264 Mass. 436 | Mass. | 1928
This is a petition to register title in fee simple, subject to rights of way, to a strip of land between Washington Street and Harrison Avenue in Boston, over which lies a private way known as Chickering Place.
The petitioners own the land and building at the southeasterly corner of Chickering Place and Washington Street. The respondents, the Ames Trustees, own the land and buildings on the north side of Chickering Place throughout its length. Other respondents own land abutting on Chickering Place.
The chief question is whether the petitioners own the fee of the entire Chickering Place.
Prior to 1822 title to the land included within the lines of Chickering Place, together with land on each side, had been acquired by Lemuel Hayward by two deeds, one from Nathaniel Sweetser and the other from Jacob Sweetser. He also owned land southerly of what is now Hayward Place, and that was included in the partition proceedings as was all his other real estate. After his death partition was made of his real estate by three commissioners appointed upon proceedings in the Supreme Judicial Court in 1822. The report of the commissioners was approved and accepted by the court. Accompanying that partition was a plan showing a subdivision of the Washington (then Newbury) Street property into lots with two passages running easterly from Washington Street and a third passageway at the east connecting the two; the lots having buildings thereon being left unnumbered and the vacant lots being numbered. The northerly passageway thirteen feet wide is. the present Chickering Place. The southerly passageway is the present Hayward Place and the connecting passageway at the east is within the present limits of Harrison Avenue.
Each of the other lots abutting on said passageways was described as bounding “by” or “on” the respective passageways (Chickering Place, Hayward Place and the easterly way now in Harrison Avenue) with a clause as to free and uninterrupted privilege therein similar to that in the description of the parcel set off, for example, to Sarah H. Hayward, through whom the respondents claim a part of their estate. To her was set off a parcel on the easterly side of Newbury Street bounded southerly “by said passage way thirteen feet wide leading to Newbury Street there measuring one hundred and five feet and three inches, with a free and uninterrupted use and privilege in and to said passage way leading to said Newbury Street, which is to be kept open and used in common for the benefit of the owners of estates adjoining.” The respondents also claim a part of their estate through Joshua H. Hayward. The contention of the petitioners is that, by the rules for construction of deeds established previous to 1822 and then prevailing, the portion set off to Joshua H. Hayward included also the fee and soil of Chickering Place, and that no part of the fee and soil of Chickering Place passed to Joshua’s brothers and sisters under the description of the lots set off and assigned to them.
The judge of the Land Court filed a decision setting out at length the reasons leading him to the conclusion that the petitioners have not title to the fee and soil of Chickering Place beyond such portion as may be owned by them as a part of their lot on the corner of Chickering Place and Washington Street and, since their title to that tract was not before him, he ordered the petition dismissed. He granted certain requests for rulings in substance that the effect of the proceedings for partition was to vest in those, to whom the several parcels abutting on Chickering Place were set off, the fee and soil of that passageway to its center fine between the side lines of the several parcels extended. The petitioners excepted to the granting of these requests and to the ruling as to the state of their title in the fee of the passageway.
The case comes before us by exceptions. Hence only questions of law are presented, and the findings of fact made by the Land Court must stand if warranted on any view of the evidence with its justifiable inferences. Marvel v. Cobb, 204 Mass. 117. Boston Five Cents Savings Bank v. Massachusetts General Hospital, 255 Mass. 583, 586. Eaton v. Eaton, 233 Mass. 351, 369. G. L. c. 185, § 15. The general finding against the petitioners imports a finding of all subsidiary facts essential to that result, so far as permissible on the evidence. Adams v. Dick, 226 Mass. 46, 52. This case presents chiefly for interpretation the construction of a written instrument. If that were all, no deference could be paid to the decision of the trial judge and this court would decide its meaning. Creighton v. Elwell, 243 Mass. 580, 583. Gould v. Converse, 246 Mass. 185, 189. Farber v. Mutual Life Ins. Co. of New York, 250 Mass. 250, 253. The significance of words takes color from the time and circumstances in which they are used, and the intent of parties is almost always a matter of fact. Therefore'weight will be given to the findings made. Atlantic Maritime Co. v. Gloucester, 228 Mass. 519, 521, 522. Webber v. Cox, 256 Mass. 595, 597.
The result of these decisions is that, while there have been some fluctuations in the form and emphasis of expression during the six score years which' have elapsed since the words of Chief Justice Parsons in Clap v. M’Neil, 4 Mass. 589, the underlying principle on which they all rest is that the intent of the parties in each instance was ascertained from the words used in the written instrument interpreted in the light of all the attendant facts. That is the general principle governing the interpretation of deeds, Simonds v. Simonds, 199 Mass. 552, 554, and of other instruments creating rights in property, Eustace v. Dickey, 240 Mass. 55, saving only that the intent thus found be not repugnant to some positive rule of law or the terms of the instrument. Expressions in some of the earlier cases, which bear a contrary aspect, are to be taken as not essential to the point decided and hence not binding upon the court or falling within the protection of the doctrine of stare decisis. See Swan v. Justices of the Superior Court, 222
There are indications in the record that the trial judge thought the law to have been settled in 1822, to the effect that such descriptions as set off the several parcels abutting on Chickering Place to different owners, in the report of the commissioners, transferred the fee in the private way now known as Chickering Place throughout its entire width and length to Joshua H. Hayward. As already pointed out, that is not so. If that had been the settled law at that time, there would be difficulty in supporting the conclusion of the trial judge. Parties have a right to contract, and commonly do contract, in view of settled rules of property established by authoritative decisions of courts of the jurisdiction. Having entered into an engagement as to real property in the light of such declared rules, there would be grave doubt about holding them at a later time to some other standard. It is a principle of wide application that what “a court declares to be the law always was the law, notwithstanding earlier decisions to the contrary.” Ross v. Freeholders of Hudson, 90 N. J. Law, 522, 527. Center School Township v. State, 150 Ind. 168, 173. Falconer v. Simmons, 51 W. Va. 172, 173-176. 1 Blackstone’s Com. 70. Yet, notwithstanding that principle and not at all incompatible with it, is another often asserted; “The sound and true rule is, that if the contract when made was valid by the laws of the State, as then expounded by all the departments of its government, and administered in its courts of justice, its validity and obligation cannot be impaired by any subsequent act of the legislature of the state, or decision of its courts, altering the construction of
The findings of fact are summarized in a brief paragraph by the trial judge: “ The laying out of the three passageways, the careful provisions as to their use in common as appurtenant to all of the lots abutting on them, the fact that this was a partition in which all of the land was to be divided, the absence of any language that would, on the construction contended for by the petitioners, dispose of the fee in the other two passageways, all seem to me to show a clear intent, consistent with the presumption which must govern unless otherwise rebutted, to apportion the fee in the passageways to the respective lots abutting thereon. The land set off to Joshua was simply the remaining land of the Sweetser Estate, which did not cover the other passageways, not included in the previous assignments to the other parties to the partition, and was fairly designated as ' Sweetser Estate’.”
It cannot quite be said, in our opinion, that all the circumstances disclosed fail to warrant these findings and the final inference drawn. The case at bar is fairly within the authority of Clark v. Parker, 106 Mass. 554, also a case aris
It is not necessary to discuss other questions argued. They become immaterial in view of our conclusion on the main point.
Exceptions overruled.