This is a petition under G. L. c. 185 to register title to certain land, hereinafter called the locus. The respondents claim, inter alla, “the right to remove sand from the . . . [locus] for purposes of cranberry culture on the bogs lying southwest . . . [thereof].” The Land Court ruled, inter alla, that the petitioners “are entitled to have the . . . [locus] registered free from any . . . right of the respondents to dig and remove any sand therefrom”; and the respondents appealed. The evidence is reported.
We summarize the pertinent facts from the Land Court’s decision. Much of the locus and part of the abutting land of the respondents were owned by the Wing family prior to 1868. In 1868 the Wings conveyed part of the respondents’ land to the respondents’ predecessor in title, Charles Miller. The conveyance as described in the deed consisted of “a swamp area and Little Bound Swamp” “ [t]ogether *439 with the privilege of raising the Lake two feet for the purpose of flowing said swamps, and also to drain said swamps Northerly to the Pond, known as Dam Pond, together with the privilege of taking sand from the lands of the party of the first part for sanding said swamps and building dike along the edge of said Lake, and the Party of the second part is to build and maintain the fence along the road by the large swamp and half of the fence of the Little Round Swamp, and the party of the first part to build and maintain the other half of the fence. ’ ’ By another deed of 1868, Samuel Eldred conveyed to Miller “five acres of swamp” in the same area, including part of Little Round Swamp, and granted the “privilege of flooding and draining said swamp and also obtaining sand outside of said boundaries for building roads and sanding said swamp.” By still another deed of 1868, one Crowell conveyed a swamp area to Miller and “ [a]Iso a swamp lying north of said swamp . . . known as the Little Round Swamp, bounded by the upland with the privilege of flooding, draining and obtaining sand for the dyking and sanding said swamps.” Miller proceeded to construct two bogs and took sand therefor from old pits on the locus. He could “take sand from land of each grantor for the benefit of [only] the area purchased from such grantor.” He died in 1914, devising his estate to his children. “The inventory . . . [included] about twenty-five acres of [c]ranberry [b]og,” including the two bogs already mentioned. Miller’s children in 1926 conveyed by deed seven bogs to the Linnell Cranberry Company, and also granted thereby “any and all rights of taking sand from adjoining owners.” The company in 1930 conveyed the land to the respondents’ father, who, relying upon his deed, shortly thereafter opened the presently existing sandpit on the locus. Until then no sand had been taken from the locus for over sixty years.
The Land Court found that the intention of the grantors in the deeds to Miller of the swamp areas was to enable Miller to “convert them into cranberry bogs,” that “the intent and purpose of the ‘privilege’ was to allow him to take sufficient sand from the three owners’ remaining land *440 to accomplish the building . . . [of the bogs] and [of] necessary roads and dykes,” and “that the purposes of said privilege were accomplished and terminated many years ago.” The respondents contend that the deed from the Wings to Miller in 1868 was an express grant of a profit á prendre in the locus which has not been terminated.
“Every deed is to be construed so as to give effect to the intent of the parties as manifested by the words used, interpreted in the light of the material circumstances and pertinent facts known to them at the time it was executed.”
Bessey
v.
Ollman,
“A profit [a prendre] is a right in one person to take from the land of another either a part of the soil, such as minerals of all kinds from mines, stones from quarries, sand and gravel; or part of its produce, such as grass, crops of any kind, trees or timber, fish from lakes or streams, game from the woods, seaweed, and the like. . . . A profit [a prendre] is appurtenant when created for the benefit of a dominant estate. It is then in all respects, except the character of the user, of the same nature as an easement, passing with the dominant estate as an incident thereof whenever the estate passes by deed, devise or inheritance, so that the person entitled to the enjoyment of the profit at any time will be the person who is at that time the immediate owner of the dominant estate.” Walsh, Commentaries on the Law of Beal Property, § 229.
Phillips
v.
Rhodes,
A conveyance of a profit á prendre is to be distinguished from a “conveyance of an interest in real estate which will give complete ownership of a valuable part of the property, while at the same time . . . [the owner] may retain his general ownership of the whole tract for other purposes which do not interfere with the rights which he conveys. Minerals, mines, quarries and other similar portions of the estate may be conveyed even in fee, while the rest is retained.”
Hunt
v.
Boston,
We conclude that the locus is to be registered subject to the profit á prendre of the respondents in that portion of the locus originally owned by the Wings. The decision of the Land Court is to be modified accordingly, and as so modified is affirmed.
So ordered.
