Holloman house has been replaced by a small park.
Mark Lovewell

Former Homewners Win Court Award

<p>A former longtime Vineyard Haven family won a substantial judgment in superior court last week in a case that dates to 2013 when the state took and demolished their home in order to build the new Lagoon Pond drawbridge.</p>

A former longtime Vineyard Haven family won a substantial judgment in superior court last week in a case that dates to 2013 when the state took and demolished their home in order to build the new Lagoon Pond drawbridge.

A jury awarded Charlotte Holloman, who originally filed the lawsuit together with her late mother Charlotte W. Holloman, $850,000 plus interest following the four-day eminent domain trial held in the Edgartown courthouse.

The state had paid the Holloman family $260,762 for a partial easement on the property in 2006, and $266,000 for the rest of the property in 2011.

In court, the family said the state did not pay them what their summer home was worth. The family’s appraisal put the value of the house at $1.2 million to $1.5 million, according to the complaint.

The jury was asked to determine a value as of the year 2012.

The four-bedroom house sat on a small spit of land just 10 feet from the water’s edge of Lagoon Pond, next to the original drawbridge. The house dated to 1949 and the Hollomans had owned it since 1962. They were among the first African American families to live in Vineyard Haven, and the small house was a summer sanctuary for more than 40 years.

Mass Highway, which merged with The Massachusetts Department of Transportation (DOT) in 2009, was responsible for design and construction of the new drawbridge, which first required construction of a temporary drawbridge beginning in 2006. The edge of the temporary drawbridge came to within a few feet of the Holloman summer home. The original Holloman lawsuit, filed in August 2014, said the noise and vibration of the construction project severely diminished their right to enjoy their property.

In the complaint, the Holloman family said state officials failed to communicate adequately with them throughout the nine-year, $44 million project.

On Jan. 17, 2013, DOT served a notice to vacate on the Hollomans.

As the standoff continued, the state took further action. In June 2013, DOT had a moving company remove the Hollomans’ personal possessions from the house on the property.

The house was demolished later that year to make room to disassemble the temporary drawbridge. A small park now sits on the site.

Speaking to the Gazette this week following the trial, which she attended, Charlotte Holloman called the outcome fair. And she expressed weary relief that an 11-year-plus legal and personal ordeal finally had come to an end.

“I think that the jury award was probably fair given they were asked to put a value on it in 2012,” she said. “My own opinion is that it was probably worth more than that in 2006. That’s before they worked to diminish the cash and aesthetic value of that piece of land,” she added.

Edgartown attorneys Ellen Kaplan and Kathryn Sullivan represented the Holloman family in the case.

Charlotte W. Holloman died in the summer of 2015, nearly a year after the lawsuit was filed.

In May 2013, just before the home was vacated in preparation for demolition, family friend Robert Tignor recalled summer days sitting at the kitchen table and watching osprey and oystercatchers. “It’s sort of a landmark,” he told the Gazette at the time.

And while the small house that sat on a tidal sand spit in the Lagoon is gone, Ms. Holloman said this week warm memories linger of her time spent there.

“I never took it for granted ,” she said. “We worked hard to nurture that location because of what it was and what it represented. We were able to watch other people enjoy the landscape, the shoreline . . . . For everything people wanted to come to the Island to do, you could do them on that spot. Kayaks could come there, people could fish, clam, people could snorkel.”

She concluded:

“It was a phenomenal thing.

“And it’s over.”

Comments

Submitted by Anonymous (not verified) on Wed, 11/01/2017 - 16:19

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Linda Calabrese Tolland CT and Oak Bluffs MA

To be clear, the bridge is beautiful and long overdue. The family was understandably upset and disappointed. I’m glad the court awarded them adequately and hope they were also compensated for their expenses. It sounds like justice was served on both sides. It’s nice when that happens.

Submitted by Anonymous (not verified) on Thu, 11/02/2017 - 08:44

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Lance Slaughter OB/DC

We arrived on MV the same year (1962). Happy for the outcome but I do believe the house was worth more than the payment received.
Happy you can close this difficult chapter of your life.

Submitted by Anonymous (not verified) on Sat, 11/04/2017 - 15:24

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Sandra C Bayne Washington DC/ Oak Bluffs

I am happy that the ordeal is finally over, and I hope you are satisfied with the outcome, Charlotte. At least, it seems closer to the value of your lovely house.

Submitted by Anonymous (not verified) on Sat, 11/04/2017 - 23:43

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RG

I am deeply disappointed that there were apparently no island politicians willing to stand up and prevent the loss of this home in the first place. If a family who has owned their property since 1962 is not worthy of advocacy from local leaders, then who is? Where is the leadership? Islanders deserve better.

Submitted by Anonymous (not verified) on Mon, 11/06/2017 - 17:01

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Edward Pachico Washington DC

There was also the Mary Guerin Inn near that location that my grandmother worked at or maybe it was on the other side of the bridge. Perhaps one of the older Vineyarders can still remember.

Submitted by Anonymous (not verified) on Tue, 06/26/2018 - 14:17

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Douglas Korves AIA Edgewater NJ

Did it occur to any engineer with DOT or problem solving professional on the bridge project (on this island that moves lighthouses) to relocate the house on a spit of land on the lagoon or harbor that could have been created by the excavation from the bridge project?

Congratulations on the $850,000 but it is not the value of waterfront lagoon property. Oh, and it would have been far more economical to move the house when one factors in legal fees and court costs.

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