Tavares v. Beck

814 A.2d 346, 2003 R.I. LEXIS 29, 2003 WL 203093
CourtSupreme Court of Rhode Island
DecidedJanuary 29, 2003
Docket2001-541-Appeal
StatusPublished
Cited by48 cases

This text of 814 A.2d 346 (Tavares v. Beck) 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
Tavares v. Beck, 814 A.2d 346, 2003 R.I. LEXIS 29, 2003 WL 203093 (R.I. 2003).

Opinion

OPINION

PER CURIAM.

In these two consolidated nonjury cases, a Superior Court trial justice found insufficient evidence to establish adverse possession. He then entered judgment in favor of the defendant, Horace P. Beck (Beck), the record-title holder of three adjacent parcels of mostly undeveloped property located on the Little Compton-Tiverton border (the property). The plaintiffs, Lawrence P. Tavares and Edna M. Tavares (the Tavareses or claimants), who are the adverse possessors manqué, appeal from this judgment.

We conclude that the trial justice misconstrued the claim-of-right doctrine when he ruled that the Tavareses and their predecessors failed to satisfy the elements of adverse possession. We also are of the opinion that the trial court' should not have weighed the record-title holder’s out-of-state residence as a factor in deciding that the claimants failed to meet the strict standard of proof required in such cases. Finally, we respectfully disagree with the trial justice’s determination that a predecessor of the claimants had engaged in inequitable conduct by attempting to “bootstrap” himself into owning the property after he discovered that he did not hold record title. Consequently, we vacate the judgment and remand for further proceedings consistent with this opinion.

Facts and Travel

Located in Tiverton, the property bordered on the Little Compton town line to the south, and by the south edge of the old cart path to the north. In 1991, Lawrence P. Tavares purchased two of the parcels in question from James Amarantes (Amar-antes), who obtained his title in 1977 from Robert S. Almy, Rudolph W. Almy, and Elizabeth Lincoln (collectively, the Almys). Two years later, the Tavareses acquired the third parcel — situated between the other two — from Amarantes. The Ta-vareses sought to remove any cloud on their title by having the court declare that they were the rightful owners of the property. They also asserted that they and their predecessors had been in “open, adverse, exclusive and uninterrupted possession and enjoyment” of the property for more than seventy years. The court consolidated the two cases for a nonjury trial.

After hearing the evidence, the trial justice concluded in a bench decision that the *349 Tavareses had failed to satisfy their heavy burden of proof to establish adverse possession. He ruled that they had not possessed the property for the requisite ten-year period and that they could not tack on the previous period of Amarantes’s occupation because his use of the property was neither under claim of right nor hostile to the true owner. The trial justice found that Amarantes’s activities on the parcels — -including the posting of no-trespassing signs, digging drainage holes, and building a stone wall — were not visible from any street or lot line. Further, the trial justice concluded that Amarantes, “knowing that he did not have record title to the disputed land, undertook a course of conduct designed to bootstrap himself into ownership, including deeding the property that he knew he did not own to himself and his wife and later to plaintiff.” Because the lawsuit was an equitable action, the trial justice reasoned, the Tavareses could not rely on a predecessor in title such as Amarantes, whose “hands” — in the trial justice’s estimation — -were “hardly clean.” He reached this conclusion because, after Amarantes surveyed the land between 1978-79, he realized that the property he had purchased from the Almys did not include the disputed parcels, yet he still continued to use and possess the property as if he owned it. And — what was even worse in the eyes of the trial justice— Amarantes ultimately took steps to deed the property to himself and his wife to make it seem as if he and his wife were the true owners of record. 1

A single justice of this Court ordered the parties to show cause why we should not decide the appeal summarily. After reviewing the parties’ legal memoranda and considering their oral arguments, we conclude that they have not done so and proceed to decide the appeal at this time. On appeal, the Tavareses argue that the trial justice erred in finding that Amar-antes’s use of the property was not under a claim of right, was not hostile, and was not open and notorious. They also assert that he erred in finding that the posted signs and the stone wall would not have been visible from the street. In addition, they contend, the trial justice erred in finding that the Tavareses’s predecessor in title, Amarantes, did not have “clean hands” concerning the parcels in question. Finally, they maintain that the trial justice erred in not allowing Amarantes to testify about what Rudolph Almy told him about the location of the property line, and in excluding an affidavit that Robert Almy signed and provided to Amarantes.

Analysis

General Laws 1956 § 34-7-1 addresses adverse-possession claims. Section 34-7-1 provides as follows:

‘Where any person or persons, or others from whom he, she, or they derive their title, either by themselves, tenants or lessees, shall have been for the space of ten (10) years in the uninterrupted, quiet, peaceful and actual seisin and possession of any lands, tenements or here-ditaments for and during that time, claiming the same as his, her or their proper, sole and rightful estate in fee simple, the actual seisin and possession shall be allowed to give and make a good *350 and rightful title to the person or persons, their heirs and assigns forever; and any plaintiff suing for the recovery of any such lands may rely upon the possession as conclusive title thereto, and this chapter being pleaded in bar to any action that shall be brought for the lands, tenements or hereditaments, and the actual seisin and possession being duly proved, shall be allowed to be good, valid and effectual in law for barring the action.” (Emphasis added.)

This Court has long held that to establish adverse possession, a claimant’s possession must be “actual, open, notorious, hostile, under claim of right, continuous, and exclusive” for at least ten years. Sherman v. Goloskie, 95 R.I. 457, 465, 188 A.2d 79, 88 (1963); see also Norton v. Courtemanche, 798 A.2d 925, 931 (R.I.2002) (per curiam); Carnevale v. Dupee, 783 A.2d 404, 409 (R.I.2001); Taffinder v. Thomas, 119 R.I. 545, 551, 381 A.2d 519, 522 (1977). The party claiming adverse possession must establish each of these elements by “strict proof, that is, proof by clear and convincing evidence.” Carnevale, 783 A.2d at 409 (quoting Anthony v. Searle, 681 A.2d 892, 897 (R.I.1996)).

As the parties concede, the Tavareses’s time of possession fell short of the statutory ten-year period. Therefore, to prevail, they had to “tack on the period of possession of [their] predecessor from whom [they] derived title.” Carnevale, 783 A.2d at 412 (quoting Taffinder, 119 R.I.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
814 A.2d 346, 2003 R.I. LEXIS 29, 2003 WL 203093, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/tavares-v-beck-ri-2003.