David Clark v. Buttonwoods Beach Association

CourtSupreme Court of Rhode Island
DecidedApril 15, 2020
Docket18-17
StatusPublished

This text of David Clark v. Buttonwoods Beach Association (David Clark v. Buttonwoods Beach Association) 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
David Clark v. Buttonwoods Beach Association, (R.I. 2020).

Opinion

April 15, 2020

Supreme Court

No. 2018-17-Appeal. (KC 14-271)

David Clark et al. :

v. :

Buttonwoods Beach Association. :

NOTICE: This opinion is subject to formal revision before publication in the Rhode Island Reporter. Readers are requested to notify the Opinion Analyst, Supreme Court of Rhode Island, 250 Benefit Street, Providence, Rhode Island 02903, at Telephone 222- 3258 of any typographical or other formal errors in order that corrections may be made before the opinion is published. Supreme Court

Buttonwoods Beach Association.1 :

Present: Suttell, C.J., Goldberg, Robinson, and Indeglia, JJ.

OPINION

Chief Justice Suttell, for the Court. Located on a peninsula jutting out into Greenwich

Bay, Buttonwoods is an historic and peaceful neighborhood in Warwick that traces its origins to a

Baptist summer colony established in the “early nineteenth century * * * where people could

combine recreational and religious activities in a wholesome, respectable environment.” 2 The

original tents have since been replaced by private homes and common facilities such as tennis

courts and a multipurpose community building known as the “casino,” yet in many respects time

has seemed, if not to have stopped, at least to have slowed in Buttonwoods. To a large extent, it

has retained its historic charm and it remains a pleasant neighborhood in which to live and to raise

a family. It is also the scene of the appeal now before the Court.

When the plaintiffs, Judith and David Clark, purchased 243 Promenade Avenue in

Buttonwoods (the property) in 2009, they believed they had also bought the waterfront lot across

the street from their new home. Two years later, after a neighborhood association president told

1 The proper name of the corporate defendant is “Buttonwood Beach Association.” It was created by an act of the General Assembly in May 1872. The neighborhood itself is sometimes referred to as “Olde Buttonwoods.” We shall use its more common appellation of “Buttonwoods.” 2 This is part of the description for Buttonwoods provided in The Buttonwoods Handbook: A Brief History & Rules and Regulations for Old Buttonwoods 2010, entered for identification during trial but not made a full exhibit. -1- plaintiffs they did not own the entire waterfront lot, they commissioned a property survey. The

survey showed that part of the land described in their deed was also included in an eighty-foot-

wide public way owned by the neighborhood association, the defendant Buttonwoods Beach

Association (BBA).3 The plaintiffs filed suit against the BBA, alleging that they owned the

property by adverse possession and acquiescence. The plaintiffs’ claims were tried without a jury,

and the trial justice concluded that plaintiffs had not proven either claim.

The plaintiffs now appeal from the judgment entered in favor of defendant, arguing that

the trial justice misconceived and misconstrued the evidence at trial and erred as a matter of law

when he concluded that plaintiffs had not satisfied the elements for claiming the disputed portion

of the waterfront lot property by adverse possession.4 For the reasons set forth in this opinion, we

affirm the judgment of the Superior Court.

I

Facts and Travel

The Buttonwoods neighborhood in Warwick has several common areas, including tennis

courts, a chapel, a baseball field, the “casino,” and a beach area at the end of Buttonwoods Avenue.

These common areas, as well as the roads within the neighborhood, are owned by the BBA. The

BBA leases the roads to the Buttonwoods Fire District (BFD). The BBA is a private corporation,

described through trial testimony as founded to be “the steward[] of the land, to protect * * * and

preserve the land” for future generations. The BBA is owned by stockholders; Buttonwoods

property owners were eligible to purchase up to two shares per household at $100 per share after

they had been a resident for two years. The BFD was described in trial testimony as “the manager

3 We append a copy of the survey to this opinion as Appendix A to provide a visual reference for the property features discussed herein. 4 The plaintiffs do not appeal from the part of the judgment finding in favor of defendant on their claim for acquiescence. -2- of all of [the common areas] and it has a special taxing authority enabling it to fund those

maintenance obligations.” The BFD is run by three supervisors elected by residents of the

neighborhood.

Judith and David Clark bought two properties in Buttonwoods in June 2009. One of the

properties had a residence and a carriage house with an address on Promenade Avenue, and the

other property had a residence with an address on Cooper Avenue. A brick walkway beginning at

the base of the front porch of the residence on Promenade Avenue leads to a sidewalk and resumes

across a paved roadway, continuing through a hedge with a white gate to a grassy area, beyond

which is a concrete patio bordering a seawall, the beach, and the water of Greenwich Bay. (The

area between the paved roadway and the seawall is hereinafter referred to as the waterfront lot.)

The Clarks demolished the residence on Cooper Avenue, leaving an open space; merged this lot

with 243 Promenade Avenue; and moved into the residence at 243 Promenade Avenue (hereinafter

referred to as the residential lot). The residential lot and the waterfront lot are separated by a paved

street, approximately twenty feet in width, known as Promenade Avenue. As the Clarks’ survey

disclosed, however, the full width of the Promenade Avenue right-of-way is eighty feet.

In July 2011, the Clarks posted four “private property” and “no trespassing” signs at

various points on the waterfront lot after they had seen some strangers fishing off the seawall,

asked them to leave, called the police, and received advice from the responding officer that they

were exposing themselves to liability by not having any “no trespassing/private property” signs

posted. Sometime after the Clarks posted the signs, Susan Phipps, a neighbor and then-President

of the BBA, sent plaintiffs an email stating that the waterfront lot did not belong to them and

instructed them to remove the “private property” signs. And so began the instant dispute between

the Clarks and the BBA.

-3- In March 2014, the Clarks filed a complaint in Kent County Superior Court against the

BBA, claiming ownership of the entire waterfront lot by adverse possession and acquiescence by

the BBA and seeking to quiet title to this lot. The case proceeded to a nonjury trial over six days

in September 2016.5 The trial justice heard testimony from plaintiff Judith Clark, six prior owners

of 243 Promenade Avenue, four former BBA presidents, an attorney, a realtor, and a surveyor.

Peter Weichers, who owned the property from January 3, 1986, until October 20, 1989,

testified that, when he bought the property, the realtor from the real estate agency told him he

would own the entire residential lot as well as the entire waterfront lot. His realtor did not mention

any property owned by the BBA. Weichers testified that, without asking permission from anyone,

he planted a row of shrubs, installed a gate on the waterfront lot, and removed the existing seawall

to replace it with a new one. No one from the BBA contacted him about the improvements he

made to the waterfront lot. He also maintained the waterfront lot the entire time he owned the

property.

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