MacAri v. Marandola

9 A.2d 21, 63 R.I. 369, 1939 R.I. LEXIS 106
CourtSupreme Court of Rhode Island
DecidedNovember 6, 1939
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 9 A.2d 21 (MacAri v. Marandola) 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
MacAri v. Marandola, 9 A.2d 21, 63 R.I. 369, 1939 R.I. LEXIS 106 (R.I. 1939).

Opinion

*370 Moss, J.

This cause in equity is before us upon the appeal of the respondent Domenico Marandola, individually and as administrator of the estate of his deceased wife, Caterina Marandola, from the final decree in favor of the complainants, which was entered in the superior court after a hearing upon the pleadings and evidence.

The original bill of complaint was brought by Gennaro' Macari and Anna Macari, his wife, against the above-mentioned respondent individually and as administrator as aforesaid. In an amended bill of complaint the town treasurer of the town of Johnston in this state was made a party respondent, as representing that town, and he was brought into the cause by the service of a subpoena upon him, and filed an answer.

After the hearing in the superior court, the justice before whom it was held filed a rescript, in which he found certain facts to be true, in substantial accordance with the allegations of the amended bill. From some of the findings so made, which aré amply supported by the evidence, and from our own examination of the exhibits on file and of the *371 transcript of the evidence, we find the following facts to be established.

On May 31, 1927 the respondent Domenico Marandola and his wife Caterina Marandola conveyed- to the complainants, by deed with full covenants of warranty and of freedom from incumbrances, certain real estate in the town of Johnston, which was described in the deed as follows:

“A certain lot or tract of land with all the buildings and improvements thereon situated in the Town of Johnston, County of Providence State of Rhode Island on the northerly side of Plainfield street at the junction with Mill street bounded and described as follows: northerly on the southerly line of Mill street upon which it measures One Hundred twenty-eight and 82/100 (128.82) feet; westerly by land of Antoniele Cinami and wife and land now or formerly of Francesca Martinelli upon which it measures eighty-seven and 71/100 (87.71) feet; southerly on Plainfield street upon which it measures One Hundred ten and 63/100 (110.63) feet.”

For this conveyance the Marandolas received from the complainants the purchase price of $6100, made up as follows: $4100 in cash and $2000 in a promissory note of the complainants, secured by a mortgage deed of the property. The complainants regularly paid the interest on the mortgage note until the respondent Marandola, individually and as administrator of his deceased wife’s estate, demanded from the complainants the payment of the principal of the note and threatened a foreclosure sale under the mortgage.

Then the complainants, in order to pay this mortgage note, tried to negotiate a loan from the Home Owners’ Loan Corporation and found that in order to get such a loan they must procure from a title guaranty company a policy guaranteeing their title to the mortgaged property. This they tried to procure, but were unable to do so, being informed that there was trouble with the property.

*372 At the suggestion of a representative of the Home Owners’ Loan Corporation, they employed an engineer, who made them a plat of the property, evidently after surveying it; and this plat, dated March 1935, was afterwards filed as an exhibit at the hearing of the cause in the superior court on its merits. When this plat was furnished by the engineer, it showed that the two dwelling houses, which were on the land and which evidently constitute a large part of the value of the property, were partly on what was shown as Mill street on the plat.

This plat showed one side of the smaller house, which is very near the northwest corner of the lot, as projecting a little over a foot into that street. It showed one corner of the larger house, which is very near the east corner of the lot, as projecting just about the same distance into that street. It showed also a stone wall, connecting the two houses, and a fence in continuation of the wall to the east corner of the lot, both the wall and the fence being shown as located in the street a little over a foot from its south side. Undisputed evidence at the hearing showed that the wall and fence had been in their present locations from a date prior to 1901.

It was because this plat showed the two houses as projecting into Mill street that the complainants were unable to procure a new loan of money on the security of a mortgage on the property. Consequently and because the respondent Marandola insisted upon the payment of the note held by him and threatened a foreclosure sale under the mortgage which he held, the complainants brought this suit.

In the amended bill the principal relief prayed for is that “the respondents be ordered and directed to do whatever is necessary to deliver to the complainants a marketable title in accordance with the Warranty deed delivered to the complainants on the 31st day of May, A. D. 1927”; that “the *373 respondents be ordered and directed to'remove the buildings on said real estate hereinbefore described away from that portion of the highway on, to wit, Mill Street, in the Town of Johnston upon which a portion of said buildings now are located”; that “the respondents be ordered and directed to build and construct cellars on the real estate aforesaid upon which to place said buildings”; and that until these things are done the respondent Marandola, individually and as administrator of the estate of his deceased wife, be restrained from instituting any foreclosure proceedings by virtue of the above-described mortgage.

A temporary injunction for that purpose had been issued and was still in force when the final decree appealed from was entered. The amended bill contained also a prayer for general relief. Besides the facts above stated as having been found, from sufficient evidence, by the justice before whom this cause was heard, or as found by us from the exhibits and transcript, the following facts are established in one or the other of these ways.

The town council of the town of Johnston on April 12, 1901 named and appointed three men as a committee to survey, bound and mark out a new highway forty feet wide beginning at Plainfield street in Thornton village and thence running westerly to the stock house of the Victoria Mills. A warrant accordingly was issued to the committee and in it they were directed, among other things, to agree with the owners of the land to be taken, for the damages which they would sustain, if any, caused by the layout, and to return a report of their doings and a plat of the highway as laid out by them.

On December 13, 1901, at a meeting of the town council, the committee made a written report of their layout of a street, according to the instructions given them, and returned a plat of it, which was made by Sterry K. Luther, who was then both the town clerk and an engineer. By the *374 report and plat the center of the street was a straight line from a certain location on Plainfield street to the east end of the stock house of the Victoria Mills, and the side lines were described as each twenty feet from and parallel to the center line.

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Bluebook (online)
9 A.2d 21, 63 R.I. 369, 1939 R.I. LEXIS 106, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/macari-v-marandola-ri-1939.