Showing posts with label Great Ponds. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Great Ponds. Show all posts

Tuesday, April 4, 2023

Appeals Court Protects Great Ponds

Michael J. O’Neill, Esq.

For anyone contemplating using a right-of-way to reach a Great Pond in Massachusetts, two must-read Appeals Court decisions are Kubic v. Audette, 98 Mass. 289 (2020) (Kubic I) and Kubic v. Audette, 102


Mass. App. Ct. 228 (2023) (Kubic II). They explain the principle of ownership of accreted land bordering a Great Pond, the rights and limits of access to a Great Pond, the tests for overburdening of an easement, and the proper interpretation of easements. The result is respect for but reasonable limits on use of an easement to reach a Great Pond, reflecting both the intent of the parties in creating the original easement, as well as the traditional limits on uses of a Great Pond itself. Recall that a Great Pond is defined as a natural pond the area of which is twenty acres or more. G.L. c. 131, § 1.

Plaintiffs Vince Kubic and Paul Kubic own adjacent lots separated by a 50-foot wide unpaved right of way that extends from the street to Webster Lake, which is a Great Pond.  This is the lake with the Native American name that is reputed to be the longest: Lake Chaubunagungamaug.  Audette is the owner of an inland lot which has a deeded right of access over the right of way to get to the Lake.  Audette also purchased a release deed of the right of way from a purported heir of the original developer of the subdivision of which the properties are a part and thereafter claimed that he owned the fee in the right of way. Conflict arose when Audette began using the right of way more intensely than other easement holders historically had done.

Audette represented to the Massachusetts Department of Environmental Protection (MassDEP) that he owned the land at the end of the right of way and obtained a waterways license pursuant to G.L. c. 91, the Massachusetts Tidelands and Waterways Act.  He constructed a trident-shaped dock at the end of the right of way, thirty-five feet wide and protruding fifty feet into the lake.  He docked his boat there, which comfortably held fifteen people.  He used the right of way regularly, as much as every day during the summer.  He has a large family, who had an open invitation and were regular guests.  He graded the right of way and installed pavers to facilitate motor vehicle access. The Kubics brought an action in Land Court to quiet title in the right of way and to establish the parties’ rights to use it.  The Land Court ruled in favor of the Kubics on some of the issues and in Audette’s favor on others, but declined to rule on some issues.

The record established that, at least for a period of time that included 1948, the shoreline was submerged.  Under the legal principles governing accretion and reliction of the ocean and certain water bodies, this raised some question whether the Commonwealth might make some claim of ownership if and when it reemerged. There are many cases about who owns “new land” when it appears, or loses “their land” when it goes under water, but here the Commonwealth disavowed such a claim. The state took the position that the reemerged land would belong to the littoral owners.  This is consistent with the general rule that the waterside boundaries of littoral property generally follow the changing waterline. 

There are exceptions to this general rule that lot lines move with the water lines.  An owner cannot artificially add to his land and then claim the benefit of the addition.    In such disputes, the history (or lack thereof) of the filling, dredging or grading of such a shoreline becomes relevant or even determinative. These disputes often arise in coastal areas, where lands are affected by tidal action and by storms, so the landforms are dynamic, but also in lakes, ponds, rivers and streams where alterations may be natural or man-made.

The Appeals Court used the term “littoral,” not “riparian.” It is useful to consider the natural processes which are at work and the resulting movement of the ownership line. According to Black’s Law Dictionary, “littoral rights” are rights concerning properties abutting an ocean, sea, or lake rather than a river or stream (riparian). The accretion and reliction principles vis a vis the line of ownership, however, appear to apply equally, with variations possible from the general rule. Specifically, the decision in Kubic I stated in footnote 6: “As a general rule, a littoral owner is entitled to newly emergent land whether that land emerged as a result of accretion (the gradual buildup of material next to the existing land) or reliction (the gradual receding of the waters), while such an owner loses title to the land lost to the water through erosion.”

In the case of East Boston Co. v. Commonwealth (1909), dealing with tidal flats, the SJC had held: “Upon the doctrines applying to accretion and erosion and to the elevation and subsidence of land affecting the water line along the shore of the sea under conditions like these, the line of ownership follows the changing water line.” We observe that this rule would seem to apply to deeds and other real estate instruments describing the property as extending to, by or along “the shore,” “the water,” “the lake,” “the pond,” “the bay,” “the river,” “the ocean,” ”the sea,” and the like. This rule would not apply, it seems, if the deeds instead go along a described line or to a point, in modern times a metes and bounds, or perhaps by operation of the derelict fee statute to the midpoint of a way or water. In the latter situations, the property in question consists of specific size, dimensions and lot lines which are fixed and not flexible. 

The Appeals Court held in Kubic I that the Kubics owned the fee in the right of way down to the waterline, and the easement holders were given the right to use the right of way to gain access to the Lake, which, once there, they could use for fishing, swimming, boating, and other uses that are reserved for the public in Great Ponds.   The Appeals Court further held that it was within the Land Court’s authority to conclude that the use of motor vehicles on the right of way was reasonably necessary to full enjoyment of the access rights that the easement provided, but that this does not mean that Audette had the right to park motor vehicles on the right of way.   Rather, Audette only had the right to temporary parking on the right of way to offload people or items.   Also, Audette could not occupy the right of way by hosting social events and placement of a picnic table in it, interfering with the right of the Kubics and others to gain access to the Lake.

Kubic I, as a result, vacated the Land Court Judgment insofar as it stated that Audette and his household members have a right to park in the right of way, modified it to prohibit Audette’s actions in the shoreline area that constitute occupation of that area, and remanded the case to the Land Court to address the extent to which Audette’s use of the dock unreasonably interferes with the rights of the Kubics and people other than Audette who hold easement rights in the right of way. That remand, which came back up to the Appeals Court, resulted in Kubic II.

Kubic II framed the issue to be whether the Audette’s use of the right of way constituted an overburdening of the easement, which it defined as “use for a purpose different from that intended in the creation of the easement.”  The Appeals Court then instructs how overburdening is shown by attending to changes in the “manner, frequency, or intensity of the use.”   

Kubic II includes directions as to how the reviewing court is to determine the scope of the easement.  “We construe the scope of an easement from the parties’ intent, which we ascertain from the relevant instruments and the objective circumstances to which they refer.”  It continued to provide helpful, practical guidance: a “court may consider subsequent uses, not too remote in time or disconnected from deed, to discern parties’ intent in creating easement.”  It is not uncommon for an easement to be created merely by a brief, one- or two-sentence statement in a deed.  It is helpful that the Appeals Court in this case recognizes that evidence of the interpretation that the parties themselves gave to the easement at the time, which may be considered by the Court to assist in the determination of the intent of the parties.

The Land Court on remand did not reach the question whether the placement of the dock interfered with the use of the right of way by the Kubics and others. Rather, it determined that the intended uses of the right of way were limited to the “transient uses traditionally associated with public access to tidal waters, navigable streams, and great ponds,” such as fishing, swimming, boating, and other uses that are reserved for the public in Great Ponds.  It ruled that Audette could use the right of way for temporary parking and placement of items (for no more than fifteen minutes) to serve such purposes.  The Appeals Court affirmed that limitation in Kubic II.

Audette had argued that because the right of way was unquestionably intended to provide easement holders access to the lake for boating, it follows that it must also provide him access for a dock.  The Appeals Court rejected this argument, stating that the fact that he has a general right of way does not mean that he may exercise it in any manner he sees fit. 

Audette then argued in the Appeals Court for the first time that MassDEP’s grant of a waterways license under Chapter 91 to construct and maintain the dock necessarily implied that he has a property right to use the right of way to gain access to it.  The Appeals Court ruled that this “argument of last resort” not only was waived, but also was meritless.  “Licenses granted under c. 91 do not create property rights, nor do they authorize interference with the property rights of others.”    In footnote 5 of Kubic II, the Appeals Court stated outright that Audette’s standing and chapter 91 claims were frivolous.

Kubic I and Kubic II, taken together, strongly stand for the proposition that the holder of a right of way cannot interfere with rights of way held by others.  They reinforce the principle that a right of way is a lesser interest than ownership of the fee interest, and when the owner of a right of way uses it as if he owns the fee, he is likely to get their wings clipped.  And these cases protect Great Ponds by recognizing the uses of the easement to the water are limited by the proper uses of a Great Pond, in which the Commonwealth has an interest in protecting and managing for the benefit of the public.

Editor’s Note:  Nick Shapiro, Co-chair of the REBA Land Use and Zoning Section represented the successful plaintiffs in Kubic I and Kubic II.

Mike O’Neill is a Senior Associate of McGregor Legere & Stevens, PC. He has more than thirty-five years of experience in a wide range of litigation in all courts and in real estate and commercial law, concentrating in environmental and land use law and litigation as well as real estate and commercial law and litigation.  Mike’s email address ismoneill@mcgregorlaw.com.


Thursday, March 16, 2023

Appeals Court Applies Shoreline and Easement Principals to Great Ponds

 Michael J. O’Neill

For anyone contemplating using a right-of-way to reach a Great Pond in Massachusetts, two must-read Appeals Court decisions are Kubic


v. Audette,
98 Mass. 289 (2020) (Kubic I) and Kubic v. Audette, 102 Mass. App. Ct. 228 (2023) (Kubic II). They explain the principle of ownership of accreted land bordering a Great Pond, the rights and limits of access to a Great Pond, the tests for overburdening of an easement, and the proper interpretation of easements. The result is respect for but reasonable limits on use of an easement to reach a Great Pond, reflecting both the intent of the parties in creating the original easement, as well as the traditional limits on uses of a Great Pond itself. Recall that a Great Pond is defined as a natural pond the area of which is twenty acres or more. G.L. c. 131, § 1.

 

Plaintiffs Vince Kubic and Paul Kubic own adjacent lots separated by a 50-foot-wide unpaved right of way that extends from the street to Webster Lake, which is a Great Pond.  This is the lake with the Native American name that is reputed to be the longest: Lake Chaubunagungamaug.  Audette is the owner of an inland lot which has a deeded right of access over the right of way to get to the Lake.  Audette also purchased a release deed of the right of way from a purported heir of the original developer of the subdivision of which the properties are a part and thereafter claimed that he owned the fee in the right of way. Conflict arose when Audette began using the right of way more intensely than other easement holders historically had done.

 

Audette represented to MassDEP that he owned the land at the end of the right of way and obtained a waterways license pursuant to G.L. c. 91, the Massachusetts Tidelands and Waterways Act.  He constructed a trident-shaped dock at the end of the right of way, thirty-five feet wide and protruding fifty feet into the lake.  He docked his boat there, which comfortably held fifteen people.  He used the right of way regularly, as much as every day during the summer.  He has a large family, who had an open invitation and were regular guests.  He graded the right of way and installed pavers to facilitate motor vehicle access.

 

The Kubics brought an action in Land Court to quiet title in the right of way and to establish the parties’ rights to use it.  The Land Court ruled in favor of the Kubics on some of the issues and in Audette’s favor on others, but declined to rule on some issues.

The record established that, at least for a period of time that included 1948, the shoreline was submerged.  Under the legal principles governing accretion and reliction of the ocean and certain water bodies, this raised some question whether the Commonwealth might make some claim of ownership if and when it reemerged. There are many cases about who owns “new land” when it appears, or loses “their land” when it goes under water, but here the Commonwealth disavowed such a claim. The state took the position that the reemerged land would belong to the littoral owners.  This is consistent with the general rule that the waterside boundaries of littoral property generally follow the changing waterline. 

 

There are exceptions to this general rule that lot lines move with the water lines.  An owner cannot artificially add to his land and then claim the benefit of the addition.    In such disputes, the history (or lack thereof) of the filling, dredging or grading of such a shoreline becomes relevant or even determinative. These disputes often arise in coastal areas, where lands are affected by tidal action and by storms, so the landforms are dynamic, but also in lakes, ponds, rivers and streams where alterations may be natural or man-made.

 

The Appeals Court used the term “littoral,” not “riparian.” It is useful to consider the natural processes which are at work and the resulting movement of the ownership line. According to Black’s Law Dictionary, “littoral rights” are rights concerning properties abutting an ocean, sea, or lake rather than a river or stream (riparian). The accretion and reliction principles vis a vis the line of ownership, however, appear to apply equally, with variations possible from the general rule. Specifically, the decision in Kubic I stated in footnote 6: “As a general rule, a littoral owner is entitled to newly emergent land whether that land emerged as a result of accretion (the gradual buildup of material next to the existing land) or reliction (the gradual receding of the waters), while such an owner loses title to the land lost to the water through erosion.”

 

In the case of East Boston Co. v. Commonwealth (1909), dealing with tidal flats, the SJC had held: “Upon the doctrines applying to accretion and erosion and to the elevation and subsidence of land affecting the water line along the shore of the sea under conditions like these, the line of ownership follows the changing water line.” We observe that this rule would seem to apply to deeds and other real estate instruments describing the property as extending to, by or along “the shore,” “the water,” “the lake,” “the pond,” “the bay,” “the river,” “the ocean,” ”the sea,” and the like. This rule would not apply, it seems, if the deeds instead go along a described line or to a point, in modern times a metes and bounds, or perhaps by operation of the derelict fee statute to the midpoint of a way or water. In the latter situations, the property in question consists of specific size, dimensions and lot lines which are fixed and not flexible. 

The Appeals Court held in Kubic I that the Kubics owned the fee in the right of way down to the waterline, and the easement holders were given the right to use the right of way to gain access to the Lake, which, once there, they could use for fishing, swimming, boating, and other uses that are reserved for the public in Great Ponds.   The Appeals Court further held that it was within the Land Court’s authority to conclude that the use of motor vehicles on the right of way was reasonably necessary to full enjoyment of the access rights that the easement provided, but that this does not mean that Audette had the right to park motor vehicles on the right of way.   Rather, Audette only had the right to temporary parking on the right of way to offload people or items.   Also, Audette could not occupy the right of way by hosting social events and placement of a picnic table in it, interfering with the right of the Kubics and others to gain access to the Lake.

 

Kubic I, as a result, vacated the Land Court Judgment insofar as it stated that Audette and his household members have a right to park in the right of way, modified it to prohibit Audette’s actions in the shoreline area that constitute occupation of that area, and remanded the case to the Land Court to address the extent to which Audette’s use of the dock unreasonably interferes with the rights of the Kubics and people other than Audette who hold easement rights in the right of way. That remand, which came back up to the Appeals Court, resulted in Kubic II.

 

Kubic II framed the issue to be whether the Audette’s use of the right of way constituted an overburdening of the easement, which it defined as “use for a purpose different from that intended in the creation of the easement.”  The Appeals Court then instructs how overburdening is shown by attending to changes in the “manner, frequency, or intensity of the use.”   

Kubic II includes directions as to how the reviewing court is to determine the scope of the easement.  “We construe the scope of an easement from the parties’ intent, which we ascertain from the relevant instruments and the objective circumstances to which they refer.”  It continued to provide helpful, practical guidance: a “court may consider subsequent uses, not too remote in time or disconnected from deed, to discern parties’ intent in creating easement.”  It is not uncommon for an easement to be created merely by a brief, one- or two-sentence statement in a deed.  It is helpful that the Appeals Court in this case recognizes that evidence of the interpretation that the parties themselves gave to the easement at the time, which may be considered by the Court to assist in the determination of the intent of the parties.

 

The Land Court on remand did not reach the question whether the placement of the dock interfered with the use of the right of way by the Kubics and others. Rather, it determined that the intended uses of the right of way were limited to the “transient uses traditionally associated with public access to tidal waters, navigable streams, and great ponds,” such as fishing, swimming, boating, and other uses that are reserved for the public in Great Ponds.  It ruled that Audette could use the right of way for temporary parking and placement of items (for no more than fifteen minutes) to serve such purposes.  The Appeals Court affirmed that limitation in Kubic II.

 

Audette had argued that because the right of way was unquestionably intended to provide easement holders access to the lake for boating, it follows that it must also provide him access for a dock.  The Appeals Court rejected this argument, stating that the fact that he has a general right of way does not mean that he may exercise it in any manner he sees fit. 

Audette then argued in the Appeals Court for the first time that MassDEP’s grant of a waterways license under Chapter 91 to construct and maintain the dock necessarily implied that he has a property right to use the right of way to gain access to it.  The Appeals Court ruled that this “argument of last resort” not only was waived, but also was meritless.  “Licenses granted under c. 91 do not create property rights, nor do they authorize interference with the property rights of others.”    In footnote 5 of Kubic II, the Appeals Court stated outright that Audette’s standing and chapter 91 claims were frivolous.

 

Kubic I and Kubic II, taken together, strongly stand for the proposition that the holder of a right of way cannot interfere with rights of way held by others.  They reinforce the principle that a right of way is a lesser interest than ownership of the fee interest, and when the owner of a right of way uses it as if he owns the fee, he is likely to get their wings clipped.  And these cases protect Great Ponds by recognizing the uses of the easement to the water are limited by the proper uses of a Great Pond, in which the Commonwealth has an interest in protecting and managing for the benefit of the public.

A senior associate at McGregor Legere & Stevens, Mike O’Neill is a member of REBA’s Environmental Law and Renewable Energy Section.  He has more than thirty-five years of experience in a wide range of litigation in all courts and in real estate and commercial law, concentrating in environmental, land use law and litigation.  His email address is moneill@mcgregorlaw.com. Editor’s Note: The Association’s Land Use and Zoning Section Co-chair Nicholas P. Shapiro represented the successful plaintiffs in both Kubic I and Kubic II.

 

 

 

Thursday, August 24, 2017

LAKE MANAGEMENT UPDATE FOR THE REAL ESTATE ATTORNEY

By Elisabeth Goodman, Cain Hibbard & Myers, PC.

Summer is a good time to focus on our lakes.  The real estate lawyer practicing in Massachusetts should be aware of what activities in and near lakes require permits and how application of herbicides and control of invasive species are regulated in Massachusetts. Monitoring and treatment of lakes is expensive.   Lake districts are an effective mechanism for providing governance for lakes and helping to fund lake management by way of taxation.


Lakes and Ponds are bodies of freshwater that contain standing water year round, with flora and fauna adapted to the permanent body of water.  Important criteria that define these water bodies include underlying geology, surface area, volume of water, flushing rate and watershed area.  A Great Pond is defined as any pond or lake that contained more than 10 acres in its natural state. Ponds that once measured 10 or more acres in their natural state, but which are now smaller, are still considered Great Ponds. DEP has a list of Great Ponds, which can be found at http://www.mass.gov/eea/agencies/massdep/water/watersheds/massachusetts-great-ponds-list.html Many large lakes are not Great Ponds because they are totally manmade (e.g., the Quabbin, and Wachusett).

There is no definition of a lake in the Wetlands Protection Act, G.L. c. 131 §40.  A lake is defined in the regulations at 310 CMR 10.04 as “any open body of fresh water with surface area of 10 acres or more, and shall include great ponds.”  Inland ponds have a detailed definition in the Wetlands regulations starting with requirement of surface area of at least 10,000 square feet. Several  protected wetland resource areas must be examined when activities occur in and near lakes, including land under water, 310 CMR 10.56, and banks, defined at 310 CMR 10.54.  The definition of a bank includes the lower boundary which is defined as the mean annual low flow level.  For lakes with historic drawdowns, the lower boundary of the bank extends to the low flow during the drawdown.  It is useful to know this because the restrictions for work on banks are easier to deal with than the restrictions for working on land under water.

We used to file for work in lakes and ponds as a resource improvement project under 310 CMR 10.53(4).  Now, these projects need to be submitted as an Ecological Restoration limited project.  This includes publishing in the Environmental Monitor and getting pre-approved by NHESP.  Also these Ecological Restoration projects require submission of an Appendix A.  The DEP will advise the Conservation Commission that it needs to review 310 CMR 10.11, 310 CMR 10.12 and 310 CMR 10.53(4)(e)5 as well as the submitted Appendix A.  These projects still need to conform to the FGEIR and the Practical Guide to Lake Management in Massachusetts.  See In the Matter of Craig Campbell, 2010 WL 2209452 (Mass. Dept. Env. Prot.)(2010), where  DEP approved a multi-year program for the application of herbicides to reduce nuisance levels of aquatic vegetation in a shallow 1.5 acre pond. This decision includes extensive review of the criteria considered in interpreting guidance on aquatic land management.

A number of communities are experiencing similar problems regarding lake management.  For many years the state has done no evaluations or management of many Great Ponds.  Nutrient and other contamination from watersheds cross over town boundaries. The costs of water quality sampling and control of invasive species is high. Controlling invasive species when there is public boat access can be difficult. The cost of maintaining and repairing dams is extraordinary.

To address these problems, some lake residents are turning to the state legislature seeking approval for the creation of a lake district.  A lake district is a governmental body, like a municipality. To create a lake district, first the town adopts the provisions of the special act, then the special act is approved by the state legislature, which is then signed by the governor. A district has to comply with the provisions of the special act, but usually they are run by a committee called a Prudential Committee. The property owners along the lake, called the Proprietors of the district, vote at an annual town meeting on the budget and other matters for the district.

The great advantage of creating a lake district is that the district can assess taxes and use them as a source of funds.  The taxes are based on the annual budget adopted by the Proprietors of the district.  Another advantage of a district is that it can qualify for grants as a governmental body.