154 Mass. 587 | Mass. | 1891
This is an action to recover double the expense of building a division fence and the fees of the fence viewers. The fence viewers had required the defendants to build the fence, but they did not do it, and the plaintiff built it.
Section 10 provides that, “ when lands belonging to two persons in severalty have been occupied in common without a partition fence between them, and one of the occupants desires to occupy his part in severalty, and the other occupant refuses or neglects ” to divide the line or build a fence on his part of it when divided, the party desiring the fence may apply to the fence viewers, and, if a partition fence is required, they may divide and assign the same; and in certain contingencies the party applying may build the whole fence and recover of the other party double the expense of building the portion assigned to such party, with the fees of the fence viewers. ■ There is no doubt that the lands belonged in this case to the plaintiff and to the defendants in severalty, and had been occupied by them in common within the meaning of the statute. But it is to be observed, that it is only in case the occupant, not the owner, refuses or neglects to divide the line, or to build a fence where the line is divided, that the right of the other party to apply to the fence viewers accrues. The owner may be the occupant, but in such a case it is his neglect or refusal as occupant, and not as owner, that enables the other party to set the law in motion. Again, it is the occupant, not the owner, who is made liable for
In the present case the only evidence relied on of occupation on the part of the defendants, or either of them, was the fact that they had leased it to third persons for storing carts and trucking material. The character of the tenancy is not stated; whether at sufferance or at will, or for years or for life. But whichever it was, so long as it continued, the lessee had the right of possession and occupancy. He, and not the owner, was the occupant, and he was the one against whom the proceedings should have been instituted and this action brought.
The plaintiff contends, however, that under the provisions of § 14 the fence viewers had a general power to require the fence to be built, and to apportion the expense. But even if that were so, which we do not intimate, the jurisdiction of the fence viewers only extended to cases concerning fences “ between the lands of the respective occupants,” and, as we have already seen, the defendants were not the occupants of the lot belonging to them. As this is conclusive against the plaintiff’s right to recover under this section, it is unnecessary to consider its scope further.
The result is, therefore, that judgment should have been entered for both defendants, and it is
¡So ordered.