Patrick Conley, Esquire v. Crown Realty, LLC, Brenco Realty, LLC, Town of North Providence

CourtSupreme Court of Rhode Island
DecidedJanuary 17, 2020
Docket19-66
StatusPublished

This text of Patrick Conley, Esquire v. Crown Realty, LLC, Brenco Realty, LLC, Town of North Providence (Patrick Conley, Esquire v. Crown Realty, LLC, Brenco Realty, LLC, Town of North Providence) 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
Patrick Conley, Esquire v. Crown Realty, LLC, Brenco Realty, LLC, Town of North Providence, (R.I. 2020).

Opinion

January 17, 2020

Supreme Court

No. 2019-66-Appeal. (PM 18-3987)

Patrick T. Conley :

v. :

Crown Realty, LLC, et al. :

NOTICE: This opinion is subject to formal revision before publication in the Rhode Island Reporter. Readers are requested to notify the Opinion Analyst, Supreme Court of Rhode Island, 250 Benefit Street, Providence, Rhode Island 02903, at Tel. 222-3258 of any typographical or other formal errors in order that corrections may be made before the opinion is published. Supreme Court

Present: Suttell, C.J., Goldberg, Flaherty, Robinson, and Indeglia, JJ.

OPINION

Justice Flaherty, for the Court. The defendant, Crown Realty, LLC, appeals from a

decree foreclosing its right of redemption to real property in North Providence that was the subject

of a tax sale in 2017. The appeal came before the Court for oral argument pursuant to an order

directing the parties to show cause why the issues raised in this appeal should not summarily be

decided. After hearing the arguments of counsel and after thoroughly examining the record, we

conclude that cause has not been shown and that this case may be decided without further briefing

or argument. For the reasons set forth in this opinion, we affirm the decree of the Superior Court

foreclosing Crown Realty’s right of redemption.

I

Facts and Travel

The facts in this case leave little room for dispute. Crown Realty was the owner of real

property located at 2 Tag Drive in North Providence (the property). The property was used as a

garage at which Crown Realty stored automobiles in connection with its towing business. On May

-1- 18, 2017, the property was sold to the plaintiff, Patrick Conley, at a tax sale that was conducted by

the Town of North Providence. On June 6, 2018, Mr. Conley, citing a failure of any interested

party to redeem the property, filed a petition to foreclose the right of redemption. 1 One month

later, on July 6, 2018, Duane Souza, the owner of Crown Realty, received a citation sent by Mr.

Conley via certified mail which explained that all concerned parties would have twenty days after

receipt of the citation to respond to the petition filed by Mr. Conley. The citation also explained

that should there be a failure to respond to the petition within twenty days of the receipt of the

citation, the petition would “be taken as confessed[,]” and Crown Realty would “be forever barred

from contesting said petition or any decree entered thereon.” The parties agree that Crown Realty

did not file an answer or otherwise object within the twenty-day period.

On August 3, 2018, Mr. Conley filed a motion seeking a decree pro confesso. 2 Then, on

August 9, Mr. Souza called Mr. Conley’s office to inquire into the cost of redeeming the property.

In response, a paralegal at Mr. Conley’s office sent an e-mail to Mr. Souza with a redemption

statement indicating that $11,676.72 would be required to redeem the property, and noting:

“INTEREST GOOD UNTIL August 18, 2018.” The statement also warned that “Suit Will

Continue, and Judgment May Enter Against You, Unless Full Payment is Received[.]”

Interestingly, Mr. Souza paid $7,995 to the Town of North Providence on August 10, 2018, which

had the effect of paying the unpaid taxes on the property from the year 2017, to which Mr. Conley’s

petition to foreclose did not relate.

1 The plaintiff also named Brenco Realty, LLC and the Town of North Providence as parties to the petition; those parties are not before the Court in this appeal. 2 Pro confesso means “having confessed or admitted liability, as by failing to appear when required.” Black’s Law Dictionary 1459 (11th ed. 2019).

-2- Then, on August 16, perhaps realizing his predicament, Mr. Souza obtained a cashier’s

check for $11,676.72, the amount indicated in the redemption statement form that he had received

via e-mail from Mr. Conley’s office. However, Mr. Souza did not deliver the check to Mr.

Conley’s office until August 20, he asserts, due to a death in the family. The check, however, was

not accepted when it was proffered on August 20. Thereafter, on August 28, Crown Realty filed

a response to Mr. Conley’s petition to foreclose, along with a memorandum objecting to Mr.

Conley’s motion for a decree pro confesso.

A justice of the Superior Court heard argument in September 2018 regarding Mr. Conley’s

motion and Crown Realty’s objection. After allowing the parties to submit supplemental briefs,

the justice issued a bench decision in November 2018, in which she determined that Crown

Realty’s right of redemption was barred. In that decision, she determined that this Court’s decision

in Conley v. Fontaine, 138 A.3d 756 (R.I. 2016), was largely controlling and did not favor Crown

Realty’s request to redeem after the twenty-day period had elapsed. She also determined that she

was unable to rule on whether the e-mail containing the redemption statement sent by Mr. Conley’s

paralegal had created contractual rights between the parties, because the petition before her was

filed pursuant to the tax-sale statute. One week later, a final decree was entered foreclosing the

right of Crown Realty to redeem the property. Crown Realty timely appealed.

On appeal before this Court, Crown Realty makes two arguments. 3 It argues that this

Court’s holding in Fontaine should not apply to this case because of the redemption statement that

Mr. Conley’s paralegal sent to Mr. Souza. This, says Crown Realty, amounts to “a misleading

3 We note that Crown Realty makes a third argument, that Mr. Conley should be estopped from his right to a decree pro confesso due to, in Crown Realty’s words, “Conley’s intentional or negligent misrepresentation.” Because we find this argument to be wholly without merit, we do not address it.

-3- representation as to when the property owner must redeem the tax title.” Crown Realty also argues

that, even if Mr. Conley was entitled to a decree pro confesso, an implied contract existed

obligating Mr. Conley to convey the property back to Crown Realty.

II

Discussion

At the core of this appeal is this Court’s decision in Fontaine. In that case, we explained

certain aspects of chapter 9 of title 44 of the general laws related to tax sales. Fontaine, 138 A.3d

at 760. We said in that case that, under that chapter, after the appropriate amount of time has

passed since a purchaser acquired property at a tax sale, the purchaser “may file a petition in

Superior Court to foreclose upon any interested party’s right of redemption.” Id. (quoting Izzo v.

Victor Realty, 132 A.3d 680, 685 (R.I. 2016); citing § 44-9-25(a)). We further explained that, if

the purchaser chooses to foreclose on the right of redemption, he must “send notice to all interested

parties[.]” Id. (quoting Izzo, 132 A.3d at 685; citing § 44-9-27). Moreover, “[o]nce notice of the

petition has been provided, ‘any interested party may redeem the property by filing an answer to

the petition along with an offer to redeem on or before the specified return day, which may be

fixed no sooner than twenty days after the issuance of the notice.’” Id. (quoting Johnson v. QBAR

Associates, 78 A.3d 48, 52 (R.I. 2013); citing § 44-9-29). And finally, we explained that “if an

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Patrick Conley, Esquire v. Crown Realty, LLC, Brenco Realty, LLC, Town of North Providence, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/patrick-conley-esquire-v-crown-realty-llc-brenco-realty-llc-town-of-ri-2020.