244 Mass. 236 | Mass. | 1923
These two actions of tort, one for personal injuries sustained by Ellena Leuci (hereinafter called the plaintiff), on a way in Chelsea known as Locust Street, and one for expenses paid by her father, were tried together. The plaintiff, who was ten years old at the time of the accident, lived with her parents on Yale Street, Chelsea. She was sent on an errand to Beach Street, Everett. On her return, while travelling on Locust Street, a door belonging to the defendants, which formed a part of the fence enclosing their property, fell upon her, causing the injuries complained of. The fence into which the door was nailed was old, and “very rotten . . . where it touched the ground.” The door was held in place by “three bent spikes,” two on the “left hand side,” and one “on the right hand side.” The jury could have found that it was insecurely fastened.
Locust Street has never been accepted as a public highway; it is not paved; is about forty feet wide, and has been used for travel. “There were ruts in Locust Street in the centre of the place on either side of these ruts, on both sides, rubbish was piled up in places, more space without than with rubbish. . . . There
There is shown on the plan a public highway called Everett Avenue, Locust Street, a way known as Carter Street, four other streets, and a plot of land divided into lots. There was. evidence that the members of the plaintiff’s family in going to Everett Avenue usually went by way of Carter Street, but “went by way of Locust Street sometimes.” It is stated that, there were “five houses on Vale Street at the back of the defendants’ premises between Locust Street and Carter Street, and plaintiff’s family lived on Vale Street in one of the houses on the opposite side.” Their title to these premises is not shown, nor is it shown that their deed, or the deed of those under whom they held or occupied, made any reference to the plan, to Locust Street or to any rights of way over it; and it does not appear that it was necessary to pass over Locust Street in order to reach the public highway, Everett Avenue. It does appear that the defendants took title to their property in 1919 by deed which refers to the plan “of the Everett Avenue Syndicate’s Lands Re-survey,” recorded in 1895.
Even if we assume that all the land shown on the plan, including that of the defendants and of the plaintiff, was owned by the same common grantor when the plan was recorded, the plaintiff has not shown that the deed of her land made any reference to the plan, and no right of way over Locust Street was appurtenant to her lot. Regan v. Boston Gas Light Co. 137 Mass. 37. Pearson v. Allen, 151 Mass. 79.
Locust Street has never been laid out as a public highway. There is no evidence that the public has any right of way in the street by prescription. See Aikens v. New York, New Haven & Hartford Railroad, 188 Mass. 547. It is a private way. The plaintiff was not invited to use it. She was at the most a licensee,
There was no evidence that a notice or sign was posted on Locust Street indicating that it was a private way or warning the public against its use. The absence of such a sign, however, did not make the defendants liable to the plaintiff for mere negligence. She had no legal right to use the way, and the fact, that it was laid out between lands of the defendants’ predecessors in title and other abuttors, does not change the rule.
In the case of Barber v. C. W. H. Moulton Ladder Co. 231 Mass. 507, the plaintiff was not a licensee. His father’s house abutted on the private way and the plaintiff had no other means of access to his home. It was not shown that the defendant had any title to the land occupied by them and abutting on the way. In the case at bar the land occupied by the plaintiff’s family was not on Locust Street. The land of the defendants did abut on this street; it was not necessary for the plaintiff to pass through Locust Street in travelling from her home to the public highway. Cases similar to Gorham v. Gross, 125 Mass. 232, where a party wall fell and injured the property of an adjoining owner; Cavanagh v. Block, 192 Mass. 63, where the plaintiff in using the private way stood in the place of an abutter and was in the exercise of a legal right when injured; Fuller v. Andrew, 230 Mass. 139, in which case a wharf was erected without a license and could have been found to be an obstruction to navigation; and Woodman v. Shepard, 238 Mass. 196, where a traveller on a public highway was injured by the falling of a sign from an adjoining building; and other cases where the same general rule is followed, cited by the plaintiff, are not applicable.
Exceptions overruled.