Oury v. Annotti

324 A.2d 325, 113 R.I. 506, 1974 R.I. LEXIS 1204
CourtSupreme Court of Rhode Island
DecidedJuly 30, 1974
Docket73-38-Appeal
StatusPublished
Cited by12 cases

This text of 324 A.2d 325 (Oury v. Annotti) 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
Oury v. Annotti, 324 A.2d 325, 113 R.I. 506, 1974 R.I. LEXIS 1204 (R.I. 1974).

Opinion

*507 Joslin, J.

On November 4, 1960, the defendant Domenic Annotti (Domenic) conveyed a parcel of real estate located in Providence (the subject property) to his wife Anita, ■also a defendant. The deed recited that “[t]he consideration is such that no stamps are required,” and was not recorded until January 19, 1961. It is that conveyance which the plaintiff seeks to set aside in this civil action on the ground that it was made in fraud of creditors and therefore void under G. L. 1956 (1969 Reenactment) §6-16-1. The case was heard in two stages before a Superior Court justice sitting without a jury, and it resulted in a judgment for the defendants from which the plaintiff has appealed. 1

At the initial hearing on February 24, 1971, it appeared that shortly before the November 4, 1960 conveyance to his wife, Domenic borrowed $10,000 from plaintiff. That indebtedness was evidenced by a promissory note dated September 6, 1960. Although that instrument recited that the loan was secured by a mortgage on real estate, neither the mortgage nor the real estate was identified. Indeed, what little evidence there was at the first stage of the trial came in the form of either exhibits or testimony from ■Anita, who was the only witness and who was called by plaintiff under the adverse witness statute. The exhibits included the note for $10,000, an exemplified copy of the default judgment which plaintiff obtained against Domenic *508 on that note on September 27, 1966, and a copy of the deed of the subject property from Domenic to Anita. In addition, there was Anita’s testimony. She had little or no knowledge of her husband’s affair-s, admitted that there was no consideration for the husband’s conveyance to her, and made no attempt to tie that 'conveyance to the approximately $7,000 which her husband then owed her for monies borrowed from time to time.

On the basis of this evidence, the trial justice concluded that this interspousal conveyance, while not motivated by an actual intent on the part of Domenic to defraud his creditors, appeared to involve his sole -asset and therefore operated to deprive his creditors of a -right which would have been legally effective bad that conveyance not been made. 2 In those circumstances, -the trial justice said, the transfer was obnoxious -to the law against fraudulent conveyances. He went on to say, however, that entry of final judgment should be deferred pending an accounting between the parties of their respective rights and interests in the subject property.

Following the announcement of that decision- — on which no judgment was ever entered — defendants engaged new counsel. On May 26, 1971, he filed a “Motion For New Trial, To Amend Findings Of Fact An-d/Or To Alter Or *509 Amend Judgment.” 3 Attached to that motion was an ■affidavit referring to records of real estate transactions which purportedly showed that Domenic’s assets consisted of substantially more than the subject property at the time it was conveyed and that he had given plaintiff ¡a mortgage interest as security for the loan.

That motion was heard on June 17, 1971. Following arguments of counsel, the trial justice stated that at the earlier hearing the question of what security, if any, had been given for Domenic’s promissory note had not been pursued, that the limited evidence offered at that hearing tended to show that the subject property was Domenic’s sole substantial asset, and that its transfer to his wife without consideration had ¡apparently made it “substantially impossible” for Domenic to meet his obligations to plaintiff. He then went on to observe that the nature of the mortgage interest securing plaintiff’s loan, and Domenic’s possible ownership of other assets at the critical moment, were matters which might oast doubt upon the validity of his earlier conclusion that Domenic’s conveyance to his wife was fraudulent. While the trial justice noted that much of the evidence proposed to be presented at a new hearing appeared to be part of the public record and thus could have been produced by defendants at the first hearing, he excused the failure to present that evidence because Domenic was then deceased and therefore *510 unavailable .as a witness, and Anita apparently was unaware of the details of the transactions. He concluded that in these circumstances, justice required him to “reopen the matter and hear the new evidence,” and accordingly he granted defendants’ motion, characterizing it as one to reopen.

The second stage of hearings in the case began on September 25, 1972. Documents evidencing Domenic’s ownership of other assets on the critical date were then introduced, and three witnesses were produced whose testimony essentially amplified and explained the documentary evidence. Basically, the following appears.

Domenic acquired the subject property in 1950, but did not record his interest therein until January 19, 1961, when he also recorded the challenged November 4, 1960 conveyance of that property to his wife. Domenic also owned property in the town of Narragansett, acquired by a deed dated April 30, 1947, but not recorded until April 4, 1961. Although that property was then unencumbered, it was mortgaged in November 1961 to a bank for $5,000. Record title to another Narragansett lot was also in Domenic’s name on November 4, 1960, but he had earlier conveyed it to a stranger.

It was also developed at this hearing that Domenic was the holder of a $15,000 second mortgage on the Uptown Theatre property in Providence, and that it was this second mortgage which, although unidentified at the first hearing, was the security transferred by Domenic to plaintiff for the $10,000 loan. While there was no direct evidence of the value of that mortgage interest, there was testimony that in 1960 the owner of the property borrowed $40,000 from a company engaged in the mortgage financing business, which took a first mortgage on the property as security for the loan. There was also testimony that in 1962 the first mortgagee, by then also the holder of the *511 second mortgage, .sold the property for $20,000. In what the trial justice described as a “guarded” opinion, the real estate broker handling that sale testified that the property's fair market value had not changed significantly since 1960.

On the basis of the foregoing evidence, the trial justice found that on the critical date of the conveyance to his wife, Domenic had substantial assets in addition to the subject property, and that the conveyance of that property did not work an injustice upon his creditors. Accordingly, he vacated his prior decision and ordered that judgment be entered for defendants.

In this appeal, plaintiff assumes that the so-called motion to reopen was one for a new trial grounded upon newly discovered evidence. He argues that defendants failed to establish that the evidence upon which they relied in their claim to reopen was unavailable at the first .stage of the trial, and, therefore, that no ground existed for reopening under Colvin v. Goldenberg, 108 R. I.

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Bluebook (online)
324 A.2d 325, 113 R.I. 506, 1974 R.I. LEXIS 1204, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/oury-v-annotti-ri-1974.