Raymond D. Burt, Sr. v. John C. Furtado, Nos. 21-243, 244, 245, 246, 247 (May 1, 2023) ( 2023 )


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  •  May 1, 2023
    May 1, 2023
    Supreme Court
    Raymond D. Burt, Sr.                        :                No. 2021-243-Appeal.
    No. 2021-244-Appeal.
    v.                  :                (PC 11-463)
    John C. Furtado et al.        :
    U.S. Bank National Association, as                :                No. 2021-245-Appeal.
    Trustee for Residential Asset                                    No. 2021-246-Appeal.
    Securities Corporation, Home                                     (PC 16-1572)
    Equity Mortgage Asset – Backed
    Pass – Through Certificates, Series
    2005-K510, Series 2006-E
    v.                  :
    Raymond D. Burt et al.                       :
    Tammy L. Lacoste             :                No. 2021-247-Appeal.
    (PC 13-3802)
    v.                  :
    John C. Furtado 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 (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
    Raymond D. Burt, Sr.           :                No. 2021-243-Appeal.
    No. 2021-244-Appeal.
    v.                   :                (PC 11-463)
    John C. Furtado et al.         :
    U.S. Bank National Association, as    :                No. 2021-245-Appeal.
    Trustee for Residential Asset                        No. 2021-246-Appeal.
    Securities Corporation, Home                         (PC 16-1572)
    Equity Mortgage Asset – Backed
    Pass – Through Certificates, Series
    2005-K510, Series 2006-E
    v.                   :
    Raymond D. Burt et al.          :
    Tammy L. Lacoste              :                No. 2021-247-Appeal.
    (PC 13-3802)
    v.                   :
    John C. Furtado et al.         :
    Present: Suttell, C.J., Goldberg, Robinson, Lynch Prata, and Long, JJ.
    OPINION
    Justice Robinson, for the Court. The appellants, Raymond D. Burt and
    Tammy L. Lacoste, appeal from the grant of six motions for summary judgment in
    three underlying cases. They contend that the motion justice erred by ordering
    reformation of the warranty deeds of both Mr. Burt and Ms. Lacoste and the
    -1-
    mortgage deed of Mr. Burt. That order of reformation was based on (1) the
    uncontested fact that the warranty deeds and the mortgage deed did not reflect the
    intent of the parties and (2) the inference that that fact was the product of mutual
    mistake. These consolidated appeals came before the Supreme Court pursuant to
    an order directing the parties to show cause why the issues raised in these appeals
    should not be summarily decided. After considering the parties’ written and oral
    submissions and after carefully reviewing the record, we are of the opinion that
    cause has not been shown and that these appeals may be resolved without further
    briefing or argument. For the reasons set forth in this opinion, we affirm the
    judgments of the Superior Court.
    I
    Facts and Travel1
    In August 2005, Mr. Burt entered into a purchase and sales agreement with
    Dorothy Tondreau to purchase a piece of property located at 15 Standring Street,
    Cumberland, Rhode Island. In anticipation of that real estate closing, he obtained a
    mortgage in the amount of $189,000 from Homecomings Financial, LLC
    1
    As a result of the fact that we are confronted with three separate civil actions
    and a multitude of counts, the “Facts and Travel” section of this opinion will
    necessarily be somewhat lengthy. Nevertheless, in spite of the complex “travel” of
    these consolidated appeals (that complexity being largely the result of what we
    deem to be certain inappropriate counts in the appellants’ pleadings), it will
    become clear that the appeal itself can be resolved in a rather straightforward
    manner.
    -2-
    (Homecomings Financial). In the same time frame, Ms. Lacoste entered into a
    separate purchase and sales agreement with Ms. Tondreau to purchase the
    undeveloped piece of property at 19 Standring Street, which is adjacent to 15
    Standring Street.
    In preparation for the two closings, Ms. Tondreau’s attorney prepared a
    warranty deed reflecting the conveyance from Ms. Tondreau to Mr. Burt and
    another warranty deed reflecting the conveyance from Ms. Tondreau to Ms.
    Lacoste.   The warranty deeds contained the proper legal descriptions of the
    respective properties, indicating that the property to be conveyed to Mr. Burt was
    lot 23 of the “Plan of Bluestone” and that the property to be conveyed to Ms.
    Lacoste was lots 21 and 22 of the “Plan of Bluestone.”
    Subsequently, however, while reviewing the warranty deeds, an employee of
    Nationwide Title & Escrow Company, Inc. (Nationwide) changed the legal
    descriptions of the real estate being conveyed.2 As a result, one warranty deed
    indicated that lot 21 of the “Plan of Bluestone” was being conveyed to Mr. Burt,
    while another warranty deed indicated that lots 22 and 23 of the “Plan of
    Bluestone” were being conveyed to Ms. Lacoste. Mr. Burt’s mortgage deed also
    2
    The record does not make it entirely clear which person employed by
    Nationwide allegedly made the erroneous changes in the legal descriptions—John
    C. Furtado (an attorney in the employ of Nationwide) or some other employee.
    For the purposes of these consolidated cases, however, that regrettable lack of
    clarity does not affect our analysis of the legal issues.
    -3-
    incorrectly described the 15 Standring Street property as lot 21 of the “Plan of
    Bluestone.”
    At the closing on September 20, 2005, which was conducted by John C.
    Furtado (an attorney in the employ of Nationwide and who was named as a
    defendant in most of the cases discussed infra), Ms. Tondreau signed the warranty
    deeds without recognizing the errors as to the descriptions of the properties.
    Similarly, Mr. Burt signed his mortgage deed, and both he and Ms. Lacoste signed
    their respective warranty deeds without recognizing that the property descriptions
    were incorrect. The warranty deeds and the mortgage deed, all containing the
    incorrect property descriptions, were recorded on September 22, 2005.
    Nationwide, acting as an agent for Fidelity National Title Insurance
    Company, Inc. (Fidelity), issued the following title insurance policies: (1) to Mr.
    Burt, insuring that “he had a fee simple interest, subject only to his mortgage to
    Homecomings;” (2) to Homecomings Financial, insuring that “it would have a
    valid first mortgage * * * at the conclusion of Burt’s purchase of [15 Standring
    Street];” and (3) to Ms. Lacoste, insuring that “she had a fee simple interest, free
    and clear of all encumbrances.” Each of the three title insurance policies was
    issued with the incorrect legal descriptions of the above-referenced properties.
    Mr. Burt and Ms. Lacoste proceeded to take possession of the 15 Standring
    Street and the 19 Standring Street properties, respectively. Additionally, it is
    -4-
    uncontested that “both the Town of Cumberland and the local fire district
    commenced in 2006 to send annual bills for ad valorem taxes assessed against the
    [properties],” which taxes Mr. Burt and Ms. Lacoste paid.
    Towards the end of 2008 or the beginning of 2009, Mr. Burt defaulted on his
    mortgage loan payments. Thereafter, on March 27, 2009, Harmon Law Offices,
    P.C. (Harmon) informed Mr. Burt by letter that it had been retained by GMAC
    Mortgage, LLC (GMAC) to foreclose on the mortgage. In the course of preparing
    to foreclose on Mr. Burt’s property, Harmon discovered that the legal descriptions
    of the properties in one or more of the warranty deeds were incorrect, as was the
    legal description in Mr. Burt’s mortgage deed.       Harmon then suspended the
    foreclosure proceedings and filed a claim with Fidelity on behalf of GMAC
    pursuant to the lender’s title insurance policy.
    Fidelity proceeded to contact Nationwide in an effort to determine what
    might be done to correct the erroneous descriptions. As a result, in August 2009,
    Nationwide substituted the correct legal descriptions for the erroneous ones. Then,
    without informing Mr. Burt, Ms. Lacoste, or Ms. Tondreau about those
    substitutions, an employee of Nationwide re-recorded the updated warranty deeds
    as well as Mr. Burt’s mortgage deed in the Land Evidence Records of the Town of
    Cumberland.
    -5-
    In view of the above-described facts, Mr. Burt, Ms. Lacoste, and U.S. Bank,
    N.A. (U.S. Bank)3 each chose to commence individual civil actions in the
    Providence County Superior Court.       In due course, six motions for summary
    judgment were granted, all culminating in the consolidated appeals before this
    Court.4
    A
    The Three Superior Court Cases
    1. The Burt Case (PC 11-463)
    Although this civil action was actually commenced on January 26, 2011, the
    relevant complaint for our purposes is the third amended complaint (the
    complaint),5 which was filed on September 28, 2017 and named as defendants
    Nationwide, Mr. Furtado, Homecomings Financial, Fidelity, GMAC, and U.S.
    Bank.     In Count One, Mr. Burt sought a judgment declaring that the re-recorded
    mortgage deed is void because it was not “signed or acknowledged” by him; he
    also sought an injunction preventing foreclosure of the 15 Standring Street
    3
    U.S. Bank was the holder of Mr. Burt’s mortgage deed and the owner of the
    associated promissory note.
    4
    The three Superior Court cases and the eventual six motions for summary
    judgment are described infra.
    5
    We note with dismay and disapproval that said third amended complaint
    contains some eighty separate paragraphs. See Fiorenzano v. Lima, 
    982 A.2d 585
    ,
    589 (R.I. 2009) (commenting on “the inappropriately prolix nature of the
    complaint in [that] case”); see also id. at n.7.
    -6-
    property. In Count Two, Mr. Burt alleged that the alteration of the warranty deeds
    in 2009 constituted forgery. In Count Three, Mr. Burt alleged that the 2005
    mortgage deed and the accompanying promissory note are void because the re-
    recordation “constituted a renunciation, abandonment, vitiation, destruction, and
    voiding of the mortgage * * * and the note secured thereby.”
    In Count Four, Mr. Burt sought damages against Nationwide for its failure to
    procure title insurance. In Count Five, Mr. Burt alleged that Nationwide and Mr.
    Furtado were negligent with respect to the 2005 preparation of his warranty deed
    and mortgage deed. In the first of the two counts entitled “CLAIM SIX,” Mr. Burt
    alleged that all the named defendants were negligent with respect to their actions
    relating to the 2009 corrections. In the second of the two counts entitled “CLAIM
    SIX - RESCISSION,” Mr. Burt alleged that, “based upon the fraud perpetrated
    upon Burt by Furtado, Nationwide Title and its employees” and their “material
    misrepresentation * * * [,] the real estate transfer deed of Tondreau, the promissory
    note between Burt and Homecomings and the mortgage deed from Burt to
    Homecomings must be rescinded.” Finally, in Count Seven, Mr. Burt alleged a
    violation of the Rhode Island Deceptive Trade Practices Act.
    In response, Fidelity filed an answer denying Mr. Burt’s claims; it also filed
    a cross-claim for contribution and indemnification against Nationwide and Mr.
    Furtado. Similarly, U.S. Bank, Homecomings Financial, and GMAC filed an
    -7-
    answer denying Mr. Burt’s claims; they also filed cross-claims against Nationwide
    and Mr. Furtado for contribution and indemnification and alleging legal
    malpractice on the part of Mr. Furtado, negligence against Nationwide, and breach
    of contract against Nationwide and Mr. Furtado. Nationwide and Mr. Furtado filed
    an answer denying the pertinent allegations of Mr. Burt’s complaint. Nationwide
    and Mr. Furtado also filed cross-claims for contribution, indemnification, and
    negligence against U.S. Bank, Homecomings Financial, and GMAC; and they
    sought equitable relief against Mr. Burt—viz., that he be required to sign the
    above-referenced corrected documents.
    2. The Lacoste Case (PC 13-3802)
    On July 31, 2013, Ms. Lacoste filed a complaint against Nationwide, Mr.
    Furtado, and Fidelity. In Count One, Ms. Lacoste sought a judgment declaring that
    the 2009 warranty deed was void because it was not “signed or acknowledged” by
    Ms. Tondreau. In Count Two, she alleged that the “material alteration of the Deed
    after it was recorded in 2005 * * * was done with the intent to deceive and defraud
    those persons interested in and relying upon the accuracy and integrity of the
    Cumberland land evidence records constitut[ing] forgery * * *.” In Count Three,
    Ms. Lacoste sought damages against Nationwide for its failure to procure title
    insurance. In Count Four, she alleged that Nationwide was negligent for having
    changed the legal descriptions of her property in 2005. Finally, in Count Five,
    -8-
    entitled “Claim on Policy,” Ms. Lacoste alleged that she “is entitled to
    compensation by Fidelity * * * as a result of her not owning the premises the title
    to which is insured by [her title] Policy.”
    In due course, each of the named defendants filed an answer denying the
    applicable claims against them. Thereafter, Fidelity amended its answer to include
    cross-claims for indemnification and contribution against Nationwide and Mr.
    Furtado.
    3. The U.S. Bank Case (PC 16-1572)6
    On April 8, 2016, U.S. Bank filed a complaint against Mr. Burt, Ms.
    Lacoste, Bank of America, and Joseph F. Penza, Jr.7 On May 6, 2016, U.S. Bank
    filed an amended complaint, in Count One of which it sought “reformation of the
    warranty deeds executed by Dorothy Tondreau to * * * Burt and Lacoste to
    substitute and include the correct legal descriptions” as well as “reformation of the
    mortgage deed executed by * * * Burt to substitute and include the correct legal
    description * * *.”
    In Count Two, U.S. Bank sought: (1) “a declaration that the warranty deed
    to the defendant Burt * * * as reformed, confirms and establishes that title to lot
    numbered Twenty-three (23), 15 Standring St[reet], Cumberland, Rhode Island is
    6
    In due course, the U.S. Bank case was consolidated with the Burt case.
    7
    Mr. Penza was named as a defendant in his capacity as the administrator of
    the estate of Ms. Tondreau, who had passed away on July 21, 2011.
    -9-
    fully vested in defendant Burt only and has been since the date of execution of the
    deed, September 20, 2005;” (2) “a declaration that the warranty deed to the
    defendant Lacoste * * * as reformed, confirms and establishes that title to lots
    numbered Twenty-one (21) and Twenty-two (22) on Standring St[reet],
    Cumberland, Rhode Island is fully vested in defendant Lacoste only and has been
    since the date of execution of the deed, September 20, 2005;” and (3) “a
    declaration that the mortgage deed executed by the defendant Burt * * * as
    reformed, confirms and establishes that the mortgage encumbers lot numbered
    Twenty-three (23) and that [U.S. Bank] is the holder of a valid first mortgage in lot
    numbered Twenty-three (23), superior to all other liens and encumbrances * * *
    since the date of the execution of the mortgage, September 20, 2005.”
    On August 12, 2016, Mr. Burt and Ms. Lacoste jointly answered the
    complaint, denying that there was a mutual mistake and asserting that U.S. Bank
    was not entitled to reformation.      On September 28, 2017, they subsequently
    amended their answer to include a counterclaim against U.S. Bank seeking
    rescission of “all transactions,” based on a misrepresentation of a material fact; and
    they also filed a cross-claim against Mr. Penza (the estate administrator) seeking
    rescission of the warranty deeds, the mortgage deed, and the promissory note on
    the same basis.
    - 10 -
    B
    The Six Motions for Summary Judgment
    1. The Motion for Summary Judgment of U.S. Bank as Plaintiff in
    PC 16-1572
    On January 31, 2019, U.S. Bank filed a motion for summary judgment on
    both counts of its complaint. A hearing on the motion was held on May 8, 2019,
    and a bench decision granting the motion was issued on January 31, 2020. The
    motion justice held that the original warranty deed and the mortgage deed had
    materially failed “to correctly reflect the intent of the parties and that the wrong
    legal description was made part of those instruments and that there was a mutual
    mistake.” She reasoned that Mr. Burt “intended to buy 15 Standring Street and did
    buy 15 Standring Street but for the erroneous legal description.” She further
    reasoned that Mr. Burt “validated the terms of the note and mortgage through his
    conduct”—including making “payments under the note and mortgage for many
    years.”
    Accordingly, the motion justice ordered that the original warranty deeds and
    Mr. Burt’s mortgage deed be reformed to reflect the correct property descriptions.
    The motion justice also granted U.S. Bank’s request for a declaration to the effect
    that it “can foreclose on the 2005 reformed mortgage.” On June 14, 2021, final
    judgment entered in favor of U.S. Bank as to all counts.
    - 11 -
    2. The Motion for Partial Summary Judgment of U.S. Bank, Homecomings
    Financial, and GMAC as Defendants in PC 11-463
    With respect to Mr. Burt’s third amended complaint in PC 11-463, on
    January 31, 2019, U.S. Bank, Homecomings Financial, and GMAC filed a motion
    for partial summary judgment as to Count One (seeking to void Mr. Burt’s
    re-recorded 2009 mortgage deed); Count Three (seeking to void Mr. Burt’s 2005
    mortgage deed and promissory note); and the second of the two counts entitled
    “CLAIM SIX” (seeking rescission of “all transactions” on the basis of a
    “Misrepresentation of a Material Fact”). A hearing on the motion was held on
    May 8, 2019, and a bench decision granting the motion was issued on January 31,
    2020.
    The motion justice first held that Counts One and Three were moot because,
    in the U.S. Bank case (PC 16-1572), she had ordered reformation of the 2005
    warranty deed and the mortgage deed. The motion justice next addressed the
    second Count Six of Mr. Burt’s third amended complaint, which alleged fraud and
    sought rescission of: (1) the 2005 warranty deed; (2) the promissory note between
    Mr. Burt and Homecomings Financial; and (3) the mortgage deed from Mr. Burt to
    Homecomings Financial. The motion justice held that there was “no fraud in
    2005,” and she then concluded that “there can be no claim for rescission based on
    fraud when there was no fraud.”
    - 12 -
    On June 14, 2021, final judgment as to Counts One, Three, and Six
    (Rescission) entered in favor of U.S. Bank, Homecomings Financial, and GMAC.8
    3. The Motion for Summary Judgment of Fidelity as Defendant in
    PC 11-463
    On April 4, 2019, Fidelity filed a motion for summary judgment as to all
    counts in Mr. Burt’s third amended complaint. A hearing on the motion was held
    on October 30, 2019, and a bench decision granting the motion was issued on
    January 31, 2020. The motion justice held that, pursuant to the title insurance
    policy, “any claim that the insured makes against the insurer must be made under
    the policy and be subject to its terms.” She reasoned that, because Mr. Burt had
    failed to make a claim under his policy, “regardless of what caused the incorrect
    legal description or how the parties want to categorize that incorrect legal
    description, [Mr. Burt] still has not alleged a claim under the insurance policy
    because neither mutual mistake [n]or drafting errors are listed among those types
    of claims for which Fidelity can be held liable.”
    On June 14, 2021, final judgment entered in favor of Fidelity as to all claims
    asserted against it.
    8
    The first of the two counts in Mr. Burt’s complaint entitled “CLAIM SIX”
    (alleging negligence) was not explicitly referred to in the judgment. However, the
    reasoning of the motion justice concerning the elements of the tort of negligence
    that is summarized in the next sub-section of this opinion should be noted.
    - 13 -
    4. The Motion for Summary Judgment of Nationwide and Mr. Furtado as
    Defendants in PC 11-463
    On August 25, 2020, Nationwide and Mr. Furtado filed a motion for summary
    judgment as to all counts in Mr. Burt’s third amended complaint. A hearing was
    held on the motion on December 3, 2020.9 On that same day, the motion justice
    first ruled that the law of the case doctrine governed Counts One, Two, Three, and
    the second Count Six. In granting the parties’ motion for summary judgment as to
    Count Five and the first Count Six (Negligence), the motion justice stated:
    “The real heart of this case as it relates to
    Nationwide and Mr. Furtado are the negligence counts.
    And it is absolutely clear that the plaintiff must show a
    duty owed, a breach of the duty, damages, and that the
    damages were caused by the defendants’ breach. Here,
    we have an obvious duty. We have an admitted breach
    of duty. But what we don’t have is damages. The
    damages that Mr. Burt lists as damages flowing from the
    negligence simply are not. Closing costs, mortgage
    payments, construction costs, construction materials,
    none of that has anything to do with the negligence that
    resulted in Mr. Burt owning land that he didn’t -- that he
    actually didn’t own but he thought he owned and he
    acted as if he owned it and utilized it for a number of
    years. There simply is no connection between those
    costs or expenses and the defendants’ negligence here.
    There are no damages that result from that negligence.”
    9
    Prior to the hearing, Mr. Burt voluntarily dismissed with prejudice Counts
    Four and Seven in his third amended complaint.
    - 14 -
    On June 14, 2021, final judgment entered in favor of Nationwide and Mr.
    Furtado as to Counts One, Two, Three, Five, and the first Count Six.10
    5. The Motion for Summary Judgment of Fidelity as Defendant in
    PC 13-3802
    On August 13, 2020, Fidelity filed a motion for summary judgment as to all
    pertinent counts in Ms. Lacoste’s complaint. A hearing on that motion was held on
    December 3, 2020. At the hearing, Ms. Lacoste confirmed that she was dismissing
    Counts One and Two against Fidelity. Accordingly, the motion justice addressed
    the only remaining claim against Fidelity, Count Five, entitled “Claim on Policy.”
    First, the motion justice recognized that Count Five “simply alleges that
    Lacoste does not own the premises described in the owner’s title policy that was
    issued to her by Fidelity.” She added that Count Five “further alleges that Lacoste
    is entitled to compensation by Fidelity as a result of her not owning the premises
    which were insured by the policy; and, therefore, Lacoste demands judgment for
    the amount stated in the policy, plus interest and costs provided by law.”
    However, the motion justice then held that Count Five was moot because good title
    had been restored to Ms. Lacoste pursuant to the reformation of the warranty deeds
    that was ordered in the U.S. Bank case. Accordingly, the motion justice granted
    10
    The final judgment makes no explicit mention of the second Count Six,
    wherein Mr. Burt sought rescission of the challenged deeds and the promissory
    note. It should be noted, however, that the motion justice did rule that that count
    was governed by the law of the case doctrine.
    - 15 -
    Fidelity’s motion for summary judgment. On June 14, 2021, final judgment
    entered in favor of Fidelity as to all counts against it.
    6. The Motion for Summary Judgment of Nationwide and Mr. Furtado as
    Defendants in PC 13-3802
    On December 29, 2020, Nationwide and Mr. Furtado filed a motion for
    summary judgment as to all pertinent counts in Ms. Lacoste’s complaint. A
    hearing on that motion was held on May 5, 2021.11 On that same day, the motion
    justice first held that Count One, which sought a declaration that the 2009 warranty
    deed be voided, was moot because she had already ordered that the 2005 warranty
    deed be reformed. The motion justice then granted summary judgment as to Count
    Two, which alleged that the 2009 re-recordation of the updated warranty deed
    constituted forgery in that it purportedly “was done with the intent to deceive and
    defraud those persons interested in and relying upon the accuracy and integrity of
    the Cumberland land evidence records * * *.” In granting the motion for summary
    judgment of Nationwide and Mr. Furtado as to Count Two, the motion justice held
    that there was “zero evidence that anyone did anything with an intent to deceive
    anyone.”
    As to Count Four, which sought damages for negligence, the motion justice
    first observed that Ms. Lacoste had indicated that her damages consisted of
    11
    Prior to the hearing, Ms. Lacoste voluntarily dismissed with prejudice
    Counts Three and Five as to Nationwide and Mr. Furtado.
    - 16 -
    “closing costs, interest, the money that she has paid on property taxes, [and]
    attorneys’ fees, without specifying what those attorneys’ fees are.”       She then
    reasoned:
    “[T]here could have been damages that Ms. Lacoste
    could have incurred in relation to * * * the errors relating
    to the deed * * *. But those have not been asserted here.
    The damages that she would be entitled to would have to
    do with fixing the error, and the damages that are claimed
    by [Ms. Lacoste] don’t have anything to do with
    addressing the title problems that were created in 2005 or
    any of the activities of 2009. And so, the costs are the --
    the things that she’s claiming as damages cannot be said
    to have been caused by Mr. Furtado or Nationwide.
    Because she cannot demonstrate damages, the negligence
    claim must fail as a matter of law.”
    The motion justice then granted Nationwide and Mr. Furtado’s motion for
    summary judgment as to Count Four.
    Final judgment entered as to all counts against Nationwide and Mr. Furtado
    on June 14, 2021.
    C
    The Consolidated Appeals
    Timely appeals having been filed as to all of the above-referenced
    judgments, said appeals were consolidated by order of this Court.
    - 17 -
    II
    Issues on Appeal
    The only issues properly before this Court are whether the motion justice
    erred (1) when she concluded that the 2005 warranty deeds and mortgage deed
    failed to reflect the intent of the parties and were the product of a mutual mistake
    and (2) when she proceeded to order that those deeds be reformed so as to reflect
    the correct property descriptions.
    III
    Standard of Review
    It is well established that “[t]his Court reviews the granting of a motion for
    summary judgment on a de novo basis.” Air Distribution Corp. v. Airpro
    Mechanical Company, Inc., 
    973 A.2d 537
    , 540 (R.I. 2009); see also Planned
    Environments Management Corp. v. Robert, 
    966 A.2d 117
    , 121 (R.I. 2009); Cullen
    v. Lincoln Town Council, 
    960 A.2d 246
    , 248 (R.I. 2008). And while “reviewing a
    hearing justice’s decision to grant summary judgment, this Court employs the same
    standards as were used by the hearing justice.” Air Distribution Corp., 
    973 A.2d at 540
    ; see also O’Sullivan v. Rhode Island Hospital, 
    874 A.2d 179
    , 182 (R.I. 2005).
    At the conclusion of that reviewing process, we “will affirm a hearing justice’s
    grant of summary judgment if we conclude that no genuine issue of material fact
    exists and that the moving party is entitled to judgment as a matter of law.”
    - 18 -
    Narragansett Electric Company v. Saccoccio, 
    43 A.3d 40
    , 44 (R.I. 2012) (internal
    quotation marks omitted); see also Credit Union Central Falls v. Groff, 
    966 A.2d 1262
    , 1267 (R.I. 2009). It is also important to bear in mind that “the party
    opposing a summary-judgment motion has the burden of proving by competent
    evidence the existence of a disputed issue of material fact and cannot rest upon
    mere allegations or denials in the pleadings, mere conclusions or mere legal
    opinions.” Credit Union Central Falls, 
    966 A.2d at 1267
     (internal quotation marks
    omitted); see also Mutual Development Corporation v. Ward Fisher & Company,
    LLP, 
    47 A.3d 319
    , 323 (R.I. 2012); Air Distribution Corp., 
    973 A.2d at 540-41
    . In
    addition, “[w]here the facts suggest only one reasonable inference, the [motion]
    justice may properly treat the question as a matter of law.” HK & S Construction
    Holding Corp. v. Dible, 
    111 A.3d 407
    , 411-12 (R.I. 2015) (quoting Shappy v.
    Downcity Capital Partners, Ltd., 
    973 A.2d 40
    , 45 (R.I. 2009)); see also Kennedy v.
    Providence Hockey Club, Inc., 
    119 R.I. 70
    , 77, 
    376 A.2d 329
    , 333 (1977).
    IV
    Analysis
    The primary issue before us is whether the motion justice erred in ordering
    reformation of the two warranty deeds and the mortgage deed.12
    12
    With the exception of their contention concerning the “scrivener’s error”
    issue (which we address infra), in their statement filed pursuant to Article I, Rule
    12A of the Supreme Court Rules of Appellate Procedure, Mr. Burt and Ms.
    - 19 -
    There is a presumption that “a written instrument as drawn and executed,
    especially a deed, correctly states the real intent of the parties.” Vanderford v.
    Kettelle, 
    75 R.I. 130
    , 142, 
    64 A.2d 483
    , 488 (1949). However, there are occasions
    when judicial reformation of such an instrument is appropriate. Such judicial
    reformation of a deed or similar document is appropriate only when there has been
    a mutual mistake on the part of both parties. See, e.g., Hopkins v. Equitable Life
    Assurance Society of United States, 
    107 R.I. 679
    , 685, 
    270 A.2d 915
    , 918 (1970)
    (“To warrant reformation it must appear that by reason of mistake, common to
    both parties, their agreement fails in some material respect correctly to reflect their
    prior completed understanding.”); see also Gorman v. Gorman, 
    883 A.2d 732
    , 740
    (R.I. 2005) (“For a contract to be subject to judicial reformation, the court must
    first find a mutual mistake.”); Vanderford, 
    75 R.I. at 142
    , 
    64 A.2d at 489
    .13 See
    generally Joseph M. Perillo, Contracts § 9.31 at 342-43 (7th ed. 2014)
    (“[M]isunderstanding, or mistake can result in a record that does not reflect the
    Lacoste do not raise any issues as to the granting of Fidelity’s motion for summary
    judgment in either the Burt case or the Lacoste case. They also do not address the
    dismissal of their negligence counts against Nationwide. As such, we need not and
    shall not address those issues in this opinion. See, e.g., Estate of Meller v. Adolf
    Meller Co., 
    554 A.2d 648
    , 654 (R.I. 1989) (stating that this Court expects that “the
    briefs before us will contain all the arguments that the parties wish us to consider
    * * *”); see also McGarry v. Pielech, 
    108 A.3d 998
    , 1004-05 (R.I. 2015).
    13
    “A party seeking reformation * * * must prove a mutual mistake of a
    material term * * * by clear and convincing evidence.” Merrimack Mutual Fire
    Insurance Company v. Dufault, 
    958 A.2d 620
    , 624 (R.I. 2008).
    - 20 -
    parties’ agreement. Reformation is the remedy by which records are rectified to
    conform to the actual agreement of the parties. At the simplest level it is the
    mechanism for the correction of typographical and other similar inadvertent errors
    in reducing an agreement to a record.”) (footnotes omitted).
    Before us, the appellants14 focus their attention on the requirement that there
    must be a mutual mistake in the document(s) at issue before reformation can
    properly be ordered by a trial court. They assert that the motion justice erred in her
    determination that the 2005 warranty deeds and the mortgage deed failed to reflect
    the intent of the parties and were the product of mutual mistake. They point out
    that neither they nor Ms. Tondreau made the underlying mistake; they assert that
    the “error was caused by Tondreau’s escrow agent (Nationwide and Furtado), who,
    without Tondreau’s authority * * * altered the descriptions in the deeds.” Mr. Burt
    and Ms. Lacoste additionally contend that “the existence of mutual mistake is a
    question of fact,” and they assert that the motion justice erred because there was no
    clear and convincing evidence of a mutual mistake made by the parties.
    In response, U.S. Bank, Homecomings Financial, and GMAC15 assert that
    the motion justice “properly held that there are no genuine issues as to any material
    fact and that the Appellees are entitled to judgment as a matter of law as there is no
    14
    Mr. Burt and Ms. Lacoste filed a joint Rule 12A statement.
    15
    U.S. Bank, Homecomings Financial, and GMAC filed a joint Rule 12A
    statement.
    - 21 -
    question that Burt intended to buy the Property and did buy the Property but for the
    erroneous legal descriptions.” They further assert that, “[a]lthough Nationwide
    Title caused this mutual mistake between the parties, it does not render the deed or
    the Mortgage void, as it is evident through the parties’ conduct that Burt intended
    to buy the Property and did buy the Property for which he intended.”
    Nationwide and Mr. Furtado16 likewise argue that the motion justice did not
    err in granting summary judgment against Mr. Burt and Ms. Lacoste because
    “there is no dispute as to what the intent of the parties was at the time of the
    closing on September 20, 2005.” They further assert that “[t]he fact that the
    mistake was made by a third party does not render either of the deeds or the
    mortgage void in this particular case because of the specific intentions of all of the
    parties, as well as their subsequent actions after the September 20, 2005 closing.”
    The term “mutual mistake” has frequently been defined by this Court. See,
    e.g., Dubreuil v. Allstate Insurance Co., 
    511 A.2d 300
    , 302-03 (R.I. 1986) (“A
    mutual mistake is one common to both parties wherein each labors under a
    misconception respecting the same terms of the written agreement sought to be
    [reformed].”); see also Merrimack Mutual Fire Insurance Company v. Dufault,
    
    958 A.2d 620
    , 624 (R.I. 2008) (“A mutual mistake is not merely the existence of a
    common error, but rather involves a shared misconception relating to the parties’
    16
    Nationwide and Mr. Furtado filed a joint Rule 12A statement.
    - 22 -
    intent.”); Nunes v. Meadowbrook Development Co., Inc., 
    824 A.2d 421
    , 425 (R.I.
    2003); Vanderford, 
    75 R.I. at 142
    , 
    64 A.2d at 488
    ; see generally Moffett,
    Hodgkins, & Clarke Company v. City of Rochester, 
    178 U.S. 373
    , 385 (1900).
    As for appellants’ argument that the error in the deeds was created by the
    actions of Nationwide and/or one of its employees and so should not be said to
    have constituted a mutual mistake made by Mr. Burt or Ms. Lacoste or Ms.
    Tondreau, the plain blunt fact is that settled law does not support that contention.
    It is undisputed that, at the time of the closing, Ms. Tondreau intended to sell and
    Mr. Burt intended to buy the property located at 15 Standring Street and Ms.
    Tondreau intended to sell and Ms. Lacoste intended to buy the property located at
    19 Standring Street.17
    Mr. Burt and Ms. Lacoste’s conduct after the closing further evidenced their
    intent to purchase, and own, their respective properties. It is uncontested that,
    during the substantial period of time which passed until the errors in the deeds
    were discovered, (1) both Mr. Burt and Ms. Lacoste had been paying the taxes
    assessed by the Town of Cumberland and the local fire district for their respective
    properties; (2) Mr. Burt had been paying his mortgage payments for approximately
    four years; and (3) Mr. Burt had removed an existing structure on his property and
    had begun to construct a new one.
    17
    It is undisputed that the warranty deeds and the mortgage deed contained the
    erroneous legal descriptions for the respective properties.
    - 23 -
    In our view, it is entirely irrelevant that the actual mistake in the legal
    descriptions was not made by the parties, but rather by an employee of Nationwide,
    who was in effect serving as a scrivener.18 What is determinative is that the
    mistake became “mutual” at the time when the buyers and the seller signed the
    respective deeds. The mistake was “mutual” in the sense that all the pertinent
    parties (Mr. Burt, Ms. Lacoste, and Ms. Tondreau) shared in the mistaken belief
    that the legal descriptions in the warranty deeds and the mortgage deed were
    accurate.   This concept has been nicely summarized in the venerable and
    frequently cited opinion from the New York Court of Appeals in the seminal case
    of Born v. Schrenkeisen, 
    17 N.E. 339
     (N.Y. 1888):
    “Where there is no mistake about the agreement and the
    only mistake alleged is in the reduction of that agreement
    to writing, such mistake of the scrivener, or of either
    party, no matter how it occurred, may be corrected.”19
    Born, 17 N.E. at 341.
    18
    It is clear from the record that the changes in the legal descriptions that were
    made by an employee of Nationwide technically constituted a “scrivener’s error,”
    even if Mr. Furtado at his deposition did not endorse that particular terminology
    and even if those changes were the product of a volitional act by an employee of
    Nationwide rather than being the result of a mere slip of the pen.
    19
    See also Harris v. Uhlendorf, 
    248 N.E.2d 892
    , 894 (N.Y. 1969); Parchen v.
    Chessman, 
    164 P. 531
    , 533 (Mont. 1917) (“When it is said * * * that equity will
    not lend its aid to reform an instrument for mistake unless it is a mutual mistake,
    the terms ‘mutual mistake’ are used in contradistinction to a unilateral mistake or
    the mistake of one party to the instrument only. If the error occurs through the
    mistake of the scrivener, it is none the less a mistake * * *.”); 27 Samuel Williston
    & Richard A. Lord, A Treatise on the Law of Contracts § 70:93 at 469 (4th ed.
    2020) (“In contract law, a scrivener’s error, like a mutual mistake, occurs when the
    - 24 -
    Professor Dan B. Dobbs has made the same point with admirable clarity:
    “The fact that neither of the bargaining parties
    themselves made the written mistake is no bar to
    reformation. The mistake of a draftsman, whether he is
    one of the parties or merely a scrivener, is adequate
    grounds for relief, provided again that the writing fails to
    reflect the parties’ true understanding. The mistake is
    ‘mutual’ in the sense * * * [that] there is a previous
    agreement to which the [document] may be reformed,
    and courts have no trouble in agreeing in this situation on
    reformation.” 2 Dan B. Dobbs, Law of Remedies
    § 11.6(1) at 747 (2d ed. 1993).20
    Although there is no opinion from this Court that articulates precisely the same
    principle as that articulated in Born v. Schrenkeisen and in Professor Dobbs’s
    treatise, it is clear to us (1) that it is a principle that is generally acknowledged in
    this country and (2) that it is consistent with common sense. See Peak v. United
    States, 
    353 U.S. 43
    , 46 (1957) (“That seems to us to be the common sense of the
    matter; and common sense often makes good law.”).
    There is uncontested evidence in the record which clearly and convincingly
    demonstrates that the 2005 warranty deeds and mortgage deed failed to correctly
    intention of the parties is identical at the time of the transaction but the written
    agreement does not express that intention because of that error; this permits a court
    acting in equity to reform an agreement.”).
    20
    See generally Henry L. McClintock, Handbook of the Principles of Equity
    260 (2d ed. 1948) (noting, inter alia, that “[i]n many cases the mistake is really
    that of a third party, the scrivener or draftsman who drew the instrument; the only
    mistake of the parties being in accepting it as a correct expression of their
    agreement”).
    - 25 -
    express the agreement of the parties and, therefore, were the product of mutual
    mistake. By reforming the deeds, the motion justice merely made the mortgage
    deed and the warranty deeds “convey the meaning that both parties intended.”
    Vanderford, 
    75 R.I. at 142
    , 
    64 A.2d at 489
    . Accordingly, we are of the opinion
    that the motion justice did not err by ordering reformation of the mortgage deed
    and the warranty deeds.21 It is further our opinion that summary judgment was
    appropriately granted with respect to each of the six motions for summary
    judgment, which the motion justice considered with laudable meticulousness. See
    HK & S Construction, 
    111 A.3d at 411-12
    ; see also Deutsche Bank National Trust
    Company for Registered Holders of Ameriquest Mortgage Securities, Inc. v.
    McDonough, 
    160 A.3d 306
    , 311 (R.I. 2017) (“[W]here the facts suggest only one
    reasonable inference, the [motion] justice may properly treat the question as a
    matter of law.”) (internal quotation marks omitted).
    21
    Mr. Burt and Ms. Lacoste have contended that the existence of mutual
    mistake vel non is a question of fact not to be resolved at the summary judgment
    stage. However, while the question of mistake in a given document may
    sometimes be a question of fact requiring a fact-finder to make credibility
    determinations, the appellants’ pleadings in this case foreclose any such need for
    fact-finding. These pleadings allege over and over again that the deeds at issue
    contain materially erroneous legal descriptions. That being the case, the Superior
    Court’s decision to order reformation was both appropriate and laudable.
    - 26 -
    V
    Conclusion
    For the reasons set forth in this opinion, we affirm the judgments of the
    Superior Court. The record may be returned to that tribunal.
    - 27 -
    STATE OF RHODE ISLAND
    SUPREME COURT – CLERK’S OFFICE
    Licht Judicial Complex
    250 Benefit Street
    Providence, RI 02903
    OPINION COVER SHEET
    Raymond D. Burt, Sr. v. John C. Furtado et al.
    U.S. Bank National Association, as Trustee for
    Residential Asset Securities Corporation, Home
    Title of Case                            Equity Mortgage Asset – Backed Pass – Through
    Certificates, Series 2005-K510, Series 2006-E v.
    Raymond D. Burt et al.
    Tammy L. Lacoste v. John C. Furtado et al.
    No. 2021-243-Appeal.
    No. 2021-244-Appeal. (PC 11-463)
    Case Number                              No. 2021-245-Appeal.
    No. 2021-246-Appeal. (PC 16-1572)
    No. 2021-247-Appeal. (PC 13-3802)
    Date Opinion Filed                       May 1, 2023
    Suttell, C.J., Goldberg, Robinson, Lynch Prata, and
    Justices
    Long, JJ.
    Written By                               Associate Justice William P. Robinson III
    Source of Appeal                         Providence County Superior Court
    Judicial Officer from Lower Court        Associate Justice Melissa E. Darigan
    For Appellants:
    Mark L. Smith, Esq.
    For Appellees:
    Attorney(s) on Appeal
    Joseph F. Penza, Jr., Esq.
    Brandon P. Ruggieri, Esq.
    Zachary W. Berk, Esq.
    SU-CMS-02A (revised November 2022)
    

Document Info

Docket Number: 21-243

Filed Date: 5/1/2023

Precedential Status: Precedential

Modified Date: 5/1/2023

Authorities (21)

Kennedy v. Providence Hockey Club, Inc. , 119 R.I. 70 ( 1977 )

Nunes v. Meadowbrook Development Co., Inc. , 824 A.2d 421 ( 2003 )

Moffett, Hodgkins & Clarke Co. v. Rochester , 20 S. Ct. 957 ( 1900 )

Hopkins v. Equitable Life Assurance Society of the United ... , 107 R.I. 679 ( 1970 )

Mutual Development Corp. v. Ward Fisher & Co. , 2012 R.I. LEXIS 125 ( 2012 )

Deutsche Bank National Trust Company, as Trustee for ... , 2017 R.I. LEXIS 69 ( 2017 )

Vanderford v. Kettelle , 75 R.I. 130 ( 1949 )

Merrimack Mutual Fire Insurance v. Dufault , 2008 R.I. LEXIS 95 ( 2008 )

Estate of Meller v. Adolf Meller Co. , 1989 R.I. LEXIS 22 ( 1989 )

Shappy v. Downcity Capital Partners, Ltd. , 2009 R.I. LEXIS 77 ( 2009 )

Dubreuil v. Allstate Insurance Co. , 1986 R.I. LEXIS 510 ( 1986 )

Gorman v. Gorman , 2005 R.I. LEXIS 166 ( 2005 )

Cullen v. Lincoln Town Council , 2008 R.I. LEXIS 110 ( 2008 )

Planned Environments Management Corp. v. Robert , 2009 R.I. LEXIS 28 ( 2009 )

Air Distribution Corp. v. AIRPRO MECHANICAL CO. , 2009 R.I. LEXIS 87 ( 2009 )

Fiorenzano v. Lima , 2009 R.I. LEXIS 121 ( 2009 )

Roderick A. McGarry v. Marilyn Pielech , 2015 R.I. LEXIS 8 ( 2015 )

HK&S Construction Holding Corp. v. Lynne S. Dible, in her ... , 2015 R.I. LEXIS 47 ( 2015 )

Narragansett Electric Co. v. Saccoccio , 2012 R.I. LEXIS 50 ( 2012 )

Credit Union Central Falls v. Groff , 2009 R.I. LEXIS 34 ( 2009 )

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