Panciera v. Ashaway Pines

CourtSuperior Court of Rhode Island
DecidedFebruary 9, 2010
DocketC.A. No. WC07-0836
StatusPublished

This text of Panciera v. Ashaway Pines (Panciera v. Ashaway Pines) 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
Panciera v. Ashaway Pines, (R.I. Ct. App. 2010).

Opinion

DECISION
This matter is before the Court because Defendant Ashaway Pines, LLC ("Ashaway"), seeks to establish the boundaries of a laneway (the "Laneway"), which provides access to a seventy-three acre parcel it owns in the Town of Hopkinton, Rhode Island The Laneway, roughly 500 feet long, is comprised mostly of fill and runs through swampland that abuts property owned by Plaintiffs Kenneth and Joanne Panciera ("the Pancieras"). On April 29, 2009, this Court granted Ashaway's partial motion for summary judgment and held that Ashaway owned the Laneway by adverse possession, but that "[t]his matter shall proceed to determine the precise bounds of the Laneway and on Defendant's counterclaims." During the trial, Ashaway asserted the Laneway is comprised of all the land running northerly from Route 216 in Hopkinton (the "highway"), to the southwest corner of the land described in its deed, plus the thin sliver of swamp between the western edge of the Laneway and the eastern boundary of the abutting owners. Specifically, Ashaway contends the boundaries of the Laneway are established under the doctrines of boundary by acquiescence, adverse possession and the statutory presumption of "lost grant" coupled with "strip and gore." The Pancieras contend they are the deeded owners of the property abutting the Laneway to the east, and also claim to maintain a possessory interest in the thin sliver of swamp that abuts the western edge of the Laneway Jurisdiction is pursuant to G L 1956 §§ 8-2-13 and 8-2-14 For the reasons set forth *Page 2 herein, this Court holds the Laneway's eastern toe of slope forms the boundary between Ashaway's and the Pancieras' respective properties to the east, and declines to establish the exact parameters of the Laneway's boundary to the west

I
Facts and Travel
The Pancieras brought this action on December 19, 2007, seeking to enjoin Ashaway from trespassing on the Laneway, to quiet title to the Laneway in themselves, a declaration that their property includes the Laneway, and damages for slander of title On December 19, 2007, this Court issued a temporary restraining order barring Ashaway from altering the Laneway or proceeding with Ashaway's application for a special-use-permit before the Hopkinton Zoning Board. On February 8, 2008, this Court denied the Pancieras' prayer for a preliminary injunction Subsequently, on November 17, 2008, Ashaway filed a counterclaim seeking to quiet title in the laneway in itself, based upon theories of adverse possession, boundary by acquiescence, and lost grant. On April 29, 2009, this Court granted Ashaway's partial motion for summary judgment and held Ashaway had title to the Laneway by adverse possession The Court dismissed the Pancieras' complaint, but decided "[f]urther proceedings are necessary, however, in order to determine the precise bounds of the laneway."

On October 20, 21, 26, 27, 29, 30, 2009, and November 2, 3, 4, 9, 2009, this matter was tried before the Court sitting without a jury to determine the exact boundaries of the Laneway At trial, the following facts were elicited from testimony and numerous exhibits.1 *Page 3

1. The Property2

Ashaway owns a parcel of land in Hopkinton, Rhode Island ("the Property"), recorded as Lots 7 and 7C on Hopkinton Tax Assessor's Plat 3. The Property has no road access except for a long, artificial causeway composed of fill running through a swamp The Property has the configuration of a saucepan with the "pot" portion of the tract containing approximately seventy-three acres. The "pot" has no deeded access and is landlocked. The "panhandle," the Laneway, provides the only access to the lot and is a man-made elevated causeway, which runs through a swamp.

The Property is a portion of a three hundred thirty-seven acre tract, which Weeden Barber, Jr ("Barber") took title to in 1834 by deed from William and Caroline Thurston3 A survey from the early 1800s depicts the Property, the southwesterly portion of which was bounded westerly by the land of Joseph D. Kenyon and southerly by "the highway." In 1831, Joseph D Kenyon acquired title to the land abutting the western boundary of the Thurston tract and the northern edge of the highway ("the Joseph Kenyon tract"). After these conveyances, the southeast corner of the Joseph Kenyon tract abutted the southwest corner of the Thurston *Page 4 conveyance to Barber

Subsequently, on June 7, 1855, Barber conveyed a landlocked forty acre portion of this land to Nathaniel H. Cook ("Cook")4 The deed does not discuss any possible ingress or egress to the Property, and the metes and bounds description does not describe the Laneway In 1861, Cook took title to the northern thirty-one acres of the Property from Henry Clark. This conveyance also does not mention any potential avenues of ingress of egress to the Property. As a result, as of 1861, the Property existed in its current seventy-three acre condition, without any deeded right-of-way for ingress or egress

Thereafter, in April 1881, Cook conveyed the Property to James Cook.5 Then, in March 1884, James Cook conveyed the Property to Jane Cook6 In February 1894, Jane Cook conveyed the Property to Gurdon Cook.7 Later, in December 1902, Gurdon Cook conveyed the Property to Frederick and Amanda Peterson.8 In July 1912, Frederick and Amanda Peterson conveyed the *Page 5 Property to Pietro and Regina Panciera9 In November 1942, Louis Panciera, Antone Manetti, and John Ferguson as Executor of the Will of Regina Panicera executed separate deeds to convey their respective interest in the Property to George and Nellie Manfredi10 Subsequently, in 1979, George and Nellie Manfredi conveyed all of the Property, except for the one-acre lot where the original farmhouse sits, 11 to Nancy Vuono.12 Sometime during or after Nancy Vuono's ownership of the Property, the Laneway came to be known as "Vuono Place." In July 2000, Nancy Vuono conveyed the Property to a limited liability company, Vuono Place, LLC.13 In October 2000, Sarah Land Company, LLC f/k/a Vuono Place, LLC formally conveyed the Property to Sarah Land Company, LLC.14 In October 2004, Sarah Land Company, LLC conveyed the Property to Ashaway.15 No recorded document from a third-party purports to grant a right-of-way to the Property, and no recorded deed of an abutting property states that it is subject to a right-of-way benefiting the Property

2. The Eunice Kenyon Tract *Page 6

In 1849, Barber conveyed a parcel in the southwest corner of his estate to Eunice Kenyon, which was bounded westerly by the land of Joseph Kenyon and southerly by the highway (the "Eunice Kenyon tract").

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Bluebook (online)
Panciera v. Ashaway Pines, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/panciera-v-ashaway-pines-risuperct-2010.