Sharp v. Silva Realty Corp.

134 A.2d 131, 86 R.I. 276, 1957 R.I. LEXIS 89
CourtSupreme Court of Rhode Island
DecidedAugust 6, 1957
DocketEq. No. 2559
StatusPublished
Cited by13 cases

This text of 134 A.2d 131 (Sharp v. Silva Realty Corp.) 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
Sharp v. Silva Realty Corp., 134 A.2d 131, 86 R.I. 276, 1957 R.I. LEXIS 89 (R.I. 1957).

Opinion

*278 Paolino, J.

This is a ¡bill in equity in which the complainants, husband and wife, seek to permanently enjoin the respondent, a Rhode Island corporation, from trespassing on, excavating, changing the grade of, interrupting and interfering with a certain easement of way adjoining their lot. This right of way had been acquired by express grant in the same deed by which ownership of the adjoining lot had been transferred to' them and was by such deed expressly made appurtenant to said lot. The complainants also prayed for damages. The cause was heard before a justice of the superior court on bill, answer, replication and proof. After making certain findings of fact, a final decree was entered granting some of the relief prayed for and denying and dismissing the remaining prayers of the parties. From such final decree the complainants and the respondent thereupon prosecuted their appeals to this court.

It appears from the evidence that complainants and respondent owned adjoining real estate on Lonsdale avenue in the town of Lincoln. Both parcels of land were originally owned by a common grantor, namely, the Lonsdale Company. In 1936 the Lonsdale Company conveyed lot 77, the northerly portion of said parcels of land, to Alexander K. Wright and wife by a warranty deed which also contained the following express grant of a right of way: “Together with an easement of way, as appurtenant to the above granted premises, to pass and repass on foot and with vehicles to and from Lonsdale Avenue over that northerly portion of Lot No. 76 (seventy-six) on said plat which is laid out and designated on said plat as ‘30' wide Right of Way to- Lot 77 and Lonsdale Co.’ ”

In 1943 the Wrights conveyed lot 77 to complainants by a deed which also contained in the same terms the grant of an easement of way appurtenant to the granted premises. This right of way included within its 30 feet a bank sloping down from the grade of the dominant tenement, lot 77, to the traveled portion of the way. At the top of the *279 ■bank and within the limits of the right of way was a hedge extending easterly from Lonsdale avenue all the way to the rear boundary of lot 77. This hedge had been in existence for many years.

In 1950 the Lonsdale Company conveyed the southerly portion of said adjoining parcel, namely, lot 76, the servient tenement, to respondent. This conveyance was made expressly subject to complainants’ easement of way in the following terms: “This deed is executed subject to a right of way of record over the northerly thirty (30) feet of the premises herein conveyed * * The recorded plat to which reference is made in the deeds and which is entitled “Plan of Tenement Property at Lonsdale, Lincoln, R. I. belonging to the Lonsdale Company By Waterman Engineering Company Sept. 1935” also shows in express terms the complainants’ easement of way.

It appears from the evidence that when lot 77 was conveyed in 1935 to the Wrights by the Lonsdale Company an old garage stood in the rear of the lot approximately 30 to 50 feet northerly from the right of way. In 1952 complainants built a new two-car garage at or close to the boundary line of lot 77 and the northerly line of the right of way at a point about 65 feet easterly from Lonsdale avenue. They removed a section of the hedge and banking at that location to provide an entrance to the garage. The garage was built on the grade of lot 77, not on the grade of the right of way. For this reason complainants built a ramp in front of the garage with a three-foot apron of cement and an area of black top which extended out over the right of way. There was some evidence that a cement retaining wall, which had been erected to support the ramp, extended southerly on to the right of way and that the height of the retaining wall and the grade of the ramp were higher than the grade of the right of way.-

The testimony was conflicting on the question pertaining to how far the ramp extended out over the right of way. *280 The same was true relative to the evidence as to whether or not the grade of the ramp and the height of the retaining wall were higher than the grade of the right of way. The evidence was also contradictory as to- whether the ramp interfered with the use of the right of way. In any event complainants testified and the trial justice found as a fact that in 1955 respondent began blocking the right of way with trucks and other vehicles. They testified further that' when they remonstrated with respondent, the latter entered upon the easement of way with a bulldozer and excavated and changed the grade thereof, within a few inches of the doorway of complainants’ garage, to' such a depth as to prevent all ingress and egress and every use thereof by complainants, and although respondent did not enter complainants’ land, it nevertheless damaged the concrete apron and retaining wall by removing the same and thus forced complainants and their tenant to leave their automobiles out-of-doors for a long time.

The evidence presented by respondent was in substance that by constructing the ramp as they did complainants had changed the level and contour of the right of way; that the ramp as constructed created an encroachment on its property and interfered with respondent’s use thereof; that after failure of many attempts to get complainants to remove it, respondent rightfully removed the ramp without entering or trespassing on complainants’ land; that the hedge had existed adversely for over ten years; and that complainants had removed a portion of respondent’s hedge. During the course of the hearing the trial justice found that the hedge is within the 30-foot area of the right of way and that the area covered by the hedge had never been used. He also noted that no one ever expected that such area would be used.

At the conclusion of the hearing a decision was rendered by the trial justice which contained findings of fact substantially as follows. He found that complainants had *281 proved the allegation that respondent had interfered with the right of way by blocking it with motor vehicles. He also found on the evidence before him that the ramp along its easterly side constituted an unwarranted interference with the use of the way by respondent and that, therefore, complainants should correct the grade of the ramp in order to reduce this difficulty to a minimum. The trial justice based his refusal to allow any damages to complainants on the ground that they had brought on the difficulties in the instant case by building the garage so close to the boundary line. He noted that they could have constructed it further back on their lot so as to have an entrance to the garage, on the right of way, at the same level of it.

Moreover, the trial justice stated that on the evidence he was not satisfied respondent was acting wrongfully when it destroyed the ramp then existing in the right of way, which he inferred was longer than the substituted ramp. He noted that such ramp extended 14 or 16 feet into the right of way and that it was quite a bit shorter and steeper than the one which had been bulldozed into destruction.

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

Related

Grady v. Narragansett Electric Co.
962 A.2d 34 (Supreme Court of Rhode Island, 2009)
Generis v. Foster Cove Improvement Asso.
Superior Court of Rhode Island, 2007
Carpenter v. Hanslin
900 A.2d 1136 (Supreme Court of Rhode Island, 2006)
Carpenter v. Hanslin, 03-202 (2004)
Superior Court of Rhode Island, 2004
Sartor v. Town of Barrington, 03-3985 (2004)
Superior Court of Rhode Island, 2004
Famiglietti v. Forge Constr. Mgmt., 01-103 (2002)
Superior Court of Rhode Island, 2002
Davis v. Hauser, Kc 93-0295 (2000)
Superior Court of Rhode Island, 2000
Allen v. Johnstone, Nc95-0431 (1999)
Superior Court of Rhode Island, 1999
Shaw v. Ruggieri, 95-6900 (1996)
Superior Court of Rhode Island, 1996
Coggeshall Development Corp. v. United States
39 Cont. Cas. Fed. 76,566 (Federal Claims, 1993)
Friends of the Sakonnet v. Dutra
749 F. Supp. 381 (D. Rhode Island, 1990)
Wheeler v. Lynch
445 A.2d 646 (District of Columbia Court of Appeals, 1982)
Vallone v. CRANSTON, DEPT. PUB. WORKS
197 A.2d 310 (Supreme Court of Rhode Island, 1964)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
134 A.2d 131, 86 R.I. 276, 1957 R.I. LEXIS 89, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/sharp-v-silva-realty-corp-ri-1957.