133 Mass. 12 | Mass. | 1882
This is an action to recover damages for a breach of the covenant against incumbrances, contained in a deed from the defendant to the plaintiff.
The city of Boston, by its deed dated July 3, 1862, conveyed the land in question to Mary Ann Carter. This deed, after the description and before the habendum, contained the provision that “this conveyance is also subject to the following conditions : 1. All taxes and assessments which have been laid or assessed upon the said premises previous to the execution of this conveyance shall be paid by the said Mary Ann Carter, her heirs and assigns. 2. The front line of the building which may be erected on the said lot shall be placed on a line parallel with and ten feet back from the said Newton Street. 3. The building which may be erected on the said lot shall be of a width equal to the width of the front of the said lot- 4. No dwelling-house or other building except necessary out-buildings shall be
We are of opinion that the so-called conditions in the deed to Carter were not intended or understood by the parties to be technical conditions, a breach of which would work a forfeiture of the estate. They were intended to regulate the mode in which the grantee might use and enjoy the land, and are to be construed as restrictions. Episcopal City Mission v. Appleton, 117 Mass. 326. Skinner v. Shepard, 130 Mass. 180. This same deed was before this court for construction in Keening v. Ayling, 126 Mass. 404; and, although the question is not discussed in the opinion, that case proceeded upon the assumption that they were restrictions imposed as a part of a general scheme of improvement, which might be enforced in equity by the owners of the adjoining estates, and created equitable easements which constituted a breach of the covenants against incumbrances. It is true that it appeared affirmatively in that case, by the production of the plan annexed to the Carter deed, and of other deeds of adjoining and neighboring estates, that the restrictions were a part of a general plan of improvement.
The defendant now contends that the Superior Court erred in giving the same construction to this deed, because these collateral and surrounding facts were not affirmatively shown in the case at bar. We are of opinion that this ground is not fairly open to him. The parties presented to the presiding justice of the Superior Court, for his construction, a deed which had once
The plaintiff claimed only under the fourth and fifth restrictions, and we are of opinion that the court rightly ruled that “ clauses fourth and fifth were restrictions binding upon the estate at the time of the making of the covenant sued upon, and were incumbrances upon the estate within the meaning of the covenant sued upon; ” and that the several rulings to the contrary requested by the defendant were rightly refused.
The evidence of the original agreement of the city of Boston to convey this lot to one Wheeler, assigned by him to said Carter, was properly rejected. It had been superseded by the deed to Carter given in pursuance of it. If it agreed with the deed, it was immaterial; if it differed, the deed, being the later contract, must control and could not be varied by it.
Exceptions overruled.