Carol C. Ballard v. SVF Foundation SVF Foundation v. Carol C. Ballard Dorrance H. Hamilton v. Carol C. Ballard , 181 A.3d 27 ( 2018 )


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  • April 10, 2018
    Supreme Court
    Carol C. Ballard et al.           :                  No. 2015-351-Appeal.
    (NC 13-499)
    v.                      :
    SVF Foundation.                :
    SVF Foundation                 :                  No. 2015-352-Appeal.
    (NC 08-655)
    v.                      :
    Carol C. Ballard et al.           :
    Dorrance H. Hamilton et al.         :                  No. 2015-353-Appeal.
    (NC 00-340)
    v.                      :
    Carol C. Ballard et al.           :
    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
    222-3258 of any typographical or other formal errors in order that
    corrections may be made before the opinion is published.
    Supreme Court
    Carol C. Ballard et al.            :                   No. 2015-351-Appeal.
    (NC 13-499)
    v.                       :
    SVF Foundation.                  :
    SVF Foundation                   :                   No. 2015-352-Appeal.
    (NC 08-655)
    v.                       :
    Carol C. Ballard et al.            :
    Dorrance H. Hamilton et al.           :                   No. 2015-353-Appeal.
    (NC 00-340)
    v.                       :
    Carol C. Ballard et al.            :
    Present: Suttell, C.J., Goldberg, Flaherty, Robinson, and Indeglia, JJ.
    OPINION
    Justice Goldberg, for the Court. Before this Court is yet another chapter in the long-
    running spat between Newport’s renowned feuding neighbors, Carol C. Ballard and A.L. Ballard
    (the Ballards) against SVF Foundation (the Foundation) and its predecessor owner, the Dorrance
    H. Hamilton Trust (the Trust), regarding the former “Edgehill property” located in Newport,
    Rhode Island. The parties have engaged in an embittered and unseemly battle that has endured
    for more than seventeen years. In the multiple cases that have been filed in the Superior Court—
    presided over by a series of intrepid trial justices—not a single count, claim, or counterclaim has
    proceeded to trial.1 Rather, a plethora of summary judgments and Rule 54(b) judgments abound.
    The Ballards currently appeal from summary judgments and an order of dismissal entered by the
    1
    See Moore v. Ballard, 
    914 A.2d 487
    (R.I. 2007); Hamilton v. Ballard, 
    161 A.3d 470
    (R.I.
    2017).
    -1-
    Superior Court, on the eve of trial, in these consolidated cases. The parties appeared before the
    Supreme Court for oral argument on November 7, 2017. After carefully reviewing the record
    and considering the parties’ written and oral submissions, we affirm the judgment in all respects.
    Facts and Travel
    In early 2001, in the context of pending litigation, the Superior Court ordered a partition
    of the Edgehill property and appointed a partition commissioner (the commissioner) to assess the
    equities and recommend a fair division of the property between the Ballards and the
    Foundation’s previous owner, the Trust.2 On February 8, 2002, the commissioner issued his
    report, including his findings and recommendations; on September 27, 2002, the commissioner
    issued a supplemental report and recommendation. The Superior Court adopted the
    commissioner’s findings and recommendations, and a judgment of partition entered on
    December 16, 2002. The Ballards and the Foundation were awarded equal portions of the
    property—specifically, the Foundation was awarded approximately 17.172 acres, comprising a
    masonry complex known as the “Swiss Village,” and the Ballards were awarded 11.478 acres,
    which included two structures known as the “Manor House” and the “Carriage House.” Carol
    Ballard also owned a separate parcel identified as “Lot 20,” an undeveloped lot that abuts the
    Edgehill property on the westerly side.3 Lot 20 is featured in the current phase of this battle.
    The partition order was not challenged by either side, and it ripened into a final judgment.
    However, the parties’ incessant squabbles over access easements and sewer debate have
    persisted for many years. This Court has been confronted with a petition for relief from the
    partition judgment arising from an access easement, the unending sewer debate, as well as
    2
    For convenience, we shall refer to the Foundation as the owner throughout this opinion.
    3
    Carol Ballard originally bought Lot 20 in 1995; it is now owned by Ballard Properties, LP.
    -2-
    numerous amendments to the original complaint, additional claims, counterclaims, and new
    complaints.4
    The Sewer System and Lot 20
    (NC-2000-0340)
    Among the post-partition disputes from which these appeals arise was the Edgehill
    property sewer system (the sewer system). Questions about joint responsibility for the sewer
    system and whether the sewer system could be utilized to service adjacent lots were raised
    during the partition proceeding. The Ballards sought, and were denied, an easement to connect
    Lot 20 to the sewer system; their request had been opposed by the Foundation. This was not the
    Ballards’ first attempt to do so, nor was it their last. Indeed, it is fair to say that much of this
    litigation has centered on the Ballards’ persistent efforts to expand the sewer system for their
    personal benefit. On September 27, 2002, the commissioner issued his supplemental report and
    recommendation to address the post-partition sewer system issues. The commissioner expressly
    determined that it was not necessary to address whether the Ballards may access the sewer
    system to service abutting properties such as Lot 20, as that issue did not relate to the partitioned
    estate.
    On December 6, 2002, the Superior Court issued an order of partition that adopted the
    original and supplemental findings and recommendations of the commissioner. As explained in
    the order, the sewer pump facility and its sewer lines serviced the Swiss Village, the Manor
    House, and the Carriage House. The trial justice awarded the Ballards and the Foundation―in
    joint ownership―all the benefits and rights to the sewer pump station, the forced main sewer
    line, and the main sewer feed line on the Edgehill property, and directed that any repair and
    4
    As discussed below, in 2005, the Foundation filed a fifth amended complaint in case number
    NC-2000-0340. In response, the Ballards filed numerous counterclaims.
    -3-
    maintenance responsibilities be allocated on a pro rata basis. The order also awarded individual
    ownership of any lateral sewer lines located on the parties’ respective properties. The Superior
    Court declared that “[t]o the extent that other necessary but unspecified utility or drainage lines,
    conditions or facilities exist which predate the partition, such shall be deemed pre-existing
    easements by necessity or implication which inure to the benefit of the dominant tenant.” The
    Ballards are before the Court arguing that the sewer system qualifies as an “unspecified utility or
    drainage line.” Although no appeal was taken by either party from the partition judgment, the
    Ballards’ efforts to connect the sewer system to Lot 20 have persisted.
    In a 2005 fifth amended complaint in the original action, the Foundation sought
    injunctive relief to prevent the Ballards from connecting Lot 20 to the Edgehill property’s sewer
    station.5 The Ballards then filed an answer and counterclaim, which included claims for trespass,
    declaratory judgment, and an accounting.6 A decade later, in 2015, with the trial date looming,
    the Ballards moved to amend their counterclaim to add a new count, seeking a declaration that an
    implied easement to access the sewer system arose when they bought Lot 20. The motion to
    amend was denied. No appeal was taken.
    5
    There were numerous counts set forth in the Foundation’s fifth amended complaint: Count I,
    injunctive relief for the sewer system; Count II, injunctive relief for overburdening an access
    easement; Count III, accounting relative to the Edgehill property; Count IV, unjust enrichment;
    Count V, implied easement or easement arising as a matter of law; Count VI, trespass; Count
    VII, wetlands violations; Count VIII, quiet title/acquiescence; Count IIX [sic], fraud; and Count
    IX, slander of title.
    6
    The Ballards’ counterclaim alleged: Count I, trespass; Count II, malicious prosecution; Count
    III, abuse of process; Count IV, waste; Count V, declaratory judgment; Count VI, accounting;
    and Count VII, unreasonable interference with easement.
    -4-
    The Driveway Easement
    (NC-2013-0499)
    An easement that is described in the commissioner’s report and recommendation as “a
    driveway easement for access to the Carriage House” (the driveway easement) is also before us
    on appeal.7 The driveway easement provided the Ballards with access to a driveway over the
    Foundation’s property to the Carriage House. Due to zoning setback requirements, this easement
    was a necessary part of the partition judgment. Two stone pillars stood at the entrance to the
    driveway: one on the Foundation’s property and the other on the Ballards’ property, with an iron
    gate between them. The stone pillars and the iron gate were in poor condition and in need of
    repair. Given the parties’ toxic relationship, it was only a matter of time before this circumstance
    led to acrimony and litigation.
    The Ballards, concerned about the appearance and the condition of the pillars and the
    gate, sought to initiate the restoration of these structures. A.L. Ballard approached the Trust, the
    owner at the time, with an offer to relocate the pillars and to move the driveway. Before this
    Court, the Ballards allege that, after replacing the pillars and gate and relocating the driveway,
    thus eliminating the need for access to the Foundation’s property, they nonetheless intended to
    continue to use “their easement.” They planned to install a garden with landscaping and a grass
    or gravel path for foot or vehicular traffic over “their easement”; and not for its original purpose
    as “an access easement over existing driveway to [the] Carriage House.” Indeed, at a July 9,
    2015, pretrial conference, the Ballards’ counsel argued to the trial justice that “the whole purpose
    7
    Another easement, known as the “interior access easement,” was litigated in case number NC-
    2000-340 in the context of a motion for relief from a judgment. The issue came before us in
    
    Hamilton, 161 A.3d at 480
    . This court vacated the trial justices’ judgment and remanded for
    further proceedings. The issue remains pending in the Superior Court.
    -5-
    of moving the driveway is so we can landscape on our easement[.]” Counsel also argued that the
    Ballards moved the driveway but that “[w]e didn’t move the easement.”
    According to the Foundation, it agreed to the offer to relocate the driveway and move the
    pillars onto the Ballards’ property; however, in return, the Foundation declared its intent to erect
    a fence on its property, where the stone pillar once stood. The Foundation also contends that, by
    relocating the driveway, the Ballards abandoned the driveway easement. Despite knowing the
    Foundation’s intention once the driveway was relocated, the Ballards claim that they “proceeded
    with the project of relocating and rebuilding the stone pillars and relocating the carriage house
    driveway.” Thereafter, the Foundation began installing the fence, and another donnybrook
    erupted.
    The Ballards filed a new complaint in Superior Court on December 16, 2013, seeking to
    enjoin the Foundation from erecting the fence and obstructing their use and enjoyment of “their
    easement.”8 The Ballards argued that, notwithstanding their request to move the pillars and
    relocate the driveway, and the Foundation’s conditional acceptance, they had no intention of
    abandoning the driveway easement. The Foundation responded that the proposal to relocate the
    driveway was accepted based on the understanding that the Foundation would install a fence at
    the entry of the driveway. The Foundation also filed a counterclaim alleging several counts,
    including a request for a declaration that the Ballards had abandoned the driveway easement.
    These consolidated actions were set for trial on July 29, 2015.
    8
    The 2013 complaint filed by the Ballards related to the driveway easement and Lot 20. It
    alleged: Count I, seeking to restrain or enjoin the Foundation from obstructing and interfering
    with the Ballards’ driveway easement; and Count II, seeking a declaratory judgment that the
    Ballards have a right to make improvements on their Lot 20 easement (which had also been
    created by the 2002 partition judgment).
    -6-
    Pretrial Dispositions
    On May 4 and June 1, 2015, the parties came before the trial justice on the Foundation’s
    motion for partial summary judgment on Count I of the Foundation’s fifth amended complaint,
    seeking to enjoin the Ballards from accessing the jointly owned Edgehill property sewer system
    to service a subdivision of Lot 20. The trial justice noted at the later hearing date that
    “[t]his Court gave the parties a month to try to resolve the matter
    by trying to reach a resolution that would pay for the sewerage
    system. * * * There seems to be no material fact that I can see. As
    a matter of law, [the sewer easement] apparently cannot be
    extended to benefit other lots that were not a part of the initial
    partition.”
    In recognizing that another easement would have to be created in order for the Ballards to
    connect to the sewer system, the trial justice granted the motion for summary judgment in favor
    of the Foundation, awarding injunctive and declaratory relief to prevent the expansion of the
    sewer system. An appeal of that order is before us in this matter.
    On July 9, 2015, the trial justice conducted an on-the-record pretrial conference in an
    attempt to narrow the issues in the consolidated cases and clarify which claims would proceed to
    trial on July 29, 2015. The trial justice patiently plowed through the multiple claims in each
    complaint and counterclaim.9
    In open court and on the record, the parties agreed to dismiss a number of the claims in
    advance of trial. Included in the claims addressed at the conference was the Ballards’ demand
    9
    During the July 9, 2015, hearing, the parties continued to bicker over whether some claims had
    been dismissed by stipulation; the trial justice expressed his frustration:
    “I’ll let you know, as I’m sitting here and thinking about a
    potential jury in this case, and people in this town are wealthy, and
    then there’s those less fortunate, probably sometimes can’t buy
    groceries, and the amount of silly money spent in this case for
    [fourteen] years, this is going to be embarrassing for someone in
    the long run, I can tell you that.”
    -7-
    for an accounting as set forth in its counterclaim to the Foundation’s fifth amended complaint.
    Counsel for the Ballards agreed to dismiss this claim. Soon thereafter, counsel for the Ballards
    notified the Foundation that he intended to pursue an accounting claim at trial. The record
    before us reflects that the Ballards attempted to recast their accounting claim as a demand for
    expenses related to post-partition work on the sewer system, which was unrelated to the original
    accounting claim. Accompanying this eleventh-hour about-face was an e-mail, characterized as
    a “document dump”―consisting of voluminous written material―in support of the Ballards’
    claim for reimbursement for post-partition sewer expenses. The Foundation filed an emergency
    motion to enforce the Ballards’ previous dismissal of their accounting claim, and, on July 27,
    2015, two days before trial, the trial justice held a hearing.10 The Foundation argued that, based
    on counsel’s colloquy with the court on July 9, 2015 the Ballards’ accounting claim had been
    dismissed.
    In light of the shifting posture of his adversary, counsel for the Foundation prudently
    arrived at the courthouse early on the morning of July 27, 2015, and secured a transcript of the
    pretrial conference concerning the accounting counterclaim.       The trial justice reviewed the
    transcript and confirmed the dismissal of the newly formulated accounting claim, based on
    counsel’s representation to the court on the July 9, 2015 hearing. An order entered that granted
    the Foundation’s emergency motion to enforce a settlement agreement, and dismissed the
    Ballards’ accounting counterclaim.11 The Ballards have appealed the dismissal.
    10
    Due to the timing of the Ballards’ “document dump,” the Foundation was left with no
    alternative course of action other than to file an emergency motion.
    11
    In the same order, the trial justice also granted the Foundation’s motion to dismiss without
    prejudice its unjust enrichment claim (Count IV of the fifth amended complaint) pending an
    appeal, and dismissed without prejudice the Ballards’ trespass claim (Count I of their
    counterclaim) pending appeal.
    -8-
    There was no trial on any claim. After the July 27, 2015 hearing, counsel for the Ballards
    filed a motion for sanctions pursuant to Rule 11 of the Superior Court Rules of Civil Procedure,
    alleging that counsel for the Foundation had falsely represented that a settlement agreement had
    been reached on July 9, 2015. He also accused counsel and the trial justice of engaging in ex
    parte communications, a serious accusation that was based on the fact that the trial justice was
    provided with the transcript in advance of the emergency hearing.
    On August 31, 2015, the parties came before the trial justice yet again, on the
    Foundation’s motion for summary judgment on the driveway easement. During this hearing, in
    obvious frustration over the moving pieces in this case, the trial justice likened this action to that
    of a shell game:
    “THE COURT: * * * I mean if I watched this case, that has been
    going on for 15 years, it is beginning to look like a pea. There’s
    one pea under the shell and everybody is kind of moving it around.
    I wonder if there’s a pea at all?”
    The Court admonished counsel for the Ballards:
    “THE COURT: This is what I was saying about the pea under the
    shell.”
    The trial justice ultimately granted the Foundation’s motion for summary judgment on
    the driveway easement claim, and summarily denied the Ballards’ motion for sanctions. A final
    judgment was entered on October 19, 2015. The Ballards filed a timely notice of appeal.
    Standard of Review
    It is well settled that “[t]his Court reviews a grant of summary judgment de novo.” Sullo
    v. Greenberg, 
    68 A.3d 404
    , 406 (R.I. 2013) (quoting Sacco v. Cranston School Department, 
    53 A.3d 147
    , 149-50 (R.I. 2012)). “Examining the case from the vantage point of the trial justice
    who passed on the motion for summary judgment, ‘[w]e view the evidence in the light most
    -9-
    favorable to the nonmoving party, and if we conclude that there are no genuine issues of material
    fact and that the moving party is entitled to judgment as a matter of law[,] we will affirm the
    judgment.’” 
    Id. at 406-07
    (quoting 
    Sacco, 53 A.3d at 150
    ). “Although summary judgment is
    recognized as an extreme remedy, * * * to avoid summary judgment the burden is on the
    nonmoving party to produce competent evidence that ‘prove[s] the existence of a disputed issue
    of material fact[.]’” 
    Id. at 407
    (quoting Mutual Development Corp. v. Ward Fisher & Co., 
    47 A.3d 319
    , 323 (R.I. 2012)). In the absence of a credible showing of the existence of material
    facts, summary judgment is warranted.
    Analysis
    The Ballards have narrowed their appeal to the judgments concerning the sewer system
    and the driveway easement; the order dismissing the accounting claim, based on the in-court
    conference; and the denial of their Rule 11 motion for sanctions against the attorney for the
    Foundation. We address these issues in turn.
    A
    The Sewer System
    (NC-2000-0340)
    It is apparent from the multiple complaints and counterclaims, and the voluminous
    record, that the Ballards’ efforts to connect Lot 20 to the sewer system have never abated. In
    2000, before the partition proceedings began, the Ballards requested an easement to connect their
    abutting Lot 20 to the sewer system. The Trust, the owner at the time, objected and filed an
    action seeking to enjoin the Ballards from expanding the sewer system in order to service
    abutting properties. The Superior Court subsequently entered the partition judgment and adopted
    the findings and recommendations of the commissioner. Notably, the commissioner addressed
    the sewer issue, finding that the main sewer line crosses from the pump house, through the rear
    - 10 -
    of the Foundation’s Swiss Village property, and traverses Lot 20 for a short distance. The
    commissioner expressly reported in 2002 that:
    “The question of whether the Ballards or [the Foundation] may use
    the system in order to service their adjacent properties (lots #20
    and #66, respectively) need not be addressed in this
    recommendation. Any such future use (or misuse) is presently
    speculative. The resolution of any such contingency would require
    a fact-intensive analysis of the issues presented at the time, should
    the need arise.
    “Any and all lateral sewer lines, i.e., those that are connected to the
    main feed line (which runs from the pump house crossing the
    Swiss Village to lot #20) and the forced main line (which traverses
    the Carriage House and Manor House lots from the pump house)
    should be owned and maintained solely by the owners of the
    respective lots [, under] which such lateral lines serve.”
    On June 1, 2015, the trial justice granted summary judgment in favor of the Foundation and
    enjoined the Ballards from connecting Lot 20 to the sewer system. The trial justice declared:
    “As a matter of law, this easement apparently cannot be extended
    to benefit other lots that were not a part of the initial partition. So
    the rights to full usage across this piece of property would be in the
    nature of an easement, so therefore I’m going to grant the Motion
    for Summary Judgment for [the] Foundation.”
    The Ballards contend before this Court that the trial justice erred in rejecting their claim
    of a sewer easement. The Ballards argue that an easement by necessity or implication to use the
    sewer system to service Lot 20 arose from the partition judgment.              Notwithstanding the
    commissioner’s specific findings rejecting any such easement, the Ballards rely upon a different
    portion of the partition judgment that declares “[t]o the extent that other necessary but
    unspecified utility or drainage lines, conditions, or facilities exist which predate the partition,
    such shall be deemed pre-existing easements by necessity or implication which inure to the
    benefit of the dominant tenant.” (Emphasis added.) This argument is wholly without merit. This
    portion of the partition judgment is separate and apart from the specific declaration in the
    - 11 -
    judgment relating to the sewer system. The sewer system is not an “unspecified utility or
    drainage line.” The Ballards also contend that “below-ground flow of sewage” and a manhole
    located on Lot 20 somehow amount to a preexisting easement. The Ballards have failed to
    articulate how a manhole and underground sewer pipe can service an uninhabited parcel of land.
    The Ballards also claim—without any supporting evidence—that an easement was created by
    and through their deed to Lot 20.
    The Foundation responds that Lot 20 has never been serviced by the sewer system and
    that, therefore, the partition of the Edgehill property did not create an easement for Lot 20.
    Although acknowledging that sewer pipes extend underneath Lot 20 for a short distance, the
    Foundation argues that this circumstance does not create an easement for Lot 20 to access the
    sewer system.12 Nor does the placement of a manhole on Lot 20 give the Ballards any right to
    connect to the sewer system, contends the Foundation. Finally, the Foundation argues that the
    Ballards’ deed to Lot 20 neither grants an easement for access to the sewer system, nor does it
    purport to create any issue of material fact. We agree with these contentions and proceed to
    resolve the issue of Lot 20 and the sewer system with finality.
    There is nothing in the unappealed partition judgment that gives rise to an easement,
    express or implied, for Lot 20 to access the sewer system.         Lot 20 and the sewer issue
    specifically were excluded in the partition judgment. The Ballards’ contention that the location
    of a manhole on Lot 20 somehow gives them the right to tie into the sewer system, while artful,
    is delusory. The manhole that is situated on Lot 20 has no bearing on the issues in this case. To
    the extent that it constitutes a trespass, the Foundation has agreed to remove it. Similarly, the
    12
    The Foundation has consistently offered to relocate the pipes that intrude onto Lot 20, to no
    avail. Counsel for the Ballards responded that the Foundation has no right to come onto their
    land.
    - 12 -
    fact that a lateral sewer line extends for a short distance onto Lot 20 is equally irrelevant; Lot 20
    is an undeveloped parcel of land.
    Finally, we briefly address the Ballards’ argument that they were granted an easement to
    connect to the sewer system through the original property deed to Lot 20. The Ballards raised
    this issue a month before trial in a motion to amend their counterclaim. Their attempt to add this
    claim to a case that had been pending for over a decade was rebuffed. They are foreclosed from
    raising that issue on appeal. As we consistently have held on numerous occasions, “[t]his Court
    staunchly adheres to the ‘raise or waive’ rule.” State v. Barros, 
    148 A.3d 168
    , 174 (R.I. 2016)
    (quoting State v. Figuereo, 
    31 A.3d 1283
    , 1289 (R.I. 2011)). “The raise-or-waive rule requires
    that objections are to be raised at trial so that opposing counsel has ‘an opportunity to respond
    appropriately to claims raised.’” 
    Id. at 175
    (quoting State v. Burke, 
    522 A.2d 725
    , 731 (R.I.
    1987)). Because the Ballards failed to raise and articulate any claim that the property deed to Lot
    20 granted them, as they contend on appeal, “the right to lay sewer and other underground lines”
    into the Edgehill property, we deem this argument waived. Accordingly, the Ballards have no
    right to connect Lot 20 to the sewer system; they have no express or implied easement in the
    sewer system, as a matter of law.
    B
    The Driveway Easement
    (NC-2013-0499)
    In 2013, after they dismantled and relocated the existing driveway, the Ballards filed an
    action seeking to prevent the Foundation from erecting a fence on the Foundation’s property. As
    noted above, it was the Ballards who sought to repair and relocate the driveway, along with the
    stone pillars and the iron gate. The Foundation, through written correspondence, had agreed to
    the Ballards’ request to relocate the driveway, with the understanding that the Foundation would
    - 13 -
    erect a fence on the Foundation’s side.13 However, when the Foundation undertook to install the
    fence, the Ballards balked. They filed suit seeking to enjoin the construction of the fence,
    alleging that there was no agreement between the parties and that they intended to continue to
    use the driveway easement for “landscaping and plantings.” It was a short fight; the Ballards
    lost. Injunctive relief was denied, and summary judgment was eventually sought. On August
    31, 2015, the trial justice granted summary judgment, declaring that the Foundation was no
    longer burdened by the driveway easement.
    Before this Court, the Ballards contend that the issues surrounding whether there was a
    contract between the parties or whether the Ballards abandoned the driveway easement are fact-
    bound inquiries for which summary judgment should not have been granted. This argument is
    without merit. The existence of a contract, of course, is a matter of law. See Fogarty v.
    Palumbo, 
    163 A.3d 526
    , 539 (R.I. 2017) (affirming trial justice’s grant of summary judgment
    because the evidence presented, as a matter of law, did not establish the existence of a contract);
    Filippi v. Filippi, 
    818 A.2d 608
    , 625 (R.I. 2003) (affirming the trial justice’s decision as a matter
    13
    The letter dated September 17, 2013, states:
    “Dear Mr. Ballard:
    “* * *
    “We agree to your moving the gate and driveway, including the
    pillar that presently sits on [the Foundation] property, to a new
    location. It’s our understanding that the new access way to the
    Carriage House, including the driveway and gates, will be located
    entirely on Ballard property and that you will remove the driveway
    surface from the Foundation property. The Foundation, in turn,
    will fence our side of the property line, and install planting so as to
    return its property, in that area, to a natural condition.
    “We look forward to seeing the changes and know it will be a great
    improvement.” (Emphasis added.)
    - 14 -
    of law on the existence of a contract). However, we need not delve deeply into the law of
    contracts, because the issue before the Court is controlled by the law of easements.
    The record discloses that, due to zoning setback requirements, the Carriage House
    driveway was on the Foundation’s portion of the property, and an easement was necessary in
    order for the Ballards to access the Carriage House. Although this easement was an express
    grant of easement in the partition judgment, it was nonetheless a necessary component of the
    partition and was granted for a specific purpose. Thus, it possessed all of the characteristics of
    an easement by necessity.
    When the Ballards relocated the driveway to their property, the driveway easement was
    no longer necessary. The law is clear that when an easement of necessity is no longer necessary,
    the right to that easement is terminated and the easement thereafter ceases to exist. See Fusaro v.
    Varrecchione, 
    51 R.I. 35
    , 36, 
    150 A. 462
    , 462 (1930) (“A right of way of necessity ceases when
    the necessity for its continuance ceases[.]” (quoting Sweezy v. Vallette, 
    37 R.I. 51
    , 54, 
    90 A. 1078
    , 1080 (1914))). Generally, this occurs when another lawful way onto the property has been
    acquired, thus eliminating the necessity. 
    Sweezy, 37 R.I. at 54
    , 90 A. at 1080.
    Furthermore, we are of the opinion that the driveway easement was abandoned by the
    Ballards themselves based on the undisputed evidence produced on summary judgment. It has
    been held that “[w]hether or not a way has been abandoned by acts in pais is a question of
    intention and such intention must be shown by positive evidence of an express declaration to that
    effect or by acts of a decisive character.” 
    Sweezy, 37 R.I. at 54
    , 90 A. at 1080 (emphasis added).
    In the case before us, we are hard pressed to envision a more decisive act of abandonment than
    relocating the very driveway over which the easement runs, taking a stone pillar and the gate
    along with you, and then excavating the driveway surface from the servient estate. The Ballards
    - 15 -
    not only abandoned the easement, they demolished it. When the owner of an easement “has
    voluntarily acted in so decisive a manner as to clearly indicate his intent to abandon the
    easement,” and these acts “were relied upon by the person owning the land subject to the
    easement[,]” the easement has been abandoned as a matter of law. Charles C. Gardiner Lumber
    Co. v. Graves, 
    63 R.I. 345
    , 350, 
    8 A.2d 862
    , 864 (1939). The evidence produced on summary
    judgment is uncontradicted and conclusive. The easement has been abandoned by the acts of the
    Ballards.
    Accordingly, there were no genuine issues of material fact presented in this case, and the
    trial justice properly granted summary judgment. We affirm.
    C
    Accounting Counterclaim and Sanctions
    We now turn to the more troubling issues in this case: the Ballards’ shifting position on
    the dismissal of their accounting counterclaim and the eleventh-hour transmutation of the claim
    itself. In 2005, in their answer and counterclaim to the Foundation’s fifth amended complaint,
    the Ballards sought an accounting pursuant to G.L. 1956 § 10-2-1.14 The Ballards alleged that,
    14
    General Laws 1956 § 10-2-1 provides:
    “Whenever two (2) or more persons have and hold any estate,
    interest or property, whether real or personal, in common as joint
    tenants, tenants in common, co-parceners or joint owners and one
    or more of the owners of the common property shall take, receive,
    use or have benefit thereof, in greater proportion than his, her, or
    their interest therein, such owner or owners, his, her, or their
    executors and administrators shall be liable to render his, her, or
    their account of the use and profit of such common property to his,
    her or their fellow commoner or commoners, jointly or severally;
    and such of the fellow commoner or commoners or any or either of
    them, their executors or administrators, shall have his, her, or their
    action against such receiver or receivers or either of them, as his,
    - 16 -
    before the partition judgment, the Trust had committed waste on the jointly owned property,
    including demolition and reconstruction of structures in violation of local regulations and
    ordinances, and altering and destroying extensive wetlands, in contradiction of the Ballards’
    interests. The Ballards alleged that they were cited by the state’s Department of Environmental
    Management for wetlands violations and ordered, “along with Hamilton, to perform extensive
    restoration work and pay administrative penalties[,]” requiring them to “expend great sums on
    attorneys’ fees and expert fees[.]” They sought an accounting.
    In 2006, in response to an interrogatory inquiring about the facts and documents in
    support of the accounting claim, the Ballards answered:
    “The plaintiff and defendants were joint tenants in the Edgehill
    property. During the time of the joint tenancy, the plaintiff
    embarked on significant alterations to the jointly held property
    without the knowledge or approval of the defendants.” (Emphasis
    added.)
    Additionally, when asked in another 2006 interrogatory to set forth the specific amount of
    damages they were seeking for each claim in their counterclaim, the Ballards responded:
    “The defendants’ claim for money damages is for the legal and
    professional fees they were required to incur in protecting their
    interests after being named as defendants in the Department of
    Environmental Management’s enforcement action that arose out of
    Mrs. Hamilton’s uncontested alterations and destruction of
    wetlands on the jointly owned property.”
    The Ballards are bound by these responses, and their attempt to transmute the claim into one
    seeking post-partition sewer expenses must fail.
    her, or their bailiff or bailiffs, for receiving more than his, her, or
    their part or proportion as provided in this section.”
    - 17 -
    Furthermore, the accounting claim lay dormant for many years until the July 9, 2015
    pretrial conference.    It was at that time that counsel for the Ballards made the following
    statements with respect to several claims, including the accounting claim:
    “[COUNSEL FOR THE BALLARDS]: * * * Count 2, malicious
    prosecution: We do not intend to pursue that claim and I offered to
    dismiss that with prejudice; abusive [sic] process, the same; waste,
    the same.
    “* * *
    “Accounting, I’ve offered to dismiss that with prejudice.
    “And interference with access easement is in the Supreme Court
    and is pending appeal.”
    As the trial date approached, there was no writing reflecting this agreement. However,
    counsel for the Ballards notified the Foundation of his intention to pursue the newly clothed
    accounting claim, and filed a pretrial memorandum that set forth the basis of an entirely new
    claim. In the memorandum counsel stated:
    “The Ballards seek an accounting to impose liability on [the
    Foundation] for its share of expenditures that the Ballards have
    made for maintenance of and repairs and improvements to the
    Edgehill sewer system which Ballards and [the Foundation] own as
    tenants in common.” (Emphasis added.)
    Counsel forwarded more than 90 pages of correspondence, invoices, and photographs to the
    Foundation in an effort to recast the accounting claim under a new set of facts. As noted,
    counsel for the Foundation immediately filed an emergency motion to enforce the Ballards’
    agreement to dismiss the claim and wisely procured a transcript on the morning of the hearing.
    After reviewing the transcript, the trial justice granted the Foundation’s motion to enforce the
    agreement to dismiss the claim:
    “[COUNSEL FOR THE FOUNDATION]: Your honor, this is a
    count going back a year that [the Ballards’ counsel] has told me
    - 18 -
    was dismissed. It relates to a 2000 case. Now we came before this
    Court on pretrial conference to limit the issues so the parties would
    know what is going to be tried and so the Court would know what
    is going to be tried. And your Honor went through each of these
    for a great deal of time.
    “THE COURT: Over an hour.
    “[COUNSEL FOR THE FOUNDATION]: At [the Ballards’
    counsel’s] request. And at the point that you came up with, you
    said: ‘What is going on with this accounting claim?’ And [the
    Ballards’ counsel] said: ‘I offered to dismiss that with prejudice[.’]
    And you said: ‘Let’s go to the next one.’
    “[COUNSEL FOR THE BALLARDS]:                      Do you have the
    transcript?
    “THE COURT: I have it here.
    “[COUNSEL FOR THE FOUNDATION]: Your Honor, this
    relates to the 2000 case.
    “THE COURT: Wait a minute. The motion is granted. I want to
    move on. You can note your objection.”
    Regrettably, the Ballards next sought Rule 11 sanctions, arguing that counsel for the Foundation
    had fraudulently represented to the trial justice that the Ballards’ accounting claim had been
    dismissed and that he and the trial justice had engaged in an ex parte communication. The
    Ballard’s counsel acknowledged at oral argument before us that this latter claim was based on
    the fact that the trial justice was provided with a transcript of the July 9, 2015 proceeding.
    We begin our analysis of this troubling conduct by noting that Rule 1.4 of the Superior
    Court Rules of Practice provides that “[a]ll agreements of parties or attorneys touching the
    business of the court shall be in writing, unless orally made or assented to by them in the
    presence of the court when disposing of such business, or they will be considered of no validity.”
    (Emphasis added.) Additionally, this Court has held that “stipulated agreements [must] be
    placed on the record or * * * be reduced to an agreed-upon writing [to ensure] that the
    - 19 -
    agreement itself does not become a source of further controversy and litigation.”               In re
    McBurney Law Services, Inc., 
    798 A.2d 877
    , 881 (R.I. 2002) (emphasis added) (quoting
    DiLuglio v. Providence Auto Body, Inc., 
    755 A.2d 757
    , 776 (R.I. 2000)). “A party may not
    escape its obligations simply because one of the parties may not consider the agreement to be as
    palatable to them as when they entered into it.” 
    Id. The record
    in this case is clear: counsel for the Ballards stipulated in open court that he
    was dismissing the accounting claim, along with several other counts in the consolidated actions.
    We reject as disingenuous counsel’s appellate contention that his statement was not “a statement
    of present intention” to dismiss the Ballards’ accounting claim. It is undisputed that the purpose
    of the pretrial conference on the record was to narrow the claims asserted in the complaints and
    counterclaims in order to prepare for trial.
    Moreover, counsel’s argument that there was no dismissal of the accounting claim
    because there was no writing is wrong. First, as noted, a writing is not required when the
    stipulation is made in open court. Secondly, and of greater concern, counsel made identical
    representations, in open court, for three additional counts that were dismissed without a written
    stipulation. When asked about this disparity at oral argument, counsel insisted that he was
    “entitled to pick and choose.” This response speaks to the fallacy of counsel’s contentions
    before this Court.      Accordingly, we conclude that the trial justice properly dismissed the
    Ballards’ accounting counterclaim.
    The Ballards further contend that it was inappropriate for the trial justice to deny Rule 11
    sanctions against counsel for the Foundation.15 The Ballards insist that counsel’s motion seeking
    15
    Rule 11 of the Superior Court Rules of Civil Procedure provides, in relevant part:
    - 20 -
    to enforce a settlement agreement was fraudulent because no settlement agreement had been
    reached by the parties. The Ballards also accused the trial justice of engaging in ex parte
    communication with counsel for the Foundation because counsel prudently obtained a transcript
    of the pretrial conference and provided it to the Court at the later hearing. The Ballards contend
    that it was an abuse of discretion by the trial justice to deny sanctions without setting forth his
    reasoning on the record. These contentions are without merit. Counsel has failed to proffer a
    good-faith basis for seeking Rule 11 sanctions.
    This Court will not disturb a trial justice’s decision to impose or deny sanctions for an
    attorney’s alleged misconduct unless the trial justice based his or her ruling on “an erroneous
    view of the law or on a clearly erroneous assessment of the evidence.” Michalopoulos v. C&D
    Restaurant, Inc., 
    847 A.2d 294
    , 300 (R.I. 2004) (internal quotation marks omitted). Here, the
    “The signature of an attorney, self-represented litigant, or party
    constitutes a certificate by the signer that the signer has read the
    pleading, motion, or other paper; that to the best of the signer’s
    knowledge, information, and belief formed after reasonable inquiry
    the pleading, motion, or other paper is well grounded in fact and is
    warranted by existing law or a good faith argument for the
    extension, modification, or reversal of existing law, and that the
    pleading, motion, or other paper is not interposed for any improper
    purpose, such as to harass or to cause unnecessary delay or
    needless increase in the cost of litigation. If a pleading, motion, or
    other paper is not signed, unless signed promptly after the
    omission is called to the attention of the pleader or movant, or is
    signed with intent to defeat the purpose of this rule, the pleading,
    motion, or other paper shall be stricken. If a pleading, motion, or
    other paper is signed in violation of this rule, the court, upon
    motion or upon its own initiative, may impose upon the person who
    signed the pleading, motion, or other paper, a represented party,
    or both, any appropriate sanction, which may include an order to
    pay to the other party or parties the amount of the reasonable
    expenses incurred because of the filing of the pleading, motion, or
    other paper, including a reasonable attorney’s fee.” (Emphasis
    added.)
    - 21 -
    trial justice appropriately exercised his broad discretion when he denied Rule 11 sanctions.
    There is no suggestion on the record before us that the trial justice abused his discretion. We
    uphold the trial justice’s decision.
    Conclusion
    For the reasons set forth in this opinion, we affirm the judgment in all respects. The
    record shall be returned to the Superior Court.
    - 22 -
    STATE OF RHODE ISLAND AND                                  PROVIDENCE PLANTATIONS
    SUPREME COURT – CLERK’S OFFICE
    OPINION COVER SHEET
    Carol C. Ballard et al. v. SVF Foundation.
    Title of Case                        SVF Foundation v. Carol C. Ballard et al.
    Dorrance H. Hamilton et al. v. Carol C. Ballard et al.
    No. 2015-351-Appeal.
    (NC 13-499)
    No. 2015-352-Appeal.
    Case Number
    (NC 08-655)
    No. 2015-353-Appeal.
    (NC 00-340)
    Date Opinion Filed                   April 10, 2018
    Suttell, C.J., Goldberg, Flaherty, Robinson, and
    Justices
    Indeglia, JJ.
    Written By                           Associate Justice Maureen McKenna Goldberg
    Source of Appeal                     Newport County Superior Court
    Judicial Officer From Lower Court    Associate Justice Walter R. Stone
    For Plaintiffs:
    R. Daniel Prentiss, Esq.
    Attorney(s) on Appeal                For Defendants:
    Stephen J. MacGillivray, Esq.
    Michael Daly, Esq.
    SU-CMS-02A (revised June 2016)