Carlson v. Clark
Full Opinion (html_with_citations)
¶ 1. Plaintiffs challenge the trial courtâs denial of their request to unilaterally relocate a shoreline right-of-way held by defendants Lockwood and Claire Clark. According to plaintiffs, the Clarks hold an easement by necessity, rather than a prescriptive easement, and plaintiffs are entitled to move the Clarksâ easement to a location plaintiffs deem more convenient. The Clarks respond that their right to use the shoreline road was conclusively determined in prior litigation with plaintiffsâ predecessor-in-interest, and that plaintiffs are barred by the doctrine of res judicata from raising this issue for a second time. We agree with the Clarks, and affirm.
¶ 2. Plaintiffs own real property on a peninsula called Windmill Point in Alburg, Vermont, derived from a common grantor, the Aqua Terra Corporation. The Clarks own adjacent property as well as an historic lighthouse on the tip of the peninsula. The Clarks have a right-of-way to their property that runs along the shoreline of Lake Champlain, behind plaintiffsâ homes. Plaintiffs purchased their lots with clear notice of the existing right-of-way. They nonetheless claimed that increased traffic on the road was presenting a safety hazard and interfering with their ability to
¶ 8. In March 2004, plaintiffs sued the Clarks, alleging that the Clarks held an easement by necessity, and that the necessity no longer existed because plaintiffs had created a new access road. Plaintiffs asked the court to âextinguishâ the existing right-of-way, and order the Clarks to use the private roadway they had constructed. Plaintiffs moved for summary judgment and the court denied their motion. The court found that both the servient and dominant estates must agree to the relocation of an existing easement. The court also noted that material facts remained in dispute regarding the level of traffic on the shoreline road.
¶ 4. In March 2006, the Clarks moved for partial summary judgment, arguing that their vested prescriptive easement rights defeated plaintiffsâ attempt to unilaterally move the right-of-way. The trial court agreed, finding that the earlier summary judgment ruling had resolved the issue of whether the right-of-way could be unilaterally relocated. The court declared the Clarksâ easement to be prescriptive, and reiterated that it could not be relocated without the Clarksâ consent.
¶ 5. Before the issue of the traffic level on the road could be tried, the parties reached an agreement on the roadâs use. They stipulated that use of the shoreline road would be limited to the Clarks and their family members, and that other visitors would use the center road. As part of their stipulation, the parties also reserved the right to challenge the trial courtâs underlying orders. In July 2007, the trial court issued a final order, recognizing the Clarksâ right to use their existing right-of-way. Plaintiffs appealed.
¶ 6. On appeal, plaintiffs assert that, notwithstanding this Courtâs ruling in prior litigation between the Clarks and plaintiffsâ predecessor-in-interest, the Clarks hold an easement by necessity. They suggest that any prior statement that the Clarks held a prescriptive easement was âunnecessary and served only to confuse the true nature of the easement.â Plaintiffs argue that because the Clarksâ easement is one of necessity, they have the right to relocate it unilaterally.
¶ 8. Mott eventually transferred his property to Aqua Terra Corporation, and in 1972, Aqua Terra physically blocked the shoreline right-of-way. The Clarks filed a complaint for injunctive relief, seeking the removal of the physical barrier and an order permanently enjoining Aqua Terra from interfering with their use of the right-of-way. The Clarks asserted that the right-of-way had been used to access their property for over sixty years. Aqua Terra responded that any prior use of this road was permissive. Following a trial, the court issued a written order finding that there had been open, notorious, continuous, and adverse use of the shoreline road since 1949. The court concluded that the Clarks had obtained a right-of-way by prescription, âdefined as that parcel of land on the westerly side of Windmill Point . . . from the terminus of the town road at the old ferry landing directly to the northerly gate of [the Clarks].â The court permanently enjoined Aqua Terra from interfering with the described right-of-way.
¶ 9. While neither party appears to have directly raised the issue of an easement by necessity, the Clarks did allege in their
¶ 10. Aqua Terra appealed from the trial courtâs decision, arguing that the prior use of the right-of-way had been permissive, not adverse, and thus, the Clarks could not have obtained a prescriptive right of way. We rejected this argument and affirmed the trial courtâs order. In reciting the facts, we noted, sua sponte, that Mottâs conveyance to the United States in 1857 âwould generate in the United States a right-of-way by necessity,â which would attach to the land and pass to succeeding owners. Aqua Terra, 133 Vt. at 56, 329 A.2d at 667. No further specific mention was made of a right-of-way by necessity, however. Instead, the Court discussed the trial courtâs finding that the Clarksâ right was acquired by prescription and that it had not been abandoned. We concluded, in response to the arguments raised by Aqua Terra, that it was for the trial court to weigh the evidence. Id. at 57, 329 A.2d at 668.
¶ 11. Although the case was disposed of by deferring to the trial courtâs finding of fact that the use was adverse, we gave a further response to Aqua Terraâs position that the use was permissive. âBut assuming the facts to be as [Aqua Terra] urges them,â we reasoned, the result would be the same. Id. Once the right attached, we explained, whether it arose at the time of the initial conveyance or through prescription, it could not be divested by future permissive use of the road. Id. at 57-58, 329 A.2d at 668. Although this discussion ensued in the context of the Clarksâ prescriptive claim, the opinion does not further characterize the right.
¶ 13. Because the issue of the Clarksâ easement right has been litigated, plaintiffs are now barred from trying to recharacterize the nature of that right. As we have often repeated, â[u]nder the doctrine of claim preclusion, a final judgment in previous litigation bars subsequent litigation if the parties, subject matter, and cause(s) of action in both matters are the same or substantially identical.â Faulkner v. Caledonia County Fair Assân, 2004 VT 123, ¶ 8, 178 Vt. 51, 869 A.2d 103. The doctrine âbars parties from relitigating, not only those claims and issues that were previously litigated, but also those that could have been litigated in a prior action.â Merrilees v. Treasurer, 159 Vt. 623, 624, 618 A.2d 1314, 1316 (1992) (mem.)
¶ 14. In Aqua Terra, we decided the only issue litigated by the parties â did the Clarks have a right to use the shoreline road and if so, had they abandoned it, or was it overcome by Aqua Terraâs claim that the use was permissive? The Clarks claimed, and we decided, that they had acquired a right by prescription, a right that had not been abandoned. Aqua Terra, 133 Vt. at 57-58, 329 A.2d at 668. Our discussion of Aqua Terra in Berge v. State, 2006 VT 116, ¶¶ 13-16, 181 Vt. 1, 915 A.2d 189, cited by plaintiffs, did not and could not alter the holding of Aqua Terra with respect to the parties before the Court.
¶ 15. As the dissent recognizes, for purposes of res judicata, a âcause of action is the same if the same evidence will support the action in both instances.â Hill v. Grandey, 132 Vt. 460, 463, 321 A.2d 28, 31 (1974). âThe element of identity of causes of action, for res judicata purposes, applies to affirmative defenses,â and thus, âthe doctrine specifically bars defendants from using defenses available in one action as the basis for a claim in a later action.â Lamb, 165 Vt. at 381, 683 A.2d at 735 (quotation omitted). This litigation plainly presents the same essential cause of action as that presented in Aqua Terra, and it rests on exactly the same evidence. Citing the same series of real estate transactions, plaintiffs now ask this Court to construe those transactions
¶ 16. Accepting the issue as framed by the dissent, allowing plaintiffs to bring the current action would also â ânullify the initial judgment or . . . impair rights established in the initial action.â â Post, ¶ 31 (quoting Restatement (Second) of Judgments § 22(2)(b) (1982)). A ruling that the Clarks now hold an easement by necessity, and not a prescriptive easement, would necessarily undermine our decision in Aqua Terra, which defined the Clarksâ right differently, and it would impair the Clarksâ property rights established through that litigation. See Restatement (Second) of Judgments § 22 cmt. f (explaining that issue preclusion is appropriate where claim is âsuch that its successful prosecution in a subsequent action would nullify the [first] judgment, for example, ... by depriving the plaintiff in the first action of property rights vested in him under the first judgmentâ). The Clarksâ right to use the shoreline road has been litigated, and plaintiffs are now barred from seeking, for a second time, to extinguish the Clarksâ right-of-way. See 18 J. Moore, supra, § 131.10[2], at 131-17 (âThe concept of bar prevents a plaintiff who loses in litigation from bringing a subsequent action based on the same transaction or series of transactions by simply asserting additional facts or by proceeding under a different legal theory.â).
¶ 17. We note, moreover, that both parties touched on necessity issues in the first litigation. The trial court was not persuaded by this evidence, finding that the Clarks had acquired a prescriptive easement â one acquired through longstanding, hostile, open, and notorious use of the road â and not an easement implied by necessity. Certainly, Aqua Terraâs defense in the first litigation could have more explicitly included what its successors-in-interest now see as a more flexible legal theory on which to base the Clarksâ entitlement â that the right-of-way was established by necessity and may be relocated.
¶ 18. We did not hold otherwise in Cassani v. Northfield Savings Bank, 2005 VT 127, 179 Vt. 204, 893 A.2d 325, cited by plaintiffs. In that case, the plaintiffs sought reformation of a deed after a declaratory judgment action decided that the deeded easement was so inaccurate that it could not be interpreted to grant any effective right-of-way, and that it was fatally mistaken. Id. ¶ 14. Plaintiffs sought reformation of the deed, alleging that it was based on a mutual mistake of the parties. The first action was simply a construction of the deed, and a declaration of the rights granted to the plaintiffs under the deed; the second was an equitable action aimed at reforming the deed to carry out what the plaintiffs claimed was the true intention of the parties. Id. The two actions presented different issues, and the first declaratory judgment action decided only the preliminary issue of whether the deed, as written, established an easement. Id. ¶ 13.
¶ 19. Plaintiffs claim that Cassani permits a second action here because the Clarksâ first action sought to prove the existence of the right-of-way while plaintiffsâ present action seeks only to relocate it, and these issues are different. But plaintiffs seek to relocate the right-of-way unilaterally, and that argument is based, by their own contention, on establishing first that the nature of
¶20. Because this litigation involves the same parties, subject matter, and causes of action as the Aqua Terra case decided in 1974, all of the elements of claim preclusion have been satisfied, and plaintiffsâ attempt to change the legal basis on which the Clarks hold their easement is barred. See Lamb, 165 Vt. at 379, 683 A.2d at 734. Plaintiffsâ challenge to the trial courtâs decision is without merit.
Affirmed.
Plaintiffs spend a substantial portion of their brief on defining the scope of the Clarksâ easement, but this issue was conclusively settled by the stipulation and we will not address it.
In a December 2005 filing with the trial court, plaintiffs agreed with the Clarks that âthe previous Vermont Supreme Court decision upholding [the Clarksâ] prescriptive easement is the law of the case.â Indeed, they specifically stated that our decision in Aqua Terra âheld that [the Clarks] had a prescriptive easement to get from the public roadway to their property,â and they indicated that they were not trying âto upset this decision.â Plaintiffs argued that â[t]he right-of-way, if relocated as requested by [plaintiffs, will remain a prescriptive easement.â We do not see why we should ignore these statements, as the dissent suggests, simply because they were included within a responsive pleading.
Even if the reference to an easement by necessity was logically inconsistent with a prescriptive easement, it is of no moment. First, the reference to an easement by necessity is dicta. Moreover, it is well established that claim preclusion applies even if a prior final judgment is âwrong or rested on a legal principle subsequently overruled in another case.â Federated Depât Stores, Inc. v. Moitie, 452 U.S. 394, 398 (1981); see also Chicot County Drainage Dist. v. Baxter State Bank, 308 U.S. 371, 374-78 (1940) (claim preclusion applied even though statute upon which prior case was decided was subsequently declared unconstitutional); see also 18 J. Moore et al., Mooreâs Federal Practice § 131.12[3], at 131-21 (3d ed. 2008) (âThe doctrine of claim preclusion is not concerned with whether a prior judgment was right or wrong or whether subsequent changes in the law, the discovery of additional facts, or considerations of fairness should merit a different result in the subsequent litigation.â). The rationale is that although the law may change, the rights between the parties and their privies are concluded at final judgment. Otherwise, there would be no concept of settled rights, resulting in multiple lawsuits over the same issue. Indeed, as Moore observes, furthering the public policy of settled rights may be greatest in the resolution of real property disputes because of the âpublicâs interest in the reliability and certainty of titles to real property.â 18 J. Moore, supra, § 131.12[4][b], at 131-24.
In discussing the doctrine of res judicata, our case law refers interchangeably to issues that âcould have been raisedâ and issues that âshould have been raised.â
To be clear, we do not reach the issue of whether an easement by necessity may be relocated unilaterally and express no opinion on that issue.
Although it is true that plaintiffs have alleged some new facts, occurring since Aqua Terra was decided, those new facts relate solely to the scope of use of the easement. Scope of use is a distinct issue that is not barred by the Aqua Terra decision, but that issue has been resolved by stipulation in favor of plaintiffs.
Ordinarily, an easement may not be relocated without the consent of the owners of both the dominant and servient estates. In re Shantee Point, Inc., 174 Vt. 248, 261, 811 A.2d 1243, 1254 (2002). Plaintiffs argue that a different rule applies if the easement is one by necessity. Again, it is unnecessary to reach this issue in view of our disposition. We note, however, that the Vermont case upon which plaintiffs rely does not involve the relocation of an existing easement, but rather an initial determination of where a certain easement by necessity was to be located. See Jenne v. Piper, 69 Vt. 497, 38 A. 147 (1897).