¶ 1. This appeal arises from a partition action brought by plaintiff Daniel Massey against defendant Lucille Hrostek. In that action, Hrostek was ordered to sign over title to their jointly owned $450,000 vacation home on nineteen acres of land without receiving any compensation from Massey. We reverse and remand.
¶ 2. When Massey brought this partition action, the parties were the titular owners, as joint tenants with rights of survivorship, of a house and land in Cavendish. 1 The parties were for some time involved in a romantic relationship, but were estranged before Massey filed the partition action. The pertinent facts are largely undisputed, and may be briefly recounted.
¶ 3. In November 1996, the parties took title in fee simple absolute to the Cavendish house by warranty deed. Both parties were named in the deed. Massey, however, paid the entire $270,000 purchase price for the property. There was no mortgage. The deed was duly recorded in the town land records, and both parties were named as insureds on the homeowners’ insurance policy. There are no deed conditions that compromise or prematurely terminate Hrostek’s interest in the property, and the parties had no written agreement, apart from the deed itself, concerning their respective ownership interests in the property. Massey, in addition to paying the entire purchase price, has since paid every expense associated with the property, including all taxes, insurance, utilities, and necessary maintenance costs. He did not demand contribution from Hrostek for these expenses.
¶ 4. From November 1996 until their breakup in November 2003, Hrostek had full access to the property, and the parties *215 used the property together as a vacation home. After the breakup, however, Hrostek was denied access: Massey changed the locks and alarm codes in November 2003. Massey has had exclusive possession of the property ever since.
¶ 5. In January 2004, Massey filed this action to partition the Cavendish property, pursuant to chapter 179 of Title 12. See 12 V.S.A. §§ 5161-5188. Hrostek filed a counterclaim in March 2005 alleging that Massey had denied her access to the property and requesting injunctive relief, compensatory and punitive damages, costs, and attorney’s fees. The parties stipulated that they were joint owners of the property, and in July 2005 the court appointed commissioners to make “findings regarding the valuation and partitioning of the property.” See 12 V.S.A. § 5169 (when the court finds that the parties both have ownership interests in the property, “the court shall render judgment that partition be made and appoint three disinterested residents of the county as commissioners”). The commissioners issued their report in August 2006. The commissioners found — as the parties had stipulated — that the property could not be physically divided. Specifically, the commissioners found that “the property cannot be physically subdivided between the parties in an equitable manner so that each party would receive equal value.” The commissioners further found that the value of the property, according to an independent appraiser, was $450,000, and that the parties did not dispute this value.
¶ 6. Hrostek contended at trial that she was entitled to $225,000, half of the present value of the property, because Massey had made a gift to her of a one-half interest in the property at the time of the original purchase. The gift, Hrostek contended, was binding against Massey both in equity — i.e., in the partition action — and at law. Hrostek argued that the property should either be sold or assigned to Massey: in either event, she stated that she was entitled to $225,000. Massey, by contrast, urged that Hrostek was entitled to nothing and should simply be ordered to transfer her interest in the property to Massey without compensation.
¶ 7. The trial court issued an opinion including findings of fact and conclusions of law in September 2007. The court first recounted the history of the parties’ relationship, a story that need not be retold here. Similarly, the court made findings concerning the parties’ respective employment histories, which are also not relevant here. The pertinent findings are as follows.
*216 ¶ 8. Massey paid the entire purchase price for the property in Cavendish, all of the closing costs, and the property transfer tax. The deed provided that Massey and Hrostek held the property as joint tenants with rights of survivorship. The court also found that “[although [Massey] was the purchaser, he included [Hrostek] as an owner as a sentimental gesture,” and that Massey “did not intend this as an outright gift,” but only intended that Hrostek would be provided some measure of security if Massey should die while they were still romantically involved. Massey, the court found, “just assumed that” if the parties broke up, Hrostek “would simply sign over the house to him because he had paid for everything.” In seeming contrast, however, the court also found that Massey, because of an earlier contentious divorce, “was extremely conservative with putting names on property” and for this reason never had his primary home in Connecticut titled in Hrostek’s name.
¶ 9. Next, the court enumerated thirteen expenses — the amounts of which were stipulated to by the parties — that had been paid solely by Massey from the date of purchase through November 1, 2003. They are:
Purchase Price $270,000.00
Property Transfer Tax 3,375.00
Property Taxes 41,345.44
Central Vermont Public Service 9,747.36
Parker Oil 9,236.07
TDS Telephone 2,688.00
Sanderson Maintenance 28,930.00
Linda Hastings (house cleaning) 3,997.50
Homeowner’s Insurance 2,800.00
Direct TV 9,072.00
Countryside Lock and Alarm 2,169.72
Pest Control 3,500.00
Willey Earthmoving Corp. 23,000.00
Total $409,861.09
The court also found that Massey had spent $80,000 since 2004 — i.e., in the period after Hrostek was denied access to the premises — repainting the interior of the house, renovating the kitchen and master bathroom, and laying hardwood floors. Massey did not seek Hrostek’s permission to make these improvements.
*217
¶ 10. The court then noted that there was “no dispute that the parties hold the property at issue as joint owners” and that as a “joint tenant, [Massey] may seek partition.” See 12 V.S.A. § 5161. Because, as the commissioners had found, the property could not be physically divided, the court determined that the property should be assigned to Massey. See
id.
§ 5174;
Wilk v. Wilk,
¶ 11. Having so concluded, the court determined that the case was controlled by our decision in
Begin v. Benoit,
¶ 12. Citing Begin, the court here concluded that because Hrostek “made no financial contributions,” she was “a joint owner in name only” and thus had “no legal entitlement to any portion of the value of the property.” The court ordered that Massey was “entitled to partition and ... to an assignment of the property without having to make any financial payment” to Hrostek. Hrostek appealed, contending for several reasons that she is entitled to one-half of the property’s stipulated value of $450,000. We consider her arguments in turn.
I.
¶ 13. The threshold question in this appeal is whether Hrostek received any interest in the property at the time of the purchase in 1996. Hrostek contends that the trial court erred as a matter of law by failing to conclude that she had a one-half interest in *218 the property that was acquired by gift at the time of the purchase. As is clear from the summary above, the trial court’s ultimate decision relies at least in part on its conclusion that Hrostek was entitled to nothing because she did not contribute to the purchase price, and because Massey lacked the requisite donative intent to establish a joint tenancy, notwithstanding the deed itself. This was error.
¶ 14. Our law establishes a rebuttable presumption “that the act of titling property in another’s name establishes intent to convey a present interest in the property.”
Brousseau v. Brousseau,
¶ 15. The trial court here did not explicitly acknowledge the standards just cited. It found, however, that Massey included Hrostek on the deed only “as a sentimental gesture” and “did not intend this as an outright gift.” Further, the court found that there “was no agreement, written or oral, that [Hrostek] would share in the ownership or equity of the property.” The court then found that “[Massey] just assumed that if [the parties separated, Hrostek] would simply sign over the house to him because he had paid for everything.” The court concluded that Hrostek was therefore “a joint owner in name only” and had “no legal entitlement to any portion of the value of the property.” In seeming contrast to these findings, however, the court also found that Massey, because of an earlier contentious divorce, “was extremely conservative with putting names on property” and for this reason never had the parties’ primary home in Connecticut titled in Hrostek’s name. See
Hrostek v. Massey,
No. CV030407894S,
¶ 16. These findings are insufficient to rebut the presumption that the joint title established Massey’s intent to convey a present interest in the property to Hrostek. The findings’ insufficiency is illustrated by their internal inconsistencies. The finding that Massey did not intend to give Hrostek “an outright gift” of any interest in the property is contrary to the finding that he intentionally placed her name on the deed and the finding that he was cautious in titling property jointly. Similarly, it is impossible to reconcile the finding that Massey simply assumed that Hrostek would sign over the property upon their estrangement with the finding that he was “extremely conservative with putting names on property,” or with the finding that he intentionally did not put Hrostek’s name on any Connecticut deeds. Indeed, Massey’s supposed assumption that Hrostek would simply sign over her interest upon the parties’ estrangement must necessarily have been predicated on Massey’s belief that Hrostek had an interest to sign over. Further, the finding that Massey and Hrostek were joint owners — a finding that was a necessary precondition for Massey to bring this action in the first instance, see 12 V.S.A. § 5161 — is irreconcilable with the finding that Massey did not intend to give Hrostek “an outright gift.” And, finally, the court found that Massey had a will that named Hrostek as a beneficiary with respect to property other than the house, and that he canceled that will upon their breakup. This cannot be reconciled with the court’s finding that, as to the house, Massey intended to accomplish by mere silence what he had taken pains to accomplish with full written formalities as to other property.
¶ 17. Thus, although Massey furnished all of the consideration for the property, the evidence presented does not support the finding — implicit in the trial court’s order — that Massey rebutted the joint-title gift presumption. See, e.g.,
Jezo v. Jezo,
*220 (1) An instrument may create a joint tenancy in which the interests of the joint tenants are equal or unequal.
(2) Unless the instrument creating a joint tenancy contains language indicating a contrary intent:
(A) It shall be presumed that the joint tenants’ interests are equal.
(B) Upon the death of a joint tenant, the deceased joint tenant’s interest shall be allocated among the surviving joint tenants, as joint tenants, in proportion to their respective joint interests at the time of the deceased joint tenant’s death.
As noted above, the court’s finding that Massey intended to convey
nothing
was unsupported by the record, and was therefore insufficient to rebut the presumption established by the statute just quoted. Thus, Hrostek and Massey, upon the 1996 purchase of the property, each had an undivided one-half interest in the property.
2
To hold otherwise would allow the consideration of contributions preceding the joint tenancy to effectively defeat joint ownership,
Boulette,
¶ 18. It would, of course, have posed no great difficulty for Massey to achieve by legal means the result he now seeks to achieve in equity. He might have drafted the deed to reflect that the parties had unequal ownership interests, see
British Am. Oil Producing Co. v. Grizzaffi,
*221
¶ 19. As a final matter, we note that this case is not like
Stephan v. Lynch,
in which the putative donee was aware that the supposed donor lacked donative intent, and the donee allegedly “took advantage of [his mother’s] generosity in purchasing a home with her own assets and putting it in their joint names, by driving her out of it and taking possession of the premises.”
¶20. Thus, the parties had undivided one-half interests in the property, and the petition for partition was properly brought. We turn next to a review of the trial court’s partition of the equity in the property.
II.
¶ 21. We begin by recounting the principles governing the allocation of property in partition proceedings. Several are relevant here, and we take some pains to enunciate their details, having not had cause to do so in our prior partition cases. As a preliminary matter, the goal of partition actions is “that a cotenant must equally share both the burdens of land ownership (i.e., the responsibility of preserving the land) as well as the benefits.”
Parker v. Lambert,
*222
¶22. First, under most circumstances, a cotenant who pays necessary maintenance costs associated with jointly owned property is entitled to a setoff for the other tenant’s portion of those costs in a partition action, the theory being that it would be inequitable for the noncontributing cotenant to benefit from those outlays. See, e.g.,
Palanza v. Lufkin,
¶23. A cotenant who pays for discretionary improvements to the property — as distinct from the just-mentioned necessary maintenance costs — is entitled to a setoff only for the resultant increase in fair market value,
not
for the actual costs.
Palanza,
¶ 24. The next widely accepted principle relevant to this action is that a cotenant who ousts his cotenant from possession and enjoyment of the property will have his share of the partition proceeds set off by the rental value of the ousted cotenant’s interest for the period of the ouster. See
Reitmeier,
¶ 25. Finally, the cotenant who excludes his cotenants from possession and enjoyment of the jointly owned property is not entitled to credit for costs incurred, for either maintenance
or
improvements, during the period of the ouster.
Rinehart v. Schubel,
III.
¶ 26. We turn now to the applicable setoffs. Because Massey stated at trial that he would take an assignment of the property and compensate Hrostek an equitable sum for her interest in the property, on remand the trial court should calculate Hrostek’s interest. As we noted in Begin, the trial court should interpret the partition statutes in order “to achieve equity between the parties,”
¶ 27. Based on the stipulated $450,000 value of the property, Hrostek was entitled, before setoffs, to $225,000 for her one-half interest. Had the parties contributed equally to the upkeep of the property, Hrostek would simply be entitled to that amount upon partition. It is undisputed, however, that Massey paid all of the necessary maintenance and repair expenses, as well as certain pre-ouster improvement costs.
¶28. Hrostek’s interest must therefore be reduced by an amount equal to one-half of the necessary repair and maintenance costs incurred before the ouster. See, e.g.,
Biondo,
Reversed and remanded for proceedings consistent with the views expressed herein.
Notes
Massey subsequently quitclaimed his interest to a trustee who reconveyed it to him, severing the joint tenancy and converting it to a tenancy in common. The severance is not material to our decision today because it did not affect the size of the parties’ respective shares in the property, and did not prevent the court from entertaining the partition action. See 12 V.S.A. § 5161 (“A person having or holding real estate with others, as joint tenants, tenants in common or coparceners, may have partition thereof.”).
See also
In re Lower,
