Vallone v. City of Cranston Department of Public Works

197 A.2d 310, 97 R.I. 248, 1964 R.I. LEXIS 81
CourtSupreme Court of Rhode Island
DecidedFebruary 5, 1964
StatusPublished
Cited by36 cases

This text of 197 A.2d 310 (Vallone v. City of Cranston Department of Public Works) 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
Vallone v. City of Cranston Department of Public Works, 197 A.2d 310, 97 R.I. 248, 1964 R.I. LEXIS 81 (R.I. 1964).

Opinion

Roberts, J.

These are three petitions brought in the superior court for the assessment of damages resulting from the taking by eminent domain of certain easements in the land of the petitioners pursuant to P. L. 1927, chap. 1079, sec. 3, wherein provision is made for a trial on such petitions, at which the court “shall determine all questions of fact relating to the value of such * * * easements and the amount thereof * * The petitions were heard by a justice of the superior court, jury trial having been expressly waived, and thereafter a decision was entered in the first case for the petitioner in the amount of $500, in the second case for the petitioners in the amount of $2,273, and in the third case for the respondent. The petitioners are in this court prosecuting an exception to the decision in each case. Their other exceptions, being neither briefed • nor argued, are deemed to be waived.

It appears from the record that Luigi Vallone, in part as an individual and in part, jointly with his wife Libera, hereinafter referred to as petitioners, acquired title to certain parcels of land lying on the easterly side of Atwood avenue in the city of Cranston through a series of conveyances that began in 1936. The parcels, all of which adjoin, together comprise a tract of land that is bounded on the west by said Atwood'avenue for á‘distance of about 18Ó0 feet, on the east by a body of .water commonly known as Randall’s Pond, on the north by land of the Roman Catholic Bishop of Providence used as a cemetery, and on the south by a highway known as Randall street.

[251]*251It appears that .petitioners caused- a -plat of this tract to be -prepared designated “Pleasant View Industrial ..Sites” and dated March 1959. . This plat, hereinafter referred to as the 1959 plat, was. introduced into evidence by respondent along with testimony that.it had been filed in the office of the commissioner of the department, of-public works for use by that department, in planning and building public improvements. This plat reveals that beginning at a point in Randall street at .-the southerly boundary of the- tract a strip of land 60 feet, in width extends northerly into the tract, the westerly line thereof maintaining .a distance of 200 feet from the easterly line of Atwood avenue. This strip extends northerly to a point about 200 feet south of the cemetery land where, turning westerly at a right angle, it extends to Atwood avenue. It appears from the plat that this interior strip, hereinafter .referred to- as the proposed street, is bounded on both sides by platted lots. There is no legend or notation on the plat indicating that this strip was intended to constitute a street.

On February 24, 1959 petitioners conveyed to W-. J. Siravo, Inc. a parcel of land lying within the tract between Atwood avenue -and the proposed street referred to above. The description was by metes and bounds wherein it was noted that the lot was bounded northerly “on a proposed street sixty (60) feet in width” and again -as bounded easterly “on a proposed street sixty (60) feet in width.” No reference was-made in the deed to the 1959 plat. The deed, however, -in express terms gives the grantee “the right to use said proposed streets for all purposes for which streets and ways are customarily used.”

In December 1959 and in January 1960 petitioners conveyed five more parcels of land lying between Atwood avenue and the proposed street. In each of these conveyances the lot was described by metes and bounds, and in four of such deeds one of the bounds was described as “along the [252]*252westerly line of the proposed street,” while in the remaining deed the lot was described as “bounding easterly on a proposed Street.” In none of these deeds was any reference made to- the 1959 plat, nor was there any express grant of an easement of way in the proposed streets as appears in the deed to W. J. Siravo, Inc.

In December 1960 the commissioner of public works of the city of Cranston submitted to the city council for its approval a plan proposing the construction of sewerage facilities within that city and the taking by eminent domain of designated rights and easements in certain strips and parcels of land, which included taking the easements in the lands of petitioners now under consideration. This plan subsequently was approved by the city council, and the taking was accomplished on January 24, 1961 by filing with the city clerk a plan, description, and statement of the rights and easements taken pursuant to- the terms of the pertinent statute. The statement of taking reads, in part, as follows: “That said Commissioner of Public Works in behalf of said City of Cranston desires to take, by condemnation and takes and the same is taken by said City of Cranston by eminent domain, pursuant to- the provisions of said Act, as amended, the perpetual right and easement to locate, lay, construct, build, operate, maintain, repair and renew a sewer or sewers and appurtenant structures ■and sewer service or other connections for the purpose of collecting and conveying sewage; of such size and at such depths as said Commissioner of Public Works or said City may determine, together with the right to- dispose of surplus spoil material for sewerage construction purposes; and to make such constructions as said Commissioner of Public Works or said City may require to protect and support such sewer or sewers and appurtenant structures and sewer service or other connections on, in, through, under, and along certain strips of land in said City of Cranston described by parcels designated as follow, namely: * *

[253]*253There is in evidence also a plan of the taking upon which are delineated the portions of petitioners’ tract in which the easement is to be taken, which discloses that such portions coincide substantially with the proposed street. In addition, the taking includes two strips of land each 25 feet in width, one of which extends northerly from the northern line of the proposed street to the cemetery, while the other extends easterly from the eastern line of said street to the shore of Randall’s Pond. As delineated on these plans, the easement to be taken extends along the entire length of the westerly line of lot 2853 owned, by petitioners.

In his decision the trial justice made several findings of fact and concluded therefrom, in substance, that the conveyances of the several lots abutting on Atwood avenue created private easements of way in the proposed street in favor of those lots; that the 1959 platting of the tract constituted an incipient dedication of the proposed street to the public; that the easement taken in the proposed street by respondent did not extinguish the private easements of way existing therein; that respondent’s easement taken in the proposed street has a concurrent existence with the private . easements of way therein existing; and that petitioners have residual rights to use the area in which respondent’s easement was taken to an extent consistent with the paramount right of respondent to use that area pursuant to the terms of the taking.

The petitioners contend that error inheres in these conclusions of the trial justice on several grounds, which contentions, in our opinion, raise two fundamental questions. The first is whether petitioners had any right or interest in the proposed street at the time it was taken by respondent for which they would be entitled to an award of more than mere nominal damages. The second question is whether the taking so deprived lot 2853 of ways of ingress and egress as to entitle petitioners to an award of severance damages therefor.

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Bluebook (online)
197 A.2d 310, 97 R.I. 248, 1964 R.I. LEXIS 81, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/vallone-v-city-of-cranston-department-of-public-works-ri-1964.