296 Mass. 107 | Mass. | 1936
This is a petition to register title to three parcels of land situated at Megansett, in the town of Falmouth. The petitioner also claims as appurtenant to the land certain rights of way over Cedar Avenue, leading from the road, shown on a plan as “Boulevard,” to the shore. A Land Court examiner filed a report and an abstract of title. At a hearing before a judge of the Land Court Warner V. Taylor (herein called the respondent) excepted to the denial of his requests for rulings and to the granting of certain requests for rulings filed by the petitioner. The exceptions relate to the location of Cedar Avenue as the boundary of the petitioner’s land, and her rights in that avenue.
The findings of - fact made by the judge of the Land
Besides other facts, the trial judge found that the land sought to be registered consists of three parcels — one, designated in the decision of the judge of Land Court as "parcel one,” is a lot bounded northerly on land of the respondent by the southerly line of Cedar Avenue, a curving way; another, designated in the decision of the judge of the Land Court as “parcel two,” is an adjoining lot on the south that extends from the boulevard to a point near high water mark; and a third is a parcel of upland and flats running westerly from said point near high water mark, and bounded northerly on land of the respondent, being the end of Cedar Avenue, and fiats of the respondent on which there is an ancient wharf.
The decision by the judge of the Land Court includes the following: "There was an old way, known as the road to the wharf, leading from a public way at some distance to the east across the present land of the petitioner to a point about opposite his [sic] present house, and thence down through, a steep gully to the wharf. From about opposite the house an old logging road branched from the wharf road southerly to and across what is now the boulevard or present town way. The wharf, which has long ceased to exist as a wharf, was once used by coasting schooners and packets, but not at all for over fifty years; and there has been no use of the road within that period as a means of access to the wharf. It was a private road,
“There is on the ground a travelled way as shown on the filed plan which follows the course of the old logging road from the present town road to a point opposite the respondent [sfc] house, and thence down to the shore follows the old road to the wharf. The road to the wharf extended to the northerly line of the petitioner’s third parcel, which had by grant an appurtenant privilege of the wharf.
“February 9, 1903, Mrs. Mary Donkin, then owner of both the land now of the respondent and of the remaining land of the petitioner, conveyed to her sisters-in-law what is now the petitioner’s first parcel, described as bounding by the southerly line of Cedar Avenue. Mrs. Donkin had a plan made by E. L. and C. L. Hayward, engineers, . . . showing the parcel conveyed February 9 as bounding northerly by Cedar Avenue, a way between the boulevard and the shore laid out on a consistent curve, with courses and distances from the boulevard to the stone monument near the shore which marks the southwest corner of the petitioner’s first parcel and the northeast corner of her third parcel. The description in the deed of February 9 was taken from this plan, but it is not referred to and was not recorded until 1920. The Cedar Avenue shown on this plan follows substantially the course of the travelled way. It is however twenty feet wide whereas the travelled way is only about five feet wide, and it makes a regular curve thereby diverging from the travelled way in two places. From a point about eighty feet west of the boulevard for a distance of about seventy feet the southerly line of the travelled way is about a foot to the south of the southerly line of Cedar Avenue on the recorded plan, and at the westerly end the travelled way leads by irregular lines, within the limits of the recorded plan avenue, up through a steep gully with ■ bayberry bushes and gravelly banks on either side, to near the top of the rise, and then swings to the north for a distance of about seventy-five feet, making a sharp curve of which the furthest distance of its northerly
“February 19, 1903, Mrs. Donkin conveyed to one Noyes the second parcel now of the petitioner. The land is described as bounding west and east of the first parcel, northerly by the southerly line of ' Cedar Avenue.’ The courses and distances given are those of said plan, but the plan is not referred to and . . . was not recorded until 1920.”
On August
"But when the Donkin sisters, grantees of parcel one, conveyed to the petitioner by deed dated September 7, 1920, and recorded with said grant of the easement of August 25 and accompanying plan, they described the land as shown on said plan and therein referred to, and bounded ‘along the line of said avenue.’ The respondent contends that the petitioner’s land extends northerly only to the southerly line of the avenue as shown on said recorded plan. That plan, however, . . . was not a survey of, nor a location of, said avenue except in so far as concerned the easement of a driveway out to the boulevard. In the grant of that easement the right of way of the grantees from said land to the shore, which was over the travelled way, was expressly preserved. Unquestionably the plan was incorporated by reference into the deed for all essential purposes, but the location of a new way between the boulevard and shore, impossible to use at its shore end, in place of the travelled way was not its purpose. It is unthinkable that it was the intention of the parties that the grantor should retain title to a land locked strip between the southerly line of the Cedar Avenue as indicated on the plan and the southerly line of the travelled way.
"I find that as a result of said deeds the petitioner’s land is bounded northerly by the southerly line of the travelled way, and rule that, under familiar principles of law, rights of way thereover passed and remain appurtenant to each of said parcels one and two.
"The right of way granted in 1920 as appurtenant to the petitioner’s first parcel was an additional right of way for the purposes of a driveway to the boulevard. The travelled way is not wide enough for such use. This easement is subject to the terms stated in said grant. The petitioner, successor in title to the grantees therein, has acquired parcel two, which is adjacent to parcel one, but has not constructed thereover any driveway to the boulevard, nor executed any release; Such a driveway could be
The right of way granted in 1920, as appurtenant to the petitioner’s first parcel, was an additional right of way for the purpose of a driveway to the boulevard, and was not lost by acquisition of parcel two, adjacent to parcel one, as the petitioner has not constructed thereover any driveway to the boulevard, nor executed any release of her rights in connection with the granted right of way, and the trial judge so ruled. The words of this grant, so far as per
We have considered all the exceptions of the respondent and find no reversible error.
Exceptions overruled.
The judge’s decision by error read “October” instead of “August.” — Reporter.
Clauses preceding this quotation were as follows: “The above grant is made on the following condition: Whereas on account of the location of the aforesaid land of the grantees, the grantees are unable to use any way other than said Cedar Avenue for the purpose of a driveway from any buildings located or to be located on said land to said ‘Boulevard’, and Whereas it is possible that the grantees or their heirs and assigns may purchase adjacent land and may construct a driveway over land to which they shall have acquired title to said ‘Boulevard.’” — Reporter.