Podren v. Johnson

246 A.2d 817, 104 R.I. 508, 1968 R.I. LEXIS 673
CourtSupreme Court of Rhode Island
DecidedOctober 14, 1968
StatusPublished

This text of 246 A.2d 817 (Podren v. Johnson) 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
Podren v. Johnson, 246 A.2d 817, 104 R.I. 508, 1968 R.I. LEXIS 673 (R.I. 1968).

Opinion

Powers, J.

These are three appeals from identical judgments entered in two separate civil actions which were consolidated for trial to a superior court justice sitting without a jury. The circumstances out of which the litigation arose [509]*509lend substance to the common belief that there are instances where fact is barely, if at all, more credible than fiction.

Some time in January 1963, Peter J. Coelho, a part-time real estate broker, purchased a dwelling house from the state of Rhode Island. Pursuant to that sale, Coelho was required to remove the house from the lot on which it w'as located; said lot having been condemned by the state for highway purposes. Searching for a suitable lot on which the house could be relocated, Coelho observed an unimproved tract of land on the easterly side of Goldsmith Avenue in East Providence. Inspection of the East Providence land records disclosed that included in said unimproved tract was a lot owned by Antonio Gomes and wife. It was designated in said records as lot 86 on assessor’s plat 20, fronting 50 feet on Goldsmith Avenue and containing 5,333 square feet. Coelho and his wife, hereinafter called “Coelhos,” purchased said lot 86 from the Gomes and engaged the Waterman Engineering Company to survey it, having only a general idea as to the lot’s precise location. Waterman’s representative, however, intending to lay out lot 86, erroneously surveyed and staked out lot 87 on assessor’s plat 20. He walked Coelho from stake to stake and the latter, understandably, assumed that it was lot 86 which was being pointed out. Indeed, the surveyor placed two stakes on the lot to indicate generally where the house should be located. The surveyed lot 87 abutted lot 86 to the north and was the property of one Fred Podren, a Massachusetts resident.

Parenthetically, it should be noted that each lot has a frontage of 50 feet on Goldsmith Avenue; that lot 86 is slightly larger, but contains less than 100 additional square feet; that lot 86 which the Coelhos purchased from Gomes was zoned residential; whereas Podren’s lot 87 was zoned commercial and was one of five lots so zoned, owned by Podren.

[510]*510Relying on the location of lot 86, as pointed out by Waterman, the Coelhos applied to the East Providence building inspector and department of public works for permission to excavate a foundation and to move the house purchased from the state. Approval was given and the department of public works assigned street number 47 Goldsmith Avenue, noting in its records that this street number designation corresponded to lot 86 on assessor’s plat 20. A foundation was then dug on lot 87 which was pointed out to the construction company as being- Coelho’s lot 86 and the house was duly placed thereon. The foundation and the house relocated thereon were in fact on lot 87 of said plat. On this state of the city’s records, the tax assessor continued to tax lot 87 to Podren as unimproved property, while the Coelhos were assessed for an improved lot 86.

Later, in the summer of 1963, Mr. Coelho made it known to friends that the property designated as 47 Goldsmith Avenue was available for sale. He showed the property to Mr. and Mrs. Albert C. Johnson who, on September 9, 1963, signed an agreement to purchase the property for $12,800. Simultaneous with the signing of this agreement, the Johnsons made a binder payment of $500. They then applied to the Peoples Savings bank for a mortgage in the amount of $11,300, which mortgage was approved by the bank and insured by the Veterans’ Administration. A title examination, required by the bank and paid for by the Johnsons, was made by the Title Guarantee Company of Rhode Island. It established the validity of Coelhos’ title to lot 86, but the fact that the house had been placed on lot 87 did not come to light.

On November 22, 1963, a closing was held by the title company. The Coelhos conveyed lot 86 to the Johnsons who paid them an additional $1,000, executed a mortgage to the bank as security for an $11,300 note and paid other incidental expenses. The following month, December 1963, [511]*511the Johnsons took possession of the house at 47 Goldsmith Avenue, where they lived without recorded misgivings until some time in April 1965. Then, however, they, the bank and the Coelhos learned that the house was located on the wrong lot. Their source of information was the East Providence Sewer department, which was engaged in work on Goldsmith Avenue. Upon investigation, the Coelhos learned that Waterman Engineering had been aware of the error for at least a year and had advised its insurance company at the time the mistake was discovered.

Meanwhile, the Johnsons engaged counsel who, by letter dated May 14, 1965, demanded rescission by the Coelhos, as well as damages for monies expended in connection with the purchase. Thereupon, Mr. Coelho telephoned a representative of Waterman Engineering Company and was advised that the matter was under investigation.

On July 29, 1965, the Johnsons filed a bill in equity naming the Coelhos, the Peoples Savings bank and the Title Guarantee Company of Rhode Island as respondents. It prayed for rescission of the sale, cancellation of the agreement and an accounting by all respondents, to the end that complainants be made whole. The bill further prayed for injunctive relief against the bank, seeking to restrain it from enforcing the terms of the note, as well as from foreclosing the mortgage.

Notwithstanding the commencement of suit, the John-sons continued to occupy the house at 47 Goldsmith Avenue until December 29, 1965, on which day they quit the premises. The same day their counsel sent written notices to the bank, the title company and to the Coelhos that the Johnsons had moved out and would make the keys available to whichever interested party intended to protect the property. Within a day or two of the Johnsons’ departure, the house sustained substantial damage from fire, the cause of which does not appear. The house, together with house[512]*512hold furnishings had been insured by the Johnsons who, through counsel, filed a claim in excess of $2,000, with the very insurer who, by a remarkable coincidence, also insured Waterman Engineering. Fire damage to the house was claimed to be something in excess of $1,800, but whatever it was, the claim has not been settled.

In connection with the travel of the litigation, it should be noted that the Johnsons commenced their equity suit prior to January 10, 1966, the date on which the current superior court rules of civil procedure became effective. Prior to that date, specifically August 25, 1965, the bank filed its answer admitting execution by the Johnsons of the mortgage and note, and of having advised the Johnsons in April of that year that the house had been placed on the wrong lot; disclaiming any knowledge of how that error occurred; and averring, filed its answer that the mortgage was insured by the Veterans’ Administration, by the terms of which insurance the bank’s rights would be jeopardized if collections on the mortgage note were restrained for more than 90 days. The answer concluded with a prayer for appropriate relief in light of the Veterans’ Administration’s insurance conditions.

On September 9, 1965, a hearing was held in connection with the Johnsons’ prayer for injunctive relief, after which a superior court justice, by decree entered September 24, 1965, enjoined the bank from asserting any claim against the Johnsons pending final determination on the merits of the bill.

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Related

Marandola v. Hillcrest Builders, Inc.
227 A.2d 785 (Supreme Court of Rhode Island, 1967)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
246 A.2d 817, 104 R.I. 508, 1968 R.I. LEXIS 673, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/podren-v-johnson-ri-1968.