[¶ 1] Richard and Anne Manalio appeal from a judgment entered in the Superior Court (York County, Fritzsche, J.) after a bench trial, declaring the Manalios’ rights in a deeded right of way over land owned by Mill Pond Condominium Association, finding the Manalios liable for conversion, and concluding that the Manalios had failed to establish a prescriptive easement over Mill Pond’s land or title through adverse possession. We affirm the judgment.
I. BACKGROUND
[¶ 2] Mill Pond is an association of twenty condominium units set back from U.S. Route 1 in Wells. The condominiums are connected to Route 1 by a strip of land owned by Mill Pond that is approximately forty-two feet wide and 176 feet long. The Manalios also live on Route 1, adjacent to this strip of land, and own a deeded right of way to the strip, described by metes and bounds, “over and along the full length, breadth and width of the ... parcel of land for the purposes of ingress and egress ... over, on and under said right of way and the construction of and maintenance of a roadway over said right of way .... ”
[¶ 3] A ruction has developed between the parties based on attempts by both to assert their respective rights in this strip of land. In essence, the parties dispute the nature and extent of the Manalios’ historic maintenance and use of the right of way. Much of their conflict concerns a sign that Mill Pond had placed on the southeast corner of the strip. The Manal-ios removed Mill Pond’s sign in retaliation to Mill Pond’s suggestion, later determined to be erroneous, that the Manalios had built their new stockade fence on Mill Pond’s land.
[¶ 4] The Superior Court, after a bench trial, found that Mill Pond’s sign was in a location that “cannot be reasonably used for purposes of ingress and egress” and that “[t]he sign was removed in anger to make a point.” Consequently, the court determined that the sign could remain in its current location and that the Manalios had converted the sign when they removed it. The court also ordered that other specific uses of the land by the Manalios cease because they were not for the purpose of ingress and egress, and determined that the Manalios’ claim of adverse possession failed.
II. DISCUSSION
[¶ 5] The Manalios argue that (1) the court improperly interpreted the language of the deed granting the right of way, thereby limiting the Manalios’ use of the
[¶ 6] We review the construction of a deed de novo as a question of law.
Pettee v. Young,
[¶ 7] Thus, the Manalios correctly argue that where the metes and bounds of an easement are explicitly described in the deed, the easement holder has the right to use the full extent of the described land for purposes consistent with the deeded easement. On this record, however, the court did not err in finding that the space taken up by the fee owner’s sign did not, as a matter of fact, interfere with the Manalios’ ingress or egress across the easement.
Cf. Rotch,
[¶ 8] Regarding the Manalios’ second argument related to the conversion, we will uphold the trial court’s factual findings unless they are clearly erroneous.
Stickney v. City of Saco,
[¶ 9] To address the Manalios’ final argument, a party claiming title through adverse possession must show that “his possession and use of the property for a twenty-year period was actual, open, visible, notorious, hostile, under a claim of right, continuous, and exclusive.”
Dombkowski v. Ferland,
The entry is:
Judgment affirmed.
