Norton v. Courtemanche

798 A.2d 925, 2002 R.I. LEXIS 150, 2002 WL 1277975
CourtSupreme Court of Rhode Island
DecidedJune 7, 2002
Docket2001-63-APPEAL
StatusPublished
Cited by13 cases

This text of 798 A.2d 925 (Norton v. Courtemanche) 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
Norton v. Courtemanche, 798 A.2d 925, 2002 R.I. LEXIS 150, 2002 WL 1277975 (R.I. 2002).

Opinion

OPINION

PER CURIAM.

This is a boundary dispute over certain abutting parcels of real estate located in the Town of Jamestown (town) on the island of Conanicut. The plaintiffs, Claire M. and Catherine Norton, appeal from a Superior Court judgment entered in favor of the defendants, George and Jeannine Courtemanehe. William P. Norton (decedent) originally filed this action, but he died during its pendency. The Superior Court substituted Claire M. and Catherine Norton, co-administrators of his estate, as party plaintiffs. The complaint sought declaratory and injunctive relief, as well as damages, over a boundary dispute with the defendants. The defendants also appeal from the Superior Court’s judgment in favor of the third-party defendants, SAI Surveying Company (SAI) and Bank of Newport (Bank), on the defendants’ third-party complaint against them for negligence and breach of contract, respectively.

The plaintiffs argue on appeal that the trial justice erred in excluding certain statements of decedent from evidence. They also suggest that she erred in finding that a cut-grass line was an insufficiently permanent boundary to support plaintiffs’ claim of adverse possession. Finally, they posit error in her finding that the plus-or-minus notations on the plat map in question should be integrated with the adjoining properties in such a way as to provide plaintiffs’ lot with merely a remainder of the property left to it after first accounting for the fixed boundaries of the adjoining properties. On their appeal, defendants *928 argue that the trial justice erred in granting third-party defendants’ motion for a judgment as a matter of law on defendants’ third-party claims. Because of our resolution of plaintiffs’ appellate arguments and because defendants failed to object at trial to the granting of the dismissal motions in question, we need not address the merits of defendants’ contentions on their appeal from the judgment dismissing their third-party claims. A single justice of this Court ordered the parties to show cause why the issues presented in their respective appeals should not be summarily decided. Because they have not done so, we proceed to decide the appeals at this time.

Facts and Travel

At issue in this case is the property boundary between plaintiffs’ and defendants’ abutting Jamestown properties. The Boy Scouts of America originally owned all the property in question. In October 1941, a registered engineer subdivided the property and memorialized this division in a “plat map” recorded in the town’s land-evidence records. The subdivision was bounded on the west by Beaver-tail Road and on the east by a body of water known as Hull Cove. In 1981, decedent purchased his land — lot No. 22 on the plat map — while defendants purchased their land — lot No. 20 on the plat map, abutting decedent’s lot — in 1992. The plat map described lot No. 22 as measuring 100 feet plus (100' +) on the western edge, 100 feet on the eastern boundary, 136 feet plus or minus (136' ±) on the northern edge, and 140 feet plus or minus (140' ±) on the southern edge. The defendants’ property is shown as measuring 100 feet square. After they purchased lot No. 20, defendants began to build a house on the lot. To accomplish this task, they hired SAI to perform a survey of the land and to stake out their property’s boundaries. Although decedent almost immediately objected to SAI’s location of the boundary line, he took no legal action until filing this suit in 1993, after defendants had finished building their home. The decedent alleged in his complaint that defendants’ house encroached on his property, as established by the plat map, and that even if the SAI survey line represented the original property line, the doctrine of adverse possession — via decedent’s “mowed occupation line” — entitled him to the disputed strip of land.

The trial justice, after receiving evidence at the trial, issued a written decision in which she found that the SAI property line reflected the actual boundary between lots No. 22 and No. 20. She decided that the plat map’s use of the “plus-or-minus” designation for decedent’s northern and southern boundaries “suggests that there could be a variance from those dimensions [136' ±, and 140' ± respectively].” The plaintiffs presented no evidence that the engineer who prepared the plat used the plus-or-minus designation to indicate a negligible deviation. Therefore, the trial justice determined that the drafter of the original plat map intended to estimate the size of decedent’s land through the use of the plus-or-minus designations, and thus that map defined the size of his property as a remainder of the other defined properties that abutted his lot, none of which was described with the disputed plus-or-minus designations.

Having determined that the SAI survey line represented the actual boundary between lots No. 22 and No. 20, the trial justice turned her attention to decedent’s claim of adverse possession. The plaintiffs attempted to establish through various witnesses that, whatever the boundary line may have been (as reflected on the plat map or the SAI survey), decedent had adversely possessed a certain disputed *929 ten-foot swath of land by virtue of having regularly mowed the grass in that area of the property to a particular point (the mowed-grass line). During the testimony of Charles Cooper (Cooper), a friend of decedent’s since the 1940’s, plaintiffs attempted to introduce certain statements that decedent allegedly communicated to Cooper about the boundary line. Cooper testified that he visited decedent in December 1992, and that, during this visit, decedent made some statements to Cooper about SAI’s staking of the property line. 1 The plaintiffs’ counsel argued that decedent’s statements qualified as exceptions to the hearsay rule under Rule 804(c) of the Rhode Island Rules of Evidence. Because decedent had notified defendants of his objection to the staking of the property line before his alleged statements to Cooper, the trial justice found that there was “insufficient evidence of good faith” to allow the admission of the statements. As a result, plaintiffs never introduced the contested statements into evidence.

In addition, the trial justice found that decedent’s adverse-possession claim lacked sufficient evidentiary support. The trial justice concluded that there was no doubt that the decedent and his predecessors in interest regularly mowed the lawn on the eastern side of the property — abutting lot No. 20 — using a telephone pole as a guide. The trial justice found, however, that plaintiffs’ witnesses were unclear about where the cut-grass line lay, and that, notwithstanding the telephone pole, the line apparently had shifted over the years from east to west. Moreover, according to the trial justice, plaintiffs’ witnesses never would have been able to identify the cut-grass line’s location without plaintiffs’ counsel’s leading questions.

Given the tenor of this inconclusive testimony, the trial justice ruled that “plaintiffs have failed to satisfy this Court, under the rigorous clear and convincing evidence standard, that the boundary line between their property and that of defendant has been established by the doctrine of adverse possession * *

On appeal, plaintiffs allege that the trial justice committed three errors. 2

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Bluebook (online)
798 A.2d 925, 2002 R.I. LEXIS 150, 2002 WL 1277975, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/norton-v-courtemanche-ri-2002.