257 Mass. 38 | Mass. | 1926
This is a bill in equity brought by the metropolitan district commission of the Commonwealth of Massachusetts against the defendant, the owner of a parcel of land abutting on the Revere Beach Parkway, to order her to refrain from removing curbing if replaced by the plaintiffs and from constructing, from her land across the sidewalk of the Commonwealth to the roadway owned by it, two ways, one for entering and the other for leaving her premises. The defendant’s demurrer to the bill was overruled and the case was reported upon the complaint, answer and agreed statement of facts for determination by this court.
The land of the Commonwealth adjoining the defendant’s premises is a part of the Revere Beach Parkway constructed under St. 1894, c. 288, (G. L. c. 92, § 35,) and was conveyed to the Commonwealth by one Brodbine in 1902 by a deed con
The land of the defendant bounding on the Revere Beach Parkway was a portion of the adjoining land of Brodbine, referred to in the deed to the Commonwealth, and has become the property of the defendant by mesne conveyances from Brodbine. In 1902 this land was used only for farming purposes.
The land of the Commonwealth consists of a roadway and a cinder sidewalk between the roadway and the defendant’s land, both having been constructed by the Commonwealth upon the land conveyed by the Brodbine deed.
On February 16, 1925, the defendant notified the commissioners of her intention to erect a public gasoline filling-station upon her land; and to construct at the westerly end of her premises a roadway about forty feet in width across the land of the Commonwealth (now used as a sidewalk) for the ingress of automobiles from Revere Beach Boulevard to
On March 20, 1925, the plaintiffs notified the defendant’s counsel that upon the defendant’s petition for the construction of an ingress to and egress from her premises it was "Voted that, in the opinion of the Commission, the construction and use of said roadways in the location and for the purposes petitioned for is undesirable and inconsistent with the safety and convenience of the public and with the appearance of the parkway and the purposes for which it is maintained.”
On March 30, 1925, the defendant notified the plaintiffs that bn April 2,1925, she would begin the work referred to in her letter of February 16,1925, unless she received word that they wished to confer with her in regard to the location or construction of the roadways. In pursuance of her intention to construct an entrance to her premises, the defendant has removed curbing in front of her land for a space of thirty-five feet. The plaintiffs have not indicated a preference for any location for an entrance or exit other than those suggested by the defendant, but have taken the position that the defendant should not have any entrance to her premises from the boulevard or any exit from them to it because of her use and intended use of the property as a gasoline filling station.
The general rights of the parties in this case depend upon the principles stated in Anzalone v. Metropolitan District Commission, ante, 32, which need not here be repeated. Reference is made to that case for a statement of the reasons for the decision of the fundamental questions involved. The differences between the cases relate principally to the acts of the respective owners in attempting to assert their rights and in the form of the remedy by which the parties have undertaken to enforce them. In this case, as in that, the
The court cannot pass upon these questions of fact: they are to be decided by the commissioners. See French v. Jones, 191 Mass. 522, 532; Ayer v. Commissioners on Height of Buildings in Boston, 242 Mass. 30.
The defendant is not in the position of a person who has a right of way of a definite kind at a specified place, and cases which relate to such rights are not controlling in the case at bar. Brown v. Stone, 10 Gray, 61. Gordon v. Taunton, 126 Mass. 349. Hayes v. Di Vito, 141 Mass. 233. O’Brien v. Murphy, 189 Mass. 353. Downey v. H. P. Hood & Sons, 203 Mass. 4.
The defendant had no right to remove the curbing on the land of the Commonwealth without a permit from the commissioners. Upon their refusal to grant a permit for a way reasonably necessary for access to her property, she should have proceeded by petition for writ of mandamus. On the other hand the commissioners exceeded their powers in refusing to grant any permit for access, and we have no way of knowing whether, when they act upon the defendant’s application, recognizing her legal right of access they will permit the construction of the exit and entrance applied for at the places designated by the defendant, or whether, if only one way of access is approved, it will be at one of those places;
A decree may be entered enjoining the defendant from removing curbings if replaced by the plaintiffs, and from constructing roadways upon land of the Commonwealth, until the commissioners have acted upon her application by • designating a way or ways between the roadway of Revere Beach Parkway and land of the defendant.
Ordered accordingly.