Riverside Burial Society of Pawtucket v. Chitwood, 99-2713 (2003)

CourtSuperior Court of Rhode Island
DecidedJanuary 10, 2003
DocketC.A. No. P.C. 99-2713
StatusPublished

This text of Riverside Burial Society of Pawtucket v. Chitwood, 99-2713 (2003) (Riverside Burial Society of Pawtucket v. Chitwood, 99-2713 (2003)) 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
Riverside Burial Society of Pawtucket v. Chitwood, 99-2713 (2003), (R.I. Ct. App. 2003).

Opinion

DECISION
This case is before the Court for decision following a non-jury trial on a complaint by plaintiff Riverside Burial Society of Pawtucket that seeks to establish title to a portion of land owned by defendants J. Martin Chitwood1 and Faye B. Zuckerman under theories of adverse possession and acquiescence based on a longstanding irregular line of ten to twelve Canadian hemlock trees. By counterclaim, the defendants seek a declaratory judgment that their deed for the subject premises, that comports with the surveyed boundary line agreed to by the parties, is a valid and complete description of the property and that the adverse possession and acquiescence claims advanced by plaintiff are invalid. They also seek damages against plaintiff for alleged slander of title and intentional interference with contractual relations.

For the reasons set forth in this Decision, this Court resolves the disputed title question in favor of the defendants and grants their request for a declaratory judgment. This Court denies plaintiff's claims based on the theories of adverse possession and acquiescence and also denies defendants' claims for slander of title and intentional interference with contractual relations.

Facts/Travel
Plaintiff, Riverside Burial Society of Pawtucket ("plaintiff"), owns residential property located at 745 Pleasant Street in the City of Pawtucket, Rhode Island that it leases to third parties and which is designated as Lot 857 on Tax Assessor's Plat 66 (Lot 857). Plaintiff is a Rhode Island corporation that operates the Riverside Cemetery across the street from its residential rental property. It acquired the residential property in 1983 by deed from May-Day Realty Corporation. (Pl.'s Ex. 2D). Both of those corporations are family businesses that were operated previously by Joseph M. Davis — the father of the President and General Manager of the plaintiff corporation, Polly Stiles ("Stiles"). Stiles lives further down Pleasant Street from plaintiff's residential rental property.

Defendants J. Martin Chitwood ("Chitwood") and Faye B. Zuckerman ("Zuckerman") (collectively "the defendants") own undeveloped property that abuts the plaintiff's property and that is designated as Lot 954 on Tax Assessor's Plat 66 (Lot 954). The northerly portion of plaintiff's real estate borders the southerly portion of defendants' real estate, with both lots bordering Pleasant Street to the east.

The property in dispute in this case is a narrow strip of defendants' land measuring approximately six feet wide by one hundred fourteen feet long that runs along the northern edge of plaintiff's property. There are approximately ten to twelve Canadian hemlock trees located in an irregular line on the disputed portion of the property at issue. Stiles believes that these trees were planted by her late father, Joseph M. Davis, sometime after the 1938 hurricane because similar trees exist in the cemetery. The trees are estimated to be between 50 and 60 years old. Lot 954 (defendants' undeveloped property) and Lot 955 (residential property that is currently owned by Charles Donmoyer (Donmoyer") and that borders defendants' Lot 954 to the north) originally were part of a larger parcel of land owned for a substantial period of time by the Nickerson family. (Donmoyer Dep. 6/28/99 at 16-17.) The Nickerson family was very friendly with the neighboring Davis family in the years before and after the trees were planted. In 1987, Nancy Nickerson sold these two properties as "buildable lot[s]" to Donmoyer. Id. at 17. At the time of this sale, there was a two-family dwelling on Lot 955, which was designated as 733 Pleasant Street. Id. at 18. From 1987 to 1994, Donmoyer resided in the house located at 733 Pleasant Street that he still owns. Id. In August 1990, Donmoyer sold Lot 954 (the undeveloped lot) to the defendants, although he maintained a right of first refusal to repurchase the property on terms identical to those governing the sale to defendants. (Pl.'s Ex. 2B.) Both the deed that reflects this conveyance and the deed conveying the adjacent residential lot to plaintiff in 1983 make no reference to the tree line as the boundary line between Lot 954 (defendants' undeveloped lot) and Lot 857 (plaintiff's property). (Pl.'s. Ex 2C). Donmoyer represented to the defendants at the time of the sale that the undeveloped lot was a buildable lot.

The westerly edge of Lot 954 (defendants' undeveloped property) abuts Lot 957 on Tax Assessor's Plat 66 (Lot 957) — — land located at 26 Newman Road in Pawtucket, Rhode Island where defendants resided from 1989 until 1998. The northern boundary of Lot 957 (defendants' former residential property) also abuts the southern boundary of plaintiff's residential property (Lot 857) with both lots bordering Newman Road to the west.

Around June 1989, after she learned that defendants had purchased the abutting residential property on Newman Road (Lot 957), Stiles ("Stiles") hired a surveyor to survey the Newman Road line of Lot 857 (the residential property owned by plaintiff). At this time, Stiles proceeded to place a new marker to divide plaintiff's property from defendants' abutting property, and she told the defendants that she was doing so because the prior marker had been disturbed. Stiles did not inform the defendants at this time that she considered the hemlock trees to be located on plaintiff's property.

In 1995, Zuckerman and Stiles had a conversation regarding defendants' plan to install a stockade fence on their property. Zuckerman informed Stiles that the placement of the fence was meant to prevent defendants' young children from running out onto Newman Road. The defendants installed a stockade fence that ran several feet from the boundary line between the properties of the parties, as indicated by survey, and well inside the line of hemlock trees.

In the fall of 1997, the defendants decided to sell both their residential property (Lot 957) and their adjacent undeveloped property (Lot 954). Defendants approached Donmoyer to ascertain whether he wanted to exercise his right of first refusal to purchase the property. (Donmoyer Dep. at 33.) Lacking the necessary financing for the purchase, Donmoyer was unable to exercise his right of first refusal. Id. at 28. After several unsuccessful months of trying to market the properties together, the defendants opted to market the two lots separately. Within days, on August 8, 1998, defendants entered into a purchase and sale agreement with Thomas Getz and Betty Finn for the sale of their residential property (Lot 957).

Subsequently, in January 1999, defendants hired R.C. Cournoyer Enterprises, Inc. to survey their remaining undeveloped lot (Lot 954). During an on-site visit, Mr. Cournoyer met Stiles. It was during this meeting that Stiles learned that the defendants were conducting a survey of the property in anticipation of the sale of the lot. It also was at this time that Stiles said she first discovered that defendants' undeveloped property (Lot 954) was separate from their residential property (Lot 957).

Within the same month, Stiles encountered at the site two other men who identified themselves as Douglas Cuddeback (Cuddeback), the prospective buyer of defendants' undeveloped property (Lot 954), and his builder. Cuddeback and his builder told Stiles that the survey conducted a month before that date indicated that the hemlock trees were located on defendants' undeveloped lot (Lot 954). Moreover, Cuddeback stated that he intended to cut down the trees after purchasing the property because the trees obscured the lot.

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Riverside Burial Society of Pawtucket v. Chitwood, 99-2713 (2003), Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/riverside-burial-society-of-pawtucket-v-chitwood-99-2713-2003-risuperct-2003.