Tammi Sousa v. Gilbert Roy, Jr., individually and as Trustee of The Gilbert F. Roy, Jr. Residence Trust—2005.

CourtSupreme Court of Rhode Island
DecidedJanuary 19, 2021
Docket19-140
StatusPublished

This text of Tammi Sousa v. Gilbert Roy, Jr., individually and as Trustee of The Gilbert F. Roy, Jr. Residence Trust—2005. (Tammi Sousa v. Gilbert Roy, Jr., individually and as Trustee of The Gilbert F. Roy, Jr. Residence Trust—2005.) 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.

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Tammi Sousa v. Gilbert Roy, Jr., individually and as Trustee of The Gilbert F. Roy, Jr. Residence Trust—2005., (R.I. 2021).

Opinion

January 19, 2021 January 19, 2021

January 19, 2021

Supreme Court

No. 2019-140-Appeal. (PC 13-5564)

Tammi Sousa et al. :

v. :

Gilbert Roy, Jr., individually and as : Trustee of The Gilbert F. Roy, Jr. Residence Trust—2005. :

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

Gilbert Roy, Jr., individually and as : Trustee of The Gilbert F. Roy, Jr. Residence Trust—2005. :

Present: Suttell, C.J., Flaherty, and Robinson, JJ.

OPINION

Chief Justice Suttell, for the Court. The plaintiffs, Tammi Sousa (Sousa)

and Charles G. Thibeault III (Thibeault) (collectively plaintiffs), appeal from the

grant of judgment as a matter of law in favor of the defendant, Gilbert F. Roy, Jr.,

individually and as trustee of The Gilbert F. Roy, Jr. Residence Trust—2005

(defendant). This case came before the Supreme Court pursuant to an order directing

the parties to appear and show cause why the issues raised in this appeal should not

be summarily decided. After considering the parties’ written and oral submissions

and reviewing the record, we conclude that cause has not been shown and that this

case may be decided without further briefing or argument. For the reasons set forth

in this opinion, we affirm the judgment of the Superior Court.

-1- I

Facts and Travel

Prior to their respective deaths, Flora I. Roy and Gilbert Roy, Sr., owned a

house located at 44 Ashburne Street in Pawtucket (the property).1 In approximately

1989, the couple’s daughter, Linda Mary Roy, contributed funds to build an addition

onto the property. After the addition was built, Linda lived at the property with her

children, who are the plaintiffs in this matter. Gilbert, Sr., died in 1997, and, in

1998, Flora signed a quitclaim deed conveying the property to defendant, who is

Linda’s brother, with a reserved life estate for herself. Flora also executed a will,

bequeathing to Linda her car and $25,000, bequeathing to defendant her kitchen set,

and bequeathing the rest and residue of her estate to Linda and defendant in equal

shares. Flora then gave the will to defendant, enclosed in an envelope. In 2005,

defendant conveyed his legal ownership in the property to himself, as trustee of the

Gilbert F. Roy, Jr. Residence Trust—2005.

Flora lived on the property until her death in 2010. Following Flora’s death,

defendant and his wife moved onto the property, where Linda continued to live. The

plaintiffs allege that in 2011 defendant signed a statement acknowledging that Linda

was “entitled to 50% of the proceeds, at the time of a sale and minus all expenses

1 Aside from defendant, this opinion will refer to family members who share the last name Roy by their first names to avoid confusion. No disrespect is intended.

-2- that [defendant had] incurred for the property” (the statement). The plaintiffs further

allege that, following Linda’s death in 2012, they asked defendant to sell the property

and to distribute the sale proceeds, but defendant refused to do so and continued to

live at the property.

The plaintiffs thereafter filed a complaint in Providence County Superior

Court, asking for a declaratory judgment that defendant was holding the property in

a constructive trust for their benefit, with plaintiffs having “the right upon the sale

of the real estate to $25,000.00 of the sale proceeds plus one-half of the balance of

the sale proceeds[,]” and asking the court to order defendant to convey a co-tenancy

interest to them. The plaintiffs further asked that, if defendant refused to sell the

property, the court appoint a commissioner to do so. They also asked for monetary

damages and asserted claims of promissory estoppel and unjust enrichment.

According to plaintiffs’ amended complaint, after Gilbert, Sr.’s death, Flora

conveyed the property to defendant,

“but with the family intention and understanding that Linda owned one-half of the house and that upon the eventual sale of the house either at her direction or following her death that she or plaintiffs would be due $25,000.00 to compensate Linda for her contribution of the funds for the house addition, and that the balance of the sale proceeds would be equally shared, one-half to Linda or her children if Linda died before the sale, and one-half to defendant or as he might designate if he died before the sale.”

-3- The plaintiffs called five witnesses at the jury trial: defendant; Sousa;

Thibeault; defendant’s wife; and Edward Stachurski, a licensed real estate broker

and certified general appraiser.

The defendant testified that, although Flora gave him an envelope containing

her will, he did not open the envelope until 2005, when he met with his attorney to

execute his own will. The defendant also testified that, until that day in 2005, he

was not aware that he owned the property; according to defendant, his mother had

not discussed the conveyance with him. He testified that he did not make any

statements to his mother to influence her to sign the deed to the property over to him

in 1998, nor did he discuss with her any issue concerning ownership of the property

or the distribution of any proceeds upon its eventual sale.

The defendant additionally testified that, due to Linda’s “nagging[,]” he wrote

the statement, dated March 9, 2011, that acknowledged that his sister was “entitled

to 50 percent of the proceeds, at the time of sale minus all the expenses that I have

incurred for the property[,]” and that, if she did not survive defendant, plaintiffs

would be given her share. He described it as “a proposal” and his “offer to her[,]”

and that he was “waiting for her to sign it so as to make some kind of a deal.” He

testified that Linda altered the statement by inserting the words “after your death[,]”

meaning Linda’s death, handed it back to him, and said it was “[n]ot acceptable”

because she did not want her children to have to pay any expenses. According to

-4- defendant, there were no further discussions about the statement. He testified that,

after Linda died, he denied possession of the property to plaintiffs because “it was

[his] house.”

Sousa testified that, at some point in 1990 or 1991, there was a family

conversation involving Linda, Flora, and Gilbert, Sr., about the money Linda had

contributed to the addition on the property. She testified that her grandparents told

Linda that she would get extra money, approximately $25,000, from the sale of the

property for her contribution, and that “they’d split the house.” Sousa testified that

defendant was not part of these discussions and would not have known about the

understanding. Additionally, Sousa testified that Gilbert, Sr., said that her

stepfather, Linda’s husband, “was no good, he was a drunk and a gambler,” and that

“they didn’t want him to be able to take anything of my mother’s.”

Sousa further testified that she encouraged Linda to get something in writing

about her partial ownership of the property, after defendant moved in, so that her

mother would be protected.

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Tammi Sousa v. Gilbert Roy, Jr., individually and as Trustee of The Gilbert F. Roy, Jr. Residence Trust—2005., Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/tammi-sousa-v-gilbert-roy-jr-individually-and-as-trustee-of-the-gilbert-ri-2021.