Cimino v. Cimino

107 A.2d 463, 82 R.I. 322, 1954 R.I. LEXIS 56
CourtSupreme Court of Rhode Island
DecidedAugust 12, 1954
DocketEx. No. 2270
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 107 A.2d 463 (Cimino v. Cimino) 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
Cimino v. Cimino, 107 A.2d 463, 82 R.I. 322, 1954 R.I. LEXIS 56 (R.I. 1954).

Opinion

*324 Condon, J.

This is a bill in equity to enjoin the respondent Guiseppina Cimino, the complainant’s mother, from conveying certain real estate to Richard, Augustine A., and Rinaldo' L. Manocchia with whom she had entered into a written contract to sell it. The bill further prays that such real estate be impressed with a trust for the benefit of complainant.

After a hearing, the superior court denied and dismissed the bill but no decree was entered. Several months later the Manocchias, hereinafter sometimes referred to' as the interveners, brought a bill for specific performance against respondent. Almost a year after said bill was filed complainant moved to reopen the instant suit. The respondent did not object and the motion was granted. Thereupon *325 the Mano cchias moved to intervene in such suit in accordance with general laws 1938, chapter 528, §12. From a decree of the superior court granting that motion, complainant has appealed to this court.

The complainant contends that the court erred because the motion to- intervene was not in due form and was not supported by evidence. He also claims that it was filed so late that it should have been dismissed on the ground of laches. In reply the interveners contend that complainant has no standing to appeal because he was not aggrieved by the granting of the motion, none of his rights having been thereby determined. They also urge that the appeal be dismissed on the- ground that under §12 the granting -of a motion to intervene rests in the discretion of the superior court and that, except for abuse, its exercise of such discretion is not reviewable by this court.

We do not think that the appeal should be dismissed on either ground. The Manocchias’ right to intervene depends upon compliance with §12 which reads as follows:

“Whenever any bill or proceeding in equity is pending, any person n-ot a party thereto may, upon making it appear to the superior court that he is interested in the -subject matter of the suit or proceeding, or that he has reason to- .apprehend collusion between the parties therein to obtain some -order or decree by which his interest may be affected, be allowed to become a party to such suit or proceeding, upon such terms and conditions as the court shall prescribe.”

That right is not dependent upon the discretion of the superior court, but is to be granted by that -court -only if the applicants bring themselves within the provisions of the statute. 39 Am. Jur., Parties, §75, p. 947. There it is stated: “The fact that the statute may require one seeking intervention to obtain leave of court does not give the court a discretion to accept or refuse an application for intervention, -or prevent its decision thereupon from being subject to revision.” Hence in the case at bar complainant *326 has the right te a review, for error of law and not merely for the superior court’s abuse of discretion, of that court’s ruling granting interveners’ motion. See Gallagher v. Early, 60 R. I. 318, where this court reversed the superior court’s decree denying such a motion.

We are also of the opinion that there is no- merit in the interveners’ contention that complainant is not aggrieved by the mere granting of the motion to intervene and therefore has no standing to appeal. It is true that by such action the merits of the cause have not been determined even in part adversely to complainant, but he is nevertheless entitled to litigate his suit without interference therein from one who has no interest in the litigation or who is not otherwise authorized by statute to intervene. Intervention was unknown at common law. Ford Motor Co. v. Blair, 259 Mich. 574. 67 C.J.S. Parties, §53 (b), p. 975. Hence in the absence of statute granting that right it may be assumed that it does not exist now. Petition of Cross, 17 R. I. 568. Therefore unless the Manoechias showed good legal grounds under §12 to intervene in the instant suit the superior court erred in granting their motion. Whether such grounds existed is a proper question for complainant to raise on appeal for this court’s determination.

This brings us to the specific contentions made by complainant in support of his appeal. We think his first contention that the motion is not in due form is clearly without merit. The motion is too lengthy to quote here but it may be substantially summarized as setting out the travel of the instant suit, the description of the contract between respondent and the Manoechias, reference to the filing of their suit for specific performance, and their apprehension of collusion between complainant and respondent to circumvent such suit and to defeat the Manoechias’ alleged right under their contract. The motion concludes with a prayer that they may be allowed to intervene on the ground of such threatened collusion and also on the further ground of their *327 interest in the subject matter of the suit. There is another prayer with which we have no concern here as it was not granted by the decree appealed from. The motion bears the signature -of Manoechias’ .counsel, but is unsworn.

The complainant argues that since it is unsworn it is not in due form and therefore the allegations therein of collusion and interest cannot be deemed a sufficient showing to warrant the granting of the motion in the absence of evidence to support those allegations. Ordinarily a motion need not be under oath and there is no- provision in §12 requiring one. Therefore, as far as the mere absence of an oath is concerned, it cannot be held that for such reason the motion to intervene was not in due form. In so holding, however, we express no opinion on the form or correctness of the bill of intervention, otherwise entitled by the interveners as their “Bill Of Intercession,” which they filed after the motion to intervene had been granted. That matter is not before us on this appeal.

The complainant .argues that if the motion was in due form, it should have been denied, as no evidence was presented in support of the allegations therein. In the circumstances here we think that evideixce in proof of such allegations was not necessary to enable the superior court to- determine whether there was ground for intervention by the Manoechias. The allegations in the motion were as to maters -of record in the superior court itself concerning the existence -of which there could be no controversy and from which that court could reasonably infer there might possibly be collusion between complainant and respondent, or that by virtue of the pending suit for specific performance the Manoechias had an interest in the subject matter of the instant suit which conceivably could be adversely affected by the final decree entered therein. We think the chronology of the litigation which is hereinafter set out in our discussion of complainant’s third contention substantially supports this view. Moreover, in this connection it *328

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Bluebook (online)
107 A.2d 463, 82 R.I. 322, 1954 R.I. LEXIS 56, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/cimino-v-cimino-ri-1954.