173 Mass. 152 | Mass. | 1899
This is a bill to enforce a restriction as to the character of buildings to be erected on the defendants’ land for twenty years from the date of the deeds by which the restriction was imposed. The defence is a denial that the defendants are bound by the restriction in question. In 1875, one Anthony Holbrook and one Johnson, his son in law, owned a four-acre lot, of which both the plaintiffs’ and the defendants’ land formed part, as tenants in common. Holbrook died and left one third of
The title of the defendant Ahl, who owns the land on which it is proposed to erect the building in question, is derived from the same tenants in common, as follows. On February 13,1895, the devisees of Holbrook and the trustee under his will conveyed to one Winnibel Bowman by metes and bounds, “ subject to the same restrictions as are contained in the deeds of adjoining lots,” to the plaintiffs, and on January 19 of the same year the executrix of Johnson released to Bowman, seemingly in anticipation of the Holbrook conveyances, in the same form as in the case of the plaintiffs. The latter conveyances are not material.
The main objection urged is that the deed by the Holbrook heirs to the plaintiffs is void. There have been expressions looking that way, it must be admitted. Marshall v. Trumbull, 28 Conn. 183,185. But it seems to us hardly to need argument, and it is perfectly settled in this State and many others, that such a deed, accompanied by possession, is only voidable, espe
A further objection is taken that the deeds of the trustee under Holbrook’s will were void, because the license was to sell one third of the fee, whereas the interest of the cestuis que trust was only one third of Holbrook’s half. We do not see that it matters whether these deeds are good or bad, other deeds imposing the restriction being good, and therefore do not decide this question. See Atkins v. Bean, 14 Mass. 404; Baker v. Baker, 125 Mass. 7, 10; Bryan v. Manning, 6 Jones, 364; Rorer, Judicial Sales, (2d ed.) § 390.
It is suggested that the releases of 1892, saying nothing about restrictions, put an end to the restrictions. But this argument is due to a confusion. The restriction sought to be enforced is upon the land that then remained in the hands of the 'Holbrook devisees, and was conveyed by them later, in 1895, expressly subject to the restriction, as we have shown. For the foregoing reasons, we are of opinion that the ruling that the restrictions do not now exist was wrong.
Exceptions sustained.