Gliottone v. Ventetuolo, 87-1493 (1991)

CourtSuperior Court of Rhode Island
DecidedJuly 25, 1991
DocketC.A. No. 87-1493
StatusUnpublished

This text of Gliottone v. Ventetuolo, 87-1493 (1991) (Gliottone v. Ventetuolo, 87-1493 (1991)) 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
Gliottone v. Ventetuolo, 87-1493 (1991), (R.I. Ct. App. 1991).

Opinion

[EDITOR'S NOTE: This case is unpublished as indicated by the issuing court.]

DECISION
Before this Court is an action to quiet title to a parcel of real property located in the City of Cranston, State of Rhode Island. Mary V. Gliottone ("plaintiff") asks this Court to remove a cloud on her title to the subject property. Said cloud is the right of equitable redemption held by the heirs of Antonio Madalene and Antonio Ventetuolo. This Court conducted a nonjury trial with decision reserved. Jurisdiction is pursuant to Rhode Island General Laws 1956 (1984 Reenactment) § 34-16-7.

TRAVEL AND FACTS
The subject property is described as Lot Two (2) on Assessor's Plat thirty-five (35) of the Tax Assessor of the City of Cranston. The parties to this action agree that the subject property consists of approximately nine acres of unimproved woodland that does not abut a public way.

Both parties agree that the plaintiff's father, Joseph Ventetuolo, purchased the subject property from the City of Cranston on October 19, 1956. (Plaintiff's Exhibit 3). The parties concur that Joseph Ventetuolo in turn conveyed the property to himself and his wife Marie, as joint tenants, by deed dated July 28, 1966. (Plaintiff's Exhibit 4). Both parties agree that approximately three and a half years after Marie died, Joseph Ventetuolo conveyed the subject property to himself and plaintiff, as joint tenants, by a deed dated April 29, 1982 (Plaintiff's Exhibit 5). The parties concur that since Joseph Ventetuolo's death, on June 28, 1982, the plaintiff has become the sole owner of record.

Defendants are the heirs at law of Antonio Madalene and Antonio Ventetuolo, who were the owners of record prior to April 19, 1955. Both parties agree that on that date the property was sold to the City of Cranston for nonpayment of taxes assessed December 31, 1950, December 31, 1951, and December 31, 1952. The parties also agree that prior to the tax sale plaintiff's father, Joseph Ventetuolo, and the other heirs of Messrs. Madalene and Ventetuolo held the subject property as tenants in common.

At trial, the plaintiff presented five (5) witnesses and seven (7) exhibits. Plaintiff and her brother, Joseph Ventetuolo testified. Upon offer of proof, the Court found that testimony by her brothers — Donald, Anthony and Edward Ventetuolo — would merely be cumulative of testimony provided by plaintiff and her brother Joseph Ventetuolo. The Court found plaintiff and her brother, Joseph Ventetuolo, to be credible witnesses possessing a great deal of knowledge about the property before and after the tax sale.

Plaintiff and her brother both testified that from 1937 until 1950 their father paid taxes on the subject property. According to plaintiff and her brother, Antonio Madalene and Antonio Ventetuolo were dead by this time and the tax bill was sent to "Uncle Nicola." They claim that their father paid the taxes because "Uncle Nicola" was too poor to make the payments. Plaintiff and her brother testified that their father stopped paying taxes on the property around 1950. They claim their father's decision to stop paying taxes was due to the fact that his name was not on the title to the property. Plaintiff and her brother further testified that after their father received the deed from the City of Cranston in 1956, he paid taxes on the property until his death in 1982. Plaintiff asserts that she has paid the taxes on the property since 1982.

Plaintiff and her brother Joseph also testified regarding use of the property before and after the tax sale. They testified that the subject property does not abut a public way. Both testified that they and their father had visited the property several times each year. During some of those visits trees were cut down, sometimes cuttings were taken from bushes, other times they picnicked or camped. Plaintiff and her brother testified that they did not see anyone else using the property.

Defendants produced five (5) witnesses and eight (8) exhibits at trial. Alberta Spinney, niece of Joseph Ventetuolo, admitted having no knowledge of the property until 1986 when plaintiff's lawyer notified her about the action to foreclose redemption.

Nicholas Ventetuolo, son of Nicola Ventetuolo, testified that his family and Joseph Ventetuolo's family were close and visited every Sunday from 1954 through 1982. Nicholas does not recall mention of the property during those years. He remembers visiting the property but not after 1939. Nicholas recalls his father Nicola receiving financial help from all of the brothers except Joseph.

Arthur Salzillo, the son of Riga Madelane Salzillo, testified that he did not recall hearing about the property until 1986 when the foreclosure action was brought. Since redemption of the property he claims that he has attempted to pay taxes on the property each year, however, plaintiff makes the payment first.

Biagio Pezza testified that he worked with Joseph Ventetuolo (Plaintiff's father) until Joseph retired. After Joseph retired, Biagio claims that he saw Joseph socially. Biagio testified that Joseph never mentioned the property.

Alvira DiFriscio, daughter of the late Antonio Ventetuolo, claims to have contributed money to payment of the property taxes while her father was alive. She does not recall hearing about the property until 1986.

Plaintiff brings this action pursuant to R.I.G.L. § 34-16-7 to quiet title to the subject property. She asserts that since she and her predecessor in title have been in adverse possession of the property for a period greater than ten (10) years the defendants equitable right of redemption under R.I.G.L. § 44-9-21 is extinguished.

Defendants assert that plaintiff is estopped from pursuing this action because she has accepted monies they tendered pursuant to a February 9, 1987 Superior Court order (P.M. No. 86-0845) granting redemption. Defendants also allege that since plaintiff's predecessor in title (her father, Joseph) held the property in common with the other heirs of Messrs. Madalene and Ventetuolo, prior to the tax sale a showing of "ouster" must be made in addition to satisfying the elements of adverse possession.

DISCUSSION
The Court will first address the issue of whether plaintiff is estopped from bringing the instant action. The monies which defendants claim the plaintiff accepted and retained, rather than depositing in the Registry of the Court, are actually attorney fees awarded directly to plaintiff's attorney by a February 9, 1987 Superior Court order. The Court awarded the counsel fees pursuant to a directive in R.I.G.L. § 44-9-29. Since the attorney fees were awarded to plaintiffs attorney, not to plaintiff, she is not required to deposit those monies into the registry of the court to preserve her right to bring this action. Therefore, plaintiff is not estopped from pursuing this action.

A person whose title to real estate originates from a tax collector's deed may bring an action pursuant to R.I.G.L. §34-16-7 to extinguish the right of redemption under § 44-9-21.Sleboda v. Heirs at Law of Harris, 508 A.2d 652, 657 (R.I. 1986). When the claimant or his predecessor in title has been in "open, exclusive, and uninterrupted possession and enjoyment" of the property "for a period of at least ten (10) years" a "rebuttable presumption in law and fact of a lost grant" arises. R.I.G.L. § 34-16-7.

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508 A.2d 652 (Supreme Court of Rhode Island, 1986)
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Bluebook (online)
Gliottone v. Ventetuolo, 87-1493 (1991), Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/gliottone-v-ventetuolo-87-1493-1991-risuperct-1991.