Cahill v. Slaimen

185 A. 257, 56 R.I. 265, 1936 R.I. LEXIS 103
CourtSupreme Court of Rhode Island
DecidedJune 3, 1936
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 185 A. 257 (Cahill v. Slaimen) 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
Cahill v. Slaimen, 185 A. 257, 56 R.I. 265, 1936 R.I. LEXIS 103 (R.I. 1936).

Opinion

Moss, J.

This is a suit in equity, brought by the complainant as the owner of several adjoining lots of land in the city of Providence, forming one tract, which stretches from South Main street on the east to South Water street on the west. The respondents are respectively the beneficial owner, the owner of record, and the mortgagee of another lot of land. This is bounded on the east by South Main street, on the south by the most easterly part of the complainant’s land, and on the southwest and west by a gangway twelve feet wide, lying between this lot and the complainant’s most northerly lot, of which latter lot the southern boundary is a prolongation of the southerly boundary. line of the respondents’ lot. This gangway is not in dispute and it appears that it is owned in *266 common by the owners of these two lots, to which its use is appurtenant.

The respondents Slaimen and Silva, the beneficial and record owners, who only will be hereinafter referred to as-respondents, claim that there is also another gangway, which extends from South Main street, near the southeast corner of their land, to South Water street, which they have the right to use, and which the complainant is obstructing by a fence and gate at its westerly end. The complainant asserts that there is no such other gangway; that, the respondents have been trespassing upon his land and breaking down this fence and threaten to continue such conduct; and that by all-day parking of automobiles they have also been obstructing his use of the admitted gangway. He prays that his title to his land may be quieted; that the-respondents may be permanently enjoined from trespassing on his land and from interfering with his fence and may be obliged to repay him for the expense of restoring it-after they had damaged it; and that they may be enjoined from obstructing the admitted gangway.

The cause was heard in the superior court on bill, answers, and evidence, and a decree was entered granting the relief prayed for. From this decree the respondents have taken an appeal to this court, the grounds stated being substantially that the decree was against the evidence and the weight thereof, and was against the law, and was therefore-erroneous.

In trying to prove the existence of a twelve-foot gangway, from street to street, through the complainant’s property,, the respondents seem to rely considerably on a plat which is in the office of the recorder of deeds of the city of Providence and a copy of a portion of which was introduced in evidence. This plat bears the following notation signed by four men as a committee:

"We the subscribers being of the committee which was chosen and appointed to Regulate ye *267 first Devision of ye Lotts called Wair House Lotts with ye highway and Gang Ways that was formerly laid out along Providence Town Street this being a Plan thereof.”

It bears also another notation, attested by the Proprietors’ clerk, to the effect that at a meeting of the “Proprietors of the common Lands of the Town of Providence on the east side of the seven mile line in Providence” held on May 31, 1746, “this plat or plan was by a clear Voat of the said Proprietors accepted allowed of and confirmed”; and'ordered to be filed for record.

This plat shows many lots, the great majority of which are marked as 40 feet wide, and which run from the street later known as South Main street westerly to what was apparently the line of the bank of the Providence river then, South Water street being laid out on filled land much later. Generally, but not always, it shows two adjacent lots, then a 12 foot gangway, then two more lots and then a 12 foot gangway and so on. In particular it shows a 12 foot gangway, (which the respondents rely upon as now legally existent), between two lots, the northerly of which is marked, “Scul Bitt. Charles Tillinghast’s house,” with a frontage on the street marked as 57j/¿ feet, and the southerly of which is marked “No. 19. Tillinghast’s House,” with a frontage marked as 40 feet.

A study of this plat and the next one which we shall mention, made in 1839 and recorded, convinces us that the northern fine of this alleged gangway, as shown on this plat of 1746, was a straight line located a little south of the line which is now the southerly line of the respondents’ land and diverging from it as the distance from South Main street increased.

The main contention of the respondents seems to be that this same gangway is shown, in the same location, on the plat of 1839, above mentioned, which was made in connection with a partition then made between Thomas *268 Burgess and Peter Pratt, who were at that time owners in common of all the land now included in the complainant’s most northerly lot and the respondents’ lot and the bent gangway between them. The agreement of partition created this bent gangway, running, from a little west of the middle of the northerly line of the whole tract, southerly and then a little south of east, to the southerly line of the whole tract, the nearest point being 20^ feet from the street, as it then was.' The agreement assigned the land on the eastward of this gangway to Thomas Burgess, from whom, by mesne conveyances, the respondents have received, all of it except a strip about 20 feet deep taken' in 1901 for widening South Main street; and the land on the westward of this gangway was assigned to Peter Pratt, from whom it has passed, by mesne conveyances, to the complainant. The plat shows the frontage of the Burgess lot as 51 feet.

This plat does indicate also a straight 12 foot gangway as running from South Main street, in a direction a little south of west, to South Water street, in or approximately in the location of the gangway indicated on the 1746 plat, b.ut it shows it as being entirely south of the land being partitioned and on land then belonging solely to other owners, and now belonging to the complainant by a different chain of title. This straight indicated ■ gangway is not mentioned in the partition agreement; and its being indicated thus on the partition plat could not have conferred any rights therein upon Thomas Burgess and his successors in title. It seems probable that it was simply traced on from the 1746 Proprietors’ plat.

Philip Tillinghast in 1704-5 and 1708-9 acquired from the Proprietors all the land now belonging to the complainant and the respondents which is involved in this cause; and the uncontradicted testimony was that the records in connection with the acquisition contain nothing about a gangway. He died in 1732. In 1746 all the land later partitioned as aforesaid between Thomas Burgess and Peter Pratt was owned by Charles Tillinghast as devisee under the *269 will of Philip Tillinghast, his father; and the land to the south had passed, by the same will, to other sons of Philip Tillinghast. The justice before whom this cause was heard ruled that under these conditions the Proprietors had no power in 1746 to lay out and open up any such gangway, and we aré strongly inclined to agree with him. But our conclusion from the notations on the plat is that they were not attempting then to lay out or open up any gangways, but only to put on record what they conceived to have been the layout of lots and gangways many years before. It may be some

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Bluebook (online)
185 A. 257, 56 R.I. 265, 1936 R.I. LEXIS 103, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/cahill-v-slaimen-ri-1936.