285 Mass. 110 | Mass. | 1934
This is an appeal by the respondent from a decision of the Land Court upon a petition to register the title to a parcel of land, in Greenfield, on the west side of Congress Street one lot north of Russell Street. The respondent owns a triangular parcel of land adjoining on the southwest the land sought to be registered. The location of the boundary line between these two tracts is the matter in dispute. Two plans are annexed to the record. The first was drafted by the Land Court and shows various features of the decision and the evidence on the case. The second is a copy of a plan recorded January 3, 1917, inscribed “Plan
It appears from the record that in 1916 Minnie R. Liver-more acquired a good title to the land shown on the plan which will hereafter be referred to as the recorded plan, by a deed from one Kiely. She sold this property in four separate parcels. In 1917, referring to the recorded plan, she deeded lot 3 to Ray H. Livermore, “Also a right of way over the driveway extending from Congress street to lot number 4 on said plan, as shown on said plan above referred to.” In 1919 she deeded lot 4 to Frank B. Stone. In 1920 she deeded lot 1
It was found by the trial judge that when Mrs. Liver-more conveyed to Mrs. Sleigh her remaining land she was travelling over this way between Congress Street and her barn. These three ways, namely, the driveway of the recorded plan for the benefit of lot 3, the way deeded to Howell, and the travelled way, overlapped in places but at scarcely any point actually coincided. The three ways are shown on the Land Court plan, which in its general outlines is substantially similar to the recorded plan. On the Land Court plan the Howell way, ten feet wide, runs east and west along the northerly side of the Howell land from Congress Street to lot 3, which is marked “Gray.” The respondent Gray rightly claims title to this lot under the deed from Minnie R. Livermore to Ray H. Livermore. On this plan the driveway follows the same course as on the recorded plan, heretofore described. It is shown, however, as running for seven feet of its width on land of Howell. This results from the fact that on the recorded plan lot 1 is fifty feet wide, while on the Land Court plan it is fifty-seven feet wide, the width stated in the deed from Mrs.
The respondent Gray claims title to the triangular parcel and “garden lot” under the deed from Sleigh to Keet, her main contention being that she owns in fee the land to the
It is a general rule that it is only when the description of granted premises is uncertain “through latent ambiguities, either in the meaning of the words or in their application to the face of the earth, that resort may be had” to extrinsic evidence to resolve existing obscurities. Hirsch v. Fisher, 278 Mass. 492, 495, and cases cited. We are of opinion that there is nothing ambiguous or indefinite in the description of the triangle as written in the Keet deed, and that the decision of the trial judge, that the words “to the west line of a right of way conveyed by Minnie R. Livermore” meant to the west line of the recorded driveway, was warranted and must stand.
The respondent filed certain requests for rulings, which were properly denied as inconsistent with the facts proved or unnecessary to a decision of the case. The denial of the respondent’s motion for a further hearing fails to show any error of law.
Decision of the Land Court affirmed.