DiCenzo v. Ruscetta

510 A.2d 417, 1986 R.I. LEXIS 482
CourtSupreme Court of Rhode Island
DecidedJune 5, 1986
Docket84-85-Appeal
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 510 A.2d 417 (DiCenzo v. Ruscetta) 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
DiCenzo v. Ruscetta, 510 A.2d 417, 1986 R.I. LEXIS 482 (R.I. 1986).

Opinion

OPINION

WEISBERGER, Justice.

This case comes before us on the appeal of the defendant Anthony Ruscetta, treasurer of the city of Cranston (the city), from a judgment entered against the city in Superior Court. We reverse. The facts are as follows.

On April 18, 1979, plaintiff, Paul A. DiCenzo (DiCenzo), was looking for his son in the Grant Avenue area of Cranston. DiCenzo drove his motorcycle around and stopped to speak with Benjamin DeLillis (DeLillis), who told him that he had seen his son on Grant Avenue. It was approximately 7 p.m., and because of the darkness, visibility was limited. After talking with DeLillis, DiCenzo drove his motorcycle south on Grant Avenue, crossed over Farm-ington Avenue, and drove onto a paved portion of private property that appeared to be a roadway. He had entered at the northern end of the property and was driving approximately twenty to thirty miles per hour. After travelling the length of the property, approximately ninety feet, DiCenzo was severely injured at the southern end. He was found unconscious on a city road that abutted the property. It is impossible to reconstruct the facts surrounding the accident because DiCenzo had no recollection of the occurrence. He remembered talking with DeLillis but could not recall anything after that. The next thing he could remember was being in the hospi *418 tal. The only eyewitness, DeLillis, testified that DiCenzo drove onto the paved area and then went over a railroad-tie retaining wall that was at the southern end of the property. Although he saw the motorcycle’s taillight bounce, he lost sight of DiCenzo and did not see what happened after DiCenzo went over the wall.

The paved area of private property upon which DiCenzo travelled was owned by the abutting landowners who were named as codefendants. The landowners obtained title in 1973 when a city council abandonment resolution was passed pursuant to G.L. 1956 (1968 Reenactment) § 24-6-1. 1 Prior to the 1973 abandonment, the land was unimproved and untraversable owing to a sharp drop in elevation that created a pit. Sometime after gaining title, the owners of the abandoned land built a paved private way with a railroad-tie wall on the southern end. In addition the city placed a yellow sign on the northern end that read, “Not a Through Street.”

On March 12, 1980, DiCenzo filed a complaint against the city and the abutting landowners. The jury found the city negligent but did not find the abutting landowners negligent. Total damages were set at $1,054,328, and the jury apportioned 85 percent of the responsibility on the city and 15 percent on DiCenzo. The verdict was reduced by the appropriate percentage of responsibility to $896,178.80. Pursuant to G.L. 1956 (1969 Reenactment) § 9-31-3, as amended by P.L. 1970, ch. 181, § 2, the Superior Court entered a judgment against the city for $50,000. 2

DiCenzo filed a motion to alter or amend the judgment under Rule 59(e) of the Superior Court Rules of Civil Procedure, and the city filed a motion for new trial. Both motions were denied, and the parties appealed.

While on appeal, a bill entitled “An Act Relating to a Suit against the City of Cran-ston by Paul A. DiCenzo,” number 84-S-0434 (the act), was passed by the Legislature. The act was aimed at permitting DiCenzo to recover the amount of the jury’s verdict ($896,178) plus interest as of the date of the verdict, for a total judgment of $1,335,306.40. An order of remand was entered on July 26, 1984, pursuant to DiCenzo’s motion, to reconsider the final judgment in light of the act.

*419 On remand, a judgment was entered in the sum of $896,178 together with interest, the judgment not to exceed $1,335,306.40. The city appealed this judgment.

The city has advanced several arguments, including a challenge to the act. However, we need only consider two issues: (1) whether the city owed a duty to DiCenzo with respect to the condition of the private way and (2) the question of what effect, if any, posting a “Not a Through Street” sign instead of a “Not a Public Way” sign had on the city’s liability.

DiCenzo’s action was based on the city’s alleged negligent maintenance of the paved area on which he was injured. Two statutes, §§ 24-5-1 and 24-5-13 3 apply to this type of claim. To recover against the city, DiCenzo would have been required to show that these statutory provisions applied and that the city’s violation thereof caused the injuries. Such violation of the statutory duty could constitute negligence.

In order to prove negligence, the plaintiff must establish, inter alia, that the defendant owed him a duty of care. Ryan v. Department of Transportation, 420 A.2d 841, 843 (R.I. 1980); Montuori v. Narragansett Electric Co., 418 A.2d 5, 9 (R.I. 1980). Section 24-5-1 imposes a duty on municipalities to maintain their highways in a safe condition for travelers. DiCenzo attempted to use § 24-5-1 to show that the city owed him a duty. However, no duty arises under § 24-5-1 if the area is privately owned.

In Chapman v. Cook, 10 R.I. 304 (1872), the plaintiff sued a town for an injury received on a private way. The facts in that case were as follows. The plaintiff was travelling along a public road. It was nighttime, and the plaintiff made a right turn onto a private way that she believed was a public street. The private way led to another public highway and passed a schoolhouse. The plaintiff travelled approximately fifty to a hundred feet on the private way when she discovered that she had made a wrong turn. As she tried to turn around, she was thrown from her carriage when the carriage fell into a deep rut that was adjacent to the private way. The town had not put a fence beside the private way, nor had it taken steps to keep travel-lers from turning off the public way onto the private way.

The court held that the town was not liable for the plaintiff’s injuries. Stressing that the accident occurred at least fifty feet from the public street, the court held that the town owed no duty to the plaintiff for injuries suffered upon a private way when the accident and hazard were not on or contiguous to the public street. Id. at 307, 310. The court stated:

“Towns are required to keep their highways in such condition that people exercising ordinary care, reasonably prudent men, may pass along them with their horses, teams, and carriages, with safety and convenience and may with such care be enabled to keep within the line of the highway, without being in danger of falling off, or going off, without the limit of the highway, into danger that may be contiguous to it, as ponds, sloughs, cellars, or excavations, down precipices, against their will, when they would keep within the way as laid. The pit, or the *420 cellar, or the excavation, outside the way, is not, properly speaking, a defect in the way.” Id. at 307.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
510 A.2d 417, 1986 R.I. LEXIS 482, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/dicenzo-v-ruscetta-ri-1986.