1 Conn. App. 341 | Conn. App. Ct. | 1983
The issue in this case is whether the trial court erred in finding that the plaintiff failed to prove a prescriptive easement to use beach property under General Statutes 4737.1 The plaintiff beach association brought suit against two of its members whose beach property adjoins that over which the plaintiff claims a right to perpetual use by virtue of a 1959 deed. The complaint alleges that in 1977 the defendants erected a fence on the beach which encroaches on the plaintiff's easement. The defendants acquired their property in 1974 from Vincent Stella's grandfather, who had acquired the property in 1959. The plaintiff acquired its easement in 1959 from the same grantor *342 as that of Stella's grandfather. The trial court found that the defendants' fence is on their property and thus does not encroach on property owned by the plaintiff, and that finding is not challenged on appeal.
A second basis on which the case was tried and decided in the trial court, and the only issue argued on appeal, is whether the plaintiff had acquired a prescriptive easement under General Statutes
The plaintiff appealed,2 claiming that the court erred (1) in finding consent without a sufficient factual basis, and (2) in ruling that summer use was insufficient as a matter of law to constitute the continuity required by General Statutes
The plaintiff's first claim is based on the existence of a prior fence apparently erected by Stella's grandfather. It appears to be undisputed from the transcript and the defendant's brief that such a fence existed, that it was on the beach for some period of time until the defendants bought the property in 1974 and that the *343 defendants subsequently erected the present fence in a somewhat different location. The plaintiff claims that its adverse use began with the erection of that prior fence. Just where and when that prior fence was erected was not undisputed, however. The trial court made no findings as to the existence of the prior fence, the date of its erection or its location relative to the present fence; nor did the plaintiff seek under Practice Book 3082 to have the court articulate its decision further to establish those facts or the basis of the finding of consent after its erection.
Ordinarily we do not "`resort to matters extraneous to the formal record, to facts which have not been found and which are not admitted in the pleadings or exhibits which are not part of the record.'" Grunschlag
Ethel Walker School, Inc.,
Since the trial court's determination that the plaintiff's use of the defendants' land was consensual must stand, the plaintiff has not established a necessary element of its claim of adverse use. Thus we need not consider the plaintiff's second claim of error.
There is no error.