Essex v. Lukas

159 A.2d 612, 90 R.I. 457, 1960 R.I. LEXIS 44
CourtSupreme Court of Rhode Island
DecidedApril 5, 1960
DocketEg. No. 2778
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 159 A.2d 612 (Essex v. Lukas) 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
Essex v. Lukas, 159 A.2d 612, 90 R.I. 457, 1960 R.I. LEXIS 44 (R.I. 1960).

Opinion

*458 Paolino, J.

This is a bill in equity to establish a boundary line, to remove a cloud on title, and for incidental relief. After a hearing in the superior court on amended bill, answer and proof, a final decree was entered denying and dismissing the bill and establishing the true division line. The cause is before us on the complainants’ appeal from such decree.

*459 The narrow issue 'before us relates solely to the location of the true boundary line between the southerly line of complainants’ land and the northerly line of land owned by respondents. The complainants assert that the true boundary line is the center line of a certain hedge, while respondents claim that it is the division line which appears on certain surveys and recorded plats. The accuracy of the division line as it appears on the surveys and recorded plats is not questioned by complainants. Nor are they claiming by adverse possession. Their entire case is based on the contention that the hedge, which is located on an area south of the paper line, so called, has been recognized and acquiesced in for at least fifty years by the owners of both adjoining properties as the true boundary line.

On such issue the trial justice found that the boundary line as defined by the hedge had not been acquiesced in by the succeeding owners of respondents’ land. On the basis of this finding he decided that the true boundary line was not the hedge or the center line thereof but the line as shown on the surveys and recorded plats. The complainants contend that the decree containing such findings is against the law, the evidence and the weight thereof.

It is well settled that when a boundary line between two adjoining properties has been recognized and acquiesced in by the owners thereof for a length of time equal to that prescribed by the statute of limitations as barring a right of entry, both owners are precluded from denying it to be the true boundary line. O’Donnell v. Penney, 17 R. I. 164. But it is equally well settled that although the issue of what are the boundaries of land is a question of law, the determination of where such boundaries are is a question of fact. Di Maio v. Ranaldi, 49 R. I. 204, 206. In a case such as this, depending in the first instance upon the question of whether there has been the required acquiescence, such issue must 'be resolved before the question of where the true line exists is determined. The acquiescence is also *460 an issue of fact depending upon the evidence in each case. Di Maio v. Ranaldi, supra; Ungaro v. Mete, 68 R. I. 419, 426.

Therefore the principal issue before us is whether the trial justice was clearly wrong in finding as a fact that there had been no> acquiescence by the succeeding owners of respondents’ land and that the true boundary line was the same as appears on the surveys and recorded plats. We shall discuss only the evidence which pertains to such issue.

The lots in question are located on the westerly side of Broad street in the city of Cranston. The complainants’ house is at 2073 Broad street. The respondents’ home is on the adjoining lot at 2079 Broad street, the southerly line of complainants’ land being the northerly line of respondents’ lot.

The complainants’ land was formerly part of a larger piece of land which was owned by a relative of the complainant Mrs. Charles Essex. The relative died on December 25, 1947 and under her will she left her homestead cottage and one half of said larger tract of land to Mrs. Essex. Sometime in 1947 or 1948 a survey of the testatrix’s land was made .by an engineering company for the purpose of dividing the land. In August 1948 complainants moved into the house located on the portion of the land which had been left to Mrs. Essex. For thirteen years prior thereto they had lived in a house located in the rear of their present home. On December 8, 1948 she conveyed the property acquired under the will to herself and her husband as joint tenants by a deed which described the premises by metes and bounds.

The will under which complainants’ land was acquired and copies of certain deeds in the chain of title going back to 1817 are in evidence. The hedge in question was not referred to as a monument or as a boundary line in the description in any of the instruments. Such descriptions merely provided that the land presently owned by com *461 plainants bounded southerly on the land now owned by respondents. A similar provision appears in the 1948 deed whereby Mrs. Essex conveyed the property to herself and her husband as joint tenants. In addition the said deed expressly describes the premises conveyed by actual measurements which neither refer to' the hedge nor include the strip of land now in dispute.

The survey made in 1957 for complainants by Clarence F. Lamb, a civil engineer, is also in evidence. Mr. Lamb, who was called as a witness by complainants, testified that the boundary line claimed by respondents is the line shown on the recorded plats; that said line is the same as the division line shown by the survey made in 1947 or 1948; and that the line shown in the 1948 Essex deed is the same as respondents’ fence line, the engineering company survey line, and the line on the recorded plat.

We will now discuss respondents’ land. This is a portion of a plat of land formerly belonging to' Earle H. Williams. He owned this lot and lived in the house now occupied by respondents from 1928 to 1953. In 1929 he had his land surveyed, staked and platted, and recorded said plat plan in the land records of the city of Cranston. A copy of this plan is in evidence. The boundary line claimed by respondents corresponds with the line on said plat.

Mr. Williams conveyed his property to himself and his wife as joint tenants by deed dated October 29, 1935. Thereafter, by deed dated August 21, 1953, they conveyed lots 1 and 2 on the Williams plat to' William F. and Frances A. Ciocys. By deed dated September 6, 1955 the Ciocys conveyed the easterly portion of lot 1 to respondents. No reference to a hedge appears in any of the conveyances. The descriptions in the deeds from Mr. Williams to himself and his wife and from the Ciocys to respondents are by metes and bounds which correspond with respondents’ claim of where the true boundary is.

The evidence which we have heretofore discussed is not *462 in dispute. It is also undisputed that for at least fifty-years a growth referred to as a hedge has existed in the area to the south of complainants’ land and south of the line which respondents claim is the true boundary line. The so-called hedge is described in the evidence as a growth of false spirea, “a native plant which grows very luxuriantly and is apt to take over an area quite quickly unless it is properly controlled.” The origin of the hedge is unknown. There is no evidence as to when or by whom it was planted or whether it was a wild growth. The hedge extended from Broad street for about two thirds of the way toward the rear where there was an opening sufficient for a person to walk through.

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Bluebook (online)
159 A.2d 612, 90 R.I. 457, 1960 R.I. LEXIS 44, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/essex-v-lukas-ri-1960.