Robert Stratoberdha v. Clements Properties, LLC

CourtSupreme Court of Rhode Island
DecidedJuly 3, 2025
Docket2024-0017-Appeal.
StatusPublished

This text of Robert Stratoberdha v. Clements Properties, LLC (Robert Stratoberdha v. Clements Properties, LLC) 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
Robert Stratoberdha v. Clements Properties, LLC, (R.I. 2025).

Opinion

Supreme Court

No. 2024-17-Appeal. (NC 13-437)

Robert Stratoberdha et al. :

v. :

Clements Properties, 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 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, and Long, JJ.

OPINION

Justice Goldberg, for the Court. The plaintiff, Robert Stratoberdha, is

before the Court on appeal from a Superior Court order approving a settlement

agreement despite his objection.1 Critically, however, Robert failed to timely appeal

any of the three orders rendered in the Family Court during the divorce proceedings

from his then-wife Etleva, which included the appointment of a Commissioner, the

authorization to effectuate the sale of the marital domicile, and the adoption of the

settlement agreement. Accordingly, the Family Court decrees are final and the

1 In order to avoid confusion, we refer to the individual plaintiffs, Robert and Etleva Stratoberdha, by their respective first names, and we refer to the plaintiffs collectively by their last name, the Stratoberdhas. We intend no disrespect. Although the Stratoberdhas are both plaintiffs, on appeal, they take divergent positions; Robert is the appellant and Etleva is an appellee. -1- Superior Court’s reliance thereon may not be challenged in connection with the

ministerial act of approving the settlement agreement. For the reasons explained

below, we affirm.

Facts and Travel

In October 2013, the Stratoberdhas, by and through legal counsel, filed an

action in the Superior Court (the Superior Court action), naming defendants

Clements Properties, LLC; Robert P. Rucando; and various officials of the Town

of Portsmouth, sued in their official capacities. The Superior Court action stemmed

from the Stratoberdhas’ purchase of real estate located at 18 Peggy Lane in

Portsmouth, Rhode Island, which abutted real property owned by Clements

Properties. The Stratoberdhas sought a jury trial and alleged that Clements

Properties was responsible for a continuous trespass onto 18 Peggy Lane by

“creating an illegal and unapproved drainage structure,” which discharged water

onto their property; that Rucando failed to disclose the flooding issue properly and

fully when he sold 18 Peggy Lane to the Stratoberdhas in 2008; and that the Town

neglected to enforce certain ordinances relating to the illegal drainage system.

Nearly eight years later, the Superior Court action endured, but the

Stratoberdhas’ marriage did not. In October 2021, Etleva filed a complaint for

divorce in the Family Court, and Robert counterclaimed (the Family Court action).

In the course of the divorce proceeding, the Family Court issued various orders,

-2- three of which concerned the settlement agreement that was entered in the Superior

Court and are pertinent to this appeal.

On March 24, 2022, a Family Court trial justice issued an order appointing

Attorney Barbara E. Grady as “Commissioner to effectuate the sale of the Former

Marital Domicile located at 18 Peggy Lane * * *.” The order further directed

“[t]hat Attorney Barbara E. Grady is hereby authorized to work with Attorney J. Russell Jackson, who represents [the Stratoberdhas] in [the Superior Court action] in order to obtain the best settlement/resolution of the matter. Attorney Barbara E. Grady shall also have the authority to settle and/or compromise said claim in order to maximize the amount to be realized by the marital estate.” (Emphasis added.) Neither Robert nor Etleva sought review of the March 24, 2022 order.

In May 2023, Robert notified Commissioner Grady that he no longer wished

Attorney Jackson to represent him in the Superior Court action and instead indicated

that he would represent himself. Attorney Jackson continued to represent Etleva in

the Superior Court action. A month later, in an effort to resolve the nearly

decade-long Superior Court action, the Stratoberdhas, Clements Properties, the

Town, and Commissioner Grady appeared before a justice of the Superior Court for

a one-day-long mediation.2 This endeavor proved successful; Clements Properties

2 Prior to mediation, Rucando had unfortunately deceased. The settlement agreement ultimately dismissed all claims against Rucando.

-3- agreed to purchase 18 Peggy Lane, the marital domicile, for $870,000; the Town

agreed to pay damages in the amount of $75,000; and the Stratoberdhas would

receive a total award of $945,000. 3

Thereafter, a justice of the Family Court convened a hearing for the purpose

of eliciting testimony from Commissioner Grady regarding the terms of the

settlement agreement. During this hearing, Robert appeared pro se, provided

testimony, and cross-examined Commissioner Grady. After the hearing, the Family

Court trial justice ordered, in relevant part:

“1. The terms and conditions set forth in the proposed Settlement Agreement, attached hereto and incorporated herein by reference, as related to the marital domicile located at 18 Peggy Lane, Portsmouth, Rhode Island, are hereby adopted and approved by this Honorable Court. Said Settlement Agreement, containing the terms and conditions of the mediation settlement conference conducted * * * in connection with the Superior Court Action, shall be forthwith finalized and executed by all Parties named therein. “2. This Honorable Court hereby instructs and orders Commissioner, Barbara Grady, Esq., to forthwith execute

3 According to the record, the Stratoberdhas would also not have to pay a real estate commission for the sale of the marital domicile, a value estimated at approximately $43,000. The record also contains real estate appraisals at different intervals valuing the marital domicile at between $795,000 and $965,000. Commissioner Grady employed the services of an appraiser, who indicated that in October 2022 the property was valued at $865,000. Before the Family Court, Commissioner Grady testified that the $865,000 valuation did not take into consideration the water or flooding issues that plagued the property and that were the subject of the Superior Court action. -4- the final Settlement Agreement on behalf of either Robert Stratoberdha or Etleva Stratoberdha, should either Party fail or refuse to so execute personally.” (Emphases added.) This order was entered on September 8, 2023, and neither Robert nor Etleva sought

review of the order in this Court.

On or about October 26, 2023, a different justice of the Superior Court granted

Attorney Jackson’s motion to withdraw as Robert’s legal counsel in the Superior

Court action. Subsequently, Commissioner Grady, inter alia, filed with the Superior

Court a motion to obtain approval of the settlement agreement and eventual

dismissal of the Superior Court action. Commissioner Grady signed the motion on

behalf of “Plaintiffs[,] By their Duly Appointed Family Court Commissioner,” and

attached the Family Court’s March 24, 2022 order.

At the November 30, 2023 hearing, the Superior Court trial justice recognized

that Robert lacked standing to object to the settlement agreement due to the Family

Court’s March 24, 2022 order, but nonetheless allowed him to address the court and

object to the entry of the settlement agreement.

Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI

Related

Elizabeth Boyer v. Chief Judge Haiganush Bedrosian
57 A.3d 259 (Supreme Court of Rhode Island, 2012)
Palin v. Palin
41 A.3d 248 (Supreme Court of Rhode Island, 2012)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
Robert Stratoberdha v. Clements Properties, LLC, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/robert-stratoberdha-v-clements-properties-llc-ri-2025.