Matthew Gray and Erik Gray v. Martha Treder, John Muscarelle, Robert Muscarelle, Joseph Muscarelle, III, Anne Herrera, Edward F. Godfrey, Judith C. Godfrey
NOTICE: This opinion is subject to motions for reargument under V.R.A.P. 40 as well as formal
revision before publication in the Vermont Reports. Readers are requested to notify the Reporter
of Decisions by email at: JUD.Reporter@vermont.gov or by mail at: Vermont Supreme Court, 109
State Street, Montpelier, Vermont 05609-0801, of any errors in order that corrections may be made
before this opinion goes to press.
2018 VT 137
No. 2018-146
Matthew Gray and Erik Gray Supreme Court
v. On Appeal from
Superior Court, Washington Unit,
Martha Treder, John Muscarelle, Robert Muscarelle, Civil Division
Joseph Muscarelle, III, Anne Herrera, Edward F. Godfrey,
Judith C. Godfrey, et al. October Term, 2018
Mary Miles Teachout, J.
Paul S. Gillies of Tarrant, Gillies & Richardson, LLP, Montpelier, for Plaintiffs-Appellees.
Christina A. Jensen of Lisman Leckerling, P.C., Burlington, for Defendants-Appellants
Martha Treder, John Muscarelle, Robert Muscarelle, Joseph Muscarelle, III, and Anne Herrera.
Kevin M. Henry of Primmer Piper Eggleston & Cramer PC, Burlington, for Defendants-Appellants
Edward F. and Judith C. Godfrey
PRESENT: Reiber, C.J., Skoglund, Robinson, Eaton and Carroll, JJ.
¶ 1. ROBINSON, J. This case centers around plaintiffs’ landlocked ninety-acre parcel
on Roxbury Mountain. Defendants appeal the trial court’s decision following a contested hearing
that the plaintiffs’ parcel includes an appurtenant easement by necessity that crosses some of
defendants’ properties. They further contend that the trial court erred in holding that Vermont’s
Marketable Record Title Act has not extinguished that easement. We do not decide whether an
easement by necessity arose in the first place because we conclude that even if it had, the Act
would have extinguished it. Accordingly, we reverse.
¶ 2. The trial court found the following. The lot at issue, identified by the parties as “the
Eaton Lot,” currently has neither frontage on a public road nor deeded access to one. Before 1948,
it was part of a larger parcel of land that stretched west to a public highway called Senor Road. In
1948, the large parcel’s owner, Henry Brooks, sold the western part of it—the part that fronted
Senor Road—to Lester and Arlene Senor, retaining the Eaton Lot in his ownership. The parties
describe this western part as “the Front Lot.” The Brooks-Senor deed did not reserve an express
appurtenant easement for access to the Eaton Lot via the Front Lot.
¶ 3. The Senors began to sell pieces of the Front Lot in the mid-1970s. Some of
defendants—the Muscarelles, Godfreys, Whittles, and Ambrianos—now own the parcels that
comprised the Front Lot. The Ambrianos access their property directly from Senor Road; the
Whittles, Godfreys, and Muscarelles access their properties from a private road called Old Farm
Lane. Old Farm Lane was created pursuant to a deeded easement from the Senors, and it runs
between the Whittle and Ambriano parcels for 800 feet before entering the Godfreys’ property and
ending where the Godfreys’ driveway begins. It does not reach the Eaton lot. The schematic
below reflects the general layout of the parties’ properties.1
N
S
1
This schematic was not included in the trial court’s findings. We include it here to
provide a general visual sense of the relationships among the parties’ properties.
2
¶ 4. There are no visible logging or other roads or pathways leading from the Eaton Lot
continuously across the Front Lot to Senor Road at the present time. Plaintiffs have recently
located three physical features at the back of the Front Lot that suggest remnants of portions of a
logging road: an open line through woods where there are no tall trees down the center but there
are tall trees on either side, suggestive of a cleared roadway; a length of a ten-foot-wide depressed
area the width of an old roadway with what have been described as wheel tracks; and a stone wall
that crosses a portion of the Front Lot with an opening in line with the other two features that is
consistent with a roadway passing through it. The Muscarelles purchased their lot in 1974. At that
time, the above features were not visible enough to be noticed by then nine-year-old John
Muscarelle.
¶ 5. In 2009, plaintiffs bought the Eaton Lot. Along with other family members, they
already owned a 130-acre wooded lot, called the Mountain Lot, adjacent to and north of the Eaton
Lot. As a result of a separate lawsuit in the early 2000s, they did not have the legal access to the
Mountain Lot that they once believed they had, rendering the Mountain Lot potentially landlocked.
After that, plaintiffs began looking for other ways to access the Mountain Lot. They bought the
adjacent Eaton Lot believing it had either a deeded easement or a way of necessity over the Front
Lot. Prior rulings in this case have made clear that there is in fact no express deeded easement
over the Front Lot for access to the Eaton Lot. Plaintiffs have accessed the Eaton Lot by crossing
the lot of their southern neighbors, the Kathans, with the Kathans’ permission, but that permission
is temporary only and provides no legal right of access for the future.
¶ 6. Plaintiffs filed suit in February 2011, alleging, among other things, that an easement
by necessity arose when the Eaton Lot was separated from the Front Lot in 1948. Plaintiffs
requested a declaratory judgment establishing their right to reach the Eaton Lot via Old Farm Lane
and a right-of-way over the Muscarelles’s land.
3
¶ 7. After a three-day bench trial, the court issued a decision holding that an easement
by necessity arose when the Eaton Lot was severed from the Front Lot in 1948, and the Marketable
Record Title Act did not extinguish the easement because, since it was created as a matter of law
due to the effect of the 1948 recorded Brooks-Senor deed, it fell into an exception in the Act that
exempts from extinguishment easements “granted, excepted, or reserved by a recorded
instrument.” The court alternately held that the Act did not extinguish the easement because the
easement arose from the 1948 Brooks-Senor deed, which was the “root” conveyance starting the
period of examination under the Act.
¶ 8. On appeal, defendants challenge the court’s holding that an easement by necessity
arose as a result of the 1948 transfer of the Front Lot from Brooks to the Senors. They also
challenge the court’s holding that the Act did not extinguish the easement by necessity. They
argue that they and their predecessors had held title to their properties for over forty years without
any conveyance or other event purporting to create an interest in any other person, as required
under the Act, and none of the statutory exceptions saved the claimed easement from
extinguishment.
¶ 9. Whether the Act extinguished the claimed easement by necessity is a question of
statutory interpretation, which we review without deference to the trial court. Stowell v. Action
Moving & Storage, Inc., 2007 VT 46, ¶ 9, 182 Vt. 98, 933 A.2d 1128. “When interpreting
statutes, our goal is to effectuate the intent of the Legislature. To do so, we look first to the
language of the statute and, if the meaning is clear, enforce the statute according to its terms.” Id.
(citation omitted).
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¶ 10. We conclude that even if an easement by necessity in favor of the Eaton Lot arose
in 1948, because it has remained unrecorded, the Act has extinguished it.2 We base this conclusion
primarily on the plain language of the Act and the inapplicability on its face of the extinguishment
exception relied upon by plaintiffs. The structure and purpose of the Act further bolster our
analysis. We conclude that neither the public policy against inaccessibility of land, nor the
principle that statutory modifications to the common law must be clear, overcome the plain
language of the statute.
¶ 11. The Marketable Record Title Act provides that “[a]ny person who holds an
unbroken chain of title of record to any interest in real estate for 40 years, shall at the end of that
period be deemed to have a marketable record title to the interest” that is “subject only to such
claims to the interest and such defects of title as are not extinguished or barred under this chapter.”
27 V.S.A. § 601(a). One who has marketable title under the Act holds it “free and clear of any and
all interests” arising out of “any act, transaction, event or omission that occurred prior to such 40-
year period.” Id. § 603.
¶ 12. The chain of title is considered “unbroken” when “the official public records
disclose . . . [a] conveyance not less than 40 years in the past, executed and recorded according to
law, which purports to create such interest in such person with nothing appearing of record during
the 40-year period purporting to divest the person of the purported interest.” Id. § 602(a)(1).
Accordingly, the Act will not extinguish an interest “if the holder of the interest files for record
within the 40-year period, a notice in writing . . . setting forth the nature of the claim.” Id. § 603.
¶ 13. The Act contains a list of interests that it does not extinguish, two of which are
relevant to our analysis. First, the Act does not extinguish “any easement or interests in the nature
of an easement . . . the existence of which is clearly observable by physical evidences of its use.”
2
Accordingly, we assume only for the purposes of our discussion of the Act that the 1948
deed created an easement by necessity. We do not purport to decide whether that assumption is
accurate.
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Id. § 604(a)(6). Second, it does not extinguish “any easement or interest in the nature of an
easement, or any rights appurtenant thereto granted, excepted, or reserved by a recorded
instrument creating such easement or interest.” Id. § 604(a)(7). Defendants rely on the latter of
these exceptions on appeal.
¶ 14. By its plain terms, the Act extinguishes any unrecorded easement by necessity that
may have arisen as a result of the 1948 transfer severing the Front Lot and the Eaton Lot unless
one of the statutory exceptions to extinguishment applies. Defendants, or their predecessors in
title, have held title to their respective properties for more than forty years, and thus hold their
properties “free and clear of any and all interests” arising out of any “act, transaction, event or
omission” that occurred before that forty-year period—subject only to claims to interests not
extinguished by the Act. The central question on appeal is whether the claimed easement by
necessity is among those that survive the extinguishment of interests effected by the Act.
¶ 15. An implied easement by necessity, the existence of which is not clearly observable
by physical evidence of its use, is not among those interests excepted from extinguishment.
Although an easement may survive pursuant to § 604(a)(7) if it was “granted, excepted, or
reserved by a recorded instrument,” the claimed easement in this case was not granted, excepted,
or reserved by such an instrument. A way of necessity is not granted. It is “a fiction of law” that
arises only in the absence of a deeded right of access to a landlocked parcel.3 Myers v. LaCasse,
2003 VT 86A, ¶ 16, 176 Vt. 29, 838 A.2d 50 (quotation omitted). In fact, an easement by
necessity, far from being granted by the grantor, may even “thwart[] the intent of the original
grantor or grantee.” Traders, Inc., 142 Vt. at 491, 459 A.2d at 978. By definition, interests
implied by operation of law, as easements by necessity are, do not fall within the statutory
3
An easement by necessity is deemed to arise when a property is divided in a way that
cuts off one parcel from access to a public road. Traders, Inc. v. Bartholomew, 142 Vt. 486, 491,
459 A.2d 974, 978 (1983). It provides the grantee of the landlocked parcel access across the
remaining property of the common grantor to a public road. Id.
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category of interests “granted . . . by a recorded instrument.” Id. § 604(a)(7). To conclude
otherwise would stretch the language of the statute beyond its plain meaning. Had the Legislature
intended to include among the interests that are not extinguished by the Act interests that arise by
operation of law in the absence of a deeded right, it would have said so. See, e.g., State v.
Rosenfield, 2016 VT 27, ¶ 9, 201 Vt. 383, 142 A.3d 1069 (“Had the Legislature intended for the
statute to have that effect, it would have included such language.”) Based on the plain language of
the statute, we conclude that plaintiffs’ claimed easement is not exempt from extinguishment by
virtue of § 604(a)(7), and thus has not survived the operation of the Marketable Record Title Act.4
¶ 16. Our conclusion is bolstered by the structure and purpose of the Act. The
Marketable Record Title Act provides bona fide purchasers repose with respect to claims of which
they have no notice. Merritt v. Merritt, 146 Vt. 246, 252, 500 A.2d 534, 537-38 (1985). To that
end, it extinguishes interests in property outside of those reflected in an unbroken chain of title
going back more than forty years, with limited exceptions.
¶ 17. Both provisions in the Act specifically excepting easements, or easement-like
interests, from extinguishment involve easements that can be readily identified by a prospective
purchaser or owner of property. One excepts easements “the existence of which is clearly
observable by physical evidence of use,” and one excepts easements “granted, excepted, or
reserved by a recorded instrument.” 27 V.S.A. § 604(a)(6), (7). By contrast, plaintiffs’
construction of the statute would except from extinguishment easements arising in the distant past
4
For the same reason, we reject the trial court’s alternate holding that, because the 1948
Brooks-to-Senor deed was the “root deed” for the purposes of a title search, the interest it created
fell within the forty-year window established by the Act. Had the root deed reserved an easement
in favor of the Eaton Lot, that easement would be a matter of record reflected in the deed
establishing plaintiffs’ rights as of the beginning of the forty-year look-back period. But plaintiffs’
claim is that the easement arose not from the terms of the deed but by operation of law on the basis
of a 1948 transaction, given certain factors outside of the transaction itself. This is not an interest
disclosed in “the official public records.” Unless plaintiffs’ claim was preserved by a notice filed
within forty years of its creation pursuant to 27 V.S.A. §§ 603 and 605, or it was an interest
excluded from the extinguishing effect of the Act pursuant to § 604, it was effectively extinguished
in 1998.
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by operation of law, in some cases based on factors such as topography that may not be reflected in
the land records. In fact, the validity of such claims may ultimately depend on judgments by
courts weighing the various factors to determine whether, for example, a property truly lacks
access. See, e.g., Berge v. State, 2006 VT 116, ¶ 18, 181 Vt. 1, 915 A.2d 189 (holding water
access to property did not defeat easement by necessity because it would not allow plaintiff a
reasonably practical, consistent way to access his property); Dee v. King, 73 Vt. 375, 377-78, 50
A. 1109, 1110 (1901) (holding that easement by necessity did not exist where plaintiff was able to
access his property via tortuous path that could only support light loads, which made access
inconvenient and expensive but not impossible). Plaintiffs’ construction of the statute would leave
property owners vulnerable indefinitely to claimed interests in land never recorded in the land
records and not apparent on the land itself—exactly the kinds of interests the Act is designed to
extinguish. See, e.g., 27 V.S.A. § 602 (defining “unbroken chain of title” with reference to
information in “the official public records”).
¶ 18. The Act provides ample opportunity for people with claimed interests arising by
operation of law to preserve their claims. The statute sets forth a mechanism for providing written
notice in the land records, id. § 605, and provides that the claim is preserved only if the notice is
filed within the forty-year period after the event giving rise to the claim. Id. § 603. In the absence
of actually using the claimed easement and leaving physical evidence of that use on the ground,
plaintiffs’ predecessors in title had forty years from the 1948 transfer severing the Front Lot from
the Eaton Lot to file notice of their claim to an easement by necessity. Id. They did not do so. To
allow them to assert their claim now would not only run afoul of the plain language of the Act, but
would fly in the face of the Act’s purpose.
¶ 19. Neither of the countervailing interpretive principles relied upon by the trial court
persuades us otherwise. We acknowledge, as the trial court emphasized, that “[t]he common law
is changed by statute only if the statute overturns the common law in clear and unambiguous
8
language, or if the statute is clearly inconsistent with the common law, or the statute attempts to
cover the entire subject matter.” Langle v. Kurkul, 146 Vt. 513, 516, 510 A.2d 1301, 1303 (1986).
But we conclude that the statute’s omission of easements implied by law from those preserved
beyond forty years is not unclear or ambiguous; it is an aspect of a thorough recitation by the
Legislature of the various kinds of interests that are not extinguished by operation of the
Marketable Record Title Act.
¶ 20. Likewise, we recognize that the result of our analysis undermines the public policy
against inaccessibility of land. See, e.g., Traders, 142 Vt. at 491, 459 A.2d at 978 (explaining that
way of necessity rests on public policy that disfavors efforts “to hold land in perpetual idleness” by
cutting off access). But this policy is itself in tension with respect for private property rights. See
Hyde v. Town of Jamaica, 27 Vt. 443, 460 (1855) (holding that finding right to cross property of
another merely on basis of convenience would violate property rights secured “by the laws and the
constitution”); Berge, 2006 VT 116, ¶ 24 (Reiber, C.J., dissenting) (“The public’s interest in access
to landlocked property must be balanced against the serious consequences inherent in granting one
landowner an uncompensated interest in the property of a neighbor.”). Moreover, it bumps up
squarely against the conflicting policy of the Marketable Record Title Act—to provide repose and
certainty for bona fide owners of property without notice of claimed interests in their property
arising from events that occurred more than forty years ago. See, e.g., Merritt, 146 Vt. at 252, 500
A.2d at 537-38. Resolution of this case does not in any event turn on competing policy
considerations but, rather, rests squarely on the plain language of the Marketable Record Title Act.
Reversed.
FOR THE COURT:
Associate Justice
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