Court Opinion

ID: 4267244
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2018-04-24 00:01:37.664605+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T14:31:07.184576
License: Public Domain

Forestdale Heights, Inc. v. Essex Junction Sch. Dist., No. S0215-08 CnC (Toor, J., May 5, 2010)

[The text of this Vermont trial court opinion is unofficial. It has been reformatted from the original. The accuracy of the text and the
accompanying data included in the Vermont trial court opinion database is not guaranteed.]
                                                     STATE OF VERMONT
                                                    CHITTENDEN COUNTY

                               │
FORESTDALE HEIGHTS, INC.       │
 Plaintiff                     │
                               │                                                SUPERIOR COURT
 v.                            │                                                Docket No. S0215-08 CnC
                               │
ESSEX JUNCTION SCHOOL DISTRICT │
 Defendant                     │
                               │

                 FINDINGS OF FACT, CONCLUSIONS OF LAW, AND ORDER

           This is a dispute arising out of an error in the creation or filing of a deed to land in

Essex Junction. A court trial was held on April 8; post-trial filings were complete April

29. Plaintiff was represented by Carl Lisman, Esq. and Adam Bergeron, Esq.; Defendants

were represented by Christopher Roy, Esq. and Joseph Farnham, Esq. The witnesses at

the hearing were Hector LeClair and Brooke Scatchard.

                                                        Findings of Fact

           In 1978, an entity by the name of Forestdale Heights, Inc., a land development

company, sold to the Essex Junction School District a parcel of land the parties refer to as

the Saxon Hill Forest. It is comprised of approximately 90 acres of mostly forested land.

Hector LeClair was one of the principals in Forestdale at the time. He and his three

partners were all involved in the negotiations to some extent. The sale to the school

district was in conjunction with Forestdale’s purchase of 680 acres from the Village of

Essex, with the 90 acres being a portion thereof.

           This case has made its way to the courthouse doors because, unfortunately, the

deed that was recorded with the Town Clerk was missing some language. The relevant

section reads as follows:
                   Forestdale Heights, Inc., for itself, its successors and
                   assigns, also hereby grants to the Essex Junction School
                   District, its successors and assigns, an easement 15 feet in
                   width for use by the Essex Junction School District and its
                   guests, over the extension of the Saxon Hill Road, so-called
                   for the purpose of pedestrian and vehicular access to the
                   lands hereby conveyed, to the intersection thereof with the
                   road crossing Saxon Hill.

                   lands conveyed herein shall be for public usage for
                   conservation/recreation and educational purposes only.

Exhibit 1, pp. 1-2. The missing language is, obviously, that preceding the word “lands.”

That word starts the second page of the deed, suggesting either that a portion of the page

was missed in photocopying or that it was dropped in the typing.

        Forestdale has offered in evidence a different version of the deed with an identical

first page but an entirely different second page. That page also starts midsentence. It

reads as follows:

                   that Forestdale Heights, Inc., its successors and assigns,
                   reserves the right to relocate, redesignate or eliminate any
                   such road, roadway or path so long as such action does not
                   unreasonably or unnecessarily impede the Essex Junction
                   School District or its guests from obtaining access to or
                   from the lands benefitted by this grant.

                   It is an express condition of this conveyance that the lands
                   conveyed herein shall be used for conservation/recreation
                   and educational purposes only, and any use not so
                   conforming shall work a forfeiture to Forestdale Heights,
                   Inc., or its successors or assigns.

Exhibit 2, p. 2.

        Both versions of the deed are signed and dated in the same fashion and on the

same date, August 15, 1978. No explanation has been offered by the parties for the two

different versions of the deed, but it is apparent that neither is complete. Mr. LeClair

testified that although he is the current custodian of Forestdale’s business records, some

of the old files were burned in a fire. Likewise, counsel who prepared the deed (Attorney

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Lisman’s office) have been unable to locate the law firm’s file from that time period, over

thirty years ago. Exhibit 2 came from Forestdale’s files.

        LeClair testified that Exhibit 2, not Exhibit 1, describes the arrangement he

recalls. However, he did not offer a great deal of detail or explanation. He has “no idea”

how what he believes to be the wrong deed got recorded. However, he assumes that it

would have been the buyer – the School District – that would have recorded the deed. He

also has no explanation for the missing language in Exhibit 2.

        In 2004, the School District leased the parcel to the Town of Essex for a twenty-

five year period. The lease specifies that the Town may use the land “for conservation,

recreational and educational purposes only.” Exhibit 4. LeClair believes that transferring

management of the property to the Town constituted an event that triggers forfeiture of

the property requiring that it be returned to Forestdale. He states that the intent of the

original sale to the School District was “for education” and “for the kids to learn about

forestry.” He does not believe management by the Town is the same as that by the

School District. However, he agrees neither deed says that a sale or lease of the property

requires forfeiture. In addition, although he testified to his intent that the School keep the

property, he did not testify that such intent was ever conveyed to the School District or

agreed to by it.

        The court also notes that in a 2004 letter from Forestdale’s counsel to the Town, it

is represented that the 90 acres was conveyed to the School District because the Town

required Forestdale to do so, not out of the goodness of the company’s heart. See Exhibit

5 (“as part of a condition imposed upon it by the Village of Essex Junction, [Forestdale]

transferred approximately 90 acres of the Park to the Essex Junction School District”).

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This creates some question as to the true intent of Forestdale at the time of the

conveyance.

       Undercutting LeClair’s claim that Forestdale did not intend to allow the School

District to lease or sell the property is the deed language (in both versions of the deed)

referring to the School District’s “successors and assigns.” Exhibit 1, p. 1; Exhibit 2, p.1.

This clearly indicates that it was anticipated that the District might lease or sell its rights

in the property at some future date.

       LeClair has been on the 90 acre parcel in recent years. He noted that it did not

appear that it was being managed under a forest management plan “as it was supposed to

be.” Again, however, there is nothing in the deed requiring a forest management plan.

Since 2004 LeClair has noted new trails on the property, which were built by a group

called The Fellowship of the Wheel. The trails are used for bicycling and for walking.

       The Fellowship of the Wheel is a non-profit organization that is in the business of

creating and maintaining mountain biking trails. It works with the Town’s Director of

Parks and Recreation, which has given the group authorization to build and maintain

trails. They are in frequent communication. The Fellowship cleans up the trials and post

signs asking people to stay off the trails when they are too muddy. The trails are quite

popular with mountain bikers. Only members of the organization are entitled to obtain

trial maps, but the trails are open to the general public. The trails are compacted dirt, with

some wooden bridges up to two feet wide over wet areas.

       Last year the Fellowship did a four-day project with the Essex Middles School, in

which the students assisted in building a new trail. They also did projects with twelve to

eighteen Center for Technology students four mornings a week for three to four hours.

They do invite donations from users of the trails.

                                              4
        LeClair agrees that use by bicycles is “recreational” and does not object to

bicyclists’ use of the property. His objection is that parties other than the School District

or the Town are using the property. He agrees the property is still open for conservation,

recreational and educational uses.

        Forestdale is currently trying to develop the remaining lands adjoining the 90-acre

parcel. Although LeClair hopes that the plans can proceed without regaining ownership

of the 90 acres, the current development plan submitted to the Town for approval

anticipates that Forestdale will regain the 90 acres.

                                     Conclusions of Law

        Forestdale argues that Exhibit 2 is the operative deed, that it is ambiguous as to

who was intended to use the parcel, that parol evidence establishes that it was to be

limited to the school district, and that both the lease to the Town and the use of the land

by the fellowship of the Wheel operate as a forfeiture of the District’s rights under the

deed.

        The court concludes that both deeds are missing language and therefore both are

ambiguous to some extent. If one were missing language and the other were not, the

complete document would seem more likely to be correct. Here, neither on its face is

obviously more likely to be the correct deed.           Forestdale argues that there was no

evidence as to how Exhibit 1 came into existence or was delivered to the School District.

However, the deed is fully executed by the parties to the transaction and was recorded on

August 15, 1978, the date of its execution. The fact that it was recorded is prima facie

evidence of its delivery. Rich v. Wry, 110 Vt. 307, 311 (1939). “The recording of a

regularly executed and acknowledged deed by either the grantor or the grantee raises a

rebuttable presumption of delivery, which is entitled to great and controlling weight.” 23

                                              5
Am. Jur. 2d Deeds § 141 (West, Westlaw through March 2010). “When a presumption of

delivery arises, nothing except the most satisfactory evidence of nondelivery can prevail

against it; a mere preponderance of the evidence is not sufficient.” Id.§ 148. Given that

no one has offered any explanation for why an incorrect deed would have been recorded,

the recorded deed is the more reliable of the two documents. The court finds no credible

evidence that it was not delivered.

       Although LeClair testified that he found the other deed in Forestdale’s files, that

does not rebut the presumption of delivery from recordation. Even if it might otherwise

rebut the presumption, the fact that it is incomplete undercuts its effectiveness in doing

so. Nor does the court find any other credible evidence that the unrecorded deed is the

correct one. Although LeClair testified that the language regarding forfeiture was what he

intended, given that the events occurred over thirty years ago, that the transfer of the

lands appears to have been at the behest of the Town rather than because of some

particular desire by Forestdale to insure recreational and educational use of the property,

that LeClair’s other testimony that he intended non-transferability of the property is

contradicted by the clear language of both deeds, and that LeClair apparently has a

financial motive for obtaining the return of the land, the court did not find persuasive his

explanation of the original intent of the transfer.

       The recorded deed states that the lands conveyed “shall be for public usage for

conservation/recreation and educational purposes only.” It contains no language referring

to any forfeiture of the property. It is undisputed that the land is being used for

recreational and educational purposes only. It is also open to the public. Thus, the uses to

                                               6
which it is being put are entirely consistent with the deed. Nor is there anything in the

deed barring the lease of the land to the Town.1

         Although Forestdale argues that page two of Exhibit 2 flows more directly from

page 1 because it refers to a road as does page 1, there is nothing about page 2 of Exhibit

1 that is inconsistent with page1. Both page twos start in the middle of a sentence and

thus both are lacking continuity with page 1.

         Forestdale also argues that the deeds are ambiguous as to who may use the land.

The court finds no ambiguity. Instead, on its face the deed limits the types of uses that

can be made, but not the types of users who may be allowed. There is nothing ambiguous

about that.

         Finally, Forestdale argues that by allowing the Fellowship of the Wheel to alter

the natural landscape by building bicycle trails, and to collect donations from users of the

trails, the Town has gone beyond “recreational” use of the land. The court disagrees.

While trail building and the collection of donations may not themselves be recreation,

they are incidental to recreational use of the property. They do not constitute a violation

of the terms of the deed.

                                                   Order

         The court concludes that Exhibit 1 constitutes the controlling deed, and that page

two of the deed should read “The use of such lands herein conveyed shall be for public

usage for conservation/recreation and educational purposes only.”

         The court concludes that the deed does not prohibit the lease of the property so

long as the uses continue as described in the deed. The parties are hereby ordered to

1
   Even if Exhibit 2 were the controlling deed, the court would conclude that no forfeiture has occurred.
That deed allows use of the land for “conservation/recreation and educational purposes only.” The court
finds that all the current uses of the land meet this description. Nothing in either deed requires the land to
stay in the control of the School District as opposed to the Town.

                                                      7
submit a stipulated proposed judgment within ten days. If they cannot agree on the

language, each party should submit their proposed language for the court to consider.

Dated at Burlington this 5th day of May, 2010.

                                            _____________________________
                                            Helen M. Toor
                                            Superior Court Judge

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