This is an appeal by the respondent from “the decision” of the Land Court whereby it ordered “a decree” for the registration of the petitioner’s land “free of encumbrances claimed by the respondent.”
The respondent did not allege in her answer that she owned a fee in any part of the locus: she alleged therein that under two deeds in priority to that of the petitioner’s predecessor in title, she acquired bathhouse and bathing privileges; that a road or way extended over the common grantor’s land with its termini at Ipswich Bay and she acquired the privilege of erecting and keeping a bathhouse on the beach between land of Butler on the east and the end of said way. She also claimed the use of open and reserved spaces depicted on a plan recorded by the common grantor in Essex registry of deeds. She contended that the lines of the land sought to be registered protruded into and cut off Nashua Avenue which ran to the sea on
We shall consider this case on the footing that on appeal from the Land Court only questions of law raised on the record can be considered. Solovicos v. MacLachlan, 236 Mass. 402. The decision of the Land Court discloses the material facts which follow: The common grantor, Richard W. Ricker, under whom the petitioner and respondent derivatively claim title, in 1878 and prior thereto owned and lived on a tract of land, including the locus, in the Bay View section of Gloucester, extending from Washington Street on the south to Ipswich Bay on the north and "situate and lying between the road running by the North side of the Universalist Meeting House in Annisquam and the Ocean at Ipswich Bay.” Ricker in his lifetime executed two deeds under which the respondent claims, and of which the petitioner was bound to take notice, and two later deeds under which the petitioner claims. The first of these deeds was given by Ricker to one Wright in 1878. Speaking generally, it covered a portion of the Wheeler farm, so called, under which Ricker claimed, and more specifically in terms expressed it covered lots numbered 21-25 inclusive on a plan to be recorded in the Essex registry of deeds. This deed in the part material to the respondent’s claim of an easement of way reads as follows: "Beginning at the North Easterly corner of the premises at land of Benjamin F. Butler, and running by land of grantor Westerly, one hundred feet to a road or way laid out over said farm . . . .” The part of this deed material to the respondent’s claim of privilege of bathing in Ipswich Bay and keeping a bathhouse on the land abutting the bay and near the beach reads as follows: "Contents more or less, with the privilege of erecting and keeping a Bath house on the Beach between land of said Butler and the end of said road or way.” The second deed under which the respondent claims was given by Ricker to one Ryan in 1881. This deed conveyed a certain piece of land "situate at Bay View,” Gloucester, and was bounded
The judge admitted in evidence a plan, a reduced copy of which is annexed to his decision, and which is recorded at the end of book 1179 in the Essex South District Registry of Deeds. He found that there is no evidence who made this plan, or whether it is the plan referred to in many Ricker deeds; but he inferred that it was such plan and admitted it in evidence because he believed it to be the plan to which the grantor intended to refer when he referred to any plan. “Nashua Avenue” is shown on that plan as running to the sea.
The dotted lines on the above plan which continue Nashua Avenue from Ocean Avenue to the sea show its position as it appears on the plan recorded in the Essex South District Registry of Deeds at the end of volume 1179, above referred to. According to the scale to which the sketch is drawn, the westerly bound of Diamond Cove would
The judge found and ruled that in “both Stevens deeds . . . the compass directions are, in most cases, about ninety degrees in error, which fact is manifest from the context of the deeds taken as a whole”; that the compass error appears in the grant of easements as in the grant of the fee title; and that the grantor intended to locate these easements “east” and not “north” of the granted premises. He further found that the whole water front of the Ricker land is a rocky shore unsuitable for bathing purposes with the exception of a small extent of water front land east of the locus and shown on the above sketch plan as Diamond Cove. The judge found and ruled that the Wright deed, the Ryan deed and the first Stevens deed laid out Nashua Avenue over the northeast corner of the locus as shown by the dotted lines on the above sketch plan, and that Wright and Ryan and those claiming under them in one way or another were entitled under their two deeds to assume that Nashua Avenue ran to the sea with appurtenant right to use the same in connection with their property, but that when the second Stevens deed was given Ricker disclosed the clear intention to obliterate the sea end of the avenue, and that this intention was binding on all his subsequent grantees. The judge further found that “The thirty-seven foot boundary 'by said Nashua Avenue’ is clearly across the northerly end of the same as Ricker then conceived it to be,” and said “end is in approximately the same location as shown on the filed plan.”
The decision recites that a survey plan of the Worthen lot on the east side of the locus was in evidence. This plan
The first error complained of is that the decision, ordering a decree free from encumbrances claimed by the respondent, wrongfully deprived her of privileges of erecting and keeping a bathhouse and of bathing on the beach
On the second point raised by the respondent, the finding and ruling, that on the evidence and especially by reason of the Worthen lot incident abandonment of the way over the locus by the respondent and those under whom she claims was to be presumed and that abandonment had occurred, were correct. Abandonment of an easement or not presents an issue of fact. Willets v. Langhaar, 212 Mass. 573, 575. Les v. Alibozek, 269 Mass. 153, 157-158. Ordinarily findings of fact by the Land Court are final. Holmes v. Barrett, 269 Mass. 497, 499. Willard v. Kimball, 277 Mass. 350, 356. G. L. (Ter. Ed.) c. 185, § 15. The finding here was based in part, if not principally, on the findings of nonuser of that part of the way crossing the Worthen lot accompanied by obstruction to the use of that part of the way for more than twenty years prior to the filing of the petition. There was no use of the way continued over the locus for at least thirty-seven years. Without elaboration of the reason leading to the result, we think the facts found warrant the conclusion that the right of way over the Worthen lot was extinguished, and that since the easement over the locus could not have been used as laid out except by crossing the Worthen lot where the easement has been abandoned, it is also to be presumed that there was an intention to abandon the easement. Physical obstructions on the servient tenement, rendering user of the easement impossible and sufficient in themselves to explain the nonuser, combined with the great length of time during which no objection has been made to their continuance nor effort made to remove them, are
Decree of registration affirmed.