190 Mass. 277 | Mass. | 1906
This case comes before us on the report of a judge of the Superior Court upon the bill, answer and statement of agreed facts.
It appears that on the twenty-third day of April, 1897, the defendant Holl, who is hereinafter called the defendant, conveyed to the plaintiff land in the vicinity of Columbus Avenue in Boston, by quitclaim deed of that date, containing a covenant that it was free from all incumbrances made or suffered by her. The plaintiff contends that on that day the land was subject to a betterment assessment under an order of the street commissioners of the city of Boston, passed on January 4, 1895,
In 1895, before the defendant made her conveyance, the street commissioners of the city of Boston, acting under the authority of St. 1894, c. 416, by valid orders laid out the extension of Columbus Avenue, and proceeded to do the necessary work therefor; but the work of construction was not done in conformity with the requirements of the statutes as to the letting of contracts and otherwise, so that abutters could not be made liable for the payment of betterment assessments; and if any such assessment had been made, the abutters could have had it quashed on certiorari. Warren v. Street Commissioners, 181 Mass. 6. The work of construction was begun before the defendant gave her deed to the plaintiff, and was completed in 1899, subsequent to the giving of this deed. In 1902, the Legislature passed an act allowing the street commissioners to make betterment assessments for work completed within the six years next preceding the passage of the act; St. 1902, c. 527; and on January 3,1903, the board of street commissioners assessed upon the land described in the plaintiff’s deed the sum of $326, and the plaintiff has paid this assessment.
It is not disputed that the assessment of January 3,1903, was valid as against one who owned the land assessed at the dates of both the orders of construction and of assessment. New England Hospital for Women and Children v. Street Commissioners, 188 Mass. 88. Warren v. Street Commissioners, 187 Mass. 290. And it is settled that by the passage of an order laying out a highway or ordering its widening or alteration, a lien attaches to the property to be assessed for a betterment, though the amount due upon such lien is uncertain until the completion of the work and the making of the assessment, and the existence of this lien is an incumbrance upon the land and constitutes a breach of the covenant against incumbrances in a deed given after the passing of the order for the laying out or widening, but before the actual making of the betterment assessment. Blackie v. Hudson, 117 Mass. 181. And this would be so, even though the assessment were technically invalid, if the proper officers could correct the error by proceedings in due form, and
But it appears that no such assessment could be laid, and that the lien upon the defendant’s land, under the laws in force when she gave her deed, had ceased to be a lasting incumbrance. Her covenant against incumbrances, if broken at all, was broken as soon as it was made. Bailey v. Agawam National Bank, ante, 20, decided since this case was argued. Whitney v. Dinsmore, 6 Cush. 124, 127, 128. But when she gave her deed, there was no valid incumbrance upon her land for this assessment, nor could there be any under the statutes then in force. The street commissioners had no power to make any assessment for this construction. Warren v. Street Commissioners, ubi supra. For the same reason they had then no power to make a reassessment, as might have been done in Coburn v. Litchfield and Smith v. Abington Savings Bank, ubi supra. The assessment now in question, whether called a reassessment or not, was laid under St. 1902, c. 527; the power to lay it is derived wholly from that statute; the liability to pay it and the lien upon the land for its collection could not have existed in 1897, when the rights of these parties became fixed.
We are of opinion that the incumbrance of which the plaintiff complains was not in existence when he received his deed from
Bill to he dismissed.