Lead Opinion
The defendant, Marjorie Shortt, appeals the decision of the Superior Court {Smith, J.) that the public has acquired a prescriptive easement over a road crossing the defendant’s property located in the Town of Warren (town), and thus the road is a class VI public highway pursuant to RSA 229:1 (1993). We reverse.
The trial court found that members of the public used Mica Road for purposes other than ingress and egress to the dominant estate, without requesting the permission of the various owners of the servient estate, specifically the defendant and the predecessors to her interest. In addition, the court found that members of the public used the right-of-way to access land abutting the dominant estate, without requesting anyone’s permission. Most significantly, the trial court agreed with the town that “members of the public . . . believed that Mica Road was a public road . . . and] that the public use of [the road] was in a manner sufficient to give notice to the owners of the land on which Mica Road was located that ari adverse claim was being made to [it].”
The question in this case is whether the public has acquired a prescriptive easement over the road, and thus the road may be declared a class VI highway under the definition in RSA 229:1, which provides that roads used for public travel for twenty years, prior to 1968, are public highways.
On appeal, the defendant contends that the trial court erred when it ruled that she bore the burden of demonstrating that the public’s use of the land for the statutory period of time prior to 1968 was permissive. She also argues that the evidence does not support the court’s determination that the public use actually made of the road was adverse and of such character as to put the owners on notice of an adverse claim of right.
Whether a use of property is adverse is an issue of fact. Ucietowski v. Novak,
At trial, the burden was on the town to establish by a balance of the probabilities that the public used Mica Road for twenty years, prior to 1968, in an adverse, continuous and uninterrupted manner. Ueietowski,
On the issue of consent, the superior court ruled that when a prescriptive easement is claimed, and a landowner’s defense to it is that the use of the property was permissive, the burden of proof is on the landowner to show that the use was permissive. We disagree.
In Wason v. Nashua,
To establish a highway by prescription it must appear that the way was used by the general public continuously without interruption for a period of twenty years . . . under a claim of right without the permission of the owner.
Id. at 198,
In Catalano v. Town of Windham,
On the other hand, in Gowen v. Swain,
The defendant next argues that the evidence does not support the trial court’s finding that the public use was adverse and of such a character as to put the defendant on notice of an adverse claim. We agree.
It is well established that “[a] permissive use no matter how long or how often exercised cannot ripen into an easement by prescription.” Ucietowski,
For many years, the mill that was located on the dominant tenement employed many of the residents of the town. Employees and customers of the mill used the road for access. In addition, employees and others used the road to obtain access to an adjacent piece of property, which was used for recreational purposes. It seems logical to us that, incidental to the use contemplated when the easement was created, to get to and from work, citizens of the town used the same road to accomplish other aims. It is not logical that the owner of the servient tenement, either then or now, would or should be expected to police every passerby in order to determine if their use of the road was pursuant to the deeded easement. This level of scrutiny is not required. As this court stated in the Wason case, the evidence in the present case demonstrates that
the use of the space by the general public was not of a character or extent to interfere with that of the owners, their tenants and customers, but, on the other hand, was so far*245 incidental thereto that reasonable men in the place of the owners would not have supposed that the public was occupying it under a claim of right.
Wason,
As noted above, a use that is incidental to a use that is in fact permitted by the owner of the servient tenement will not develop into a prescriptive easement, unless the user has done more in order to put that owner on notice of any “claim of right.” E.g., Estate of Smilie,
The law is very rigid with respect to the fact that a permissive use in the beginning can be changed into one which is hostile and adverse only by the most unequivocal conduct on the part of the user. The rule is that the evidence . . . must be positive, must be strictly construed against the person claiming a prescriptive right, and that every reasonable intendment should be made in favor of the true owner.
Id. at 1160 (quotation omitted); see also 3 R. Powell, Powell on Real Property § 34.10, at 34-114 to 34-117 (P. Rohan ed. 1994) (citing cases).
In cases where a previously effective license or an easement for the benefit of another is in effect on the claimed land, adversity must be affirmatively shown by the party claiming a prescriptive easement. See Catalano,
The trial court granted each of the town’s requests for findings of fact, including one which states that “[p]rior to 1968 and for a period of at least 20 years, the public use of Mica Road was in a manner sufficient to give notice to the owners of the land on which Mica Road
Reversed.
Dissenting Opinion
dissenting: The trial court correctly applied the doctrine of Gowen v. Swain,
