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Maine Alliance for Road Associations

Town Owned Lot

  • 05 May 2024 7:04 PM
    Message # 13352615

    I am posting this questions as I don't see a discussion forum that seems to match our specific issue/question.

    We are trying to establish a SRA on a public easement that dead ends at a town owned lot.  We are considering describing in the by-laws that the portion of the road maintained by the association stop prior to the town lot.  This way we need not get the Town involved in any way, shape, or form.

    The law on SRA's doesn't seem to exempt town's from being notified of the organizational meeting and voting when there is town owned property on a road that the owners want to establish a SRA.  This is why we are writing the by-laws to stop the maintenance prior to the town owned lot.

    Thoughts? 


  • 06 May 2024 9:42 AM
    Reply # 13352814 on 13352615
    Anonymous member (Administrator)

    My first thought --if the town-owned lot will be the destination and egress point for heavy equipment owned by the town accessed over your road association's road for which you will be responsible for maintenance, then the town should pay for a fair share of the maintenance.

    Last modified: 06 May 2024 9:44 AM | Anonymous member (Administrator)
  • 06 May 2024 6:29 PM
    Reply # 13353111 on 13352615
    Anonymous member (Administrator)

    Interesting question! When I first saw this, I assumed you have a “public easement” over a former town or county way that was discontinued or abandoned. As founder of Maine ROADWays, (Residents & Owners on Abandoned & Discontinued Ways,) that’s a complaint I’ve heard a number of times. But then I realized which road you are talking about. I have already been contacted by another abutter on your road, who told me the easement was deeded to the town. She was going to get more information for me, but I had not yet received it.

    So I went to the Registry of Deeds website and did some digging. I found that there were two deeds that granted a right of way to the town, along with a lot of land to which the right of way provides access. The first deed, which was granted in 1985, included the following clause: “Also conveying herewith the sum of $1,000 to the Inhabitants of the Town of Perry in TRUST to be invested by said Town and the interest thereon to be used for the purpose of providing basic maintenance of the lot and right of way herein conveyed.” (The second deed simply clarified the location and scope of the right of way. However, it doesn’t seem to correct a typographical error in the original deed, which identified the lot as lot 15 on map 5 instead of lot 15 on map 3.)

    A right of way granted by deed in order to give public access to a piece of public land is a bit different from a public easement that is created over a former town way when that way is discontinued for the purpose of saving the town the expense of maintaining it. In your case, I believe the road qualifies as a private road, since it never was dedicated and accepted as a town way. But unlike most private roads, where the public can be excluded, in your case the public also has a right to use the road. It could be argued that the public is basically like any other abutting landowner who is granted shared access to their property over the private road, and as such they have the same obligation as other landowners do to contribute to the cost of keeping the road passable.

    I wonder if that $1,000 Trust was well invested, and if it produces enough interest to provide an ongoing share of road maintenance? Even if it does not, it seems that by accepting that deed, the Town would have acknowledged some obligation to contribute to maintenance. On the other hand, it’s possible the TRUST was set up because the Town only agreed to accept the deed if it was not going to cost them anything to maintain the access. The deed refers to “Articles 53, 54, and 55 of the Warrant for the 1984 Town Meeting.” I would like to see what those Articles state, and whether they would shed any light on the matter of road maintenance. You should be able to obtain a copy of those Articles from your Town Office. Make sure to also ask for the result of the vote, as you can’t just assume the Articles were approved.

    I don’t think it would hurt any to call an initial meeting to form a statutory road association under 23 MRS section 3101, and to notify the Town as one of the owners of property “benefited by” the road as required under section 3101(2). It seems the Town should contribute proportionally to the public’s use of the road. (Make sure you are careful to follow the statute precisely, so there is no flaw that could be used by the town to prove the association invalid.)

    There is one other case in particular I have seen where a town had suspended maintenance on a town way where the town owned public parkland at the end of the road. If my memory is correct, attorney Mary Denison was considering filing suit to get the Town to become a contributing member of a road association. But the Town decided it was time to resume maintenance of the road. That case was a bit different because the road was a town way which previously had been maintained by the Town. In your case the road never was a town way, and I wouldn’t hold my breath waiting for them to accept it as one. But I do think that they should be treated like any other owner of land benefited by the road, considering the public’s proportion of use of the road.

    I hope that one of the things the Abandoned and Discontinued Roads Commission will consider is legislation to require that where a town owns land on a road that’s maintained by a road association, the town must be a paying member of that association.


  • 07 May 2024 6:58 PM
    Reply # 13353667 on 13352615

    Thanks Andrew and Roberta.

    As for Andrew's post, The road does not see heavy equipment from the Town as the Town has done nothing to the lot in the 20 years since I've been here and others here before me say the same.  We get clammers  who use the lot for parking when they dig for clams and the occasional gawker/sightseer.

    In answer to Roberta's post, the Town did not invest the 1,000.00 wisely just a regular savings account with other reserve accounts.  As of the last Town Report the balance was $1,496.05.  Based on our proposed fee the interest would be wiped out in 4-5 years leaving only the $1,000.00 trust.  After that the town would have to budget for the fee or take it from the public works account.

    The articles in the Town Warrant from 1985 did pass, I have a copy of the clerks record.  The deed says right of way, Article 54 says easement and Article 55 says right of way.

    Article 53 - To see if the Town will vote to accept the gift of a shorefront lot in fee simple from Stephen Lincoln which is more particularly described as follows: Lot 15 on Map 3 on Perry Tax Map.  This lot is to be used for public recreational purposes.

    Article 54-To see if the Town will vote to accept the gift of an easement for recreational purposes from Stephen Lincoln to be used as access to the shorefront lot accepted by the Town under Article 53 above.  This easement crosses other property owned by Stephen Lincoln and is more particularly described as follows: Lot 35 of Map 3 on Perry Tax Map.  This easement interest is to be in common with other private land-owners to whom Mr. Lincoln previously has deeded a similar easement.

    Article 55- To see if the Town will vote to accept as a gift the sum of $1,000.00 from Stephen Lincoln in trust, interest to be used by the Town for the purposes of providing basic maintenance of the shorefront lot and or the right of way accepted under Articles 53 and 54 above.

    Needless to say it is a mess and after some 20+ years of attempting to get the town to maintain the road which included a failed referendum vote by the residents the only option is to move forward with a RA. 

    So you can see why we want, if possible, to completely exclude the town from the RA 

  • 08 May 2024 10:44 AM
    Reply # 13353880 on 13352615
    Anonymous member (Administrator)

    I don't know why you would want to exclude the town.  If you form as a statutory road association under 23 MRS section 3101, you MUST notify every owner of a parcel benefitted by the road, and that would include the town.  If you fail to notify them, your whole road association could be ruled invalid.  See Sunshine v Brett.  (There's a link on the Resources page.) 

    But once you hold your first meeting and set up your bylaws, you could, if your members so vote, specify in your dues formula that public lands are exempt from dues.  OR, you could go ahead and bill them along with everyone else, either at the same rate or at a rate proportional to the public's use of the road. Your formula just needs to be "fair and equitable", which the Courts have taken to mean that what ever your formula is, it must be applied equally to everyone.  So you can have a formula that says all year round residents pay at one rate and all seasonal residents pay at another rate, as long as you bill everyone according to that formula rather than billing some people in one category as if they were in the other category.  Or you could have a formula that says all public lands pay at a different rate from privately owned lands.  If the town pays, great! 

    If they don't pay, then it's up to your members to decide whether it's worthwhile to pursue payment or not.  At least if the public uses and damages the road at some point, you could decide to try to enforce payment.  I doubt if filing a Notice of Claim would have much effect, as that often only results in payment when an owner sells a lot that has a claim against it.  I don't know if it would kick in if the Town tried to borrow money, but it might.  But if public use really damaged the road, I believe you would at least have the right to file in small claims court to collect back dues, which then could be used to repair the damage caused by that public use.

    There remains, of course, the question of whether it's constitutional to require private individuals to pay to maintain a public easement.  Section 3101 says you can.  As far as I know, no one has yet tried to challenge the road association laws on that issue.  I suppose someone could use a constitutional claim as grounds for not paying their dues, but all that would do is make it difficult for you to force them to pay, and you would have the same problem with a voluntary association.  At least if you name the Town as a member due to their ownership of land benefitted by the road, then the rest of your members would have the assurance that the town may be held liable for their share of wear and tear on the road.

  • 09 May 2024 8:33 AM
    Reply # 13354352 on 13352615
    Anonymous member (Administrator)

    Roberta makes good points. I agree!

    Last modified: 09 May 2024 8:33 AM | Anonymous member (Administrator)
  • 10 May 2024 2:39 PM
    Reply # 13355181 on 13352615

    Thanks for the comments advise.  Just hoping there was a magic bullet

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