Swerdlick v. Koch

721 A.2d 849, 27 Media L. Rep. (BNA) 1801, 1998 R.I. LEXIS 332, 1998 WL 916829
CourtSupreme Court of Rhode Island
DecidedDecember 7, 1998
Docket96-195-Appeal
StatusPublished
Cited by93 cases

This text of 721 A.2d 849 (Swerdlick v. Koch) 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
Swerdlick v. Koch, 721 A.2d 849, 27 Media L. Rep. (BNA) 1801, 1998 R.I. LEXIS 332, 1998 WL 916829 (R.I. 1998).

Opinion

OPINION

FLANDERS, Justice.

A tabloid headline describing the trial of this case might read as follows: “JUDGE NIXES ZONING OUTLAWS’ SUIT AGAINST NOSY NEIGHBOR.” The husband-and-wife plaintiffs, Gerald and Catherine Swerdlick (Gerald, Catherine, or plaintiffs), claimed that the defendant Robert *853 Koch’s (Koch or defendant) ongoing surveillance of various alleged business activities occurring outside their Westerly home violated their right to privacy under G.L.1956 § 9-1-28.1. Furthermore, the plaintiffs alleged that the defendant’s conduct in reporting such activities to a municipal zoning officer and to the plaintiffs’ neighbors tarnished their reputation and caused them to suffer emotional distress. A Superior Court trial justice sitting with a jury heard four days of testimony before she granted the defendant’s motion for judgment as a matter of law and dismissed the plaintiffs’ claims. For the reasons set forth below, we deny the plaintiffs’ appeal and affirm the trial court’s judgment in favor of the defendant.

Facts and Travel

On David Avenue, a dead-end street in the Town of Westerly (town), plaintiffs and defendant lived only a few homes apart from one another in a residential neighborhood. In the early 1980s, Gerald, who was legally blind in one eye and totally blind in the other, began selling visual aids for the blind and visually handicapped. Thereafter, in the mid-1980s, he started a mail-order business from his home called Electronic Visual Aid Specialists (EVAS). 1 Assisted by his wife and several employees, EVAS’s sales volume grew as the years passed to the point that plaintiffs began to use their garage for the receiving, warehousing, assembling, and shipping of EVAS products. From September 1989 through December 1989, Gerald received product deliveries from various shipping and delivery services at least once or twice a day for up to five days a week. (The defendant testified that upon his retirement in February 1989, he observed deliveries occurring four times a day at least five days a week.) The defendant initially noticed a tractor-trailer truck at plaintiffs’ home in 1987, and thereafter, the regular coming and going of the delivery trucks and automobiles steadily increased.

To document that plaintiffs were operating a business out of their home in violation of the town’s zoning ordinances, defendant began photographing and logging the apparent business-related activities occurring outside plaintiffs’ residence. In the summer of 1989, plaintiffs first encountered defendant standing in the street at the end of their driveway taking photographs. When plaintiffs approached defendant, he stated, “My name is Robert Koch, and I’m sick and tired of what you’re doing here.” A few weeks later, Catherine saw defendant looking at vehicles parked in her driveway and taking notes from the street.

By a letter dated October 5, 1989, defendant complained to Jane Barber (Barber), the town’s zoning inspector, about plaintiffs’ operation of a home-based business in violation of the town’s zoning ordinance. 2 In addition, defendant sent Barber photographs of delivery trucks and automobiles he and his neighbors had observed at plaintiffs’ residence. In response, Barber placed these items in a public file and contacted plaintiffs to inquire whether they actually were operating a business from their home. Gerald informed Barber that he was running EVAS as a mail-order business out of his home and allowed her to inspect the premises to review this operation. Upon doing so, she noticed a shipping and receiving area in plaintiffs’ garage. In addition, she viewed three offices in the upstairs of the house furnished with computers. According to Barber, “[i]t was definitely a business set up” that had “considerable packaging.”

She concluded that plaintiffs were operating their business in violation of the town’s *854 zoning ordinance. She then arranged a November 1, 1989 meeting "with plaintiffs and other residents of David Avenue to persuade plaintiffs to abate the violation. At that meeting, Barber informed plaintiffs that their business activities must cease and that EVAS needed to move to a properly zoned location. Participants in the meeting also addressed the concerns raised earlier by defendant, such as the alleged degradation of the neighbors’ property values because of plaintiffs’ business; the increase in traffic on David Avenue; and the steady increase of commercial activity on the street over the previous several years. The plaintiffs did not deny that before January 1, 1990, they had been operating a warehousing, shipping, and receiving business out of their home in violation of the town’s zoning ordinance. Barber gave plaintiffs sixty days to move— establishing a January 1, 1990 deadline— because their business “was rather extensive.” She allowed plaintiffs, however, to maintain an office at their home.

After the November 1st meeting, defendant sent Barber a letter dated November 3, 1989 to further support his complaint. 3 In this letter, he listed the license-plate numbers of ten vehicles that he had observed at plaintiffs’ house. The defendant assumed that most of the vehicles he had seen there were business-related due to the frequency and nature of their arrivals and departures. He did not know for certain, however, to whom the vehicles belonged, or why they were at plaintiffs’ residence. The evidence established that some of the automobiles did in fact belong to EVAS employees, but that several of the vehicles were present for non-business reasons. 4

Meanwhile, after their meeting with the zoning inspector, plaintiffs immediately began looking for commercial space. Eventually, on December 30 and 31,1989, they moved the shipping, receiving, and warehousing operations for their business to a commercially zoned location. Between December 1, 1989 and January 1,1990, Barber performed three or four drive-by inspections of plaintiffs’ house lasting approximately five minutes a piece. 5 Barber also inspected EVAS’s new commercial location. Although Barber did not document her inspections in the zoning official’s file, at no time did Barber observe delivery trucks arrive at plaintiffs’ house. Per Barber’s erstwhile request, Gerald sent her a letter dated January 4, 1990 stating that he had moved these activities from his home to a different location. 6

Upon receipt of Gerald’s January 4th letter, Barber submitted a report to the town manager in which she wrote, “[t]he violation existing at 16 David Ave., has been abated to the degree that the receiving and shipping operation of the mailorder [sic ] company has rel[ located to a business zoned area.” Nevertheless, on January 10, 1990, defendant and several neighbors wrote another letter to Barber complaining that plaintiffs had not yet ceased operating their business out of their home. 7 The defendant asserted that he *855 continued to witness delivery trucks coming to and going from plaintiffs’ residence.

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Bluebook (online)
721 A.2d 849, 27 Media L. Rep. (BNA) 1801, 1998 R.I. LEXIS 332, 1998 WL 916829, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/swerdlick-v-koch-ri-1998.