Deraismes v. Ferguson

CourtSuperior Court of Rhode Island
DecidedMarch 18, 2011
DocketC.A. No. WC 2007-0040
StatusPublished

This text of Deraismes v. Ferguson (Deraismes v. Ferguson) 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
Deraismes v. Ferguson, (R.I. Ct. App. 2011).

Opinion

DECISION
This Court is asked, through various dispositive motions filed by the parties in this case, to interpret and apply the Rhode Island statute concerning "spite fences," R.I. Gen. Laws § 34-10-20, to determine the viability of a statutory claim for private nuisance filed by Plaintiffs Jack and Anne deRaismes against their neighbors, Defendants Bruce and Eleanor Ferguson. For the reasons set forth in this Decision, this Court first finds that the parties' properties are "adjoining" under the statute, as a matter of law, so as to give rise to a potential statutory action for private nuisance. As such, the Fergusons' motion for summary judgment as to that issue is denied, and the deRaismeses' cross-motion for partial summary judgment as to that issue is granted. This Court finds further, however, that the trees of which the deRaismeses complain are not "on or near" the parties' property line, as the statute requires, so as to bar their statutory action for private nuisance as a matter of law. Accordingly, as to that issue, the Fergusons' motion for summary judgment is granted. *Page 2

I
FACTS AND TRAVEL1
The parties in this case are neighbors on a road called Waterway in a bucolic section of North Kingstown, Rhode Island that overlooks Narragansett Bay. Defendants, the Fergusons, own waterfront property that also fronts on Waterway. Plaintiffs, the deRaismeses, live across the street from the Fergusons on non-waterfront property, upland and uphill from the Fergusons' property, which also fronts on Waterway. This dispute erupted when the Fergusons, who are passionate about their landscape architecture, planted a row of trees along Waterway and elsewhere on their property that grew to block the deRaismeses' view of Narragansett Bay. Calling those trees a "spite fence" that creates a private nuisance, the deRaismeses filed this action to seek a court order for their removal under R.I. Gen. Laws § 34-10-20 (the "Rhode Island Spite Fence Statute").

Many years before this dispute arose, the lands comprising both the deRaismes and Ferguson properties, as well as parcels in the surrounding area, were held in common ownership. See Mem. of Law in Support of Pl.s' Obj. to Def.s' Mot. for Summ. J. on the Issue of the "Adjoining" Nature of the Parties' Properties and in Support of Pl.s' Cross-Mot. for Partial Summ. J. at 1-7; Exs. 1-17. (hereinafter "Pl.s' Mem. on `Adjoining' Issue"). A 1913 deed references "The Waterway," describing it as a "drift way or road thirty-three (33) feet in width," "subject, however, to all existing rights of way, or other rights, if any, in the said road of the owners of land abutting on the said road or any other persons."Id. at 3; Exs. 1-7. By the 1970's, the Langes owned all of the land currently *Page 3 owned by the parties. Id. at 5; Exs. 1, 10-11. They later conveyed the eastern, waterfront portion of the property (now owned by the Fergusons) to Janet Anderson, including all "right, title and interest in and to said Waterway insofar as the same is adjacent to and coextensive with said parcel."Id. at 5-6; Exs. 1, 14. The Langes conveyed the parcel west of Waterway (now owned by the deRaismeses) to Katherine Aldrich.Id. at 6; Exs. 1, 15. This deed to Aldrich did not convey any interest in and to Waterway, but instead states that the property is bounded on the east by Waterway. Id. The 1974 plat map filed with the Town of North Kingstown depicts Waterway, with what is now the deRaismeses' property to the west of it. Id. at 6; Ex. 13.

The Fergusons later purchased the waterfront property east of Waterway that Anderson had owned (including Waterway) and built their home on it. Id. at 5-6; Exs. 1, 14, 16. In 2001, the owner of the undeveloped parcel of land west of Waterway marketed it for sale. See Pl.s' Mem. of Law in Support of their Obj. to Def.s' Mot. for Summ. J. on the Issue of Whether the Spite Fence Statute Requires a Fence to be Located "On or Near" a Property Line (hereinafter "Pl.s' Mem. on `On or Near' Issue"); Ex. A. The Fergusons, who owned and resided on the waterfront property across Waterway from this parcel, apparently considered buying the parcel either individually or in some form of neighborhood trust.Id. at 2; Ex. D. The deRaismeses outbid the Fergusons, however, and purchased the property in part because of what, at that time, was a clear ocean view of Narragansett Bay over the Fergusons' property. Id. at 2; Ex. C.

The deRaismeses began clearing their property in 2002 in order to build a home. Id. The following year, the Fergusons also did additional landscaping of their property which included the planting of a row of trees on their property along the edge of *Page 4 Waterway and across from the deRaismeses' property.Id. at 2; Exs. C, E and G.2 The trees grew, obstructing the deRaismeses' ocean view, prompting the deRaismeses to approach the Fergusons informally about trimming the trees so as to preserve their view. Id. at 2-3; Exs. C, E, F, G. The Fergusons were unreceptive to this request. Id. at 3; Exs. E, F. Within six years of their initial planting, these trees grew to a height of approximately forty feet, entirely blocking the view of the ocean that the deRaismeses had from their property. Id. at 3; Ex. G.

The deRaismeses allege that, in planting the trees, the Fergusons were motivated by spite, suggesting that the Fergusons planted the trees because they were outbid by the deRaismeses in attempting to purchase the deRaismeses' property. See id. at 4. In support of this allegation, the deRaismeses cite an alleged conversation between the parties during which Eleanor Ferguson suggested that if the deRaismeses wanted a water view, they should pay some of the Fergusons' property taxes. Seeid. at 3; Ex. F.

The deRaismeses filed this action in 2007, alleging causes of action for a private nuisance under Rhode Island's Spite Fence Statute, R.I. Gen. Laws § 34-10-20, and prima facie tort for intentional violation of an unspecified duty owed to plaintiffs.See Complaint, Counts I and II.3 On September 15, 2008, a hearing justice of this Court heard the Fergusons' motion to dismiss the deRaismeses' action on the grounds that a private nuisance action could not lie because the parties' properties were not "adjoining" *Page 5 as a matter of law as required by the Rhode Island Spite Fence Statute. The hearing justice treated that motion to dismiss as a motion for summary judgment and denied it, finding that the parties' properties were adjoining as a matter of law. (Order, Nov. 17, 2008 (Thompson, J.))4

As the hearing justice's decision about the adjoining nature of the parties' properties came in the form of an order denying the Fergusons' motion for summary judgment, the deRaismeses later filed a motion for partial summary judgment to attempt to use the order to obtain an affirmative judgment in their favor on the issue. At a hearing on June 3, 2009, the hearing justice granted the deRaismeses' motion for partial summary judgment, finding that "legally for purposes of the [Spite Fence Statute] they *Page 6

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Bluebook (online)
Deraismes v. Ferguson, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/deraismes-v-ferguson-risuperct-2011.