Carol C. Ballard v. SVF Foundation SVF Foundation v. Carol C. Ballard Dorrance H. Hamilton v. Carol C. Ballard

181 A.3d 27
CourtSupreme Court of Rhode Island
DecidedApril 10, 2018
Docket15-351, 352, 353
StatusPublished
Cited by16 cases

This text of 181 A.3d 27 (Carol C. Ballard v. SVF Foundation SVF Foundation v. Carol C. Ballard Dorrance H. Hamilton v. Carol C. Ballard) 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
Carol C. Ballard v. SVF Foundation SVF Foundation v. Carol C. Ballard Dorrance H. Hamilton v. Carol C. Ballard, 181 A.3d 27 (R.I. 2018).

Opinion

Justice Goldberg, for the Court.

Before this Court is yet another chapter in the long-running spat between Newport's renowned feuding neighbors, Carol C. Ballard and A.L. Ballard (the Ballards) against SVF Foundation (the Foundation) and its predecessor owner, the Dorrance H. Hamilton Trust (the Trust), regarding the former "Edgehill property" located in Newport, Rhode Island. The parties have engaged in an embittered and unseemly battle that has endured for more than seventeen years. In the multiple cases that have been filed in the Superior Court-presided over by a series of intrepid trial justices-not a single count, claim, or counterclaim has proceeded to trial. 1 Rather, a plethora of summary judgments and Rule 54(b) judgments abound. The Ballards currently appeal from summary judgments and an order of dismissal entered by the Superior Court, on the eve of trial, in these consolidated cases. The parties appeared before the Supreme Court for oral argument on November 7, 2017. After carefully reviewing the record and considering the parties' written and oral submissions, we affirm the judgment in all respects.

Facts and Travel

In early 2001, in the context of pending litigation, the Superior Court ordered a partition of the Edgehill property and appointed a partition commissioner (the commissioner) to assess the equities and recommend a fair division of the property between the Ballards and the Foundation's previous owner, the Trust. 2 On February 8, 2002, the commissioner issued his report, including his findings and recommendations; on September 27, 2002, the commissioner issued a supplemental report and recommendation. The Superior Court adopted the commissioner's findings and recommendations, and a judgment of partition entered on December 16, 2002. The Ballards and the Foundation were awarded equal portions of the property-specifically, the Foundation was awarded approximately 17.172 acres, comprising a masonry complex known as the "Swiss Village," and the Ballards were awarded 11.478 acres, which included two structures known as the "Manor House" and the "Carriage House." Carol Ballard also owned a separate parcel identified as "Lot 20," an undeveloped lot that abuts the Edgehill property on the westerly side. 3 Lot 20 is featured in the current phase of this battle. The partition order was not challenged by either side, and it ripened into a final judgment. However, the parties' incessant squabbles over access easements and sewer debate have persisted for many years. This Court has been confronted with a petition for relief from the partition judgment arising from an access easement, the unending sewer debate, as well as numerous amendments to the original complaint, additional claims, counterclaims, and new complaints. 4

The Sewer System and Lot 20 (NC-2000-0340)

Among the post-partition disputes from which these appeals arise was the Edgehill *31 property sewer system (the sewer system). Questions about joint responsibility for the sewer system and whether the sewer system could be utilized to service adjacent lots were raised during the partition proceeding. The Ballards sought, and were denied, an easement to connect Lot 20 to the sewer system; their request had been opposed by the Foundation. This was not the Ballards' first attempt to do so, nor was it their last. Indeed, it is fair to say that much of this litigation has centered on the Ballards' persistent efforts to expand the sewer system for their personal benefit. On September 27, 2002, the commissioner issued his supplemental report and recommendation to address the post-partition sewer system issues. The commissioner expressly determined that it was not necessary to address whether the Ballards may access the sewer system to service abutting properties such as Lot 20, as that issue did not relate to the partitioned estate.

On December 6, 2002, the Superior Court issued an order of partition that adopted the original and supplemental findings and recommendations of the commissioner. As explained in the order, the sewer pump facility and its sewer lines serviced the Swiss Village, the Manor House, and the Carriage House. The trial justice awarded the Ballards and the Foundation-in joint ownership-all the benefits and rights to the sewer pump station, the forced main sewer line, and the main sewer feed line on the Edgehill property, and directed that any repair and maintenance responsibilities be allocated on a pro rata basis. The order also awarded individual ownership of any lateral sewer lines located on the parties' respective properties. The Superior Court declared that "[t]o the extent that other necessary but unspecified utility or drainage lines, conditions or facilities exist which predate the partition, such shall be deemed pre-existing easements by necessity or implication which inure to the benefit of the dominant tenant." The Ballards are before the Court arguing that the sewer system qualifies as an "unspecified utility or drainage line." Although no appeal was taken by either party from the partition judgment, the Ballards' efforts to connect the sewer system to Lot 20 have persisted.

In a 2005 fifth amended complaint in the original action, the Foundation sought injunctive relief to prevent the Ballards from connecting Lot 20 to the Edgehill property's sewer station. 5 The Ballards then filed an answer and counterclaim, which included claims for trespass, declaratory judgment, and an accounting. 6 A decade later, in 2015, with the trial date looming, the Ballards moved to amend their counterclaim to add a new count, seeking a declaration that an implied easement to access the sewer system arose when they bought Lot 20. The motion to amend was denied. No appeal was taken.

The Driveway Easement (NC-2013-0499)

An easement that is described in the commissioner's report and recommendation *32 as "a driveway easement for access to the Carriage House" (the driveway easement) is also before us on appeal. 7 The driveway easement provided the Ballards with access to a driveway over the Foundation's property to the Carriage House. Due to zoning setback requirements, this easement was a necessary part of the partition judgment. Two stone pillars stood at the entrance to the driveway: one on the Foundation's property and the other on the Ballards' property, with an iron gate between them. The stone pillars and the iron gate were in poor condition and in need of repair. Given the parties' toxic relationship, it was only a matter of time before this circumstance led to acrimony and litigation.

The Ballards, concerned about the appearance and the condition of the pillars and the gate, sought to initiate the restoration of these structures. A.L. Ballard approached the Trust, the owner at the time, with an offer to relocate the pillars and to move the driveway.

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Bluebook (online)
181 A.3d 27, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/carol-c-ballard-v-svf-foundation-svf-foundation-v-carol-c-ballard-ri-2018.