A man sitting at a table with water bottles.
John Echeverria, of Strafford, speaks during an editorial board meeting in West Lebanon, N.H., in May 2018. File photo by Geoff Hansen/Valley News

This story by Frances Mize was first published in the Valley News on May 27.

TUNBRIDGE โ€” This spring, Tunbridge trail volunteers were inspecting Orchard Trail, favored by bicyclists, before its reopening for summer use. They found their way barred by downed trees.

On May 14, the Tunbridge Selectboard unanimously passed a motion giving the townโ€™s highway crew permission to cut the trees when ground conditions improve.

The boardโ€™s decision, however, could throw a wrench in an intractable legal dispute.

With Vermontโ€™s highest court about to hear the case that has pitted the town against a private landowner, the status of the hotly contested trail remains in limbo.

John Echeverria and Carin Pratt have owned the 325-acre Dodge Farm, a former dairy farm at the top of Strafford Road, since 2015. The couple lives in nearby Strafford and rents the property to a Tunbridge resident.

They argue the Selectboard lacks the authority to maintain or designate appropriate use of legal trails in town. The couple takes particular issue with bikes on Orchard Trail, a three-quarter mile path running through their property that had become a popular cycling thoroughfare.

Tunbridge officials refute the claim, asserting that legal trails, which are reclassified town highways, are akin to roadways and can be maintained as such.

On Wednesday, the state Supreme Court will hear oral arguments in the case.

Echeverria and Pratt have twice brought their suit against the town to Vermont Superior Court, only to be rejected by Judge Elizabeth Mann for lack of โ€œripeness.โ€ In legalese, ripeness refers to whether the facts relevant to a case are sufficiently developed for a court to intervene.

In her most recent ruling last December, Mann wrote โ€œmere fears that the town may one day seek to maintain the trails on the Dodge Farm are not sufficient.โ€

But the blown-down trees now blocking the trail have provided an opportunity for those โ€œfearsโ€ to become reality.

โ€œIโ€™m speaking solely for myself; Iโ€™ve been sick of this situation a long, long time,โ€ said Selectboard Chairman Gary Mullen. โ€œSometimes youโ€™ve just got to pull the trigger and do something, whether itโ€™s right or wrong. I would have cut the trees a long time ago.โ€

Even before making it to Vermont courts, the dispute had a hefty paper trail. For two years, the issue was a topic of much discussion at Selectboard and Planning Commission meetings, leading to the creation of the Tunbridge Trails Committee. But that wasnโ€™t enough ultimately to stave off litigation.

Although the case has been dismissed twice, town officials are still waiting for a court to rule on whether they are authorized to maintain Tunbridgeโ€™s trails. If the town cleared the trees currently blocking the trail, it could change the lack of ripeness that led to the caseโ€™s dismissal in the first (and second) place. In an April email to the Trails Committee, Echeverria and Pratt wrote, โ€œHopefully soon, the courts will resolve the legal dispute over trail maintenance and repair authority.

โ€œIn the meantime,โ€ the couple added, โ€œwe would be happy to resume maintaining and repairing the Orchard Trail, including removing downed trees and branches obstructing use of the trails, and embrace use of the trails for all manner of pedestrian activity and horseback riding, if the town can see its way clear to an agreement to reroute bicycle traffic around our farmyard.โ€

Echeverria, a professor of property law at Vermont Law and Graduate School, maintains the town โ€œhas planted a flag, so to speak, in asserting that they have the authority to enter onto our property for the purposes of doing trail maintenance.โ€

In an interview with the Valley News, Echeverria said the โ€œmere assertion of a legal entitlement to enter onto the property of another creates a ripe claim.โ€

โ€œWhen we filed the lawsuit it was obvious, and now months later itโ€™s overwhelmingly obvious, that it can be reasonably expected of the town to invade our property and injure our interest,โ€ he added.

The coupleโ€™s first declaratory judgment action was filed in an attempt to initiate โ€œa quick and painless legal resolution for an issue that has divided the town and Carin and myself.โ€

Town officials, Echeverria said, thought that if they continued to oppose the case, โ€œthen we would give up on defending our private property rights.โ€

โ€œAnd the town thought wrong,โ€ he said.

Tunbridge has spent $33,000 on legal fees in the case to date, said Mullen, the Selectboard chairman.

โ€œI get bewildered at his logic sometimes,โ€ Mullen said of Echeverria. โ€œWe, the town, know that we have a legal trail, we know by statute that the Selectboard can restrict anyone or everyone from the trail if need be, and because of that, just like a road, we have the right to maintain it if we want to maintain it.โ€

If the Selectboard had conceded to Echeverria in the earliest days of the dispute, when it was only a dust-up, โ€œwe could have solved this thing,โ€ he said. โ€œBut what John wanted was for us was to give up Orchard Trail, and we donโ€™t want to do that because itโ€™s ours.โ€

It could be upwards of six months before the Supreme Court hands down its decision.

โ€œSo thatโ€™s why weโ€™re deciding to cut some trees,โ€ Mullen said.

The Valley News is the daily newspaper and website of the Upper Valley, online at www.vnews.com.