Crawford Realty Company v. Ostrow

150 A.2d 5, 89 R.I. 12, 1959 R.I. LEXIS 36
CourtSupreme Court of Rhode Island
DecidedApril 10, 1959
DocketEq. No. 2676
StatusPublished
Cited by11 cases

This text of 150 A.2d 5 (Crawford Realty Company v. Ostrow) 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
Crawford Realty Company v. Ostrow, 150 A.2d 5, 89 R.I. 12, 1959 R.I. LEXIS 36 (R.I. 1959).

Opinion

*13 Roberts, J.

This bill in equity was brought to enjoin the respondents from interfering with the complainants’ use of certain passageways in the vicinity of property located on Weybosset street in the city of Providence. The cause was heard by a justice of the superior court, who thereafter entered a decree which granted relief as to one of the aforesaid passageways 'but denied the other relief sought. From said decree the complainants have claimed an appeal to *14 this- court. Prior to the hearing in the superior court the National Furniture Distributors, the lessee of said company, was added as a party complainant and the Plantations Auto Park, Inc. was added as a party respondent.

The complainant Crawford Realty Company is the owner of property located on the southerly side of Weybosset street, which property is designated as lot No. 487 on assessor’s plat No. 24. The complainant National Furniture Distributors is the lessee of the said property. The respondent Hassie Ostrow is the owner of three parcels of land located on the westerly side of Richmond street and designated as lots Nos. 47, 447, and 492 on the aforesaid assessors’ plat No. 24. The respondent Max Ostrow is the operator of a parking lot on said three parcels.

The bill of complaint alleges that the westerly side of the property owned by complainant Crawford Realty Company adjoins a “private gangway” which extends southerly from Weybosset street and that said complainant by grant possesses certain rights in this “private gangway.” It is further alleged that “there extends westerly from Richmond Street a public street designated as Read Street,” which is also designated on plat No. 24 and which bisects the parcels owned by respondent Hassie Ostrow. The bill alleges that Read street, extending westerly from Richmond street, proceeds to a point of intersection with the aforesaid “private gangway” running southerly from Weybosset street, and that “the respondents have wrongfully caused obstructions and suffered obstructions to be' placed upon the said aforementioned gangways and upon Read Street * * It is prayed that respondents be enjoined from obstructing complainants’ use of the gangway and of Read street.

According to evidence adduced at the hearing, prior to the year 1795 the lot now owned by Crawford Realty Company and the lots now owned by respondent Hassie Ostrow were all part of one parcel then owned by Sarah Richmond. In the year 1795 William Richmond, one of the héirs of *15 Sarah Richmond, brought an action for partition of this parcel. As a result of that suit the property of Sarah Richmond was divided into five parcels, three of which abut on the southerly side of what is now Weybosset street. In that partition suit reference is made to a passageway separating the three parcels abutting on Weybosset street from the other two parcels. The passageway referred to is Read street. It is not clear from the evidence whether the establishment of Read street arose out of the partition suit or had been made prior thereto, but it is clear that Read street existed as a passageway of some kind in 1795. There was also evidence that prior to 1795 there existed a plat upon which Read street was laid out through the property of Sarah Richmond, but witnesses who had searched the title were unable to find such plat. However, there was introduced in evidence a plat of the year 1798 which clearly shows the passageway known as Read street.

The evidence further shows that in 1801 William Richmond, the owner of a parcel which abutted on the southerly side of what is now Weybosset street and on the northerly side of Read street, entered into an agreement with Marvin Morris whose property adjoined the westerly side of the property of William Richmond. This agreement, which was subsequently recorded, established a private gangway between the property of William Richmond and that of Morris. The gangway referred to by the parties herein as the Richmond-Morris gangway extended southerly from Weybosset street for a distance of approximately 135 feet to a point near the westerly end of Read street.

The complainants sought to establish that Read street, so called, over the years has been accepted by the public as a public street. It was shown that Read street has never been taxed by the city authorities; that pipes were laid therein by the city; and that at various times it has been used for pedestrian and vehicular travel. This evidence *16 was offered as proof of public acceptance of the dedication of Read street allegedly made prior to the year 1795.

The parcel of land which by reason of the partition suit of 1795 became the property of William Richmond was subsequently subdivided. Lot No. 487 on assessor’s plat No. 24, now the property of complainant Crawford Realty Company, comprises the northerly part of the property of William Richmond. Said complainant’s property therefore abuts upon the Richmond-Morris gangway but not upon Read street. The complainants sought to establish that their right to the use of the “private gangway” derives from the Richmond-Morris agreement of 1801 and that their right to the use of Read street derives from the dedication and acceptance of Read street as a public way.

The trial justice ruled that complainants were entitled to the free and unobstructed use of the Richmond-Morris gangway as a result of the agreement of 1801. With respect to Read street, he found “that there was a dedication of what is now termed Read Street to and for the use of the public and that through the years there has been a degree of acceptance by those persons who actually built and lived on either side of the street and by those persons who had business with such residents.” He held, however, that it had never been accepted as a street in the statutory sense and that “In the opinion of the Court it is more properly termed a private way.” The trial justice found that the dedication to the public use occurred “prior to the partition suit of 1795 or by reason of that suit * * He also found as a fact that the existence of a plat was proved even though the plat itself could not be found. He concluded that although complainants had a legal right to the use of the Richmond-Morris gangway, there is no public right to the use of Read street.

The complainants argue that notwithstanding the nonacceptance of Read street by the public they have a private right to the use of Read street. They urge that the dedi *17 cation of Read street to the public use in 1795 or prior thereto created an easement therein appurtenant to the land presently owned by complainant Crawford Realty Company and that this easement entitles complainants to the use of Read street even if it is merely a private way. The trial justice rejected this contention stating: “Crawford Realty Company as the owner of Lot 487 is not the owner of land abutting on Read Street * * * and therefore is not in a position to complain of any obstruction on Read Street as it would be if it were such abutting owner.”

The complainants’ reasons of appeal are limited to the rulings of the trial justice with respect to the use of Read street. The respondents have not appealed from the granting of relief with respect to the Richmond-Morris gangway.

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Bluebook (online)
150 A.2d 5, 89 R.I. 12, 1959 R.I. LEXIS 36, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/crawford-realty-company-v-ostrow-ri-1959.