190 Mass. 90 | Mass. | 1906
This is a petition to the Land Court to register the title to two parcels of land in Gloucester. The controversy-relates only to the first of these parcels. After a decision and an order for a decree in the Land Court, the petitioner appealed to the Superior Court, under the provisions of the R. L. c. 128, § 13, as amended by the St. 1902, c. 458. Under this section issues for the appeal were framed in the Land Court as follows: “ 1. Have the respondents any right, title or interest in the real estate claimed by the petitioner? 2. If the respondents have any right, title or interest in the real estate claimed by the petitioner, what is it?” The controversy between the parties relates to the location of the boundary line between their estates, and inasmuch as the description of the petitioner’s lot gives no boundary on the side next the respondents’ lot, other than the respondents’ land, it is now contended that nothing is open on the appeal from the decree of the Land Court. The contention is that the petitioner’s claim of title extends only to the true boundary line, and therefore that the respondents have no right or title in the estate claimed by him, the question where the true boundary is having been finally and conclusively settled by the decision of the Land Court. But the record shows that the parties made conflicting claims in the Land Court, in regard to the ownership of a strip of land and the location of the boundary line. The petitioner’s claim of ownership was to a line northerly of that found by the Land Court to be the boundary ; and the respondents claimed as owners a part of that which the
We are of opinion that this contention is erroneous. The issues might have been framed in better form to present the questions to be answered in the Superior Court. But they are to be read in connection with the findings of the judge of the Land Court, which are a part of the record. Reading them in this way, we see that they are intended to present to the Superior Court the question of title to the land claimed by the petitioner, up to the line which he calls his boundary.
The line in dispute runs through a dwelling house. The deed under which the petitioner claims, which originally divided the ownership of the property, was made in 1771, and it describes the premises conveyed as follows: “ The southerly half of my dwelling house in the Harbor, so called, in Gloucester aforesaid, as the same is divided by the partition from the northerly part of said dwelling house, together with the southern half of the land adjoining thereto, reserving liberty of a free passage into and out of the cellar by and through the fore cellar doorway, together with all the privileges and appurtenances to the same half house and land any way belonging.” The southerly half of this house is now owned by the petitioner, and the northerly half by the respondents. An ell has been built at the rear of the westerly end of the petitioner’s house, the part next to the main house being ancient, and the remainder, further westward, being of recent construction. The plans also exhibit that which appears to be an ell on the westerly end of the respondents’ house, and there is nothing in the record to show when it was built. These ells are not separated from each other by any partition, but by an open space, not built upon. While the fact does not distinctly appear, we infer from the description in the deed that neither of them was in existence when the deed of division was made.
Looking at this deed, to which both parties go back to deter
The next and most difficult question is, what is the line of the land, which was conveyed in these words, namely: “together with the southern half of the land adjoining thereto.” The dwelling house is treated as divided in halves by the partition, and we think it follows that the land adjoining thereto was intended to be divided by the same general line that divides the house. Inasmuch as the partitions in the first and second stories are in very nearly the same vertical line and in the same general course, being almost straight, we think they should determine the ownership of the adjoining land. The attic is an unimportant part of the building, and the partition there departs but little from the line of the two lower stories. So far as we can determine from the plans and the record, the termini of the partitions on the first and second floor at the front and rear of the main house are in the same vertical line, and we think that they should be taken as the termini of the boundary line of the land under the house, which line is to run in a straight course
There was no cellar under the rear part of the house on either side, although on the southerly side the cellar extended back farther than on the northerly side. So far as there was a partition in the cellar, its line was very irregular, and cannot have been intended to designate the boundary line of the land, under the deed of division. The only line referred to in that deed is the partition that divides the house as a structure. -The ownership of the land is made to depend upon the line that marks the ownership of the-different parts of the house.
The facts reported do not indicate that any rights in the land now in question have been gained by adverse possession. The cellar on each side was appurtenant to the house above, and the cellar and the other appurtenances are expressly referred to in the deed. There was an implied easement created in favor of each party, which permitted him to keep and use the cellar as a part of the house or as appurtenant to it, so long as the house should stand. So far as either party has used any part of the cellar beyond the boundary line of his land, he must be held to have used it by virtue of the easement secured to him by the deed, and not adversely. The result is that the rights of the parties in the cellar, outside of the line of their land, are like their rights in the house above. In regard to the house the Land Court made this decision: “ That the petitioner’s title is subject to, and also has the benefit of an easement of the right of occupation, so long as the present house stands, in accordance with the partitions in the several stories thereof, and an easement of the right to mutual support and shelter for the several portions of said house belonging to the respective parties.” We understand that neither party seriously questions the correctness
The report shows that there is a fence in the rear of the house, which terminates at the house, and is treated in some part of its course as a boundary. The record does not show at what point it meets the house, and there is nothing before us that enables us to determine the boundary westerly of the westerly end of the house as it was in 1771. We assume that there was evidence before the Land Court relating to that part of the property.
A part of the report is in these words : “ If such further rulings are not correct, then the case is to be remanded to the Land Court for a decree with such directions from the Supreme Judicial Court as the facts and the law require.”
An appeal having been taken upon certain points from the Land Court to the Superior Court, under the R. L. c. 128, § 13, and the St. 1902, c. 458, and the report to this court being only of questions of law which arose in the Superior Court, our decision upon these questions must go directly to the Superior Court, and the matters involved in the appeal must be finally determined by that court. Its decision will then be remanded to the Land Court. This follows from a proper interpretation of the R. L. c. 128, § 14. It is only when questions of law come directly to the- Supreme Judicial Court from the Land Court that this court makes a certificate of its decision to that court.
The case will be further heard in the Superior Court, and a decision entered in accordance with the law as stated above.
■So ordered.