292 Mass. 263 | Mass. | 1935
This is a bill in equity by which the plaintiffs seek to enjoin the defendant from trespassing upon their land. The case was referred to a master who found the following facts: The plaintiffs own certain real estate in the town of Blackstone located on the westerly side of Blackstone Street, which runs in a northerly direction from Blackstone to Mention. The defendant is the owner of real estate on the same side of the same street, southerly from the plaintiffs’ property but separated from it by two intervening lots on which there are houses. All these lots originally were owned by Albert Gaskill, a common grantor of the plaintiffs and the defendant.. The plaintiffs’ house
It was agreed by counsel that the plaintiffs’ and the defendant’s chains of title, both of which are printed in the record, may be considered by the court as though the same were incorporated in the master’s report. The question before this court is whether the final decree was proper upon the facts found; if so it should be affirmed. The master found that “The source of the right which the defendant has over the land of the plaintiffs is that contained in a deed from one Albert Gaskill, whose house the plaintiffs now own and occupy and who was the owner in 1864 of the land of both the plaintiffs and , defendant. . . . Albert Gaskill conveyed the land southerly of the plaintiffs’ property and now owned in part by the defendant to one Susan Gaskill by deed dated May 4, 1864, . . . which contained the following clause: 1 and with the right of way across my land (with teams only) from said road on the North side of my dwelling house occupied by me between my said house and barn to said premises, it being the usual way of passing on to said premises for the necessary use and man
Ordered accordingly.