129 Mass. 167 | Mass. | 1880
This is an action of contract upon a written agreement, by which the plaintiff agreed to sell and the defendant agreed to buy a lot of land on Marlborough Street in Boston, the plaintiff stipulating that he would convey a good title, free from incumbrances. The defendant refuses to perform the agreement, upon the ground that the plaintiff is not able to give a good title.
The plaintiff’s title is derived from the Commonwealth of Massachusetts, under a deed dated May 31, 1872. It is admitted that the Commonwealth, in and prior to the year 1857, was seised in fee of a large tract of land known as the Back Bay lands, of which the premises in question are a part, and that the title of the Commonwealth continued until the sale to the plaintiff; but the defendant contends that, by the acts of the Commonwealth between these two dates, the premises became subject to certain easements, so that the deed to the plaintiff did not convey a title free from incumbrances. The facts bearing upon this question are in substance as follows:
In 1857, the Back Bay commissioners prepared a plan for the laying out and improvement of the Back Bay lands, which was made a part of their fifth annual report to the Legislature. On this plan is represented a rectangular piece of land bounding on Beacon Street, Exeter Street and Marlborough Street, which, though not so designated, appears to be intended for a public
Afterwards, and before the sale to the plaintiff, the Commonwealth made changes in this plan, by which the said square and forty-foot passageway were discontinued, and the land covered by them appropriated to building purposes.
The plaintiff’s lot is situated partly on the square and partly on the passageway; and the ground taken by the defendant is, that the deeds of the lots east of Dartmouth Street gave to the grantees an interest in the nature of an easement in the square and passageway, and estopped the Commonwealth from ever afterwards appropriating the land covered by them on the plan to any other purposes. The deeds of .the lots east of Dartmouth Street are substantially alike in form. Each deed conveys to the grantee “ a certain parcel of land or flats in the Back Bay so called, bounded and described as follows, .... reference being had to the plan accompanying the fifth annual report of the commissioners on the Back Bay, dated January 21, 1857.”
The question is whether this general reference to the plan imports a stipulation by the grantor that the plan shall not be in any respect changed in parts remote from and not immediately connected with the lot sold to the grantee.
It is a question of the intent of the parties. At the time this form of deed was adopted, the whole of the land was covered by water, and it was very inconvenient, if not impracticable, to establish physical monuments to mark the boundaries of the lots sold. A reference to the plan was necessary in order to designate with accuracy the lots intended to be conveyed. As was stated by Chief Justice Bigelow, “ we do not think that a mere reference to a plan in the descriptive part of a deed carries with it by necessary implication an agreement or stipulation that the condition of land, not adjacent to, but lying in the vicinity of, that granted, as shown on the plan, or the use to which it is represented on the plan to be appropriated, shall forever continue the same so far as it may be indirectly beneficial to the land included in the deed, and was within the power
We have considered this case as if the Commonwealth were merely the private owner of the Back Bay territory. As in this view, which is most favorable to the defendant, he fails to maintain his defence, it is not necessary to inquire whether in its dealings with this territory the Commonwealth acted solely as a private owner, or in regard to the streets and squares in its sovereign capacity, in which case different rules would govern. See Attorney General v. Gardiner, 117 Mass. 492. The result is, that the plaintiff is entitled to maintain his action.
Judgment for the plaintiff.
By a plan used at the argument, the easterly boundary of the land in question appeared to be about four hundred and thirty feet westerly of Dartmouth Street.