Root v. Providence Water Supply Board

850 A.2d 94, 2004 R.I. LEXIS 110, 2004 WL 1272863
CourtSupreme Court of Rhode Island
DecidedJune 10, 2004
Docket2001-499-Appeal, 2003-370-Appeal
StatusPublished
Cited by10 cases

This text of 850 A.2d 94 (Root v. Providence Water Supply Board) 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
Root v. Providence Water Supply Board, 850 A.2d 94, 2004 R.I. LEXIS 110, 2004 WL 1272863 (R.I. 2004).

Opinion

OPINION

FLANDERS, Justice.

A public entity used the power of eminent domain to take private property for public use. In doing so, however, it apparently faded to personally notify some of the property’s easement owners about the taking. It also failed to pay just compensation to them for extinguishing their easements. Eventually, the easement owners discovered the taking and the identity of the public entity that took it. But fearful that they apparently were out of time to sue the condemning authority, they instead sued other public entities that now own or use their former easements. The trial justice treated these other public entities as if they were the condemning authorities. Consequently, he ordered them to pay the plaintiffs just compensation for taking their easements. On appeal, we now reverse and vacate the judgment, holding that the former easement owners sued the wrong parties, that the plaintiffs possessed an adequate legal remedy against the con *96 demning authority to obtain just compensation for the taking, and that their failure to pursue that remedy within the period provided by law for doing so did not enable them to sue these defendants.

Facts and Travel

The defendants, Providence Water Supply Board (water board) and Stephen Na-politano, in his official capacity as the Treasurer of the City of Providence (city), appeal from Superior Court judgments in favor of plaintiffs, former easement owners Alan Root, Susan Root, Stephen MoscicM, and Sandra Moscicki. At all times pertinent to this case, the Roots and the Mos-cickis owned real estate that abutted Field Hill Road in the Town of Scituate (town). Until 1991, both the Roots and the Mos-cickis also owned deeded easements to use a portion of Field Hill Road to gain access to their properties. These easements passed over a certain large tract of real estate in the town known as the Joslin Farm.

In 1990, pursuant to G.L.1956 § 45-50-13(a)(2), (b), the Providence Public Building Authority (PPBA) condemned the Jos-lin Farm property, including the easements in question. The PPBA enacted a resolution declaring the necessity of using eminent domain to acquire the Joslin Farm. Thereafter, on December 27, 1991, it filed a copy of the resolution, along with the plat of the Joslin Farm, in the Scituate land-evidence records. Because the details of this condemnation process are set out in the case of Gorham v. Public Building Authority of Providence, 612 A.2d 708, 709-11 (R.I.1992), we will not recapitulate them here. Suffice it to say that, after the PPBA acquired the Joslin Farm in 1991, including the easements in question, by exercising its power of eminent domain, the trial justice found that, “it deeded or conveyed the' property * * * to the Providence Water Supply Board” to use it for water-resource and conservation purposes. 1

Although the travel of this case is tortuous, we shall recap only a selected portion of the procedural history, as needed to decide this case. In October 1995, plaintiffs sued the water board, seeking injunc-tive relief that would prevent it from blocking their access to Field Hill Road. In its answer, the water board denied that plaintiffs owned the easements in question. On the contrary, it asserted that it had the authority to prevent plaintiffs from obtaining access to their properties via Field Hill Road. In 1997, plaintiffs amended their complaint, alleging for the first time that the water board had taken their property without just compensation, that the taking had denied plaintiffs their substantive and procedural due-process rights under the United States and Rhode Island Constitutions, and that the water board’s taking of their easements had enriched it unjustly. For the first time, plaintiffs requested monetary damages from the water board. In answer to plaintiffs’ first amended complaint, the water board asserted as affirmative defenses that plaintiffs had failed to join an indispensable party, and that they had failed to comply with the procedures for suing the PPBA to obtain just compensation for the taking of their easements. See § 45-50-13(e) (providing a right of action for damages to property owners whose interest the PPBA took without personally notifying them, allowing such owners, to petition the Superior Court *97 ■within one year from the first publication of the taking). The water board also asserted that plaintiffs had received actual notice of the PPBA’s condemnation of them easements.

On August 15, 2001, a Superior Court motion justice denied the water board’s request for summary judgment. The water board argued that plaintiffs failed to pursue their statutory remedy to obtain damages from the PPBA for its condemnation of their property, as set forth in § 45-50-13(e). The case then proceeded to trial and, on September 27, 2001, the trial justice awarded plaintiffs damages, representing 10 percent of the value of their properties, plus interest. 2 The water board appealed from that judgment to this Court.

In February 2002, after a hearing, the Superior Court entered an order allowing executions on the judgment to issue against the water board. It then stayed these executions pending the water board’s appeal, but conditioned the stay upon the water board’s posting a supersedeas bond or segregating sufficient money to satisfy the judgment. The water board also appealed from these orders and, on February 8, 2002, this Court entered an order staying the executions and remanding the case to the Superior Court to determine various issues.

After yet another hearing before the trial justice, the Superior Court issued an order on May 14, 2002, denying the water board’s motion to vacate the judgment and to stay the executions. The court found that the water board had waived the defenses of failure to join an indispensable party and of lack of capacity to be sued. Thus, it allowed plaintiffs leave to file motions to add the city or the PPBA as parties to the case. On June 21, 2002, the court granted plaintiffs’ motion to amend their complaint, which added only the city as an additional defendant. The water board then appealed both of these orders to this Court.

In 2002, we issued several orders: we stayed the executions that the Superior Court had authorized; we denied plaintiffs’ request for the water board to post a supersedeas bond; and we granted plaintiffs’ motion to remand the case for a hearing on plaintiffs’ motion for judgment on the pleadings, or alternatively, the motion for summary judgment against the city. After a hearing, the trial justice, in April 2003, entered summary judgment for plaintiffs against the city. The city appealed from this entry of final judgment against it. 3

On appeal, the water board contends that plaintiffs received actual notice of the PPBA’s 1991 taking of their property via eminent domain, yet they failed to file a claim against the PPBA within the one-year statute of limitations for doing so, as provided in § 45-50-13(e).

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
850 A.2d 94, 2004 R.I. LEXIS 110, 2004 WL 1272863, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/root-v-providence-water-supply-board-ri-2004.