Vingi v. Read

36 A.2d 152, 70 R.I. 5, 1944 R.I. LEXIS 11
CourtSupreme Court of Rhode Island
DecidedFebruary 16, 1944
StatusPublished

This text of 36 A.2d 152 (Vingi v. Read) 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
Vingi v. Read, 36 A.2d 152, 70 R.I. 5, 1944 R.I. LEXIS 11 (R.I. 1944).

Opinion

Moss, J.

This is an action of ejectment brought to establish the plaintiffs’ title in fee simple to a certain tract of land, consisting of thirty acres and a fraction of an acre, which is situated in the town of East Providence in this state and from which the defendant, some years before the bringing of the action, had ejected them.

In an amended count, which was added to their declaration some months after the action was begun and which was based upon general laws 1938, chapter 438, §2, concerning the establishing of title to real estate by adverse possession for ten years, the plaintiffs alleged that prior to the month of May, 1932, they and their - predecessors in title had been for the period of ten years in the uninterrupted, quiet, peaceful and actual seizin and possession of this tract of land, claiming the same as their sole and rightful estate in fee simple.

This additional count was traversed by the defendant and it was upon the "issue thus made that the case was finally disposed of in a jury trial in the superior court, at the conclusion of which the trial justice, upon a motion by the plaintiffs, directed a verdict in their favor for possession of the land. The case is now before us solely on the defendant’s exceptions to that direction and to the denial of his *7 motion for the direction of a verdict in his favor, no other exception being insisted upon before us.

The plaintiffs, in support of their claim of a record title to the real estate in dispute, introduced in evidence a recorded deed, the validity of which is not in question, to them by Alvin S. Mancib and Ethel B. Neves, son and daughter and sole heirs at law of Antone S. Mancib, deceased, with a release of curtesy by the husband of Ethel B. Neves. This deed was delivered on January 11, 1932. Antone S. Mancib, hereinafter referred to as Mancib, left no will and no widow and it is not disputed that whatever right, title and interest, if any, he had in this real estate at the time of his death in September 1931 passed to the plaintiffs by this deed, and remained in them when they brought this action.

It was proved that Mancib, by a warranty deed to him from Addison S. Hawes and Ella D. Hawes, in her right, dated, acknowledged and duly recorded on March 22, 1907, received whatever right, title and interest she then had in the land which is now in dispute in this case, and which is described in that deed as follows, the Runnins River therein referred to being a small stream which in this section runs along the boundary line between this state and Massachusetts :

“A certain lot of land with all the buildings and improvements thereon, situate in the said Town of East Providence, near Mason’s Hill and is called the Kent lot, and is bounded as follows beginning at the southwest corner of the lot where the barn stands, thence northeast about ten rods bounding northwesterly by land of Albert E. Medbery thence northerly about sixty rods bounding westerly by said Medbery’s land thence easterly by land of Erancis W. Peck, to Runnins River, thence southeasterly with the river to land of said Albert E. Medbery, thence southwesterly by said Medbery’s land about twenty five rods to land of Lucas W. Read, thence westerly by said Read’s land about thirty rods to the place of beginning, containing about thirty acres more or less with the right of way to pass and *8 repass from the highway to the barn on said lot, and in front of said barn to drive in and out with a team and across the northerly end of said Lucas W. Read’s Mason’s lot so called to the highway. Being the same premises conveyed to me Ella D. Hawes by deed from Charles R. Read recorded in deed book No. 40 at page 397.”

There was also put in evidence a warranty deed, duly executed, acknowledged and recorded on March 15, 1900, from Charles R. Read, the grandfather of the defendant, to Ella D. Hawes, by which he purported to convey to her the same lot of land of a little over thirty acres and similarly described.

According to uncontradicted evidence at the trial, the plaintiffs, after receiving the deed first above referred to, which purported to convey to them the tract of land in East Providence the title to which is in issue in this case and also another tract of land adjoining that tract and lying to the southwest of it and being about twenty-two and one-half acres in area, had an examination made of the title to these properties. They were later informed by the examiners that prior to a deed of June 24, 1889 from Charles R. Read to Mary E. Greene and hereinafter again referred to, purporting to convey this, tract of a little over thirty acres, it had consisted of two parcels, one of approximately twenty-two acres and another adjoining it on the southeast and having an area of about nine acres. They were also informed by the examiners that the former of these two parcels had been deeded in 1870 to Louisa E. Read in the settlement of her father’s estate and that no deed conveying her title to that parcel to Charles R. Read or any one else appeared in the records of land evidence of the town.

After getting this information the plaintiffs made efforts to procure deeds to them of any rights, titles and interests in that parcel of land from persons who might have received any such rights, titles or interests from Louisa E. Read, directly or indirectly. Learning of these efforts, the defendant procured from many, though not all, of the heirs of *9 Louisa E. Read, she having died, quitclaim deeds of all their respective rights, titles and interests in and to the tract of about thirty acres involved in the instant case. Not long afterwards, relying upon these deeds, he entered upon this tract, excluded therefrom persons who were thereon by authority from the plaintiffs, put some fences around it and laid claim to it. Thereafter the plaintiffs brought this present action to determine the title to this property.

At the trial, copies of plats, which show the tract of land in dispute and adjoining land and other land in the vicinity and which are not inconsistent with each other, were put in evidence by the adversary parties. In these plats there is shown a barn at the southwesterly corner' of the parcel of about nine acres, with a right of way leading therefrom to the highway a short distance to the south.

There was introduced in evidence at the trial a certified copy of the record of a mortgagee’s deed of July 9, 1881, conveying what was clearly this parcel of about nine acres. In that deed that parcel was described as bounded northerly by land of Charles R. Read and easterly by Runnins river. This indicates very clearly that the above-mentioned parcel of land to the north, of approximately twenty acres, had before the date of that deed become the property of Charles R. Read. It was shown by uncontradicted and unimpeached evidence at the trial that the above-mentioned parcel of about nine acres, with the barn at its southwesterly corner, became the property of Charles R. Read on January 3, 1885.

Charles R. Read, on June 24, 1889, made a warranty deed, hereinbefore mentioned, of this parcel of about nine acres, together with the parcel of about twenty-two acres to the north of it, the whole making up the tract of about thirty and four-tenths acres, which is the tract in dispute in this case, to Mary E. Greene, who on the same date made a mortgage to him of the entire tract.

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Bluebook (online)
36 A.2d 152, 70 R.I. 5, 1944 R.I. LEXIS 11, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/vingi-v-read-ri-1944.