This matter arises out of a dispute over the use of and interference with certain easements existing across both parties’ properties in Stamford. The plaintiffs brought an action seeking damages and an injunction in an attempt to force the defendants to remove certain improvements from an easement which runs across the southerly portion of the defendants’ property and to enjoin them from interfering with their use of that easement. The defendants counterclaimed and alleged that the plaintiffs had no easement across the defendants’ property and also that the plaintiffs have interfered with easements of the defendants which run across the westerly and southerly portions of the plaintiffs’ property. The trial court found certain issues for both parties from which the defendants appealed and the plaintiffs cross appealed.
The plaintiffs are owners of two parcels of land, each with a house situated thereon, located in the Shippan area of Stamford. (See Appendix.) Each parcel fronts on a 29.58 foot strip of land, owned in fee by the plaintiffs, which extends northerly from Ocean Drive East and which has been designated as the “right of way.” The parties and the trial court have designated these parcels as Lots 1 and 2 with Lot 1 being to the north of Lot 2. Directly to the east of Lot 1 and abutting the same is another lot with a house situated thereon, designated as Lot 3, which the defendants own. Lot 3 is bounded on the east by Long Island Sound.
The defendants, on the other hand, have no direct access to Ocean Drive East or to the plaintiffs’ 29.58 foot right of way which extends to its north. The plaintiffs concede, however, that the defendants’ access to Ocean Drive East is by way of the 29.58 foot right of way described above. Also conceded is the fact that access to the defendants’ property from the 29.58 foot right of way is by way of an easement, nine feet in width, running from west to east along the southerly boundary of the plaintiffs’ Lot 2 (“the nine foot easement”) and by another connecting easement, six feet in width, running from south to north along the easterly boundary of the same lot (“the six foot easement”). Both parties agree that the six foot and nine foot easements, as they exist today, are represented by a driveway leading from Ocean Drive East to the defendants’ house on Lot 3. Additionally, the defendants have title to a parking space located within the 29.58 foot right of way, the use of which is in dispute, as well as the right to park other vehicles within the right of way.
The defendants have erected a fence along the southerly boundary of their property allegedly encroaching upon the plaintiffs’ Long Island Sound easement. The defendants have installed a catch basin at the westerly boundary of that easement and, in the process, removed a step from a stone
The trial court held that the plaintiffs had established that the Long Island Sound easement was reserved in a deed by a predecessor in title and that it was permanent and ran with the land in favor of the plaintiffs’ properties.
1
The court ordered the removal of the drainage pipes which emptied into that easement because they interfered with and impaired the plaintiffs’ use of that easement. The court also ordered the defendants to pay $500 in damages to the plaintiffs to cover the cost of the damages sustained in the Long Island Sound easement. The court additionally found, however, that the defendants’ fence was only a slight encroachment which did not interfere with the plaintiffs’ use of the Long Island Sound easement. As to the six and nine foot easements, the court found that the installed lighting was consistent with the use of the easements and that the speed bump was a nuisance and must be removed.
The defendants have appealed and claim that the court erred (1) in holding that the plaintiffs have a permanent easement by reservation to Long Island Sound across their property, and (2) in holding that the plaintiffs were entitled to $500 in damages. The plaintiffs have cross appealed and claim that the court erred (1) in holding that the defendants’ fence does not interfere with the plaintiffs’ use of the Long Island Sound easement; (2) in ordering the plaintiffs to remove the cement blocks from the perimeter of the defendants’ parking space within the 29.58 foot right of way; and (3) in not expressly stating that the defendants could not exclude the plaintiffs from using the beach area between the mean high and mean low water marks because said area belongs to the public. We will first address the defendants’ claims of error.
I
To comprehend fully the defendants’ first argument, a brief history of these pieces of property must be set out. Prior to 1916, Theodore V. Ketcham owned each of the three parcels of land now belonging to the parties along with a fourth parcel (Lot 4) which is directly to the south of the
“To have and to hold the premises, with all the privileges and appurtenances, unto said releasee [Stuart] his heirs and assigns forever, so that neither I [Marion] the said releasor nor my heirs, nor any person under me or them shall hereafter have any claim, right or title in or to the premises, or any part thereof, but therefrom I am and they are by these presents forever barred and secluded except my fee simple ownership thereof.” The defendants have conceded, and correctly so, that this 1929 deed created and granted a permanent easement (i.e., “the Long Island Sound easement”) to the owners of Lots 1 and 2.
The situation remained unchanged until 1953 when two transactions occurred. On April 24, Stuart quitclaimed his interest in Lot 3 for one dollar to Marion. One minute later, Marion con
The defendants claim that the above quoted language from the 1953 quitclaim deed operated to convert the undisputed permanent Long Island Sound easement, granted in the 1929 deed, into a mere personal right of way in Stuart which terminated with his death in 1955. The defendants point out that since there were no words of limitation such as “to my heirs and assigns,” the easement reserved was personal to the grantor and, therefore, the plaintiffs have no right to use the Long Island Sound easement running along the southerly portion of the defendants’ property. Additionally,
Since the defendants have conceded that the 1929 quitclaim deed from Marion to Stuart created a permanent appurtenant easement in the owners of Lots 1 and 2, the major focus of this issue becomes whether the reservation clause contained in the 1953 deed from Stuart to Marion reduced the appurtenant easement to an easement in gross. “The meaning and effect of the reservation are to be determined, not by the actual intent of the parties, but by the intent expressed in the deed, considering all its relevant provisions and reading it in the light of the surrounding
circumstances; Knowlton
v.
New York, N.H. & H. R. Co.,
It is well settled that “[i]f the easement makes no mention of the heirs and assigns of the grantee, a presumption is created that the intent of the parties was that merely a personal right of way was reserved. This presumption, however, is not con-
The defendants argue that the surrounding circumstances point in just the opposite way. They state that if “the intent of Stuart (and Marion) ... in 1953 were to continue the permanent easement as ‘appurtenant’ to [Lots] 1 and 2 . . .
there was no need to have Stuart execute any further document at the time of Marion’s sale in 1953 or to have it recorded immediately prior to the recorda
We cannot accept the argument of the defendants. It is true that if the only intent were to continue Stuart’s permanent easement across Lot 3 after its sale, no additional deed would have been necessary to accomplish this. It is precisely this fact, however, which leads us to conclude, along with the “surrounding circumstances,” that more than that was intended and accomplished by this 1953 deed. Notwithstanding the defendants’ argument, it is a fair inference that the purpose of this transaction between brother and sister must have been to purge Stuart of any interest he may have had in Lot 3 in order to allow Marion to pass a clear title to her purchaser in this first out-of-the-family transfer involving these lots. Viewed in this light, it made perfect sense for Stuart to include the reservation clause in the 1953 deed not merely to affirm his permanent easement but, more significantly, to avoid extinguishing or releasing the permanent easement. See
Richardson
v.
Tumbridge,
This court has noted that the existence of surrounding circumstances will further negate the presumption of an easement in gross in the absence of words of limitation in the conveyance. See
Brown
v.
Connecticut Light & Power Co.,
The defendants claim that this conclusion is erroneous because there was no testimony, expert or otherwise, as to the value of the plaintiffs’ property with and without the Long Island Sound easement.
In Blanchard v. Maxson, supra, 433, we stated that among the “surrounding circumstances” to be considered “are the relation or want of relation of the rights of way to the estate of the person to whom the grant is made, or to the other estate of the person by whom they are reserved or excepted, and the necessity they will meet or the benefit they will contribute in the enjoyment of such estate by its owner.” The benefit of the reservation to Stuart’s property is “apparent.” See Birdsey v. Kosienski, supra, 411.
“Also significant is whether the owner of the servient estate recognized the right of the subsequent owners of the dominant estate to exercise the easement.
Birdsey
v.
Kosienski,
supra, 411.”
Leabo
v.
Leninski,
supra, 615; see
Dunn Bros., Inc.
v.
Lesnewsky,
supra. Relevant to this point is the trial court’s observation that “[t]he testimony herein indicated that every deed in the chain of title from Marion McKenzie [sic] until the present indicates that the property was subject to the aforementioned right of way, including the mortgage deed executed by the defendants at the time
Finally, we will look to the actual language of the reservation clause itself. See
Dunn Bros., Inc.
v.
Lesnewsky,
supra, 336. This reservation clause provides additional support for the conclusion that Stuart retained an appurtenant easement and not merely an easement in gross. The critical language provides “reserving, however, to me ... as appurtenant to my other land ... a right of way and easement.” In a similar case, we held that an easement reserved “for and as an appurtenance to the other land of the grantors” was permanent and
We next address the defendants’ claim that the trial court erred in awarding $500 to the plaintiffs for damages sustained to the Long Island Sound easement. “The law is settled that the obligation of the owner of the servient estate, as regards an easement, is not to maintain it, but to refrain from doing or suffering something to be done which results in an impairment of it. 2 Thompson, Real Property (Perm. Ed.) § 675.”
Carrig
v.
Andrews,
There was evidence before the court, in the form of testimony by Philip Cippri, an experienced landscaper and tree trimmer, that in order to repair the easement, it would be necessary to expend $2500 for the installation of an asphalt stairway extending the length of the easement. The court was of the view that “[w]hile the plaintiffs are entitled to make repairs to the easement consistent with its intended use, the expenditure of such a sum would not be.” Outside of this testimony, however, there was no other evidence which would support a conclusion as to the amount of the damages sustained.
II
We now turn to the issues raised by the plaintiffs’ cross appeal. The plaintiffs first argue that the trial court erred in finding that there was no interference with the plaintiffs’ use of the Long Island Sound easement even though the defendants’ fence encroached upon that easement. The plaintiffs claim that the court should have ordered the removal of the fence because it constituted a nuisance.
“The owner of the servient estate may erect fences along the sides of a way, provided the right of passage is not thereby obstructed.” (Footnotes omitted.) 28 C.J.S., Easements § 98 (a); see
Dolske
v.
Gormley,
In the present case, the court found, after viewing the premises, that the fence “slightly” encroached on the easement but that it did not interfere with the use of the easement by the owners of the dominant estate. The evidence disclosed that the fence did encroach on the boundary line of the Long Island Sound easement by 0.6 feet or 714 inches. It is important to note, however, that the sole purpose of this easement was to provide the owners of Lots 1 and 2 with a means by which they could walk to the beach. We cannot say, after viewing the photographs included as exhibits and in light of the use of the easement,
The second argument which the plaintiffs present concerns the defendants’ parking space located within the plaintiffs’ 29.58 foot strip of land designated as the “right of way.” The plaintiffs claim that the trial court erred in ordering them to remove the cement blocks which they placed along the perimeter of the defendants’ parking space. The trial court found that these cement blocks interfered with the defendants’ means of ingress and egress from their vehicles. The plaintiffs have not presented us with any compelling reason to overturn this decision of the trial court.
The plaintiffs claim that their purpose in placing the cement blocks along the perimeter of the parking space was to delineate the space and to prevent the defendants from encroaching upon the plaintiff s’, land, presumably by swinging open the doors of the defendants’ automobile. The plaintiffs also claim that the cement blocks do not interfere with the defendants’ use of the easement.
“[W]here the factual basis of the court’s decision is challenged we must determine whether the facts set out in the memorandum of decision are sup
Many of the same considerations discussed above with respect to the fence also apply to the parking space issue. In the defendants’ deed to the parking space, they were also granted “a right of way in common with others to and from said [parking space] to and from Ocean Drive East over and across [the 29.58 foot right of way].” In light of the purpose and use of this right of way, the trial court could reasonably have found that the plaintiffs’ actions materially or substantially interfered with the defendants’ use of the right of way. See
Toms
v.
Settipane,
There is error in part, the judgment with respect to damages is set aside and the case is remanded with direction to render a judgment for the plaintiffs for $1 damages. The judgment is affirmed in all other respects.
In this opinion the other judges concurred.
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Notes
The plaintiffs also contended that they had established an easement by estoppel and by prescriptive use. The trial court, however, made no determination of either of these claims.
The warranty deed from Marion MacKenzie to Orestes LaPolla referred to the Long Island Sound easement over Lot 3 as follows: “Said premises are conveyed subject to ... an easement of way and use over the southerly six (6) feet of said premises, as shown on said map.” The map referred to was an exhibit before the trial court and the original was on file in the office of the town clerk of Stamford.
In 1970 the LaPollas transferred the property to the Normans; in 1974 the Normans sold to the Packards and in 1976 the Packards sold to the defendants.
In
Birdsey
v.
Kosienski,
For other eases in which an easement was held to be appurtenant despite the absence of the “heirs and assigns” language, see
Zavisza
v.
Hastings,
Philip Cippri testified that the easement basically consists of approximately forty-eight flat stones laid out to form a stairway to the beach. He stated that an alternative to repairing by adding asphalt would be to reset the stone steps, but he could not estimate the time or cost to do so.
Had the purpose of the Long Island Sound easement been to provide for automobile or other means of travel to the beach area, this 7% iuch encroachment might very well materially or substantially interfere with its reasonable enjoyment.
