Defendant Joseph P. Wilk appeals the decision of the superior court in this action for partition ordering him to transfer his one-eighth interest in a parcel of property located in the Town of West Rutland to plaintiff John F. Wilk in exchange for one-eighth of the fair market value of the parcel as determined by a panel of court-appointed commissioners. Defendant argues that the court erred by
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failing to order a public sale of the property and a subsequent dispersal of the proceeds to himself and plaintiff. He contends that the facts of this case are controlled by our holding in
Billings v. Billings,
The property at issue is a one-acre parcel of land with a house, commercial garage and office located on it. Plaintiff has operated a paving business out of the buildings on the property, and defendant — plaintiffs brother — operates a junkyard on an adjoining parcel of land. In May 1997, both parties acquired a one-eighth interest in the property by inheritance from their mother, as did their six siblings. Plaintiff subsequently purchased the interests of his six siblings, subject to a life estate held by one of his sisters, and filed this partition action in the superior court. The court appointed three commissioners, who prepared a report and submitted it to the court. The commissioners concluded that the parcel could not reasonably be divided between plaintiff and defendant and that the fair market value of the property was $125,000. Both parties sought an order from the court conveying the other’s interest in exchange for the value of the respective shares in the property. Following a hearing on the merits, the court concluded that the equities favored plaintiff and ordered defendant to convey his one-eighth interest in the property in exchange for $15,625 (one-eighth of $125,000).
Defendant argues that the facts of this case are controlled by our holding in
Billings v. Billings,
Under the common law, courts were limited to the remedy of partition in kind, or partition by allotment, when individuals decided to end co-tenancy. See P. Craig-Taylor,
Through a Colored Looking Glass: A View of Judicial Partition, Family Land Loss, and Rule Setting,
78 Wash. U. L.Q. 737, 752 (2000); see also
Blanchard v. Cross,
When it appears that the real estate, or a portion thereof, cannot be divided without great inconvenience to the parties interested, the' court may order it assigned to one of the parties, provided he pays to the other party such sum of money, at such times and in such manner as the commissioners judge equitable.
12 V.S.A. § 5174. The only exception, or limitation, to this statutory power is found in § 5175, which provides, “[i]n case one of the parties interested will not take such assignment and pay such sum, the court shall order the commissioners to sell such estate at public or private sale.” 12 V.S.A. § 5175.
In
Billings,
this Court was called upon to mediate the interplay of these two statutes when parties owning equal interests in a piece of property both were willing to take an assignment and pay the other for the half share of the property. The two dissenting justices in that case noted that, in addition to providing remedies beyond those available in the common law, the language of § 5174 was permissive with respect to the assignment remedy (when property cannot be
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conveniently divided, “the court
may
order it assigned to one of the parties”) (emphasis added).
Billings,
This conclusion is consistent with the principle that remedial statutes ought to be liberally construed. See
Carter v. Gugliuzzi,
Furthermore, as the
Billings
dissent noted, partition by sale is not a favored remedy.
The majority in
Billings
read into the statutory scheme an additional limitation on the power of the court to order assignment and gave the remedy of judicial sale preferred status in situations where the statute did not. It read the language of .§ 5175 requiring that “[i]n case one of the parties interested will not take such assignment” the court must order partition by sale, to mean alternately that if
more than one
party
is
willing to accept assignment, the court must order partition by sale.
Billings,
Under general principles of stare decisis, and without examining the underlying reasoning of the decision, this Court declined in
Weenolsen v. Kamber
to overrule our reading of § 5175 in
Billings,
noting the Legislature’s failure to amend the statute following the decision in
Billings. Weenolsen v. Kamber,
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The argument commonly advanced in favor of limiting a court’s discretion in making assignments when there are competing parties willing and able to take the assignment is that it will result in arbitrary choices. See Annot.,
Partition: Construction and Application of Provision for Assignment, to One of Co-Owners, of Real Estate Not Readily Divisible,
169 AL.R. 862, 865 (1947) (citing
Corrothers v. Jolliffe,
A genuinely arbitrary decision would not survive abuse-of-discretion review on appeal. Moreover, if the record presents no basis to grant an assignment to one party over another, the trial court may simply decline to make an assignment and instead resort to partition by sale; as the dissent in
Billings
noted, the language regarding assignment is permissive, and therefore a court is not obligated to make one. Cf.
Shotwell v. Shotwell,
Forcing partition by sale when more than one co-tenant is willing to take assignment of the property could result in the unnecessary forced divestment of numerous family farms. Cf. Craig-Taylor,
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supra,
at 771-80 (concluding that forced partition by sale has had a disproportionately negative impact on African Americans that has resulted in the loss of family land, based in part on higher incidence of intestate succession among African Americans resulting in numerous co-tenants, and on more limited resources among African Americans limiting the ability to outbid an outside party in a public sale); see also
Chuck v. Gomes,
Sadly, there are even examples in case law of outside parties acquiring fractional shares in property otherwise held by family members, some of the shares being quite small, for the specific purpose of forcing a sale in order to acquire the entire property. See, e.g.,
Black v. Stimpson,
Forced sale is disfavored because the Legislature, and the common law that came before, sought to minimize the forced divestiture of family property where avoidable. This policy not only has continuing vitality today, but assumes more importance in the face of the increased pressures on rural landowners to sell land. It is reflected in the hierarchy established by our statutory scheme. We conclude, therefore, that our statutory scheme allows for assignment even when more than one co-tenant is willing to accept it, and gives the trial court discretion over whether to order an assignment and the choice of assignee.
*350 With these principles in mind, we turn to the merits of this particular case. * Reviewing the record, we discern no abuse of discretion. In ordering defendant to assign his interest to plaintiff, the court found that plaintiff was conducting an active, viable business on the property. The court also found that he had expended considerable sums to construct an office on the property for his business. It found that he had maintained the property in a reasonable and neat manner, while defendant’s use of his own adjoining property, as well as the property at issue, for the storage of junk, old cars, parts and rusted steel was in violation of local zoning regulations. Finally, the court found that the potential loss of use of a driveway across the subject property would not prejudice defendant because his adjoining parcel had substantial road frontage from which the property could be accessed.
Defendant does not specifically challenge any of these factual findings, which are all supported by the record. Accordingly, we see no basis for disturbing the trial court’s judgment.
Affirmed.
Notes
Because it does not appear from the record that either party acted in reliance on our decision in
Billings,
and applying the statutes as interpreted above will not lead to an inequitable result in this case, we will not limit the effect of this decision to prospective application only. See
Solomon v. Atlantis Dev., Inc.,
