142 Mass. 495 | Mass. | 1886
The first question which we have considered is, whether the plaintiff has shown a title in herself to the soil of that part of the highway where the trees stood; and we think she has not. She relies, primarily, upon the grant by the town in 1788, and upon the rule of law, now well established and familiar, that grants of land bounding on a way will be presumed to extend to the centre of the way, if the grantor owns the soil thereof, and if a clear intention to the contrary is not to be gathered from the language of the deed, construed in the light of the existing circumstances. In the present case, such clear intention to the contrary sufficiently appears. It is assumed, throughout the discussion, that, prior to the proceedings of 1787 and 1788, the town owned the whole street in fee. The street was then wide, and the whole purpose of the proceedings was to narrow it. The land conveyed was not independent land bounding
The proceedings and votes of the town in 1809 and 1810 afford no ground for inferring an intention to grant the soil to the centre of the street, for reasons which are covered by what has been said in reference to the proceedings and vote of 1787 and 1788.
The plaintiff contends that the town is estopped to deny her title, by reason of the proceedings in 1883; but the town thereby lost no title which it already had to land included in the street. It is quite probable that by far the larger portion of the laud included in the highway as laid out by the county commissioners was clearly and without dispute included in the way as already existing, and there is nothing to show that the place where the trees stood was then for the first time taken into the highway. Indeed, it is plain that it was not so. Nor could the proceedings of the commissioners deprive the town of land which it owned in fee. The essential elements of an estoppel are wanting.
Exceptions overruled.