Romeo v. Pate

60 A.2d 162, 74 R.I. 245, 1948 R.I. LEXIS 71
CourtSupreme Court of Rhode Island
DecidedJuly 9, 1948
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 60 A.2d 162 (Romeo v. Pate) 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
Romeo v. Pate, 60 A.2d 162, 74 R.I. 245, 1948 R.I. LEXIS 71 (R.I. 1948).

Opinion

Baker, J.

This is a bill in equity praying that the respondents be ordered to convey to the complainants by a good and sufficient deed free and clear of all encumbrances *246 two specifically described lots of land, together forming one parcel, situated in the city of Cranston, and also for certain other relief incidental to said prayer. After a hearing of the cause on its merits in the superior court a decree was entered by the trial justice granting the prayers of the bill. Prom the entry of that decree the respondents duly prosecuted their appeal to this court.

The evidence, largely undisputed but conflicting on certain important points, disclosed the following facts. The complainants, husband and wife, had for about fifteen years owned and operated a gasoline filling station on property which bounded southerly on the premises in dispute. These comprised two adjoining lots which bounded westerly on Elmwood avenue and were vacant except for a small building on one of them. Bounding southerly on Burbank street, which runs in an easterly direction from Elmwood avenue, there was a parcel of land made up of two lots which contained a dwelling house and a garage and which bounded northerly and westerly on the other lots herein-before referred to. All this property belonged to the heirs of Antonio Gentile.

The complainants, desiring to purchase the two lots fronting on Elmwood avenue, had interviewed the Gentile heirs with reference to this matter prior to April 1945 but the conversations were indefinite and nothing was put in writing. The respondents were primarily interested in buying the former Gentile property located on Burbank street, and on April 18, 1945 entered into a written agreement with the heirs, who apparently would not sell their property in separate parcels, to purchase all of it for the sum of $8700. Thereafter on April 22, 1945 the respondent Antonio Pate, who according to the complainants’ testimony had discussed with them on several prior occasions the acquisition of the lots on Elmwood avenue, offered orally to sell them to the complainants for $3000, which offer was accepted and the latter then and there paid said respondent *247 $100, receiving from him a receipt which was in very general terms and did not describe the property involved.

It is the complainants’ contention that at the above time it was agreed they were to receive from the respondents the two lots on Elmwood avenue as they then existed and were actually laid out, but that the boundaries of the lots or their particular description were not discussed by the parties until much later. The complainant Rocco Romeo testified as follows respecting the meeting of April 22, 1945: “Q. And at that time you were interested in the purchase of the property in dispute here? A. Well, Mr. Pate come to me and he said, T hear you was going to buy the property before me. Now, I need the house and I buy and you can buy the land off me the same day.’ That is just what Mr. Pate tell me. Q. Now, what was the land that you agreed to buy from Mr. Pate? A. Was two lots next to my property.”

The respondents, however, maintain it was understood at the start that they were not selling to the complainants the two lots to their full depth but according to the testimony of Antonio Pate: “On the one condition * * * we had an agreement with him to sell the front of the property. Not the back. Just the front — front lot. In other words, to make a long story short, I promise that I have — I supposed to have 92 feet on the front and 92 feet on the back.” To allow the respondents to retain a parcel of the size thus indicated would necessitate withholding from the complainants part of the rear portion of the two lots in dispute.

Thereafter the respondent Antonio Pate brought the complainant Rocco Romeo to the office of the former’s attorney apparently to arrange for the transfer of the two lots, but nothing further was then done and no agreement of sale was put in writing. At this time the parties were friendly and the complainants had retained no attorney. On September 12, 1945 those interested in the matter except Rocco Romeo’s wife went to the office of a title company to complete the transaction. The respondent Antonio Pate *248 testified in answer to a question by his attorney: “Q. And then what happened? A. And then you — we took Mr. Romeo in order to buy the property the same day.”

At that time the deed from the Gentile heirs to the respondents of the entire property was executed and delivered. Owing to some misunderstanding, however, the bank at which the respondents had borrowed money had placed its mortgage on the whole property instead of only on the part to be retained by the Pates. Because of this it became necessary to arrange with the bank to have it release the property in question from the operation of the mortgage before a deed from the respondents to the complainants could be prepared. This caused a delay of a few days. In the meantime the title company prepared such a release and also a deed from the respondents to the complainants in which the two lots in dispute were described in full both by lot numbers and by metes and bounds. These instruments were sent to the office of the respondents’ attorney but were never executed.

At the office of the title company on September 12, 1945 the respondents did not have money enough to close their transaction with the Gentile heirs and the complainant Rocco Romeo paid over to the respondents $2900, being the unpaid balance of $3000, the price of the two lots in dispute. The said sum of $2900 was immediately turned over by respondents to the Gentile heirs to complete the amount of $8700 due them. On this occasion the complainant Rocco Romeo was given a receipt signed only by Antonio Pate which in substance stated that he had received from Rocco Romeo the sum of $3000 as the purchase price of two specifically numbered lots on assessors’ plat 4 in Cranston subject to certain restrictions, the warranty deed to such lots to be delivered not later than October 1, 1945.

In April 1945 a survey and plat had been made of the Gentile land but none of the parties apparently had seen this plat prior to the meeting in September at the office of the title company. According to the testimony of re *249 spondent Antonio Pate, after the transaction had been closed at that office and while the parties were on their way out, they stopped and looked at the plat, and a line was drawn thereon cutting across the two lots, the complainant Rocco Romeo agreeing to take that part of the lots which fronted on Elmwood avenue and the respondents were to retain the remainder thereof. The said complainant denied any such happening or agreement.

After the meeting at the title company there were several discussions at the lawyer’s office in regard to just what property should be conveyed to the complainants by the respondents but no agreement was ever reached. In the latter part of September 1945 a check for $3050 was sent to Rocco Romeo by the respondents’ attorney but was returned to the latter by the complainants’ attorney.

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Related

Chase v. Chase
81 A.2d 686 (Supreme Court of Rhode Island, 1951)

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Bluebook (online)
60 A.2d 162, 74 R.I. 245, 1948 R.I. LEXIS 71, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/romeo-v-pate-ri-1948.