Charette v. Pezza

CourtSuperior Court of Rhode Island
DecidedAugust 12, 2010
DocketC.A. No. 09-908.
StatusPublished

This text of Charette v. Pezza (Charette v. Pezza) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Superior 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
Charette v. Pezza, (R.I. Ct. App. 2010).

Opinion

DECISION
This matter was tried before the Court without a jury on Plaintiffs' Complaint alleging that the use of an outdoor wood-burning hydronic heater ("OWB") operating on and servicing Defendants' property in Foster, Rhode Island, constitutes a private nuisance and a continuing trespass. Plaintiffs also contend that Defendants are liable for negligence in the operation of the OWB, which is located across the street from Plaintiffs' residence. Plaintiffs seek a permanent injunction1 to enjoin Defendants from operating the OWB in any manner. The trial proceeded on liability only, with the parties stipulating that Plaintiffs' damages, if any, would be tried separately.

This Court has jurisdiction pursuant to G.L. 1956 § 8-2-13 and renders its decision in accordance with Rule 52 of the Rhode Island Superior Court Rules of Civil Procedure.

I
Facts and Travel
Plaintiffs, Stephen and Susan Charette ("Mr. Charette" and "Mrs. Charette"), have owned and resided at 2B Burgess Road in Foster since 2004. Their property consists of 6.5 acres and is a corner lot; Burgess Road is immediately to the west of Plaintiffs' property and Hartford Pike is *Page 2 immediately to the north. There are at least two structures on the property — a contemporary split-level house facing Burgess Road and a detached barn located in the side yard to the south of the house. The highest peak of Plaintiffs' house is 24.5 feet above grade, with the lower peak measuring 16.4 feet above grade. A number of front-facing windows on Plaintiffs' residence do not open.

Defendants own and reside across Burgess Road and directly west of the Plaintiffs' home. Defendants have resided at 2A Burgess Road since approximately 1994. Their property is a 4.95-acre corner lot abutting Burgess Road to the east and Hartford Pike to the north. Defendants Louis J. Pezza and Isabelle C. Pezza are the parents of Defendant Louis J. Pezza, Jr. ("Louis Pezza"), and live in an in-law apartment within the two-story residence. Louis Pezza and his wife, Sarah Pezza, reside in the main part of the residence.

For health reasons, the elder Pezzas require the heat in their living area to be maintained at a higher temperature than the remainder of the house where Louis and Sarah Pezza reside. Defendants' property is currently serviced by an oil furnace that is over fifteen (15) years old. In an effort to save money on heating costs in the fall and winter months, and to avoid the costly replacement of the existing oil furnace, Defendants purchased and had installed the OWB on the eastern side of their property in the summer of 2008 at a cost of approximately $15,000. Louis Pezza expected that it would take three (3) years of operating the OWB to recoup the money spent on the OWB and its installation by not having to purchase home heating oil. The OWB is located 55' from the Defendants' own residence, 15' from the edge of Defendants' property, 30' *Page 3 from the edge of Plaintiffs' property, and less than 200' from Plaintiffs' house.2 Plaintiffs' property is at a grade seven feet (7') below Defendants' property.

Generally, an OWB is a wood-burning appliance that converts wood fuel to heat. More specifically, the OWB installed on Defendants' property is a Central Boiler, Inc., Classic Model 6048 ("Model 6048"), and is recognized in the industry as a mid-sized residential unit that is designed to be fueled by hand by loading wood through a door into the combustion chamber. When the wood burns, the heat from the combustion chamber in turn heats a water jacket surrounding the combustion chamber; the water jacket is attached to a series of pumps and piping which connect the device to an indoor heating system servicing Defendants' residence. The OWB releases steam and smoke from the combustion chamber through a metal smokestack attached to the structure; the top of the smokestack on Defendants' OWB measures 18' above the ground.

Twelve witnesses testified before the Court, including Plaintiffs, Defendant Louis Pezza, Sarah Pezza, and six (6) other Foster residents, four (4) of whom reside on Burgess Road and one being the Town Solicitor. Expert testimony was also presented on behalf of Plaintiffs as well as Defendants.

A
Summer 2008 Mr. Charette testified that he was aware that Defendants — whom he described as "neighborly" up until that time — had installed their OWB in July, 2008. At that time, he observed a trench being dug on Defendants' property and testified that Louis Pezza became "instantly defensive." *Page 4
Recalling one day in late August, 2008, Mr. Charette testified that he first noticed Defendants' OWB in operation when he returned from work to find his home engulfed in smoke with all the smoke detectors sounding off. Notwithstanding this first incident, Mr. Charette acknowledged that the smoke detectors in Plaintiffs' home never sounded again due to smoke from Defendants' OWB, even on what Mr. Charette characterized as being the worst episodes of smoke. Mr. Charette described the smoke and odor on that first occasion as "disgusting," "like a car on fire," and "unlike smoke from a fireplace or a woodstove."

Mrs. Charette testified that she first observed emissions from Defendants' OWB in June or July, 2008. She experienced an odor while on the back deck of her home one afternoon and immediately went in to close the sliding doors. Plaintiffs also recalled a nighttime incident in August, 2008, during which their twin sons, then 3-years old, awoke crying and coughing due to smoke that had entered Plaintiffs' home.

The next business day following Mrs. Charette's first observations, Mrs. Charette visited Foster Town Hall to complain about the smoke from Defendants' OWB. She stated that the Town did not have any knowledge about OWBs. Mr. Charette testified that Town officials would not allow his wife to make a formal complaint. Mr. Charette subsequently contacted the Foster Building Official, the Rhode Island Department of Environmental Management, the Rhode Island Department of Health, and the Rhode Island Attorney General, with no official action taken by any entity or individual. According to Mr. Charette, Foster Town Solicitor John Bevilacqua advised Mr. Charette that the Town would shut down Defendants' OWB and create laws to regulate it. At trial, Mr. Bevilacqua disputed that he made such representations. To the contrary, Mr. Bevilacqua recognized that upwards of fifty (50) OWBs are in operation in Foster, some of which have been in operation for many years. *Page 5

Mrs. Charette testified that just after her visit to Town Hall, she observed Louis Pezza "barreling down the driveway beeping." She described him as irate and testified that he demanded that she inform Mr. Charette that he wanted to speak to him. Mrs. Charette testified that she was offended by how Mr. Pezza belittled her and she informed her husband that he was not to go over to speak with Louis Pezza.

Louis Pezza testified that after installing the OWB in accordance with the instructions, he used the OWB in late August, 2008, only as a dry run before the colder weather set in. At that time, Mr. Pezza used unseasoned pine wood to fuel the OWB, which Mr.

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Bluebook (online)
Charette v. Pezza, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/charette-v-pezza-risuperct-2010.