OPINION
for the Court.
This case came before the Supreme Court on May 6, 2009. The defendant, Stephen T. Lawrence (defendant or Lawrence), and the plaintiffs, William A. Hilley and Toni Lynn Hilley (collectively plaintiffs or Hilleys), own adjacent undeveloped lots in a subdivision in the Town of Tiver-ton. 2 The plaintiffs claimed that the defendant does not have the right to pass over their land to gain access to his property from a right-of-way within the subdivision, and sought to enjoin him permanently from crossing over then- land. A trial justice of the Superior Court, sitting without a jury, found in favor of the plaintiffs, and the defendant appealed. For the following reasons, we affirm the judgment of the Superior Court.
Facts and Travel
The subdivision under review in this case was recorded on June 29, 1942, in a plan entitled the Sunderland Plan (Sunder-land Plan or plan). 3 The plan sets out twelve lots, with ten lots numbered one through ten, and two unnumbered lots that are labeled “Sunderland.” The Hilleys purchased the two unnumbered lots (Hil-ley land) on September 15, 1988, and Lawrence purchased lot No. 6 (Lawrence land or subject рarcel) on May 19, 1998. The Hilley land is bounded in part by the Lawrence land and separates lots No. 6 and No. 7 from the remaining lots in the subdivision. The Hilley land and the subject parcel also have frontage on Riverside Drive, a public street in Tiverton. The evidence disclosed a steep slope between the paved portion of Riverside Drive and the subject parcel; an old staircase leads from the roadway to the top of the slope of the property.
In addition to the lots оn the Sunderland Plan, there is a right-of-way labeled “Drive,” which is demarcated by dashed lines. The parties refer to this right-of-way as Sünderland Drive, and we shall do the same. Sunderland Drive leads into the plat from Riverside Drive through the southwest corner of the Hilley land, curves north, and continues through the middle of the subdivision. Sunderland Drive abuts all the lots on the Sunderland Plan except for the Lawrence land and the adjacent lot No. 7, which also has access from Riverside Drive. With respect to the right-of-way through the Sunderland Plаn, the source deeds from the Sunderlands to all the lots, except for lot No. 7, contain the following language:
“That portion of the above described premises which lies within the boundary lines of a drive shown upon a plan entitled ‘Plan of Property in Tiverton, R.I. surveyed for George S. and Catherine B. Sunderland, June 29, 1942, H.J. Harvey, C.E.’ is subject to a right of way over,under and.across the same for all purposes, extending from the boundary line of Barker Heights, so-called, southerly and westerly to the Town or Public highway, which said wаy shall remain open and unobstructed forever for the benefit of the grantors, their heirs and assigns, and the owners of all other land shown upon said plan, their heirs and assigns. Hereby granting to the grantees herein a right of way for all purposes over, under and across said drive, extending from the boundary line of Barker Heights, so-called, southerly and westerly to the Town or Public highway.”
The genesis of this not-so-neighborly feud is Lawrence’s claim that he is entitled to use Sunderland Drive for vehicular access to his property over and across the Hilley land. The Hilleys contend that Lawrence must pass over their property for ingress and egress from Sunderland Drive; and, they argue, defendant does not have a right to do so. In November 2001, after having their land surveyed, the Hilleys erected a fence on their property to block access to the subject parcel from Sunderland Drive and their land. On July 19, 2003, the Hilleys returned from vacation to find that Lawrence had removed both the fence and a recently planted gardеn and had constructed a driveway, across the Hilley land, from his lot to Sunderland Drive.
The Hilleys filed the present action on July 25, 2003. They sought to enjoin Lawrence from passing over their land to access his lot. They also requested damages for trespass. The defendant counterclaimed that his right of access was derived from his deed that expressly grants the owner of lot No. 6 an easement to use Sunderland Drive. Alternatively, defendant claimed easement rights to pass over the Hilley land to reaсh Sunderland Drive based on-theories of an easement by implication, prescription, acquiescence, or- necessity. -
The trial justice heard testimony about the historical' use of the Lawrence land. Three witnesses, all of whom had lived in the area or visited it regularly for more than forty-five years, described a narrow foot path across the Lawrence land. However, none of them recalled a driveway on the property or cars parked on the Lawrence land. 4
The parties testified about the more recent use of the Lawrence land. According to Mr. ■ Hilley, Matthew and Frances Shea, the previous owners of the subject parcel from 1972 until 1998, were “very good friends [and] great neighbors.” He explained that he gave the Sheas “carte blanche” permission to pass over his land to reach the subject parcel. The defendant, on the other hand, testified that before he bought the lot, evidence of vehicular traffic from Sunderland Drive was apрarent. He was informed by the real estate agent and the seller, the Sheas’ son, that he could pass over the Hilley land to gain access to the subject parcel. However, Lawrence neither asked for nor received permission from the Hilleys to do so.
Two professional land surveyors, Richard Lipsitz and Joseph Marrier., both testified that the use of dashed lines to.demarcate Sunderland Drive on the Sunderland Plan indicated that the lines represented
The trial justice issued a written decision on June 29, 2007, and judgment was entered on July 20, 2007. In her deсision, the trial justice first rejected Lawrence’s claim that his deed grants a right of access from Sunderland Drive because she found that the boundary lines of the deeded right-of-way, as set forth on the plan, did not abut the Lawrence land. Next, the trial justice determined that, although the evidence disclosed that the Sheas crossed the Hilley land for vehicular access to the subject parcel, they did so with plaintiffs’ express permission, a circumstance that defeated defendant’s claims to easements by prescription and acquiescence as a matter of law.
The trial justice also found that there was no easement by necessity because the evidence demonstrated that the lot could be accessed from Riverside Drive, albeit at some expense. Furthermore, the trial justice rejected Lawrence’s argument that he was entitled to an easement by implication because she found that there was no evidence that the original grantors intended to reserve an easement for the benefit of the Lawrence land. Finally, the trial justice denied plaintiffs’ request for damages because they failed to present sufficient evidence of the amount of damages suffered. 6 The defendant timely filed a notice of appeal.
Standard of Review
This Court will reverse the decision of a trial justice to grant or deny a permanent injunction only “when it can be shown that the trial justice misapplied the law, misconceived or overlooked material evidence or made factual findings that were clearly wrong.”
Holden v. Salvadore,
Analysis
On appeal, defendant assigns error to the trial justice’s finding that he does not have a right of aсcess from Sun-derland Drive, and he further argues that the trial justice overlooked material evidence that established his right to pass over the Hilley land to reach Sunderland Drive. First, defendant contends that his deed expressly grants him a right of access from Sunderland Drive. Alternatively, he claims that the evidence presented at trial established that he is entitled to an easement by prescription, implication, acquiescence, or necessity to pass over the Hilley land to reach Sunderland Drive. 7 We shall address defendant’s arguments seriatim.
Express Easement
The defendant argues that his source deed contains .an express grant of an easement over the Hilley land because it permits him to use. Sunderland Drive, and, he contends, if he cannot access Sun-derland Drive from his property, that language would be meaningless. The defendant also contends that, notwithstanding that the boundary lines of Sunderland Drive do not abut his property, the use of dashed lines to demarcate the boundary of Sunderland Drive demonstrates that the lines represent only an approximate location of the right-of-way. Therefore, defendant argues, the language of the deed and the flexible location of the right-of-way establish that he has the right to access his property from Sunderland Drive. We reject this contention.
When construing an instrument that purportedly creates an easement, it is this Court’s “duty * * * to effectuate the intent of the parties.”
Carpenter v. Hanslin,
In the present case, the language in the deed unambiguously declares a right-of-way over that portion of the grantors’ land “which lies
within the boundary lines
of a drive [Sunderland Drive] shown upon [the plan].” (Emphasis added.) Thus, the deed specifies that the right-of-way is located within, and cоnstrained by, the boundary lines of Sunderland Drive as they appear on the Sunderland Plan. The defendant’s lot does not abut Sunderland Drive on the plan. “The grant of an easement normally will control its location if the location is specified therein.” 25 Am. Jur.2d
Easements and Licenses
§ 64 at
Therefore, because the language in the deed specifically limits the-right-of-way to the boundary lines shown on the Sunder-land Plan and those lines do not abut the Lawrence land, the trial justice was correct to find that there is no express easement to access the Lawrence land from Sunderland Drive.
Easement by Implication
The defendant also argues that the trial justice erred in finding that he is not entitled to an easement by implication because, he contends, the evidence demonstrated that at the time the land was subdivided, the grantors intended that the subject рarcel could be accessed by way of Sunderland Drive through the Hilley land. Specifically, defendant contends (1) that there was access from the Lawrence land to Sunderland Drive at the time of the severance and (2) that the deeds reveal the grantoi-s’ intent to reserve an easement for the benefit of the subject parcel.
“An implied easement is predicated upon the theory that when a person conveys property, he or she includes or intends to include in the cоnveyance whatever is necessary for the use and the enjoyment of the land l-etained.”
Bovi v. Murray,
a. Aerial Photograph
In the present case, the only evidence of access to the Lawrence land from Sunderland Drive at the time of severance is an aerial photograph taken in 1939 that shows a light-colored rectangle in the area where defendant consti'ucted the driveway. The defendant’s reliance on this photograph is misplaced; even if the light-colored area is a driveway, of which we are not convinced, the photograph was taken thi'ee years before the creation of the subdivision. Therefore, we cannot agree that the photo supplies clear and convincing evidence that, at the time the subdivision was declared, there was a driveway across the Hilley land.
The defendant claims that the tidal justice ei'roneously overlooked evidence contained in the aei'ial photograph when she decided this case. This Court pi'eviously has stated that a tidal justice “need not
b. Language in the Deeds
In order to establish the intent of the grantors to resеrve an easement for the benefit of the Lawrence land, defendant relies on the fact that his deed expressly permits the grantee to use Sunder-land Drive and that such language was not included in the deed to lot No. 7, notwithstanding that both lots purportedly have direct access from Riverside Drive. The defendant argues that this disparity demonstrates the grantors’ intent that access to the Lawrence land was to be accomplished from Sunderland Drive, while lot No. 7 was limited to Riverside Drive. We disagreе.
The defendant seeks a judicial declaration of an easement by implication based on the absence of language in a deed to an unrelated lot in the plan. The defendant suggests that the fact that the grantee of lot No. 7 was not deeded an express right to use Sunderland Drive gives rise to an ambiguity requiring this Court to construe the .conveyance documents. This is an exercise in which we decline to engage.
The law is well settled that when a property owner subdivides land and sells lots with refеrence to a plat, the purchasers of those lots are granted easements in the roadways shown on the subdivision plan, whether or not those roads subsequently are dedicated to the public.
Newport Realty, Inc. v. Lynch,
The record discloses that the deeds to the lots in the subdivision were conveyed with reference to the Sunderland Plan. Thus, the purchasers of lot No. 6, the Lawrence land, as well as the purchasers of lot No. 7, the adjacent parcel, were granted easements in Sunderland Drive as a result of this incipient dedication of the roadways set forth in the plan.
See Bitting v. Gray,
Easement by Prescription
The defendant аlternatively argues that he is entitled to a prescriptive easement to pass over the Hilley land to reach Sunderland Drive from his property. To establish an easement by prescription, a claimant must show “actual, open, notori
The trial justice found to be credible the testimony that the Hilley land was not used for vehicular access to the subject parcel until the Sheas received permission to do. so. A trial justice sitting without a jury is uniquely situated to evaluate the credibility of witnesses, and our review of the inferences that he or she draws from a witness’s testimony is deferential.
Alpha Omega Construction, Inc. v. Proprietors of Swan Point Cemetery,
When permission is granted for a particular use, a later use of the same kind cannot be characterized as adverse.
Stone,
Easement by Acquiescence
The defendant аlso argues that he established his right to an easement by acquiescence. “Like adverse possession, the doctrine of acquiescence to an observable physical boundary line constitutes a recognized means by which a claimant can gain title to the real estate encompassed by that boundary line, even though another party clearly possesses record title to that land.”
Pucino v. Uttley,
The defendant аlso claims that he is entitled to an easement by necessity because the steep slope along the westerly boundary of the subject parcel precludes access from Riverside Drive, and, therefore, an easement to use Sunderland Drive is reasonably necessary for the comfortable enjoyment of his property. An easement by necessity “is limited to a factual scenario, in which a single owner partitions land and fails to reserve an express easement in favor of the parcel that has become landlocked as a result of the severance.”
Ondis,
The land surveyors and engineer all testified that it was feasible to construct a driveway on the westerly border of the Lawrence land for direct access to Riverside Drive, but that doing so would be more burdensome and expensive than building a driveway across the Hilley land to reach Sunderland Drive. 8 The trial justice found that the “mere suggestion that [building a driveway to Riverside Drive] is ‘more expensive’ by some unspecified sum” was insufficient to support a finding of necessity. We agree. The testimony established that а driveway to Riverside Drive could be constructed, and the defendant failed to provide any evidence that the effort would be unreasonably expensive. Accordingly, we affirm the finding of the trial justice that the defendant is not entitled to an easement by necessity to reach Sunderland Drive.
Conclusion
For the foregoing reasons, we affirm the judgment of the Superior Court, to which the papers in this case may be remanded.
Notes
. Both parties also own residential properties in the area. However, only thе undeveloped lots are involved in this litigation.
. George and Catherine Sunderland subdivided the land after purchasing the entire tract from the trustees of the New York, New Haven and Hartford Railroad Company and the Old Colony Railroad Company on May 12, 1942.
. A fourth witness, who lived in the area from 1950 (when he was five-years old) until 1953 and who visited regularly until 1963, testified that he remembered a house on the Lawrence land and a driveway from Sunderland Drive that consisted of two ruts filled with sea shells. However, on cross-examination, he was shown an aerial photograph taken in 1951 and admitted that there was no house visible on the Lawrence land.
. Mr. Smith testified that a version of this alternative plan was presented to the Tiverton Zoning Board in 2004, and the board approved the plan with the stipulation that, if defendant did not prevail in this litigation, access to the Lawrence land would be from Riverside Drive.
. The plaintiffs did not cross-appeal on the question of damages, and we shall not address this ruling.
. On appeal, defendant also argued that he is entitled to an easement over the Hilley land based on a theory of equitable estoppel. However, defendant failed to present this argument to the trial justice, and, "[a]s we have stated many times, this Court’s 'raise-or-waive’ rule precludes our consideration of an issue that has not been raised and articulated at trial.”
Resendes v. Brown,
. The evidence revealed that a plan that provides access to the subject parcel from Riverside Drive already has been drafted and has been approved by the Tiverton Zoning Board.
