Red Gate Motel, Inc. v. Jo-Ann Albanese

CourtSupreme Court of Rhode Island
DecidedJuly 12, 2024
Docket2022-0333-Appeal. and 2022-0303-Appeal.
StatusPublished

This text of Red Gate Motel, Inc. v. Jo-Ann Albanese (Red Gate Motel, Inc. v. Jo-Ann Albanese) 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
Red Gate Motel, Inc. v. Jo-Ann Albanese, (R.I. 2024).

Opinion

Supreme Court

No. 2022-333-Appeal. No. 2022-303-Appeal. (KD 22-335)

Red Gate Motel, Inc. :

v. :

Jo-Ann Albanese. :

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 Telephone (401) 222-3258 or Email opinionanalyst@courts.ri.gov, 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, Robinson, Lynch Prata, and Long, JJ.

OPINION

Justice Long, for the Court. In these consolidated appeals arising from a

landlord-tenant eviction action, the defendant, Jo-Ann Albanese (defendant or Ms.

Albanese), appeals pro se from (1) a Superior Court judgment awarding possession

and damages to the plaintiff, Red Gate Motel, Inc. (plaintiff or Red Gate), (2) the

denial of her motion to vacate that judgment, and (3) the denial of her motion to

reconsider the motion to vacate.

These consolidated cases came before the Supreme Court pursuant to an order

directing the parties to appear and show cause why the issues raised in these appeals

should not be summarily decided. After considering the parties’ written and oral

submissions and reviewing the record, we conclude that cause has not been shown

and that we may decide this appeal without further briefing or argument. For the

-1- reasons set forth in this opinion, we affirm the judgment and orders of the Superior

Court.

Facts and Procedural History

Ms. Albanese provided this Court with incomplete transcripts of the lower

court proceedings and, therefore, the following relevant facts were gleaned from the

pertinent docket entries and documents found in the record.1 On June 28, 2021,

Red Gate sent Ms. Albanese a notice of termination demanding that she vacate

Apartment 2 at 35 Kingsley Avenue in North Kingstown, Rhode Island (the

property), by August 1, 2021. Ms. Albanese failed to vacate the property by

August 1, 2021, and still dispatched a rent payment for the month of August to

Red Gate. After returning Ms. Albanese’s uncashed rent payment, Red Gate filed

an eviction complaint in District Court for possession and monetary damages. At

the close of the District Court proceedings, the trial judge ruled in favor of Red Gate

and entered a judgment against Ms. Albanese for possession and damages. Ms.

1 Ms. Albanese provided this Court with the following documents from the lower court’s records: an excerpt of the transcript of the July 18, 2022 hearing on Ms. Albanese’s motion to dismiss; the trial transcript of the direct examination of Red Gate’s witness, Francis M. Dwyer, on July 18, 2022; an excerpt from the trial transcript of the cross-examination of Francis M. Dwyer on July 19, 2022; the hearing transcript of Ms. Albanese’s motion to vacate the judgment of damages against her on August 11, 2022; and the hearing transcript of Ms. Albanese’s motions to reconsider her motion to vacate and to stay the Superior Court judgment while her appeal was pending with this Court, which were heard on August 23, 2022.

-2- Albanese filed a timely notice of appeal to the Superior Court pursuant to G.L. 1956

§ 9-12-10.1 thereafter.

Prior to the commencement of the trial in Superior Court, Ms. Albanese filed

several motions, including a motion to dismiss the eviction action based on her

argument that Red Gate accepted her August rent payment but did not provide proper

notice to reserve its right to continue with termination of the tenancy under

G.L. 1956 § 34-18-41. The trial justice decided to hold Ms. Albanese’s motion to

dismiss in abeyance and, in doing so, reasoned that whether Red Gate provided

proper notice was a matter of proof.

The eviction trial in the Superior Court began on July 18, 2022, and spanned

five days. At the outset, the trial justice informed Ms. Albanese that she would defer

ruling on her motion to dismiss until she heard all of the evidence. Ms. Albanese

has not provided this Court with the complete transcript of the Superior Court

proceedings; however, she did provide an excerpt from her cross-examination of the

president of Red Gate, Francis M. Dwyer (Mr. Dwyer). During cross-examination,

Ms. Albanese asked about Mr. Dwyer’s prior testimony in District Court wherein he

allegedly testified that he pursued eviction because Ms. Albanese complained about

a neighbor; Mr. Dwyer denied that he ever made such a statement. Thereafter, Ms.

Albanese stated on the record that she had a recording of Mr. Dwyer making the

alleged admission and asked the trial justice for permission to introduce the

-3- recording as evidence. Ms. Albanese then asked to “save” the recording for “when

we come back next time” and the trial justice agreed; however, our abbreviated

record does not indicate whether Ms. Albanese ever entered the recording into

evidence at trial. On July 25, 2022, the fifth and final day of trial, Ms. Albanese

drove herself to the hospital due to an alleged medical crisis, leading to her absence

from that day’s Superior Court proceedings. That same day, in Ms. Albanese’s

absence, the trial justice rendered a bench decision and entered a judgment awarding

possession and damages to Red Gate in the amount of $6,000.

Following the trial justice’s ruling, Ms. Albanese filed a motion to vacate the

Superior Court judgment in favor of Red Gate and asserted that her hospital stay

made it impossible for her to fully and effectively argue her case. At the hearing on

the motion to vacate, Ms. Albanese contended that her primary-care physician faxed

medical reports to the court to explain and confirm her absence from court that day.

After hearing arguments from both parties, the trial justice denied Ms. Albanese’s

motion to vacate the judgment.

Ms. Albanese subsequently filed a motion to reconsider her motion to vacate

and a motion to stay, claiming that she had additional medical evidence to present

to the court. The additional documentation included four exhibits, which were all

submitted for the purpose of establishing that Ms. Albanese’s absence from court on

the final day of trial resulted from her doctor’s recommendation that she go to the

-4- emergency room for evaluation of reported neurological symptoms that may have

possibly indicated a stroke. The trial justice denied Ms. Albanese’s motions and she

filed timely notices of appeal to this Court thereafter.

Standard of Review

This Court applies a deferential standard of review to the factual findings of a

Superior Court justice sitting without a jury. Vilbon v. Vargas, 306 A.3d 446, 448

(R.I. 2023). We will not disturb the trial justice’s findings absent a showing that she

or he overlooked or misconceived material evidence, or clearly erred in coming to

her or his decision. Id. Moreover, we give deference to the inferences and

conclusions drawn by the trial justice from the testimony and evidence presented.

Rhode Island Depositors Economic Protection Corporation v. Bowen Court

Associates, 763 A.2d 1005, 1007 (R.I. 2001).

When reviewing a lower court’s decision denying a motion to vacate a

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