential streets and proposed roads that would provide ingress and egress from the subdivision by linking its streets with Dorset Street. Lots in the subdivision were sold until 1960 when the remaining prоperty was foreclosed upon by a creditor.
In 1977, plaintiffs Crabbe and Sweeney each purchased a subdivision lot that had been sold by the original developer prior to 1960. Both of these lots fronted a partially completed street called Oakwood Drive. Crabbe’s deed granted an easement “in,
Also in 1977, defendant Veve Associates purchased a large portion of the land originally included in the subdivision. This parcel encompassed the platted Glen Road and other disputed ease ments, and defendant immediately began plans tо construct apartment buildings that would obstruct these easements. During the permit process, plaintiff Sweeney voiced his objections to the project at a meeting of the South Burlington Planning Commission. At one point before the project wаs approved, defendant tried to negotiate a purchase of Sweeney’s lot, but talks were discontinued after defendant was advised by counsel that the value of plaintiffs’ easements was negligible.
The apartment complex was сompleted by the end of 1978, resulting in obstruction of the Glen Road easement as well as others. The lower court concluded that the blocking of the easements decreased the values of plaintiffs’ lots, finding that the fair market value of Sweеney’s lot decreased from $23,000 before construction of the apartments to $13,000 after construction and that the fair market value of plaintiff Crabbe’s lot decreased from $16,000 to $9,000 over the same period. The court concluded that injunсtive relief was inappropriate and awarded compensatory damages in the amounts of $10,000 to plaintiff Sweeney and $7,000 to plaintiff Crabbe. Concluding that the obstruction of the easements would be continuing and permanent, the court аlso awarded exemplary damages, in the amounts of $15,000 to Sweeney and $15,000 to Crabbe.
In
Clearwater Realty Co.
v.
Bouchard,
Clearwater
involved lots sold through deeds that contained specific references to a recorded subdivision plat. The plat depicted a roadway twenty-five feet wide leading from a subdivision access road to Lake Champlain, and plaintiffs sought an injunction against a lot owner’s use of the roadway. This Court held for the lot owner, noting the familiar principle that “where lots are sold by reference to a rеcorded plat, lot purchasers acquire the right to keep open and use roads, streets, highways, and park areas as indicated on the plat.
Id.
at 363,
Here, in contrast, the deeds executed to plaintiffs include express grants of easements - to plaintiff Sweeney over specific platted roadways and to plaintiff Crabbe over all the roadways depicted on the subdivision plat. Although the deeds do refer to the subdivision plat, they do so in the course of granting the express easements. Where а deed to a subdivision lot contains express provisions regarding easements over the subdivision roadways, there is no need for resort to equitable rules. See
Adams
v.
Peninsula Produce
Exchange,
Defendant argues that easements created solely for purposes of providing access to lots of a subdivision are extinguished when the subdivision plan is abandoned. He concedes that such easements may be preserved as to any lots that have been deeded out prior to abandonment of the subdivision, but only to the extent that the easements are reasonably necessary to the use and enjoyment of those lots. All of the cases cited by defendant, however, involve implied easements, and none of them state the propositions that this Court is urged to endorse. In any event, a real estate develoрer’s abandonment of a subdivision plan cannot alter the property rights of individual lot owners to whom he has already granted easements. See
Brooks
v.
Voigt,
Defendant notes that courts in other jurisdictions have held that an easement granted for a particular purpose is extinguished as soon as the purpose ceases to exist, is abandoned, or is rendered impossible of accomplishment. See, e.g.,
URS Corp.
v.
Ash,
Here, defendant asserts that the easements at issue were created for the sole purpose of providing access to lots in the subdivision. Defendant maintains that, because the subdivision plan has been abаndoned, the purpose of the easements has ceased to exist and that the easements have been extinguished. In general, we think that the rule regarding extinguishment by cessation of purpose should be applied only where easemеnts are qualified by express limitations. See
Delconte
v.
Salloum,
In the alternative, defendant assigns error to the lower court’s award of damages. He first argues that the evidence elicited at trial does not support the court’s award of $10,000 in compensatory damages to plaintiff Sweeney and $7,000 to plaintiff Crabbe. The trial court reached these figures after finding that the fair market value of Sweeney’s lot was $23,000 before the blocking of the easements and $13,000 after the apartments were constructed. The court found that Crabbe’s lot was worth $16,000 before the obstruction of his easements and $9,000 after.
Defendant maintains that the court applied the correct measure of damages but erred in relying on plaintiffs’ testimony as to the value of their property. He characterizes this testimony as self-serving and unsuppоrted by sound reasons and bases,
The owner of real property is competent to testify concerning its value. 12 V.S.A. § 1604;
Shortle
v.
Central Vermont Public Service Corp.,
Here, the record includes testimony by plaintiff Sweeney that he purchased his lot in January of 1977 for $12,000, that the value of his lot prior to the blocking of his easements was $35,000, and that this value decreased to $10,000 after the easements were blocked. The record also includes a deposition of plaintiff Crabbe in which he stated that he purchased his lot for $4,000, that the value of his lot was $30,000 before defendant’s construction activities, and that this value decreased to $4,000 after construction was complete. On the other hand, defendant’s expert witness, a real estate appraiser, opined that obstruction of the easements did not have a measurable effect uрon the value of plaintiffs’ lots. An expert witness’s opinion is not controlling,
Jackson
v.
Jackson,
Finally, defendant contends that the lower court’s award of exemplary damages was inappropriate аnd without legal foundation. He begins by arguing that the court failed to find evidence of “actual malice,” basing its award instead on the permanent nature of the obstruction. We conclude that, although its reasons were stated ambiguously, the court was correct in its judgment, and we affirm on that basis. See
Vermont Agency of Transportation
v.
Sumner,
Defendant maintains further that exemplary damages are inappropriate in cases where a defendant’s conduct is based on good-faith reliance on counsel, and he cites authority from other jurisdictions in support of his proposition. However, this point was not argued below, no finding on the issue was requested, and the trial court made no such finding. Therefore, we do not consider the question on appeal.
Affirmed.
