Chapman v. Pendleton

82 A. 1063, 34 R.I. 160, 1912 R.I. LEXIS 40
CourtSupreme Court of Rhode Island
DecidedApril 27, 1912
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 82 A. 1063 (Chapman v. Pendleton) 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
Chapman v. Pendleton, 82 A. 1063, 34 R.I. 160, 1912 R.I. LEXIS 40 (R.I. 1912).

Opinion

Dubois, C. J.

This is an action of trespass guare clausum fregit, brought by the plaintiff against the town treasurer of Westerly, to recover damages for the acts of its agents and servants in entering upon three separate parcels of his land, nearly one mile in length, and varying in width, adjoining the Watch Hill Road, and removing therefrom about 5,370 lineal feet of boundary wall, and widening, relaying and reconstructing said road by building the same upon and over the surface of the greater portion of said strip of land. The plaintiff is a farmer and owns a great deal of land along said highway. In March, 1907, the town council of Westerly voted that it was necessary to relay and widen about four miles of said road, and appointed a committee for that purpose. The committee was engaged to perform their duties October 17, 1907, and made their report to the town council October 28, 1907; this report was duly accepted and confirmed by the town council, and an appeal from their decree was taken by the plaintiff herein; the appeal was heard in the Superior Court upon the appellant’s motion to quash said proceedings and a final decree quashing the same was entered in the Superior Court, November 30, 1908.' Immediately after the appointment of the above-mentioned committee and before their engagement as such the town council advertised for bids to do the work proposed and entered into a contract therefor with the T. H. Gill Company, March 28, 1907.. The Gill Company commenced work under its contract in April, 1907, and completed the same to the acceptance of the town council, November 4, 1907, nearly four weeks before the final decree quashing the proceedings was entered in the Superior Court. On the seventeenth day of November, 1908, the town council ap~ *162 pointed another committee to relay and widen said road, who were duly engaged and made report to the town council, who accepted their report on May 3, 1909, and the plaintiff claimed an appeal from their decree confirming the report and from the assessment of damages made by the town council. On November 27, 1908, the plaintiff presented a particular account of his claim against the town and the same not having been satisfied within forty days after its presentation, he commenced suit, by writ dated June 3, 1909, which is the case under consideration.

The appeal from the decree of the town council confirming the report of the committee appointed November 17, 1908, and the present case, pending at the same time were consolidated by the court, against the objection of the plaintiff, upon the following:

"Motion to Consolidate.
“And now come the defendants in the above entitled causes, and move that the same may be consolidated for the purposes of trial, showing:
“1. That the plaintiff in each of said causes is Courtland P. Chapman.
“2. That the actual party in interest as defendant in both of said causes is the Town of Westerly.
“3. That each of said causes are brought for the recovery of damages growing out of the same transaction, viz.: the taking of certain land of the plaintiff for highway purposes by said Town of Westerly, the first of said actions referring to damages connected with the actual construction of the highway under a defective condemnation, and the second of said actions referring to the damages occurring from the condemnation of the land under subsequent proceedings.
“4. That the matters connected with the question of damages in said two causes are so inextricably confused that the same cannot be separated without great difficulty, and that grave injustice is liable to be done to one or the other of the parties by the trial of said causes separately.
*163 “5. That the witnesses and testimony in the two cases must largely be identical, and that great and unnecessary expense to the parties will be occasioned by the trial of said causes separately.
“6. That the consolidation of said suits will expedite the business of this court, and prevent unnecessary cost and a multiplicity of suits, and that the matter in dispute can more conveniently and satisfactorily be determined in one action than in two.”

The declaration in the case under consideration contains three counts, to which the defendant filed a plea of the general issue, and subsequently, in the course of the trial, it was permitted to file special pleas of “leave and license of the said plaintiff to it for that purpose first given and granted,” and “leave and assent of the said plaintiff to it for that purpose first given and granted, to wit, at the said several times when &c. in accordance with a prior understanding and agreement as to the relocation of the highway along said premises theretofore, to wit, at said Westerly, to wit, on the 22nd day of January, A. D. 1907, entered into between the plaintiff and the agents and servants of the said town of Westerly, to wit, Tristam D. Babcock, President of the town council of said Westerly, and Thomas McKenzie, the engineer of said town.” To these pleas the plaintiff filed his replication traversing the same.

Under the consolidation aforesaid the cases were tried together with the result that in the case of the plaintiff’s appeal from the decree of the town council, a verdict was rendered sustaining the layout of the highway, but increasing the damages. It appears that neither party has made any attempt to disturb these findings and that the amount of the verdict has been paid to the plaintiff by the town. In the case at bar the jury returned a general verdict against the defendant and assessed damages for the plaintiff in the sum of $600, and also returned the following special verdicts: “The reconstruction of the highway along the premises in question in these suits, and over portions thereof, by the *164 town of Westerly in the year 1907, was made by said town with the consent of the plaintiff;” and “The work of reconstructing the highway along the premises in question in these suits, and over portions thereof, by the town of Westerly, in the year 1907, was not done by said town, with the knowledge of the plaintiff, and without objection on his part to the doing of said work until after said work of reconstruction had been completed.”

The defendant thereupon filed the following motion for a new trial: “And now comes the defendant in the above entitled cause, and moves that a new trial be granted him for the following reasons:

“1. That the general verdict in said cause is contrary to the evidence.
“2. That the general verdict in said cause is contrary to the weight of the evidence therein.
“3. That the general verdict in said cause is contrary to law.
“4. That the general verdict in said cause is inconsistent, with the first special finding made by the jury therein.
“5. That the damages assessed by the jury in said cause-are excessive.,
“6.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
82 A. 1063, 34 R.I. 160, 1912 R.I. LEXIS 40, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/chapman-v-pendleton-ri-1912.