Robert F. Almeder v. Town of Kennebunkport ( 2014 )


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  • MAINE SUPREME JUDICIAL COURT                                                      Reporter of Decisions
    Decision: 
    2014 ME 12
    Docket:   Yor-12-599
    Argued:   November 19, 2013
    Decided:  February 4, 2014
    Panel:        SAUFLEY, C.J., and ALEXANDER, LEVY, SILVER, MEAD, GORMAN, and JABAR,
    JJ.
    ROBERT F. ALMEDER et al.
    v.
    TOWN OF KENNEBUNKPORT et al.
    GORMAN, J.
    [¶1] Robert F. Almeder and twenty-eight other owners of property fronting
    Goose Rocks Beach in Kennebunkport (the Beachfront Owners) appeal from a
    decision of the Superior Court (York County, Brennan, J.) awarding the public a
    recreational easement over both the intertidal and dry sand portions of the Beach.
    The Beachfront Owners argue that the court erred in (1) permitting the State and
    neighboring landowners to intervene, (2) awarding a prescriptive easement and an
    easement by custom to the public users of the beach, and (3) determining that the
    public had rights concerning the intertidal zone of the Beach pursuant to the public
    trust doctrine. The State cross-appeals,1 arguing that the court erred in limiting the
    1
    The Town also cross-appealed, but does not argue that any portion of the court’s judgment was error.
    The trial court permitted roughly 200 owners of nearby properties to intervene, as well as the Surfrider
    Foundation. The Conservation Law Foundation, the Maine Snowmobile Association, and the Maine
    Forest Products Council also have filed amicus curiae briefs.
    2
    activities allowed in the intertidal zone pursuant to the public trust doctrine. We
    vacate the judgment.
    I. BACKGROUND
    [¶2]     Goose Rocks Beach is a two-mile stretch of beach located in
    Kennebunkport.2 There are 110 parcels of property directly abutting the beach
    owned by ninety-five separate owners. Nine of the lots are owned by either the
    Town or the Kennebunkport Conservation Trust. The Beach has five public access
    points and 173 public parking spaces on two abutting roads.
    [¶3] In October of 2009, the Beachfront Owners3 initiated proceedings in
    the Superior Court against the Town and all others who claimed any title or right to
    use the Beach.          Each Beachfront Owner sought (1) a declaratory judgment
    affirming his or her ownership and exclusive right to use that portion of the Beach
    abutting his or her parcel down to the mean low-water mark, “subject only to the
    public rights of usage in the Intertidal Property established by the Colonial
    Ordinance of 1647,” and (2) to quiet title to his or her claimed Beach property.
    2
    The law treats a beach as having three discrete areas: “the submerged land below the mean low-water
    mark,” McGarvey v. Whittredge, 
    2011 ME 97
    , ¶ 13, 
    28 A.3d 620
    ; the intertidal zone (wet sand), consisting
    of the shore and flats between the mean low-water mark and the mean high-water mark, to the extent that
    distance does not exceed one hundred rods, Flaherty v. Muther, 
    2011 ME 32
    , ¶ 1 n.2, 
    17 A.3d 640
    ; and the
    upland (dry sand) above the mean high-water mark, 
    id. ¶ 2
    n.3. Unless otherwise noted, “the Beach” refers
    to the intertidal zone and the upland.
    3
    The number of Beachfront Owners has varied throughout the litigation. After determining that all
    ninety-five owners of beachfront parcels were necessary parties to the litigation, the court ordered service
    of the complaint on each pursuant to M.R. Civ. P. 19(a). Although a few joined in the complaint, many
    took no position on the matter. Others have voluntarily dismissed their complaints or conveyed their
    property to others in the meantime.
    3
    [¶4] The Town asserted nine counterclaims alleging its ownership of the
    Beach and the public’s right to use the Beach. Approximately 200 owners of
    property located in the Town’s Goose Rocks Zone, but not directly on the Beach
    (the Backlot Owners) also intervened and filed counterclaims.4 Finally, the State
    intervened as a defendant to represent the public’s use of the intertidal zone
    pursuant to the public trust doctrine, but did not assert any of its own causes of
    action. In all, the various parties asserted some sixty-three causes of action; by the
    time of trial, only sixteen of these remained for decision.5
    [¶5] With the agreement of the parties, the court scheduled a bifurcated trial
    to first address the use-related claims that were still pending, and saved for the
    second portion of trial those claims related to title. In August and September of
    2012, the court heard the first portion of the matter in a two-week trial during
    which sixty-six witnesses testified. The causes of action before the court in that
    first portion of the bifurcated trial were (1) the Town’s and the Backlot Owners’
    claims alleging prescriptive easements over the entirety of the Beach, and (2) the
    4
    The law firm of Taylor, McCormack & Frame, LLC, represents the vast majority of the Backlot
    Owners; these parties are referred to in the record as the “TMF Defendants.” Alexander M. and Judith A.
    Lachiatto and Richard J. and Margarete K.M. Driver are Backlot Owners not represented by Taylor,
    McCormack & Frame.
    5
    The remaining forty-seven claims were dismissed, withdrawn, or disposed of by summary judgment.
    None of those decisions is challenged in this appeal.
    4
    Town’s claim for an easement by custom. 6 Despite its failure to assert a
    counterclaim or cross-claim, the State was permitted to offer evidence regarding
    the application of the public trust doctrine to the intertidal zone of the Beach.
    [¶6]     By partial judgment dated October 16, 2012, the court made the
    following findings of fact.7 In colonial times, the Beach was used as a public
    highway as well as for harvesting seaweed, clamming, driving livestock, and
    providing access to marshland for cutting hay. Starting in the 1800s, the Beach
    became a popular tourist destination, resulting in the construction of hotels and
    guesthouses, a bowling alley, a casino, shops, restaurants, and “auto-trailer” camps
    on the land abutting the Beach. The court found that from the late 1800s through
    the 1940s, the Beach was used “for a full range of recreational activities, including
    walking, swimming, sun bathing and a variety of beach related games.” After a
    fire swept through the area in 1947, the rebuilt properties around the Beach had a
    more residential and less commercial character, but the Beach was still used for
    recreational activities.
    [¶7] The Town began imposing regulations on the use of the Beach in the
    1700s, including some regarding livestock, clamming, and seaweed harvesting.
    6
    Reserved for the second portion of trial were the Beachfront Owners’ claims for a declaratory
    judgment and to quiet title; the Town’s claims for fee simple ownership, adverse possession, acquiescence,
    dedication and acceptance, deeded easement, and implied/quasi-easement; and some of the Backlot
    Owners’ claims for easement by estoppel.
    7
    As the trial court noted, it did “not undertake to summarize each witness’s testimony.”
    5
    More recently, the Town has established regulations concerning dogs and fires on
    the Beach and parking near the Beach. From the 1950s to the 1990s, the Town
    provided lifeguard service for the Beach; the lifeguard stand was located near the
    “public” part of the Beach, but the lifeguards patrolled the full length of the Beach
    and gave swimming lessons to the general public. In 1994, the Town discontinued
    the lifeguard service and “replaced it with a police officer dedicated to serve the
    Beach.” The Town has also used its funds to promote the Beach to tourists and to
    provide bus service to and supervision for children at the Beach during the
    summers. The court found that “from the early 1900[s] the Town has consistently
    encouraged and facilitated the use of the Beach by the general public.”
    [¶8] The court found that “while people tended to use the area in front of
    their own properties or near a public access point most frequently, nearly all used
    the Beach ‘from river to river’ frequently depending on what activity was being
    undertaken at the time.” Although the use of the Beach is most intense in the areas
    of the Beach owned by the Town, people regularly use the full length of the Beach
    year-round to walk, play in tidal pools, collect sand dollars, play softball, ride
    horses, and cross-country ski, and to access the water for boating, water-skiing,
    windsurfing, kayaking, snorkeling, rafting, paddleboarding, and tubing.
    [¶9] Beachgoers have not asked the Beachfront Owners for permission to
    use the Beach for these general recreational purposes because they felt they had a
    6
    right to use the Beach for such purposes. They have asked permission from the
    relevant Beachfront Owners for activities beyond “ordinary beach type recreational
    uses,” however, such as storing boats on the dry sand or hosting a party or wedding
    on the Beach.
    [¶10] The Beachfront Owners have requested that beachgoers leave the
    property when beachgoers were drinking alcohol or engaging in loud, disruptive,
    or potentially dangerous activities. Rarely has a Beachfront Owner otherwise ever
    requested that a beachgoer “move along.” Testimony indicated that it would be
    impractical to ask beachgoers engaged in ordinary recreational activity to leave.
    [¶11] Although several Beachfront Owners have, in recent years, posted ‘no
    trespassing’ signs around their properties, the signs were intended to keep people
    off of the Beachfront Owners’ landscaped property and private access ways rather
    than any portion of the sand itself. As to the wet or dry sand portions of the Beach,
    the court found that beachgoers would have ignored the signs and continued to use
    the Beach as they always had. Many of the Beachfront Owners also have offered
    their homes for rent, and have not given their tenants any instructions that limit
    their use of the Beach.
    [¶12] On these facts, the court determined that the Town, the Backlot
    Owners, and the public enjoy a public prescriptive easement as well as an
    easement by custom to engage in general recreational activities on both the wet and
    7
    dry sand portions of the entire Beach.8 The court also found that the State had
    established, pursuant to the public trust doctrine, that the public’s right to fish,
    fowl, and navigate includes the right to cross the intertidal zone of the Beach to
    engage in all “ocean-based” activities, which it defined as such “waterborne
    activities   as    jet-skiing;    water-skiing;      knee-boarding        or   tubing;     surfing;
    windsurfing; boogie boarding; rafting; tubing; paddleboarding; and snorkeling,”
    but not including “swimming, bathing or wading; walking; picnicking or playing
    games.” The court denied the Beachfront Owners’ motion for additional findings
    of fact and conclusions of law. See M.R. Civ. P. 52(b).
    [¶13] Although the second portion of the bifurcated procedure remained for
    trial and decision, the court granted the Town’s, the TMF Defendants’, and the
    State’s motions for entry of a final judgment pursuant to M.R. Civ. P. 54(b)(1) as
    to prescriptive easement, easement by custom, and the public trust doctrine.9 The
    Beachfront Owners timely appealed pursuant to 14 M.R.S. § 1851 (2013) and M.R.
    App. P. 2. The Town and the State cross-appealed. See M.R. App. P. 2(b)(3).
    8
    Meanwhile, the Town, some of the Backlot Owners, and some of the Beachfront Owners reached a
    settlement in which they agreed that the joining Beachfront Owners held title to those portions of the
    Beach described in their deeds, but granted to the Backlot Owners and the public a right to use their
    portions of the Beach with certain restrictions, in exchange for dismissal of the Town’s and Backlot
    Owners’ prescriptive easement claims against those Beachfront Owners.
    9
    The Beachfront Owners objected to the entry of a final judgment in the trial court, but they had
    withdrawn that objection by the time of oral argument in this Court.
    8
    II. DISCUSSION
    [¶14] The Beachfront Owners challenge the Superior Court’s award to the
    Town, the public, and the Backlot Owners of an easement over both the wet and
    dry sand portions of the entirety of Goose Rocks Beach pursuant to theories of
    prescription and custom, and its articulation of the extent of the public trust rights
    in the intertidal zone. In its cross-appeal, the State contends that the court erred in
    limiting the scope of the activities allowed in the intertidal zone. We first address
    two threshold issues—the finality of the judgment and standing.
    A.          Threshold Issues
    1.      Entry of a Final Judgment
    [¶15] The first preliminary issue is whether the court erred in entering a
    final judgment pursuant to M.R. Civ. P. 54(b).10 In deciding whether to reach the
    merits of an appeal, we consider, as the Superior Court did, such factors as:
    • The relationship of the adjudicated and unadjudicated claims;
    • The possibility that the need for review may be mooted by future
    developments in the trial court;
    10
    Maine Rule of Civil Procedure 54(b)(1) provides, in pertinent part:
    Except as otherwise provided in paragraph (2) of this subdivision and in Rule 80(d),
    when more than one claim for relief is presented in an action, whether as a claim,
    counterclaim, cross-claim, or third-party claim, or when multiple parties are involved, the
    court may direct the entry of a final judgment as to one or more but fewer than all of the
    claims or parties only upon an express determination that there is no just reason for delay
    and upon an express direction for the entry of judgment.
    9
    • The chance that the same issues will be presented to us more than
    once;
    • The extent to which an immediate appeal might expedite or delay the
    trial court’s work;
    • The nature of the legal questions presented as close or clear;
    • The economic effects of both the appeal and any delays on all of the
    parties, including the parties to the appeal and other parties awaiting
    adjudication of unresolved claims; and
    • Miscellaneous factors such as solvency considerations, the res
    judicata or collateral estoppel effect of a final judgment and the like.
    Marquis v. Town of Kennebunk, 
    2011 ME 128
    , ¶ 13, 
    36 A.3d 861
    (alteration
    omitted) (quotation marks omitted). With particular emphasis on the first, fourth,
    and sixth factors listed above, we note the extraordinary circumstances of this case,
    which already has cost the parties and the taxpayers substantial time and resources.
    We discern no abuse of discretion in the court’s entry of a final judgment as to the
    parties’ use claims pursuant to Rule 54(b). See Marquis, 
    2011 ME 128
    , ¶¶ 12-13,
    
    36 A.3d 861
    . Therefore, we address the court’s decision on its merits.
    2.     Intervention of the Backlot Owners
    [¶16] The second threshold issue is the standing of the Backlot Owners,
    whom the Beachfront Owners contend were not proper parties to the litigation.
    The Backlot Owners moved to intervene pursuant to M.R. Civ. P. 24, which allows
    a party to intervene as of right if provided by statute or if that party
    10
    claims an interest relating to the property or transaction which is the
    subject of the action and the applicant is so situated that the
    disposition of the action may as a practical matter impair or impede
    the applicant’s ability to protect that interest, unless the applicant’s
    interest is adequately represented by existing parties.
    M.R. Civ. P. 24(a). A party may intervene by permission if the “applicant’s claim
    or defense and the main action have a question of law or fact in common.”
    M.R. Civ. P. 24(b). The court determined that the Backlot Owners had standing in
    the litigation based on
    their location [in relation] to the beach, their treatment of the beach as
    if it were their own, their ability to access the beach without permits
    (parking), their ability to rent their homes based on their proximity to
    the beach, their inflated tax assessed values based on their location
    and their ability to access the beach through various public and private
    rights of way.
    (Alterations omitted) (quotation marks omitted). We review the court’s decision to
    allow the Backlot Owners to intervene for errors of law or an abuse of discretion.
    State v. MaineHealth, 
    2011 ME 115
    , ¶ 7, 
    31 A.3d 911
    .
    [¶17]   Our review of the record indicates that, ultimately, the Backlot
    Owners’ motion to intervene was erroneously analyzed as a matter of general
    standing rather than as a matter of standing to intervene pursuant to Rule 24.
    When their motion is properly considered through the lens of Rule 24, the Backlot
    Owners did not, as a matter of law, meet the requirements of Rule 24, either by
    right or by permission.     To the extent any Backlot Owner sought a private
    11
    easement over any Beachfront Owner’s property,11 none sufficiently pleaded or
    proved the elements necessary to obtain an easement as to any specific parcel of
    Beach property, as we will discuss in further detail below. To the extent the
    Backlot Owners instead sought to establish a public easement to the Beach, those
    rights were identical to those claimed by the public, and the Town more than
    adequately represented those public rights. Notwithstanding their proximity to the
    Beach, the Backlot Owners did not demonstrate any interest in the Beach itself—as
    opposed to any paths leading to the Beach in which they might claim an interest—
    beyond that of any member of the public who has a history of using the Beach or,
    even more broadly, of any person who happens to live near a scenic location. With
    regard to this aspect of the litigation, the Backlot Owners served only to add to its
    expense and delay. We therefore conclude that the Backlot Owners are not proper
    parties to the litigation, and we vacate the court’s decision permitting the Backlot
    Owners to intervene.
    B.          Public Easements
    [¶18] The viability of a type of easement and the evidence required to
    establish that easement are matters of law we review de novo. See Androkites v.
    White, 
    2010 ME 133
    , ¶ 12, 
    10 A.3d 677
    . We review the facts supporting the
    court’s conclusions for clear error, and will uphold the court’s findings unless
    11
    The Backlot Owners asserted claims of easement by prescription, by estoppel, and by implication.
    12
    “there is no credible evidence on the record to support them or the court bases its
    findings of fact upon a clear misapprehension of the meaning of the evidence.”
    Baptist Youth Camp v. Robinson, 
    1998 ME 175
    , ¶ 7, 
    714 A.2d 809
    (alterations
    omitted) (quotation marks omitted).
    1.    Easement by Prescription
    [¶19] “An easement is a right of use over the property of another” that may
    be created by any one of several means. Stickney v. City of Saco, 
    2001 ME 69
    ,
    ¶ 31, 
    770 A.2d 592
    . Among them, 14 M.R.S. § 812 (2013) provides for the
    creation of an easement by prescription: “No person, class of persons or the public
    shall acquire a right-of-way or other easement through, in, upon or over the land of
    another by the adverse use and enjoyment thereof, unless it is continued
    uninterruptedly for 20 years.” Pursuant to section 812 and the “extensive body of
    case law” interpreting and applying it, it is the burden of the party claiming a
    prescriptive easement to prove, by a preponderance of the evidence, three
    categories of facts regarding his use of another’s property. Androkites, 
    2010 ME 133
    , ¶¶ 13-14, 
    10 A.3d 677
    .
    [¶20] First, the claimant’s use must be “under a claim of right adverse to the
    owner.” 
    Id. ¶ 14.
    Adversity is established by evidence that the claimant has used
    the property (1) in the absence of the owner’s express or implied permission, and
    (2) “as the owner would use it, disregarding [the owner’s] claims entirely, using it
    13
    as though he own[s] the property himself” (3) such that the use “provided the
    owner[] with adequate notice that the owner’s property rights are in jeopardy.”12
    Lyons v. Baptist Sch. of Christian Training, 
    2002 ME 137
    , ¶¶ 17, 26, 
    804 A.2d 364
    (alterations omitted) (quotation marks omitted). Proof of “a heated controversy or
    a manifestation of ill will” is not required. 
    Id. ¶ 26
    (quotation marks omitted).
    [¶21] Second, the claimant’s use must be with the owner’s knowledge and
    acquiescence. Androkites, 
    2010 ME 133
    , ¶ 14, 
    10 A.3d 677
    . Acquiescence is
    “consent by silence.” Dartnell v. Bidwell, 
    115 Me. 227
    , 230, 
    98 A. 743
    (1916); see
    Stickney, 
    2001 ME 69
    , ¶ 23, 
    770 A.2d 592
    (holding that acquiescence refers to
    “passive assent or submission to the use, as distinguished from the granting of a
    license or permission given with the intention that the licensee’s use may continue
    only as long as the owner continues to consent to it” (quotation marks omitted)).
    Knowledge and acquiescence may be established either by proof of actual
    knowledge and acquiescence, or by proof of a use “so open, notorious, visible, and
    uninterrupted that knowledge and acquiescence will be presumed.”13 Androkites,
    
    2010 ME 133
    , ¶ 14, 
    10 A.3d 677
    ; see Taylor v. Nutter, 
    687 A.2d 632
    , 635
    12
    At one time, adversity also required proof of the claimant’s intent to unseat the owner’s claim to the
    property. See, e.g., Lyons v. Baptist Sch. of Christian Training, 
    2002 ME 137
    , ¶¶ 17, 26, 
    804 A.2d 364
    ;
    Jordan v. Shea, 
    2002 ME 36
    , ¶ 23, 
    791 A.2d 116
    . We have since noted the elimination of the subjective
    intent requirement for prescription claims in order to parallel the absence of such a requirement for the
    adversity element in adverse possession claims. See Androkites v. White, 
    2010 ME 133
    , ¶ 16 n.7, 
    10 A.3d 133
    (citing Dombkowski v. Ferland, 
    2006 ME 24
    , ¶¶ 23 n.6, 24, 
    893 A.2d 599
    ).
    13
    The court found actual, not presumed, acquiescence, and thus the elements of presumed
    acquiescence are not at issue in this appeal.
    14
    (Me. 1996). Evidence of acquiescence may be in the form of physical acts or
    statements, and nonacquiescence “may be evidenced by verbal protest alone.”14
    Noyes v. Levine, 
    130 Me. 151
    , 152, 
    154 A. 78
    (1931); see Dowley v. Morency,
    
    1999 ME 137
    , ¶ 24, 
    737 A.2d 1061
    ; 
    Dartnell, 115 Me. at 231
    , 
    98 A. 743
    (“[D]enials and remonstrances, on or off the land are sufficient to rebut
    acquiescence, and work an interruption.”); Rollins v. Blackden, 
    112 Me. 459
    , 467,
    
    92 A. 521
    (1914) (“[O]rdinarily the law does not require one to use force to assert
    his rights.” (quotation marks omitted)). Acquiescence differs from adversity in
    that adversity regards the actions of the claimant, whereas acquiescence looks to
    the actions of the owner. See 4 Richard R. Powell, Powell on Real Property
    § 34.10[3][a] & n.38, at 34-102 (Michael Allan Wolf ed., 2005).
    [¶22] Third, a claimant must establish his continuous use of the property for
    at least twenty years. 14 M.R.S. § 812; Androkites, 
    2010 ME 133
    , ¶ 14, 
    10 A.3d 677
    . Continuous use “occur[s] without interruption.” Stickney, 
    2001 ME 69
    , ¶ 18,
    
    770 A.2d 592
    (quotation marks omitted). It does not necessarily require daily,
    weekly, or even monthly use, but instead “requires only the kind and degree of
    occupancy (i.e., use and enjoyment) that an average owner would make of the
    property.” Id.; see also Androkites, 
    2010 ME 133
    , ¶ 15 n.5, 
    10 A.3d 677
    . The
    14
    As a statutory matter, a finding of acquiescence is precluded when the owner posts a notice of his
    nonacquiescence in a conspicuous place on his property for six successive days, records such a notice in
    the registry of deeds, or serves a potential claimant with the notice in the manner of civil process.
    14 M.R.S. § 812 (2013); see Dartnell v. Bidwell, 
    115 Me. 227
    , 232, 
    98 A. 743
    (1916).
    15
    prescriptive period includes any twenty-year span in which adversity and
    acquiescence have been continuously maintained.                         Eaton v. Town of Wells,
    
    2000 ME 176
    , ¶ 39, 
    760 A.2d 232
    .
    [¶23] We begin our analysis of whether the trial court erred in concluding
    that the public has a prescriptive easement concerning Goose Rocks Beach with
    the court’s adversity determination, which we conclude is dispositive. Essential to
    our consideration of adversity in cases involving public recreational easements is
    the presumption of permission. We have long recognized that public recreational
    uses are presumed to be undertaken with the permission of the landowner, thereby
    defeating the adversity element of a prescription claim.15 Lyons, 
    2002 ME 137
    ,
    ¶ 19, 
    804 A.2d 364
    ; Eaton, 
    2000 ME 176
    , ¶ 32, 
    760 A.2d 232
    ; S.D. Warren Co. v.
    Vernon, 
    1997 ME 161
    , ¶ 16, 
    697 A.2d 1280
    ; Town of Manchester v. Augusta
    Country Club, 
    477 A.2d 1124
    , 1130 (Me. 1984); Inhabitants of the Town of
    Kennebunkport v. Forrester, 
    391 A.2d 831
    , 833 (Me. 1978); Piper v. Voorhees,
    
    130 Me. 305
    , 312, 
    155 A. 556
    (1931); Littlefield v. Hubbard, 
    124 Me. 299
    , 304,
    
    128 A. 285
    (1925); Mayberry v. Inhabitants of Standish, 
    56 Me. 342
    , 353 (1868).
    15
    In the case of a private prescriptive easement, if the claimant can establish the elements of
    acquiescence and continuous use for twenty years, adversity is presumed. Androkites, 
    2010 ME 133
    ,
    ¶¶ 14, 17, 
    10 A.3d 677
    ; Lyons, 
    2002 ME 137
    , ¶ 18, 
    804 A.2d 364
    . Nevertheless, “the presumption will
    not arise if there is an explanation of the use that contradicts the rationale of the presumption,” such as
    when the user is a family member of the owner. Androkites, 
    2010 ME 133
    , ¶¶ 17-18, 
    10 A.3d 677
    ;
    Jacobs v. Boomer, 
    267 A.2d 376
    , 378 (Me. 1970) (stating that the presumption of adversity applies unless
    the use is “contradicted or explained” (quotation marks omitted)). In addition, the twenty-year
    prescriptive period may be established by the tacking together of periods of use, but only by those with
    whom the claimant is in privity. See Flaherty, 
    2011 ME 32
    , ¶ 81, 
    17 A.3d 640
    ; Kornbluth v. Kalur,
    
    577 A.2d 1194
    , 1195 (Me. 1990).
    16
    [¶24]    The presumption of permission derives from the “open lands
    tradition” that Maine shares with a minority of other states. Weeks v. Krysa,
    
    2008 ME 120
    , ¶ 15, 
    955 A.2d 234
    ; D’Angelo v. McNutt, 
    2005 ME 31
    , ¶ 11,
    
    868 A.2d 239
    ; S.D. Warren Co., 
    1997 ME 161
    , ¶ 16, 
    697 A.2d 1280
    .                 This
    tradition recognizes the State’s desire to encourage the hunting, hiking, and other
    outdoor activities for which Maine is celebrated and on which much of Maine’s
    economy is based. See Lyons, 
    2002 ME 137
    , ¶¶ 14, 27, 
    804 A.2d 364
    ; see also
    5 M.R.S. § 6200 (2013) (stating that “the continued availability of public access to
    . . . recreation opportunities and the protection of the scenic and natural
    environment are essential for preserving the State’s high quality of life”);
    12 M.R.S. § 10108(4-A)(A)(1)-(2) (2013) (providing that the landowner relations
    program within the Department of Inland Fisheries and Wildlife “must . . .
    [e]ncourage landowners to allow outdoor recreationists access to their property to
    hunt, fish or engage in other outdoor recreational pursuits” and must “[f]oster good
    relationships between landowners and outdoor recreationists”).
    [¶25] The presumption recognizes that public recreational use “is consistent
    with, and in no way diminishes, the rights of the owner in his land.” Lyons,
    
    2002 ME 137
    , ¶ 19, 
    804 A.2d 364
    (quotation marks omitted). Particularly for
    “land [that] is not being actively used by its owner, the claimant’s use can be better
    regarded as permissive until affirmatively shown to be adverse.” 4 Richard R.
    17
    Powell, Powell on Real Property § 34.10[2][c], at 34-95 to 34-96.          Thus, the
    presumption offers a double benefit of protecting landowners from equitable
    claims to the use of their properties (as well as to their titles) while allowing the
    public to continue to use the property for recreational purposes. See 14 M.R.S.
    § 159-A(3) (2013) (limiting landowner liability for the recreational use of private
    property); Clickner v. Magothy River Ass’n, 
    35 A.3d 464
    , 484 (Md. 2012) (“In the
    United States with its great land areas[,] courts affirm that harmless trespasses
    should not be discouraged and that it would be unfair to penalize the generous
    owner.” (alteration omitted) (quotation marks omitted)). Finally, the presumption
    reflects our long-standing disapproval of public recreational easements by
    prescription:
    In a consistent line of cases this court has declined to hold that the
    mere use by the general public of wild and uncultivated land as a
    route for hauling seaweed, for hunting, or for mere pleasure or
    recreation, is sufficient to show the adverse [use] essential to create a
    prescriptive easement.
    
    Forrester, 391 A.2d at 833
    .
    [¶26]     Although we have sometimes referred to the presumption as
    applicable to “wild and uncultivated” land, 
    id., the “wild
    and uncultivated”
    language has never been employed as a precise test. In 1868, for example, we held
    that “[t]he open and unenclosed condition of the land, a sandy, pitchpine, blueberry
    plain of trifling value, was a matter from which it might be presumed that the use
    18
    was permissive.” 
    Mayberry, 56 Me. at 353
    . We have otherwise applied the
    presumption to land characterized as “unposted open fields or woodlands” and
    “unenclosed, unimproved and unoccupied” land. Lyons, 
    2002 ME 137
    , ¶ 19, 
    804 A.2d 364
    ; 
    Forrester, 391 A.2d at 832-33
    (quotation marks omitted); see Shadan,
    
    1997 ME 187
    , ¶¶ 2, 7, 
    700 A.2d 245
    (presuming permission as to an access road
    between homes in a subdivision).
    [¶27] To the extent the applicability of the presumption was uncertain, we
    clarified in Lyons that the presumption of permission is not dependent on the type
    of land at issue (wild and uncultivated, for example), but instead on how the public
    uses the land (for recreation). 
    2002 ME 137
    , ¶¶ 20-25, 
    804 A.2d 364
    . Indeed, we
    and other courts specifically have applied the presumption to cases involving
    public recreational use of private beaches.16 See, e.g., Augusta Country 
    Club, 477 A.2d at 1126
    , 1130 (applying the presumption to an action regarding a sand
    beach next to a golf course); 
    Littlefield, 124 Me. at 304
    , 
    128 A. 285
    (presuming
    permission as to public use of “unenclosed seashore property”); 
    Clickner, 35 A.3d at 467
    , 484-86 (presuming permission for public use of a beach on a
    privately-owned island). In Maryland, for example, the public’s recreational use of
    16
    The Town’s reliance on Eaton v. Town of Wells, 
    2000 ME 176
    , 
    760 A.2d 232
    , to support its
    argument that the presumption of permission does not apply to beaches is understandable, but unfounded.
    In Eaton, we affirmed the trial court’s grant of a public prescriptive easement over Wells Beach. 
    Id. ¶ 1.
    In our decision, we referred to the presumption of permission, but it is not at all clear that we applied it.
    
    Id. ¶¶ 32-40.
    If our decision in Eaton caused confusion on this point, we issued our opinion in Lyons two
    years later, clarifying that the presumption of permission must indeed be applied regardless of the nature of
    the land. 
    2002 ME 137
    , ¶¶ 20-25, 
    804 A.2d 364
    .
    19
    a privately-owned beach was “presumed to have been a product of the permissive
    indulgence of its owners.” 
    Clickner, 35 A.3d at 485
    . “To hold otherwise would
    galvanize owners into fencing or otherwise obstructing their beaches in order to
    avoid the assertion of public prescriptive rights, feasibly creating a barricade across
    [the] shoreline.” 
    Id. This is
    a “consequence [that] surely ought not to be desired
    by anyone.” 
    Id. (quotation marks
    omitted).
    [¶28] In sum, the presumption of permission must be applied in any matter
    in which a claimant seeks a public recreational prescriptive easement. Lyons,
    
    2002 ME 137
    , ¶ 24, 
    804 A.2d 364
    . When the presumption is applied, the burden
    of proof is on the claimant to rebut the presumption of permission in order to
    establish adversity. 
    Id. ¶ 25.
    [¶29] There can be no dispute that this matter involves a claimed public
    recreational prescriptive easement over the entirety of the Beach.         The Town
    specifically alleged that “the public[] . . . has acquired prescriptive rights in Goose
    Rocks Beach,” and the court found as much in awarding a right to “general
    recreational activities on the entirety of Goose Rocks Beach, both wet and dry
    sand.” Thus, this is precisely the type of matter in which Lyons requires that the
    presumption of permission be applied.
    [¶30]    Although the court did note the existence of a presumption of
    permission, it evaluated adversity without affording the Beachfront Owners the
    20
    benefit of the presumption. The failure to apply the presumption of permission
    was an error, and it was an error that affected the court’s view of the significance
    of its own factual findings. We need not remand the matter for the trial court to
    consider its findings in light of the application of the presumption of permission,
    however, because we conclude that, as a matter of law, there was insufficient
    evidence to determine that the Town rebutted the presumption.
    [¶31] Although the court did not distinguish its findings as to adversity and
    acquiescence, we discern only one finding relevant to its adversity determination,
    namely, that the Town has spent money on the Beach to provide public
    conveniences and increase tourism, and has established regulations for parking and
    other uses at the Beach. Similarly, in Augusta Country Club, the town had “spent
    both time and money to keep the right-of-way under repair and to assist with the
    maintenance and security of the beach,” which, given the presumption of
    permission, we held constituted “voluntary actions . . . taken subordinate to the
    right of ownership of the [owner] in its 
    beach.” 477 A.2d at 1130
    .
    [¶32] As a matter of law, this evidence, which was the only evidence on
    which the trial court relied in determining adversity, is not sufficient to overcome
    the presumption of permission that is applied to the public’s recreational use of the
    entirety of Goose Rocks Beach, including both wet and dry sand. The lack of
    sufficient evidence supporting the element of adversity precludes the grant of a
    21
    prescriptive public easement to the Beach, and thus we need not consider the
    evidence supporting the remaining elements of the Town’s public prescriptive
    easement claims.
    [¶33] Furthermore, the lack of specific evidence or findings as to each of
    the Beachfront Owners’ parcels at issue would require us to vacate the judgment in
    any event.17 It is in the very nature of an equitable claim to property that persons
    may “only acquire that property which they actually possessed.”                           D’Angelo,
    
    2005 ME 31
    , ¶ 1, 
    868 A.2d 239
    ; see McGeechan v. Sherwood, 
    2000 ME 188
    , ¶ 54,
    
    760 A.2d 1068
    (agreeing that the adverse use of some portion of property does not
    equate to adverse use of the entire property in the absence of evidence to that
    effect); see also Opinion of the Justices, 
    649 A.2d 604
    , 610 (N.H. 1994)
    (“[P]rescriptive easements, by their nature, can be utilized only on a tract-by-tract
    basis . . . .” (quotation marks omitted)); State ex rel. Thornton v. Hay, 
    462 P.2d 671
    , 676 (Or. 1969) (“Strictly construed, prescription applies only to the specific
    tract of land before the court, and doubtful prescription cases could fill the courts
    for years with tract-by-tract litigation.”); 4 Richard R. Powell, Powell on Real
    Property § 34.11[6], at 34-129.              As a matter of law, generalized testimony
    regarding walks along the entire length of the Beach and findings about use of the
    Beach “from river to river” cannot establish the elements of a prescriptive
    17
    Although the trial court did not determine that the Backlot Owners had any private easements, this
    same failure of proof as to specific parcels would have defeated any such private easement claims.
    22
    easement specific to any Beachfront Owner or any specific parcel of Beach
    property. Thus, the lack of evidence or findings of use specific to each Beachfront
    Owner’s parcel is an alternative basis on which we vacate the judgment, both as to
    the Town and as to the Backlot Owners.18
    2.      Easement by Custom
    [¶34] We also vacate the court’s award of an easement by custom over the
    Beach. Custom was developed in English common law to account for usage that
    “lasted from time immemorial, without interruption and as a right,” and that was
    “reasonable, certain, peaceably enjoyed and consistent with other customs and
    laws.”         4 Richard R. Powell, Powell on Real Property § 34.11[6], at 34-132
    (quotation marks omitted). It is “largely a dead doctrine in the United States”
    because “[i]t has been argued that no American custom could have lasted long
    enough to be immemorial, and that we have established methods for claiming and
    recording rights in land” that no longer necessitate employment of the doctrine.
    4 Richard R. Powell, Powell on Real Property § 34.11[6], at 34-132 (footnotes
    omitted). Although presented with several opportunities to do so through almost
    18
    Our decision in D’Angelo v. McNutt, 
    2005 ME 31
    , ¶¶ 8-9, 
    868 A.2d 239
    —in which we held, in the
    absence of a motion for findings of fact and conclusions of law pursuant to M.R. Civ. P. 52, that the court
    could infer from the evidence that a party claiming property by adverse possession used and possessed the
    entire parcel at issue—is distinguishable on this point. In that case, the property claimed was all owned by
    one record owner. D’Angelo, 
    2005 ME 31
    , ¶ 1, 
    868 A.2d 239
    . A review of the trial court decision reveals
    that it followed a process that would more than have satisfied the parcel-by-parcel analysis we require as to
    any public recreational easement on Goose Rocks Beach. D’Angelo v. McNutt, CUMSC-CV-2001-678
    (Me. Super. Ct., Cum. Cty., Apr. 1, 2004) (Humphrey, D.C.J.).
    23
    two hundred years of land use litigation, we have never recognized an easement by
    custom as a viable cause of action in Maine. Bell v. Town of Wells, 
    557 A.2d 168
    ,
    179 (Me. 1989) (noting that “[t]here is a serious question whether application of
    the local custom doctrine to conditions prevailing in Maine near the end of the 20th
    century is necessarily consistent with the desired stability and certainty of real
    estate titles”); 
    Piper, 130 Me. at 311
    , 
    155 A. 556
    (“In Maine, there never has been
    affirmation of the recognition of a right of way by custom.”); see also Augusta
    Country 
    Club, 477 A.2d at 1129
    n.7; Hill v. Lord, 
    48 Me. 83
    , 98 (1861); Littlefield
    v. Maxwell, 
    31 Me. 134
    , 141 (1850); Op. Me. Att’y Gen. 80-108 (“An easement by
    custom is of doubtful validity in the State of Maine, and therefore cannot be used
    as a theory upon which to create public access to public lots.”); 3 Herbert T.
    Tiffany & Basil Jones, The Law of Real Property § 935, at 624 (3d ed. 1939)
    (noting that some jurisdictions have held that “rights to use private land cannot
    thus be created by custom, for the reason that they would tend so to burden land as
    to interfere with its improvement and alienation, and also because there can be no
    usage in this country of an immemorial character”). Our refusal to recognize an
    easement by custom also comports with the decisions of other jurisdictions. See,
    e.g., Graham v. Walker, 
    61 A. 98
    , 99-100 (Conn. 1905) (“There being no such
    thing in Connecticut as a personal right of way established by custom . . . .”); see
    also Attorney General ex rel. Adams v. Tarr, 
    19 N.E. 358
    , 363 (Mass. 1889)
    24
    (stating that “a right by custom to maintain a building or permanent structure upon
    the land of another [can]not be acquired”).
    C.        Public Trust Doctrine
    [¶35]    Finally, notwithstanding the court’s application of a public
    prescriptive easement to the intertidal zone (which we herein vacate) the court
    went on to declare separately the public’s rights in the intertidal zone stemming
    from the public trust doctrine.19 That determination is premature. The court’s
    determination of the scope of the public’s right to use the intertidal zone pursuant
    to the public trust doctrine must be vacated because only the Beachfront Owners’
    declaratory judgment claim even implicates the public trust, and the parties have
    not yet litigated that portion of the case. In addition, as noted earlier, the State did
    not file a claim for a declaratory judgment or any other cause of action raising the
    public trust doctrine. We note also that the presumption of permission applies to
    the intertidal zone as well as to the dry sand for all general recreational activities.20
    19
    The public trust doctrine states that “the owner of shoreland above the mean high water mark
    presumptively [holds] title in fee to intertidal land subject only to the public’s right to fish, fowl, and
    navigate.” Bell v. Town of Wells, 
    557 A.2d 168
    , 171 (Me. 1989) (citing Storer v. Freeman, 6 Mass.
    (1 Tyng) 435, 438 (1810)); see McGarvey, 
    2011 ME 97
    , ¶ 18, 
    28 A.3d 620
    .
    20
    General recreational activities include walking, sunbathing, picnicking, playing games, swimming,
    jet-skiing, water-skiing, knee-boarding, tubing, surfing, windsurfing, boogie boarding, rafting, paddle
    boarding, snorkeling, and the like. As has been the practice, however, any use that exceeds such general
    recreation, such as conducting a wedding or storing a boat, would require the Beachfront Owner’s
    permission.
    25
    D.    Conclusion
    [¶36] We therefore vacate the judgment awarding the Town and Backlot
    Owners a prescriptive easement over Goose Rocks Beach, and deciding that the
    public has a right to engage in ocean-based activities in the intertidal zone pursuant
    to the public trust doctrine. We remand the matter to the Superior Court for
    disposition of the remaining causes of action.
    The entry is:
    Order granting the Backlot Owners’ right to
    intervene vacated.     Judgment vacated and
    remanded for further proceedings consistent with
    this opinion.
    On the briefs:
    Sidney St. F. Thaxter, Esq., David P. Silk, Esq., and Benjamin
    M. Leoni, Esq., Curtis Thaxter, LLC, Portland, for appellants
    Robert Almeder et al.
    Christopher E. Pazar, Esq., Drummond & Dummond, Portland,
    for appellants Janice M. Fleming, Terrence G. O’Connor, and
    Joan M. Leahy
    Amy K. Tchao, Esq., Melissa A. Hewey, Esq., Brian D.
    Willing, Esq., and David M. Kallin, Esq., Dummond
    Woodsum, Portland, for appellee Town of Kennebunkport
    André G. Duchette, Esq., and Gregg R. Frame, Esq., Taylor,
    McCormack & Frame, LLC, Portland, for appellees “TMF
    Defendants”
    26
    Richard J. Driver, Margarete M.K. Driver, Alexander M.
    Lachiatto, and Judith A. Lachiatto, pro se appellees
    Adam Steinman, Esq., Cape Elizabeth, for appellee Surfrider
    Foundation
    Janet T. Mills, Attorney General, and Paul Stern, Dep. Atty.
    Gen., Office of Attorney General, Augusta, for appellee State of
    Maine
    John A. Cunningham, Esq., and Noreen A. Patient, Esq., Eaton
    Peabody, Brunswick, for amicus curiae Maine Forest Products
    Council
    Brian P. Winchester, Esq., Augusta, for amicus curiae Maine
    Snowmobile Association
    Ivy L. Frignoca, Esq., Portland, for amicus curiae Conservation
    Law Foundation
    At oral argument:
    Sydney St. F. Thaxter, Esq. for all appellants
    Amy Tchao, Esq. for appellee Town of Kennebunkport
    André G. Duchette, Esq. for appellee “TMF Defendants”
    Paul Stern, Dep. Atty. Gen., for appellee State of Maine
    York County Superior Court docket number RE-2009-111
    FOR CLERK REFERENCE ONLY