Brown v. Goddard

13 R.I. 76, 1880 R.I. LEXIS 44
CourtSupreme Court of Rhode Island
DecidedJuly 3, 1880
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 13 R.I. 76 (Brown v. Goddard) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Rhode Island primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Brown v. Goddard, 13 R.I. 76, 1880 R.I. LEXIS 44 (R.I. 1880).

Opinion

Durfee, C. J.

Tbe complainant and tbe de-

fendants, as the defendants are trustees under the will of tbe late John Carter Brown, are owners of adjoining estates in tbe city of Providence abutting on Providence River at India Point, and lying within a barbor line established in 1864. Tbe complainant alleges in bis bill that tbe defendants have filled out their estate into tide-water, and in so doing have encroached on bis water front. He brings this suit to have bis water front defined in respect of that of tbe defendants and protected by injunction, and to have tbe defendants decreed to remove the existing encroachment on it. He claims that tbe dividing line of tbe respective water fronts ought to run, according to the rule laid down in Aborn v. Smith, 12 R. I. 370, from the point where tbe dividing line of tbe upland meets tbe shore, straight out to the barbor line, intersecting the barbor line at right angles; whereas tbe line to which tbe defendants have filled is tbe line of tbe upland produced, and is much less favorable to tbe complainant.

Tbe rule laid down in Aborn v. Smith is tbe rule which has been adopted by tbe court for tbe apportionment of ordinary open shores and water fronts where tbe riparian owners have done nothing to vary their rights. It is applicable in tbe case at bar unless tbe parties or their predecessors in title have themselves established a different rule. Tbe defendants claim that they have done so.

Previously to 1747 tbe land now belonging to tbe complain *78 ant and the defendants was part of a larger tract which then belonged to one Daniel Abbott, who had platted it and divided that portion of it lying south'of what was then Shore, now India, Street, by delineation on the plat, into numerous lots numbered 1, 2, 3, 4, 5, Sac. These lots were laterally defined by lines drawn from the south side of Shore Street out over tide-water without any line to close their outer ends, thus indicating that they were intended to be indefinitely extended. There was, according to the plat, only a slender margin of upland between the south side of Shore Street and high-water mark, and consequently the lots were for the most part tide flowed or water lots. On December 23,1747, Daniel Abbott conveyed lot No. 3, now belonging to the complainant, to one Jonathan Nichols, using' the following words to describe it, to wit: “ The water lot, called No. 3, is forty feet wide, fronting on a highway, and extends backwards to the channel of the river leading to Seconk. Reference to the plan of these lands will more fully appear.” On June 2, 1745, Daniel Abbott conveyed lot No. 4, now belonging to the defendants, and next to lot No. 3, to one Benjamin Mann, using the following words to describe it, to wit: “ A water lot, No. 4, and is forty feet in breadth, and bounds northerly upon a street or highway, and to extend southerly to the channel of the river that leads to Seconk, and is bounded easterly by a lott, No. 3, and westerly by a lott, No. 5, however otherways bounded or reputed to be bounded. Reference to the platt of those lands may more fully appear.”

These two, together with several other lots, passed by mesne conveyances to Nicholas Brown, Senior, and Thomas P. Ives, co-partners under the firm name of Brown & Ives, and in 1844, after their decease, were divided among their heirs and devisees, lots 3 and 4 being conveyed to Nicholas Brown, Junior, John Carter Brown, and Ann Brown Francis, devisees of said Nicholas Brown, Senior. The lots are identified in this conveyance by reference, not to the Abbott plat, but to the C. Harris plat of lands at Tockwotton, probably a copy of the Abbott plat, and are severally described as “ lying on the south side of India Street, and bounding forty feet thereon, and extending to the channel.” Subsequently, by partition among the devisees of Nicholas Brown, *79 Senior, lot No. 3, together with lots 1 and 2 next east of it, was set off to Nicholas Brown, Junior, the father of the complainant, and lot No. 4 was set off to John Carter Brown, the testator of the defendants. The C. Harris plat purports to have been made in 1804. It represents lots 3 and 4, and several other lots, as defined by parallel lines drawn from Shore Street, as on the Abbott plat, out over tide-water without any terminal line, and, like the Abbott plat, it shows only a narrow strip of upland south of Shore Street. In 1856 the lots south of Shore Street had been more or less filled or wharfed out, and, the boundary lines of some of them having become uncertain, the owners, including Nicholas Brown and John Carter Brown, agreed to appoint Samuel B. -Cushing and William S. Haines to determine and plat said boundary lines, and also agreed that the .lines so determined and platted should be forever deemed and taken as the true lines and boundaries. A preamble to the agreement describes the lots as lying on the south side of India Street, “ and extending southerly from said India Street to the channel of the river,” and the agreement itself purports to be entered into “ for the purpose of running, defining, fixing, and establishing the true and exact dividing lines and boundaries of the several lots.” The plat, drawn under this agreement, represents the several lots as extending southward from India Street in unequal lengths, but with their lateral lines all terminating at the water’s edge. In 1868, Nicholas Brown, Junior, having deceased, his heirs at law caused partition to be. made of his real estate by suit in equity. In this' partition, lot No. 3 was assigned to the complainant, and lots 1 and 2 to his sister and brother. In the plat, which formed a part of the decree of partition, the lines of these lots were prolonged without change of course to the harbor line. And since the partition the complainant has mortgaged lot 3, as thus defined. The decree and plat, after they were made, were recorded in the land records of the city of Providence.

It appears in proof that John Carter Brown commenced filling in 1872. In 1873, however, the first filling sunk out of sight. In 1875 work was begun again by the defendants and carried forward to completion. The entire space between the upland lines *80 produced to the harbor line has been filled out. The complainant testifies that he met John Carter Brown in 1873, and told him he was encroaching, and that John Carter Brown replied that he would see to it. Six months later he died. The complainant, however, does not testify that he explained the nature of the encroachment, nor does he testify that any encroachment which he then had in mind is the same of which he now complains. He remonstrated no further, but allowed the defendants to go on without objection. He claims that he had no personal knowledge that the work was going on, and that he therefore cannot be held to have acquiesced in it.

The complainant does not complain of any encroachment by filling committed prior to 1856. He admits that the lines as then delineated by Cushing and Haines are controlling to the extent of their delineation. But he contends that, inasmuch a3 the lines were then delineated only to the water’s' edge, they are controlling only to that extent, and beyond that extent the rule laid down in Aborn v. Smith must govern.

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Bluebook (online)
13 R.I. 76, 1880 R.I. LEXIS 44, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/brown-v-goddard-ri-1880.