Supreme Court
No. 2023-345-Appeal.
(ND 23-100)
Congregation Shearith Israel :
v. :
Congregation Jeshuat Israel. :
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
Rhode Island Supreme Court Decision, April 10, 2025
.Supreme Court
No. 2023-345-Appeal.
(ND 23-100)
Congregation Shearith Israel :
v. :
Congregation Jeshuat Israel. :
Present: Suttell, C.J., Goldberg, Robinson, and Long, JJ.
O P I N I O N
Chief Justice Suttell, for the Court. Nestled amid Newport’s narrow,
winding streets and lying at the heart of this controversy is Touro Synagogue, the
oldest active Synagogue in the United States. Touro Synagogue is not only one of
Rhode Island’s most cherished historical edifices, it is an enduring emblem of the
principles established by Roger Williams of religious freedom and liberty of
conscience.
1 The case before us concerns the efforts of the plaintiff, Congregation
Shearith Israel (Shearith Israel), to evict the defendant, Congregation Jeshuat Israel
(Jeshuat Israel), from the Synagogue.
1 Each year, George Washington’s letter to the Newport Hebrew Congregation is
read in the Touro Synagogue. Washington was responding to a letter from Moses
Seixas, warden of the congregation. Echoing Seixas’ words, Washington wrote that
the government of the United States “gives to bigotry no sanction, to persecution no
assistance * * *.”
- 1 -Jeshuat Israel appeals from a Superior Court judgment granting Shearith Israel
the right to take immediate possession of the property located at 72 Touro Street in
Newport, Rhode Island, including the Touro Synagogue building and all
appurtenances and paraphernalia contained therein. Jeshuat Israel raises four
arguments on appeal. First, Jeshuat Israel claims that the trial justice erred by ruling
that Shearith Israel’s termination notice was valid, asserting that the Superior Court
did not have subject-matter jurisdiction over the dispute. Second, Jeshuat Israel
asserts that the trial justice erred by ruling that a 1945 agreement among the parties
and the United States Secretary of the Interior does not contain a condition precedent
to the ejectment action at bar. Third, Jeshuat Israel argues that that the trial justice
erred by ruling that the 1945 agreement did not modify the 1908 lease or the terms
of Jeshuat Israel’s holdover tenancy to include that condition precedent to ejectment.
Fourth, Jeshuat Israel contends that the trial justice erred to the extent that she ruled
that Jeshuat Israel waived its defense that Shearith Israel failed to satisfy a condition
precedent to eviction under the 1945 agreement. For the reasons set forth herein, we
affirm the judgment of the Superior Court.
I
Facts and Travel
The background of this case involves a complex history that stretches back to
the mid-eighteenth century, a time during which the Jewish population of Newport
- 2 -acquired land and constructed Touro Synagogue. Congregation Jeshuat Israel v.
Congregation Shearith Israel, 866 F.3d 53, 54-55 (1st Cir. 2017).2 Some years later,
nearly all the Jews in Newport had left the area, the Synagogue closed, and moveable
Synagogue property was given to Shearith Israel, a congregation located in New
York. Id. at 55. Years after this, the number of Jews living in Newport swelled,
allowing the Synagogue to reopen and prompting Shearith Israel to return the
moveable Synagogue property to Newport. Id. The Synagogue was once again
shuttered in 1901, amid conflict between Shearith Israel and Jeshuat Israel. Id. The
Synagogue remained closed until
“a group of the Newport Jews broke in and engaged in a
limited occupation that lasted for another year, whereupon
[Jeshuat Israel] and several individuals brought suit in
equity against [Shearith Israel] in a Rhode Island court,
claiming a right to the Synagogue and its lands. [Shearith
Israel] removed the case to federal district court, which in
January 1903 sustained [Shearith Israel]’s demurrer and
dismissed the case. See David v. Levy, 119 F. 799 (D.R.I.
1903).” Id.
In 1903 Shearith Israel and Jeshuat Israel elected to settle their quarrel over
competing interests in the property by entering into a five-year lease that allowed
Jeshuat Israel to have possession of Touro Synagogue as a tenant of Shearith Israel.
2 In Congregation Jeshuat Israel v. Congregation Shearith Israel, 866 F.3d 53 (1st
Cir. 2017), the United States Court of Appeals for the First Circuit provided a
thorough history of the relationship between Shearith Israel and Jeshuat Israel
regarding Touro Synagogue. We turn to this case to provide context for our analysis
of the issues in the case at bar.
- 3 -After the term of that 1903 lease expired, Shearith Israel and Jeshuat Israel entered
into a second five-year lease with the same terms. Upon the expiration of the 1908
lease, in 1913, Jeshuat Israel did not quit possession of Touro Synagogue, but rather
became a holdover tenant. Congregation Jeshuat Israel, 866 F.3d at 55-56.
Over thirty years later, in an effort to better secure the preservation of Touro
Synagogue and to give it the recognition as a national historical site that it deserved,
Shearith Israel, Jeshuat Israel, and the Secretary of the Interior entered into an
agreement (the 1945 agreement). In particular, the agreement provides that Jeshuat
Israel, Shearith Israel, and “their respective successors and assigns” would
“preserve, protect, maintain, and, when necessary, restore, so far as lies within their
power, the Touro Synagogue, Newport, Rhode Island, and the grounds immediately
about the Synagogue building * * *.” At the root of the issues in the case before us
is the following provision:
“[I]t is the purpose of all parties to this [a]greement to
preserve the integrity of the said Touro Synagogue,
Newport, Rhode Island, and to further public appreciation
of the full importance of our great national heritage in
historic sites by insuring to the Touro Synagogue,
Newport, Rhode Island, its rightful place in the national
program of historical conservation, and to secure this
result a high degree of cooperation is necessary, and the
parties hereto shall mutually consult on all matters of
importance to the program.”
- 4 -Specifically at issue is whether this clause modified the terms of the parties’ lease so
as to create a condition precedent that required Shearith Israel to consult with both
Jeshuat Israel and the Secretary of the Interior before initiating an eviction action.
Indeed, the agreement does enumerate specific actions that require
consultation with, and permission from the Secretary of the Interior, including: (1)
“erect[ing], or permit[ting] to be erected, any building or buildings on any portion
of the grounds * * * designated by the Secretary as part of the national historic site”;
(2) installing “any monument, marker, tablet, or other memorial in or upon the said
Touro Synagogue, or any portion of the grounds herein referred to, designated by
the Secretary as part of the national historic site”; (3) making “structural alterations”
or “substantial repairs affecting the appearance” of the Synagogue; and (4)
undertaking the “decoration and furnishing of the interior of the building.”
Sadly, Jeshuat Israel and Shearith Israel do not enjoy a harmonious
relationship, leading to litigation in the federal courts seeking to resolve issues other
than those which are before this Court. See Congregation Jeshuat Israel v.
Congregation Shearith Israel, 186 F. Supp. 3d 158 (D.R.I. 2016), rev
’d, 866 F.3d
53 (1st Cir. 2017); Congregation Jeshuat Israel v. Congregation Shearith Israel,
866 F.3d 53 (1st Cir. 2017).
Both parties have recognized, in their papers and through witness testimony
at trial, that their relationship had “deteriorated.” Eventually, Shearith Israel decided
- 5 -that it would evict Jeshuat Israel from Touro Synagogue by sending a written notice
of eviction to Jeshuat Israel, informing it that it must vacate the premises of Touro
Synagogue by February 1, 2023. Jeshuat Israel has not vacated the premises.
On February 2, 2023, Shearith Israel filed in the Rhode Island District Court
the instant action against Jeshuat Israel for trespass and for repossession by
ejectment. In its complaint, Shearith Israel asserted that it owned the “real property
known as the Touro Synagogue * * * together with the appurtenances and
paraphernalia belonging thereto * * *.” Shearith Israel further claimed that it entered
into a second five-year lease agreement with Jeshuat Israel for Touro Synagogue that
expired on January 31, 1913, and that, after that date, Jeshuat Israel became a
holdover tenant. Additionally, Shearith Israel asserted that the United States Court
of Appeals for the First Circuit had recently ruled that “[Shearith Israel] is fee owner
of the Touro Synagogue building, appurtenances, fixtures, and associate[d] land[.]”
See Congregation Jeshuat Israel, 866 F.3d at 61.
Shearith Israel claimed that on October 21, 2022, it “sent [Jeshuat Israel] a
[n]otice to [t]erminate [t]enancy by e-mail, U.S. mail, and Federal Express,
”
demanding “that [Jeshuat Israel] quit the [p]remises by the end of February 1, 2023,
which is the day following the end of the holdover lease term.” As of the date that
the complaint was filed, Shearith Israel maintained that Jeshuat Israel remained in
possession of Touro Synagogue and the land, fixtures, and appurtenances thereto
- 6 -(the property), “without permission to do so.” This, according to its complaint,
caused Shearith Israel to file this action for repossession and one count of trespass
and ejectment. On March 8, 2023, the eviction proceeding was removed to the
Superior Court by an order of the District Court.3
Subsequently, the parties filed pretrial memoranda and the case proceeded to
trial on June 29, 2023. Thereafter, the parties submitted posttrial memoranda.
Before the Superior Court, Jeshuat Israel advanced several arguments in its
posttrial memorandum. Specifically, Jeshuat Israel asserted that “[t]he [c]ourt lacks
subject-matter jurisdiction over this trespass and ejectment matter unless Shearith
Israel establishes that its October 21, 2022, notice of termination of tenancy * * *
was ‘valid and proper.’” (Quoting Hedco, LTD v. Blanchette, 763 A.2d 639, 643
(R.I. 2000).) Jeshuat Israel further argued that “Rhode Island termination-
of-tenancy case-law requires ‘strict compliance with notice requirements.’”
(Quoting Hedco, 763 A.2d at 643.) Jeshuat Israel continued to rely on Hedco,
3 The Attorney General sought to intervene in Superior Court, arguing that “[t]his
proceeding involves ‘a trustee who holds in trust within the state property given,
devised, or bequeathed for charitable, educational, or religious purposes, and who
administers or is under a duty to administer the property in whole or in part for these
purposes within the state’ and therefore the Attorney General ‘shall be deemed to be
an interested party to the judicial proceedings.’” (Quoting G.L. 1956 § 18-9-5.) The
trial justice denied the Attorney General’s motion to intervene as of right and granted
the Attorney General’s motion to intervene permissively. We note that the question
of whether or not the property is held in trust is not at issue before this Court and
will not be addressed further. Accordingly, the Attorney General, on April 18, 2024,
filed with this Court a notice of intent not to file any position on this appeal.
- 7 -contending, “[a]s the Rhode Island Supreme Court stated * * * ‘we have determined
a notice to be fatally defective * * * when it did not clearly indicate that an agent
was acting on behalf of the landlord.’” (Quoting Hedco, 763 A.2d at 642 (citing Tate
v. Peter Charles Reynolds, Inc., 622 A.2d 449, 450 (R.I. 1993)).) Jeshuat Israel
claimed that the notice to terminate tenancy was not valid and proper, therefore
stripping the Superior Court of subject-matter jurisdiction over the claim, because
the notice did not state the capacity in which the author of the notice—Louis
Solomon—was writing. Jeshuat Israel argued that this caused the notice to be
defective, because Tate requires it to “clearly indicate that an agent was acting on
behalf of the landlord.” (Quoting Hedco, 763 A.2d at 642 (citing Tate, 622 A.2d at
450).) Furthermore, Jeshuat Israel asserted that Mr. Solomon testified that “[he]
didn’t make any explicit statement about the capacity in which [he] was writing” and
that that “admission is fatal to Shearith Israel’s case” as it proves a lack of strict
compliance with notice requirements.
Jeshuat Israel also argued that Shearith Israel cannot evict Jeshuat Israel
because Shearith Israel failed to satisfy a condition precedent to its lease agreement.
Jeshuat Israel asserted that the 1945 agreement by Jeshuat Israel, Shearith Israel, and
the Secretary of the Interior modified the holdover lease by creating a requirement
that Shearith Israel “consult with the Secretary of the Interior before undertaking
‘matters of importance’ to the ‘program of historical conservation’ of Touro
- 8 -Synagogue.” Jeshuat Israel contends that this eviction proceeding constitutes a
matter of importance to the preservation of the Synagogue and, therefore, required
consultation with the Secretary of the Interior before such an action could be
brought. This failure, argued Jeshuat Israel, should have precluded Shearith Israel
from being able to bring this eviction action.
Shearith Israel also brought several arguments before the Superior Court.
Shearith Israel argued that it proved a prima facie case for eviction “by proving (1)
[its] title and (2) possession in the defendant.” (Internal quotation marks omitted.)
Shearith Israel continued to assert that the First Circuit affirmed Shearith Israel’s
title in a previous opinion. Furthermore, Shearith Israel asserted that Jeshuat Israel
was in unlawful possession of the property since Shearith Israel “served [Jeshuat
Israel] with a [n]otice of [t]ermination.”
Additionally, Shearith Israel argued that it followed proper procedure in
evicting Jeshuat Israel. At trial, Jeshuat Israel attempted to raise a defense that Mr.
Solomon needed to include his title of Parnas (President) of Shearith Israel on the
notice. In response Shearith Israel argued: “[(1)] [Jeshuat Israel] was well aware of
his title * * *, [(2)] the [n]otice was on Shearith Israel letterhead, and [(3)] the
[n]otice stated that Shearith Israel is ‘owner and landlord’ of Touro Synagogue
* * *.” Shearith Israel further asserted that it followed the statutory requirements of
- 9 -a notice of termination, because “[t]he pertinent statutes require only ‘notice in
writing from the landlord.’” (Quoting G.L. 1956 § 34-18.1-2.)
Furthermore, before the Superior Court, Shearith Israel argued that “[t]he
1945 agreement did not modify the lease terms” and did not “impose a condition
precedent” that would require the parties to consult with the Secretary of the Interior
before Shearith Israel could initiate an eviction action against Jeshuat Israel.
Following the submission of posttrial memoranda and final closing
arguments, the trial justice issued a bench decision in favor of Shearith Israel. The
trial justice began her decision with an overview of the procedural history of the case
and the arguments presented at trial. The trial justice then turned to the first
argument presented by Jeshuat Israel—that the Superior Court lacked subject-matter
jurisdiction over this action because the lease termination notice was defective.
Ultimately, the trial justice held that Jeshuat Israel “fail[ed] in its attempt to
challenge the notice for a few reasons.” After her analysis of the notice arguments,
the trial justice addressed the arguments concerning the 1945 agreement and whether
that agreement modified the lease agreement between Shearith Israel and Jeshuat
Israel to create a condition precedent.
The trial justice decided that “[she did not] view this 1945 agreement as
modifying the 1908 lease to include a condition precedent before a termination of
the tenancy could be undertaken.” The trial justice went on to rule that the 1945
- 10 -agreement required Jeshuat Israel and Shearith Israel to consult with each other, and
the Secretary of the Interior, should they take any actions to renovate or restore the
buildings and grounds at Touro Synagogue.
Finally, the trial justice found in favor of Shearith Israel as to its ownership
and right to immediately possess Touro Synagogue. Judgment to that effect entered
on September 14, 2023, along with an order granting a stay of execution on the
judgment pending appeal. This appeal followed.
II
Discussion
Jeshuat Israel raises four arguments on appeal. First, Jeshuat Israel claims
that the trial justice erred by ruling that Shearith Israel’s termination notice was
valid, asserting that the Superior Court did not have subject-matter jurisdiction over
the dispute. Second, Jeshuat Israel asserts that the trial justice erred by ruling that
the 1945 agreement among the parties does not contain a condition precedent to the
ejectment action at bar. Third, Jeshuat Israel argues that that the trial justice erred
by ruling that the 1945 agreement did not modify the 1908 lease or the terms of
Jeshuat Israel’s holdover tenancy to include that condition precedent to ejectment.
Fourth, Jeshuat Israel contends that the trial justice erred to the extent that she ruled
that Jeshuat Israel waived its defense that Shearith Israel failed to satisfy a condition
precedent to eviction under the 1945 agreement.
- 11 -Subject-Matter Jurisdiction
We begin by analyzing Jeshuat Israel’s claim that the Superior Court lacked
subject-matter jurisdiction over the eviction proceeding due to deficient notice.
Jeshuat Israel maintains on appeal that Shearith Israel’s notice was not “valid
and proper” and that it was not in “strict compliance with notice requirements.”
(Quoting Hedco, 763 A.2d at 643.) Additionally, Jeshuat Israel argues that “Shearith
Israel’s purported termination notice is defective under Tate v. Peter Charles
Reynolds, Inc., 622 A.2d 449 (R.I. 1993), because the notice did not explicitly state
in what capacity its author, Louis M. Solomon, was writing.” Jeshuat Israel
continues to argue that, under Tate, Mr. Solomon was required to specifically state
the capacity in which he was sending the notice of termination of tenancy.
Furthermore, Jeshuat Israel asserts that the “notice was signed ‘Louis M. Solomon,’
but did not indicate in what capacity Mr. Solomon had sent the letter.” This,
according to Jeshuat Israel, renders the notice of termination of tenancy deficient,
stripping the Superior Court of subject-matter jurisdiction over the proceeding.
In response to this argument, Shearith Israel asserts that, in order “[t]o
terminate a commercial lease, ‘notice in writing from the landlord’ must be given.
See § 34-18.1-2 (tenants at will or by sufferance); § 34-18.1-4 (tenants by parol from
year to year).
” Shearith Israel further argues that
“there is no question that the [n]otice was ‘in writing from
the landlord.’ The [n]otice was on Shearith Israel’s own
- 12 -letterhead, containing Shearith Israel’s name, address, and
contact information; and the text of the letter said that it
was sent ‘on behalf of Congregation Shearith Israel,’ the
‘owner and landlord’ of the subject premises * * *. There
is no other requirement with respect to capacity.”
The trial justice found that “[t]he capacity in which Mr. Solomon was sending
the notice to [Jeshuat Israel] * * * is abundantly clear.” The trial justice explained
that “the parties are familiar with each other and knew exactly what Mr. Solomon’s
role is or was and in what capacity he was sending the [notice]. It literally * * *
states * * * ‘[o]n behalf of [Shearith Israel],’ who it later states ‘is owner and
landlord of the Touro Synagogue.’” This led the trial justice to conclude that “[t]here
could be absolutely no confusion in [Jeshuat Israel]’s * * * collective mind just who
was seeking to terminate the lease and in what capacity he was doing so.” In
addition, the trial justice distinguished Tate from the facts of this case. She explained
that
“the Tate case dealt with a situation wherein the original
notice to quit was determined to be facially defective
because it did not indicate that an agent was acting on
behalf of the landlord * * * and that’s not the case here.
Mr. Solomon indicated that he was acting on behalf of
[Shearith Israel].”
We agree. It is clear that the trial justice made a decision based upon the facts before
her regarding the notice letter that was sent from Shearith Israel to Jeshuat Israel,
and we perceive no error in her reasoning or determination. Indeed, the notice of
- 13 -termination that was delivered was clearly sent on behalf of Shearith Israel and,
therefore, does not render the notice deficient.
Accordingly, the trial justice was correct in determining that the Superior
Court has subject-matter jurisdiction over this action.
Condition Precedent
“A judgment in a nonjury case will be reversed on appeal when it can be
shown that the trial justice misapplied the law, misconceived or overlooked material
evidence or made factual findings that were clearly wrong.” Quillen v. Cox, 306
A.3d 1040, 1045 (R.I. 2024) (quoting Boisse v. Miller, 267 A.3d 634, 636 (R.I.
2022)). “Upon review,” this Court accords “the factual findings of a trial justice
sitting without a jury great deference and consider[s] questions of law de novo.” Id.
(quoting Boisse, 267 A.3d at 636).
Indeed, the question of “[w]hether or not ‘the terms of a contract are
ambiguous is a question of law.’” America Condominium Association, Inc. v. Mardo,
270 A.3d 612, 624 (R.I. 2022) (quoting Sturbridge Home Builders, Inc. v. Downing
Seaport, Inc., 890 A.2d 58, 62 (R.I. 2005)). “Accordingly, we review a trial justice’s
interpretation of a contract de novo.” Atmed Treatment Center, Inc. v. Travelers
Indemnity Company, 285 A.3d 352, 360 (R.I. 2022) (quoting Bacon Construction
Co., Inc. v. Arbella Protection Insurance Company, Inc., 208 A.3d 595, 599 (R.I.
2019)).
- 14 -The second set of arguments in this appeal all stem from the 1945 agreement.
Before this Court, Jeshuat Israel advances several arguments regarding the 1945
agreement: (1) “Jeshuat Israel’s eviction from Touro Synagogue is a ‘matter of
importance to the program’ of historic preservation that, under the 1945 [a]greement,
requires prior consultation”; (2) “[t]he 1945 [a]greement modified the holdover
tenancy”; (3) “Shearith Israel’s post-trial assertion of a pleading defect is not an
alternative ground for affirmance”; and (4) “[t]he 2017 decision of the First Circuit
Court of Appeals does not preclude reliance on the 1945 [a]greement.”
Similarly, Shearith Israel presents several arguments relating to the 1945
agreement: (1) “[t]he Superior Court correctly found that the 1945 agreement did
not modify the lease”; (2) “[t]he Superior Court correctly found that the 1945
agreement did not impose a condition precedent on Shearith Israel’s right to evict
[Jeshuat Israel]”; and (3) “[Jeshuat Israel] is precluded from raising any
modification or condition precedent defense.”
The dispositive question presented on appeal is whether the 1945 agreement
obligated Shearith Israel to consult with the parties to said agreement before evicting
its holdover tenant, Jeshuat Israel. Therefore, we need only address the arguments
related to the 1945 agreement. Before this Court, Jeshuat Israel argues that the 1945
agreement modified the holdover tenancy to require Shearith Israel to first consult
with Jeshuat Israel and the Secretary of the Interior prior to evicting Jeshuat Israel.
- 15 -Specifically, Jeshuat Israel first asserts that Shearith Israel and Jeshuat Israel
“modified their 1908 lease when, in the 1945 [a]greement, they explicitly agreed to
undertake additional obligations to one another, and to the Secretary of the Interior,
concerning Touro Synagogue.” Jeshuat Israel further argues that parties are free to
modify the terms of a lease through a subsequent agreement. Jeshuat Israel then
contends that Jeshuat Israel and Shearith Israel did this through the 1945 agreement,
because, Jeshuat Israel asserts, the parties entered into the 1945 agreement in their
respective capacities as lessor and lessee. This, Jeshuat Israel submits, is how the
1945 agreement created new obligations for Jeshuat Israel and Shearith Israel in their
individual roles as landlord and tenant. Jeshuat Israel claims that one such new
obligation is “the parties’ duty to consult with each other and the Secretary of the
Interior on matters of importance to Touro Synagogue’s preservation program
* * *.” According to Jeshuat Israel, this constitutes a modification of the lease
creating a condition precedent because the terms of the 1908 lease agreement
controlling the holdover tenancy relationship between Jeshuat Israel and Shearith
Israel did not contain any consultation obligation.
Second, Jeshuat Israel argues that its eviction would constitute “such a matter
of importance,” therefore requiring prior consultation to satisfy the condition
precedent. Jeshuat Israel asserts that the trial justice erred in finding that “matters
- 16 -of importance” requiring prior consultation under the 1945 agreement are limited to
buildings-and-grounds matters.
In response, Shearith Israel argues that the 1945 agreement did not modify the
lease agreement to create a condition precedent to be satisfied before Shearith Israel
could evict Jeshuat Israel from Touro Synagogue. Shearith Israel contends that “the
1945 [a]greement states that Shearith Israel and [Jeshuat Israel] agree that ‘in
carrying out the provisions of this [a]greement, their obligations shall be performed
in accordance with and subject to their respective rights and obligations as lessor and
lessee as heretofore established.’” According to Shearith Israel,
“the use of the phrases ‘in accordance with’ and ‘subject
to’ signify that the [l]ease was not modified or otherwise
limited by the 1945 [a]greement. The phrase ‘subject to’
means that the [l]ease controls and limits the 1945
[a]greement as between [Jeshuat Israel] and Shearith
Israel; it means that the 1945 [a]greement is subordinate
to the [l]ease.”
Shearith Israel further claims that, if this Court agrees with their argument “that the
1945 [a]greement did not modify the [l]ease, then it need not determine” whether a
condition precedent is created therein.
In her bench decision, the trial justice ultimately found that she “[does not]
view this 1945 agreement as modifying the 1908 lease to include a condition
precedent before a termination of the tenancy could be undertaken.” Rather, the trial
justice decided that the 1945 agreement “requires either party, taking action relative
- 17 -to the restoration or renovation of the grounds or buildings * * * to consult each
other as well as the Secretary of the Interior.” As discussed supra, this Court
“review[s] a trial justice’s interpretation of a contract de novo.” Atmed Treatment
Center, Inc., 285 A.3d at 360 (quoting Bacon Construction Co., Inc., 208 A.3d at
599).
Accordingly, the issue before this Court is whether the 1945 agreement
modified the lease between Jeshuat Israel and Shearith Israel to include a condition
precedent to an eviction action. At the heart of that issue is the question of what is
meant by the phrase “the parties hereto shall mutually consult on all matters of
importance to the program.” In particular, this Court need only decide whether an
eviction action is part of the “program” contemplated by the 1945 agreement, and,
if so, whether the agreement created a condition precedent requiring consultation
before such an action.
“In determining whether or not a particular contract is ambiguous, the court
should read the contract in its entirety, giving words their plain, ordinary, and usual
meaning.” Haviland v. Simmons, 45 A.3d 1246, 1258 (R.I. 2012) (quoting Young v.
Warwick Rollermagic Skating Center, Inc., 973 A.2d 553, 558 (R.I. 2009)).
We now turn to the potential ambiguity found in the 1945 agreement due to
the term “program.” Although the 1945 agreement provides no definition for the
term “program,” the document refers to “the national program of historical
- 18 -conservation” in a section that sets forth the purpose of the agreement. The
agreement further provides that Shearith Israel and Jeshuat Israel agree to “preserve,
protect, maintain, and, when necessary, restore, so far as lies within their power, the
Touro Synagogue, Newport, Rhode Island, and the grounds immediately about the
Synagogue building * * *.” The agreement continues to focus on only the
preservation and maintenance of the Synagogue building and grounds for the benefit
of the public as a historical site and a place for worship. Additionally, the agreement
states that it is the shared desire of Shearith Israel and Jeshuat Israel to
“promote the designation of the said Touro Synagogue as
a national historic site and to preserve, protect, and
maintain it in perpetuity for all necessary and desirable
public and religious purposes, for the inspiration and
benefit of the people of the United States, and particularly
to continue to foster on the part of the people of the
[n]ation, through visits to this shrine, a sincere devotion to
the United States and to the principles of religious freedom
for which it stands, and for the perpetuation of this
country’s architectural and cultural heritage[.]”
There is no doubt that the “program” contemplated by the 1945 agreement is the
preservation of the Touro Synagogue building and grounds as a historic national site
for the benefit of the nation’s cultural fabric, and a place for worship. When read
with this contextual framework, the word “program” within the phrase “the parties
hereto shall mutually consult on all matters of importance to the program” means
that the parties must consult with each other on matters pertaining to the conservation
and preservation of the Touro Synagogue building and grounds as a national historic
- 19 -site, so that it may continue to be held open to the public as a cultural and historical
resource and for worship.
Accordingly, keeping Jeshuat Israel on as a holdover tenant does not
constitute a “matter[] of importance to the program.” Therefore, we agree with the
trial justice that the 1945 agreement did not modify the lease between Shearith Israel
and Jeshuat Israel, but rather “it requires either party, taking action relative to the
restoration or renovation of the grounds or buildings * * * to consult each other as
well as the Secretary of the Interior.” We therefore hold that the 1945 agreement
did not modify the holdover tenancy to create a condition precedent requiring that
Shearith Israel consult Jeshuat Israel before initiating eviction proceedings, as such
an action does not fall within the scope of the program of historical preservation and
conservation.
Furthermore, the 1945 agreement contains clauses that require Shearith Israel
and Jeshuat Israel to obtain written permission from the Secretary of the Interior
before undertaking specific actions, such as constructing new buildings on the
grounds and altering the structure or appearance of the Synagogue through repairs.
The agreement also contains clauses that require the parties to consult with the
National Park Service (a bureau of the Department of the Interior) before
undertaking other specific actions such as placing a marker or monument in the
Synagogue or on the grounds and decorating and furnishing the interior of the
- 20 -Synagogue. These are specific actions within the scope of the “program” that require
consultation among the parties to the 1945 agreement. They do not include evicting
Jeshuat Israel as a tenant. From the language found in these clauses, it is apparent
that Shearith Israel, Jeshuat Israel, and the Secretary of the Interior considered when
specifically they must consult one another, but elected not to include the eviction of
the lessee occupying Touro Synagogue as such an event. It may be that these terms
of the 1945 agreement create conditions precedent to actions being taken that affect
the “program” of conservation at Touro Synagogue, but the terms do not modify the
terms of the lease agreement between Shearith Israel and Jeshuat Israel, or their
relationship as lessor and lessee in any way. It is clear that these terms seek to protect
Touro Synagogue as a historic site and require collaboration among the parties
before the Synagogue building or grounds are altered, but the terms do not reach
back to modify any of the terms of the lease agreement.
Because the 1945 agreement did not modify the lease, the only question before
the Superior Court was whether the elements required for ejectment were satisfied.
As the trial justice explained, Shearith Israel need only prove “that [Shearith Israel]
has title or ownership to the property and that the property is in possession of
[Jeshuat Israel].” The trial justice went on to explain that Shearith Israel’s ownership
of Touro Synagogue and Jeshuat Israel’s status as a holdover lessee were clearly
recognized in the First Circuit Court of Appeals decision in Congregation Jeshuat
- 21 -Israel, 866 F.3d at 61-62. With respect to Jeshuat Israel’s possession of Touro
Synagogue, the trial justice found that “it’s undisputed that [Jeshuat Israel] has not
vacated the property[;] * * * [they are] still in possession.” We discern no reason to
disturb her factual findings.
Accordingly, our review of the record reveals that the trial justice did not err
in entering judgment in favor of Shearith Israel, granting it “the right to take
immediate possession of the [p]remises * * * together with the appurtenances and
paraphernalia belonging thereto in accordance with the 1903 and 1908 leases.”
III
Conclusion
For the foregoing reasons, we affirm the judgment of the Superior Court. The
papers in this case may be remanded to that tribunal.
Justice Lynch Prata did not participate.
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