Opinion
This appeal arises out of a dispute between neighbors over the defendants’ use of the plaintiffs driveway to access the defendants’ property and their use of a portion of the plaintiffs land adjacent to the driveway as a “turnaround” area for their cars. The court held that the defendants had acquired a prescriptive easement to use the plaintiffs driveway for ingress and egress from their home to West Main Street in Waterbury, but that they had failed to establish an easement over the turnaround area. The defendants appeal the court’s refusal to render judgment for them as to their claim that they had a prescriptive right to use the turnaround area. We affirm the judgment оf the trial court.
The following facts and procedural history are relevant to the defendants’ claim. The defendants, Calvin D. Hurd and Bambi Hurd, own and reside at 1050 West Main Street in Waterbury. The plaintiff, Robert St. Ger-main, Sr., owns and resides at 1048 West Main Street in Waterbury, which lies immediately south of the defendants’ property. Running along the western border of the plaintiffs property is a paved driveway that is twelve feet wide and connects the defendants’ property to
The plaintiff also maintains a separate paved area that lies directly south of his home and east of the driveway, which he uses for parking and turning around his car. The defendants claim that they also use and have used for more than fifteen years this turnaround area to turn their vehicles to drive forward in a southerly direction toward West Main Street. As a result of such use, they do not have to drive in reverse the full length of the driveway in order to enter safely West Main Street, which is a busy public thoroughfare. The plaintiff commenced an action for a declaratory judgment seeking, among other things, to exclude the defendants from the turnaround area. The defendants filed a special defense claiming a prescriptive right to use the turnaround area and filed a counterclaim seeking a judgment settling a right-of-way or easement pursuant to General Statutes § 47-37 to the turnaround area. 2
After a trial to the court, the court found that the defendants had not established that they had a prescriptive right to use the turnaround area. The court held that “[n]o sufficient evidence was submitted into the record to establish with any degree of definiteness the boundary of the area known as the ‘turnaround.’ ” The defendants sought an articulation of the court’s ruling, and the court explained that there was “no credible testimony pointing to where and how the defendant[s] used the ‘area’ [known] as the turnaround.” The defendants appeal from the court’s judgment that they had not acquired a presсriptive easement over the turnaround area.
As a threshold matter, we must address the standard of review. The scope of our appellate review depends upon the proper characterization of the rulings made by the trial court.
Bristol
v.
Tilcon Minerals, Inc.,
“Whether a right of way by prescription has been acquired presents primarily a question of fact for the trier after the nature and character of the use and the surrounding circumstances have been considered. . . . Whеn the factual basis of a trial court’s decision [regarding the existence of a prescriptive easement] is challenged, our function is to determine whether, in light of the pleadings and evidence in the whole record, these findings of fact are
We review the defendants’ claim with this standard in mind. The defendants claim that they established their prescriptive right to use the turnaround. They argue that they “offer[ed] sufficient evidence to establish the bounds of the ‘turnаround’ with ‘reasonable certainty.’ ”
“It is well settled that [a]n easement creates a nonpossessory right to enter and use land in the possession of another and obligates the possessor not to interfere with the rules authorized by the easement. . . . [Elements are not ownership interests but rather privileges to use [the] land of another in [a] certаin manner for [a] certain purpose . . . .” (Internal quotation marks omitted.)
Stefanoni
v.
Duncan,
“It is well settled that when an easement is established by prescription, the common and ordinary use which establishes the right also limits and qualifies it.
Hawley
v.
McCabe,
It is not always necessary or even possible for the party claiming a prescriptive right to establish the precise metes and bounds of the easement. See
McCullough
v.
Waterfront Park Assn., Inc.,
supra,
We will now examine the pleadings and evidence relevant to the defendants’ claim to a prescriptive right to turn around their vehicles on the plaintiffs property. In the pleadings, neither party described the turnaround area with any specificity. 4 At trial, Calvin D. Hurd testified regarding several photographs that were admitted as full exhibits and pertained to the turnaround area. Regarding one photograph that depicts the area from his house to West Main Street, he stated: “I would back in here, back down the turn out, and then proceed in a forward manner onto West Main Street.” He also indicated the turnaround area in several other photographs. A survey map of the parties’ properties was also admitted as a full exhibit into evidence.
The defendants argue that it appears as if the only required element of a claim for a prescriptive easement, which they failed to establish by a preponderance of the evidence, was the definiteness of the boundary of the turnaround area. They claim on appeal that they established the boundary with reasonable certainty because the court was able to describe the exact location of the turnaround area and Calvin Hurd testified how the defendants used it. We are not persuaded.
The statute, § 47-37, requires that the claimed adverse use continue uninterrupted for the prescribed period. For the court to find a prescriptive easement in the defendants’ favor, it must be able to identify the defendants’ claimed common and ordinary use of the plaintiffs land. Our appellate courts have described that element as defining the bounds of the easement with reasonable certainty. The court found that there was no credible testimony establishing what portion of the plaintiffs land was used by the defendants to turn around, nor was there any credible testimony pointing to how the defendants used the area tо turn their vehicles. The evidence before the court included testimony in which Calvin Hurd pointed to a few photographs taken of the parties’ properties identifying the turnaround area and testified that he would “back in here [and] back down the turn out . . . .’’As noted by the court in its articulation, there was no credible testimony, for example, as to whethеr the defendants executed a three-point turn, and if so, whether they did so closer to the existing house or closer to the property line, or whether they executed some other maneuver by driving as far over as the existing garage. “Whether the requirements for [an easement by prescription] have been met in a particular case presents a question of fact for the trier of facts. ... In such cases, the trier’s determination of fact will be disturbed only in the clearest of circumstances, where its conclusion could not reasonably be reached.” (Citations omitted; internal quotation marks omitted.)
Robert S. Weiss & Co.
v.
Mullins,
This is not, as the defendants argue, a case of slight or immaterial changes or deviаtions in the use claimed,
which would otherwise establish a prescriptive easement. Rather, it is a question of whether the defendants proved that their claimed use of an area created a prescriptive easement. The court, as fact finder, reasonably could have concluded that the evidence presented was insufficient for it to determine, with reasonable certainty, what common and ordinary use established the defendants’ claimed prescriptive right. Accordingly, it was not clearly erroneous for the court to conclude that the defendants had failed to prove that they had
The defendants, citing
First Union National Bank
v.
Eppoliti Realty Co.,
The judgment is affirmed.
In this opinion the other judges concurred.
Notes
According to the relevаnt deeds and land records, the defendants’ property is the dominant tenement for an easement for a right-of-way measuring eight feet wide and connecting the southern border of their property to West Main Street. The court held that the defendants established by a fair preponderance of the evidence that they have acquired а prescriptive easement to use the entire twelve foot width of the plaintiff’s driveway for ingress and egress to their property. The plaintiff has not appealed that ruling.
The defendants did not claim as a special defense at trial, nor do they claim on appeal, that they have an easement by necessity over the turnaround аrea.
“A million bats can fly out of a cave at once, yet few of them will bump into one another.” L. Goodman, “Dispatches From the Bat Cave,” Brown Alumni Magazine, March/April 2011, p. 26 (describing research at a laboratory at Brown University). Use of an easement by cars driven by humans, however, of necessity requires a descriptive recitation of the claimed boundaries of its common and ordinary use.
The plaintiff alleges in his complaint that the defendants “turn around in the plaintiffs [l]ot” without his permission. The defendants allege in their special defense that they “have been using a turn around on [the plaintiffs property] . . . openly, visibly, continuously and under a claim of right without interruption for a period in excess of fifteen . . . years.” Similarly, the defendants allege in their counterclaim that they “have been using a turn around on [the plaintiffs property] . . . .”
The issue in
First Union National Bank
v.
Eppoliti Realty Co.,
supra,
The issue in the present case is not whether the court adequately described the limits on the use to which the easement could be put, but whether the defendants’ failure to produce evidence sufficient to prove the bounds of the claimed easement with reasonable certainty was fatal to their claim of the existence of a prescriptive right.
Without an easement, any determination of the use of the easement or its parameters is irrelevant. When, however, an easement has been shown to exist, the nature and boundaries of the use become relevant and must be reasonable. See
Simone
v.
Miller,
