¶ 1. Landowner appeals from a decision by the Windsor Superior Court holding that a portion of Town Highway #34/Dunham Road traverses landowner’s property, creating a right-of-way held by the Town of Bethel. Landowner contends that the trial court erred in concluding that the Town had met its burden of proving the course of Town Highway #34/Dunham Road. We affirm.
¶ 2. Landowner owns multiple parcels of land in the Town of Bethel at the northern end of Town Highway #34/ Dunham Road. The present controversy over the course of Town Highway #34/ Dunham Road arose when the Town began examining the sufficiency of “turn around” locations for town plow trucks on the stretch of this road that the Town contends runs through the northeast portion of landowner’s property. In its comрlaint, the Town alleged that
¶ 3. In granting the Town’s motion for declaratory judgment, the trial court made the following findings of faсt: (1) the Town’s introduction of surveyor Swanson’s testimony that the beginning of Town Highway #34/Dunham Road was situated on land formerly owned by Roswell Mills and located south of landowner’s property was “credible” and “established as fact”; (2) the credible evidence established that based on an 1806 land survey Town Highway #34/Dunham Road ended at the home formerly owned by Daniel Peak and presently owned by Yankee Forest, LLC; (3) there was no genuine issue as to whether a portion of Town Highway #34/Dunham Road passes оnto landowner’s property, and this undisputed portion of the road establishes “at the least a part of the course and distance of the original town highway”; (4) based on surveyor Swanson’s credible testimony, a “Woods Road” running north from landowner’s residence serves as a monument for the course of Town Highway #34/Dunham Road; (5) credible evidence established that the absence of stone walls that may have served as monuments to the location of the course of the roаd “is fully consistent with the character of the soils, topography and historic use of the lands”; and (6) credible evidence did not sustain the assertion that the town highway “migrated” to a location east of landowner’s residence. Based on these findings of fact, the trial court concluded that Town Highway #34/ Dunham Road was not a “phantom road.” Instead, the court found that the road “was lawfully established and laid out as a town highway and ... [the road’s] course and distance over the lands of landоwner are fairly and reasonably determinable at this time.”
¶4. On appeal, landowner does not dispute the creation of Town Highway #34/Dunham Road; however, he contends that the Town failed to meet its burden of proving the course of the public highway with any reasonable degree of certainty.
¶ 5. We begin by setting forth the appropriate standard of review. We will uphold the trial court’s findings of fact unless they are clearly erroneous, viewing the supporting evidence in a light most fаvorable to the prevailing party.
Highgate Assocs., Ltd. v. Merryfield,
¶ 6. At issue in this case is the existence of an “ancient road.” Vermont law defines ancient roads or “unidentified corridors” аs town highways that:
(i) have been laid out as highways by proper authority through the process provided by law at the time they were created or by dedication and acceptance; and
(ii) do not, as of July 1, 2010, appear on the town highway map prepared pursuant to section 305 of this title; and
(iii) are not otherwise clearly observable by physical evidence of their use as a highway or trail; and
(iv) are not legal trails.
19 V.S.A. § 302(a)(6)(A).
¶ 7. In an effort to quell the uncertainty that the existence of ancient rоads places on private property rights, in 2006, the Vermont Legislature passed Act 178, giving towns the option of researching the existence of ancient roads, holding public hearings on these roads, and adding the roads to town highway maps by 2010. 2005, Nо. 178 (Adj. Sess.), § 1 (codified at 19 V.S.A. § 302(a)(6)(A)); see also E. Goldwarg, Note, Known Unknowns: Ancient Roads in Northern New England, 33 Vt. L. Rev. 355 (2008). All ancient roads not added to a town highway map by 2010 will revert to “unidentified corridors,” and on July 1, 2015, all unidentified corridors will be discontinued and the right of way in these corridors will vest to the adjoining prоperty owner. 19 V.S.A. § 302(a)(6)(A), (G).
¶ 8. The two sides do not dispute that a public highway, if found, gives the Town the right to maintain the road even if it runs through landowner’s property. Rather, the two parties dispute whether the Town satisfied its burden of proving the course of a public highway through landowner’s property. In
McAdams v. Town of Barnard
we addressed landowners’ action to quiet title where a town claimed a right-of-way in an “ancient road” traversing landowners’ property.
¶ 9. In its argument that the Town has failed to meet its burden, landowner аrticulates five major objections to the trial court’s findings: (1) the Town’s evidence showing the beginning of Town Highway #34/Dunham Road is “speculative”; (2) the Town’s evidence showing the end of Town Highway #34/Dunham Road is “speculative”; (3) the surveying techniques relied on by the Town and accepted by the court are unreliable; (4) the Town’s reliance on the existing portion of Town Highway #34/Dunham Road as a monument to determine the historical and present course of the road is too speculative to “establish any section of this road within any degree of certainty”; and (5) the Town relied on “highly suspect” evidence in the form of the memories of townspeople from the 1950s concerning the location of Town Highway #34/Dunham Road.
¶ 10. The trial court evaluated extensive evidence as to the historical and present course of Town Highway #34/Dunham Road, including maps, surveys, and expert testimony To show that Town Highway #34/Dunham Road is an ancient road running through landowner’s property, the Town brought forward the following evidence: deeds in landowner’s chain of title referencing the right-of-way of an “old town road” across the parcel; the transcribed
¶ 11. Landowner introduced the testimony of another surveyor, Lisa Ginett, who testified that she questioned surveyor Swanson’s location of the beginning of the highway and believed that it is not possible to locate the course of Town Highway #34/Dunham Road. Surveyor Ginett also testified that the existencе of a “Woods Road,” which passes north of landowner’s residence and which at one point connected to Town Highway #34/ Dunham Road, is inconsistent with surveyor Swanson’s best fit placement of Town Highway #34/Dunham Road.
¶ 12. Upon review of the record, we conclude that the Town’s proffered evidence was sufficient to meet its burden of proving the existence of a public highway and that landowner has failed to demonstrate that any of the five contested findings were clearly errоneous. The bulk of landowner’s arguments surround the credibility the trial court gave to testimony from surveyor Swanson, surveyor Ginett, and several former Bethel townspeople. It is the trier of fact, however, who evaluates the credibility of the witnesses and the persuasive effect of the testimony.
Cabot v. Cabot,
¶ 13. Moreover, landowner’s contentions that there are other possible inferences to be drawn from the evidence concerning the exact location of the road are not enough to overturn the trial court’s findings. See
Highgate,
¶ 14. This situation stands in contrast to
Town of Springfield v. Newton,
Affirmed.
