308 Mass. 54 | Mass. | 1941
The petitioner Holcombe filed a petition to register title to a parcel of land in the town of Brewster
Sometime in 1925 one Mitchell, who then owned land adjacent to the easterly boundary of the Holcombe land, brought a petition to register title. The land described in his petition included an interior lot with a narrow strip or corridor about one hundred thirty feet wide running northerly from the salt marsh to the beach upland and Cape Cod Bay. The westerly boundary of this corridor is the easterly boundary of the locus now in dispute. One Matilda G. Crosby, the predecessor in title of Holcombe, was notified personally of the filing of the Mitchell petition, but she entered no appearance and did not contest the petition. Hopkins, his wife, two sisters and a brother appeared in opposition to the granting of the Mitchell petition. The general characteristics of the land in the vicinity were described by the trial judge as “upland at the south, then meadow or salt marsh, then beach upland and lastly below " the bank a wide stretch of flats extending seaward.” The
At the trial of the present petition there was further documentary evidence indicating that Hopkins held title to the locus. Hopkins introduced the entire record in the Mitchell case. Thereupon the judge ruled that the ownership of the locus was settled by the decision in the' Mitchell case and that “the legal principle of res judicata applies in favor of the Hopkins claim.”
.The burden was upon Mitchell to prove that he had a title proper for registration, Hughes v. Williams, 229 Mass. 467; Sutcliffe v. Burns, 294 Mass. 126, and the decision in that case' showed that he did not sustain the burden in reference to the corridor running northerly from the main parcel of his land to the sea. The decree entered in that case, which was a proceeding in rem, adjudged that Mitchell was the owner of the land therein described. G. L. (Ter. Ed.) c. 185, § 1. Tyler v. Judges of the Court of Registration, 175 Mass. 71. Malaguti v. Rosen, 262 Mass. 555, 567. Baumgartner v. Doherty, 286 Mass. 583. That decree did not upon its face purport to settle the ownership in the land between the northerly boundary of the Mitchell land, as finally determined by the court, and the bay. And Hopkins, who was one of the respondents in that case, could not as
The principle of res judicata cannot apply unless the previous action was between the same parties or their privies, touched a subject matter involved in both actions, and was decided against the party attempting to litigate the same subject matter again. The ownership of the locus was not in issue in the Mitchell case. Mitchell did not claim any interest in it. The parcel to which he sought to have the title registered did not include the locus. A judgment in rem is binding on all the world, and such an “adjudication is held to be conclusive upon the facts which are made the ground of the judgment, when those facts are again brought in question in ulterior or collateral proceedings.” Salem v. Eastern Railroad, 98 Mass. 431, 449. Lowell v. County Commissioners of Middlesex, 152 Mass. 372, 379. Butrick, petitioner, 185 Mass. 107, 113. New England Home for Deaf Mutes v. Leader Filling Stations Corp. 276 Mass. 153, 157, 158. Sheehan Construction Co. v. Dudley, 299 Mass. 51.
The title to the locus was not embodied in the decree entered in the Mitchell case and formed no part of the de
Decisions on petitions of Hopkins and Holcombe reversed.