Dimond v. Barlow

110 A.2d 438, 82 R.I. 399, 1955 R.I. LEXIS 87
CourtSupreme Court of Rhode Island
DecidedJanuary 11, 1955
DocketEquity No. 2265
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 110 A.2d 438 (Dimond v. Barlow) 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
Dimond v. Barlow, 110 A.2d 438, 82 R.I. 399, 1955 R.I. LEXIS 87 (R.I. 1955).

Opinion

*401 Condon, J.

This is a bill in equity for reformation of a deed on the ground of mutual mistake. The cause is here on the respondents’ appeal from a final decree granting such relief.

The complainants are Royal W. Dimond and Ruth M. Dimond, his wife, and Hugh P. Breen and Julia G. Breen, his wife. The respondents are Alice G. M. Barlow, her brother Hugh J. Murphy, and her sisters Margaret P. Murphy and Hannah M. Kiernan. The controversy between the parties arises out of two deeds of adjacent lots of land made by complainants Dimond. By the first deed executed April 25, 1949 they conveyed to the Breens the following described lot of land:

“That certain parcel of land located on the Westerly side of High Street in said Bristol with all the improvements thereon and designated as Lot 24 on a certain Plat designated as ‘Noyes Plat of House Lots Located in Bristol, Rhode Island, Surveyed and Platted November 1881 by James S. Mason’. Said Lot is recorded in Plat Book 3 at Page 29 and bounds Easterly on said High Street Fifty (50) Feet more or less and carrying that width Westerly for a- distance of One Hundred (100) Feet more or less or however otherwise the same may be bounded and described.”

As alleged in the ninth paragraph of the bill of complaint, by the second deed executed September 6, 1949 the Dimonds conveyed to respondents the following described premises:

“That certain parcel of land with all the improvements thereon located on the westerly side of High Street in Bristol and designated as Lot No. 23 on that plat entitled (Noyes Plat of House Lots located in Bristol, Rhode Island, surveyed and platted November 1881 by James S. Mason) which plat is recorded in the office of the Town Clerk of Bristol in Plat Book 3 at page 29.”

After respondents took possession they caused a survey to be made of their lot and as a result thereof it was disclosed that a dwelling house on Breen’s lot encroached nine *402 feet over the northerly line of such lot, according to the plat, onto respondents’ land. Apparently the Dimonds were unaware of this fact when they made the deed to the Breens and the Breens were equally unaware of it until the survey disclosed it. The same was true at the time the Dimonds conveyed lot 23 to the respondents. However, after the situation of the Breen house was disclosed by the survey and the respondents made it known that they claimed ownership of the area of lot 23 as shown by the plat, complainants Dimond claimed that the description in the deed was a mistake and that it was the real intention of the grantors to sell, and of the grantees to buy, only that portion of lot 23 northerly of the Breen house. The respondents denied any such intention.

In accordance with their claim the Dimonds brought the instant bill of complaint, in which they were joined by the Breens, seeking to have their deed to respondents reformed. After alleging therein that the description in the deed was in error and due to mutual mistake, they further alleged in paragraph 10 that the true description intended by the parties was as follows:

“Beginning at a point in the southwesterly intersection of High Street and Union Street; thence turning and running southerly, bounding easterly on said High Street, sixty (60) feet, more or less; thence turning at an angle of ninety degrees 90° and running westerly, bounding on other land of these grantors, one hundred (100) feet to land now or lately of Bristol Childrens Home; thence turning and running northerly, bounding westerly on said Bristol Childrens Home land, sixty (60) feet, more or less, to said Union Street; thence turning and running easterly, bounding northerly on said Union Street, one hundred (100) feet to the said point or place of beginning; it being the northerly portion of that certain lot or parcel of land laid out and delineated as Lot No. 23 on that plat entitled 'Noyes Plat of House Lots located in Bristol, R.I. Surveyed and Platted November 1881 By James S. Mason’ which *403 said plat is recorded in the office of the Town Clerk of said Bristol in Plat Book 3 at page 29.”

The respondents filed an answer denying such allegation. After a hearing on bill, answer and proof the trial justice filed a rescript on November 28, 1952 in which he expressly found that the description in the deed was the result of mutual mistake and that “the deed should be reformed in accordance with Paragraph 10 of the bill of complaint * * * » 'j'hg complainants, however, failed to submit a decree in accordance therewith. In view of such failure respondents moved that they be required to do so or have their cause dismissed for lack of prosecution.

That motion was duly heard and granted in the superior court on January 30, 1953, but not by the trial justice who heard the case originally. Subsequently in accordance with such decision a decree was entered in which complainants were ordered to submit for entry in the superior court on or before February 13, 1953 a final decree in accordance with the rescript of the trial justice of November 28, 1952 or their bill and all proceedings, orders and decrees thereunder would stand dismissed and vacated as of February 14, 1953.

The complainants did not comply with such order nor did they move to vacate it or appeal from it. Instead, over respondents’ objection, they submitted a form of decree containing a description which they claimed was in accordance with the evidence rather than with the description which they had, under oath, specifically alleged in paragraph 10 of their bill. They argued to the trial justice that he was in error in finding in his rescript that the description in the deed should be reformed in accordance with such allegation. Although this contention amounted to an outright repudiation of that paragraph they did not ask leave to amend it in the superior court nor did they do so here. However, the trial justice agreed with their contention and filed an amended rescript on February 2, 1953. *404 In that rescript he stated that he had made a mistake in finding that the description in the deed should be reformed in accordance with paragraph 10 of the bill. He further stated that, on the testimony before him, the description should be reformed as follows:

“A certain parcel of land with all the buildings and improvements thereon situated in the Town of Bristol, County of Bristol and State of Rhode Island, and bounding northerly on Union Street, easterly on High Street, southerly on other land of these grantors and westerly on land now or lately of Bristol Childrens Home, said southerly boundary line of said parcel of land herein conveyed being perpendicular to said High Street and a distance of three (3) feet northerly from the northern-most foundation line of the house presently occupied by Hugh P. Breen and wife, Julia G. Breen; said parcel of land herein conveyed being the northerly portion of that certain lot or parcel of land laid out and delineated as lot No. 23 on that plat entitled ‘Noyes Plat of House Lots located in Bristol, R.I. Surveyed and Platted November 1881 by James S. Mason' which said plat is recorded in the office of the Town Clerk of said Bristol in Plat Book No. 3 at Page 29.”

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
110 A.2d 438, 82 R.I. 399, 1955 R.I. LEXIS 87, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/dimond-v-barlow-ri-1955.