244 Mass. 506 | Mass. | 1923
The plaintiff is the owner of a parcel of low, unimproved land lying between two lots of land belonging to the defendant. The plaintiff’s land was owned by one Walker and others who, by indenture dated June 23, 1908, conveyed to the defendant an easement to "lay and maintain a fresh water pipe for the conduct of water from” one of the defendant’s parcels to the other, “ and to use for that purpose a strip of land shown by the line upon said plan marked Tine of proposed pipe’ . . . said strip to be of the uniform width of five feet in land of parties of the first part. All labor and material put into said location for said purpose shall be at the expense of said corporation without any contribution by said parties of the first part. 2nd. And likewise the right and easement to lay and maintain in said strip of land, and not less than two feet below the surface of the ground, a conduit of medium-sized diameter for electric wires, for such use as said corporation may see fit.” A plan showing the line of the pipe is referred to in the indenture and is duly recorded in the registry of deeds.
Thereafter, during the year 1908, the defendant laid an eight inch iron pipe in the five foot strip, which it has since used for the conduct of water to its manufacturing plant. The water so carried is pumped from driven wells on the defendant’s land and forced under pressure through the pipe. In October, 1922, leaks appeared in the pipe necessitating repairs; the trial judge found that "the existing line was in genuine need of repair.” For the purpose of making such repairs the defendant entered upon the five foot strip and replaced some of the eight inch pipe with new lengths of fourteen inch, which work, the trial judge found, was done “ in a bona fide repair of the pipe line then in place.” The plaintiff by this bill seeks to restrain the defendant from making any repairs or replacement in the pipe originally laid except by pipe not exceeding eight inches in diameter. Both parties are manufacturers and require water in the conduct of their respective business. The court found that “both need all the water they can get. If the defendant can convey across
The question of law is whether the defendant can rightfully increase the size of the pipe as it proposes to do, or is restricted to a pipe of the size originally laid.
It is a rule of construction well established that “Where a. right of way, or other easement, is granted by deed without fixed and defined limits, the practical location and use of such way or easement by the grantee under his deed, acquiesced in by the grantor at the time of the grant and for a long time subsequent thereto, operate as an assignment of the right, and are deemed to be that which was intended to be conveyed by the deed, and are the same, in legal effect, as if it had been fully described by the terms of the grant.” Bannon v. Angier, 2 Allen, 128. Jennison v. Walker, 11 Gray, 423. George v. Cox, 114 Mass. 382. Dunham v. Dodge, 235 Mass. 367, 371. When the exact location of the easement is not precisely defined but has been exercised in a certain place, the grantee has not the right afterwards to change the location to some other part of the land. Jennison v. Walker, supra. Chandler v. Jamaica Pond Aqueduct Corp., 125 Mass. 544, 550.
The cases above referred to are not applicable to the facts in the case at bar, but are plainly distinguishable. The easement granted to the defendant was to lay a pipe in a strip definitely located and defined, “said strip o be of the uniform width of five feet in land of parties of the first part.” The size of the pipe which the grantee is authorized to lay and maintain is not specified. The only restriction placed upon the grantee is that the pipe cannot be laid outside the five foot strip. The right
The facts in the case at bar are much stronger in favor of the contention of the defendant than those in Marsh v. Haverhill Aqueduct Co. 134 Mass. 106. In that case the deed did not prescribe any width within which the pipes were to be located, yet it was held that the grantee might enter upon the land and increase the size of its pipes and relay them upon the line originally adopted. It was there said by Morton, C.J., at page 108: “But we must not be understood as deciding that the acts of the defendant in increasing the size of its pipes, or in relaying its pipes upon the same line originally adopted, were illegal. The deed does not restrict the size of the pipe. It would seem to be entirely immaterial to the landowner whether it was four or twelve inches in diameter; and we are of opinion that the defendant had the right to enlarge its aqueduct to any reasonable extent which would not injure the landowners.”
In the present case the judge has found that there was necessity for the repair of the original pipe, and need for an increase in its size, and that a fourteen inch pipe in place of the old pipe would not cause the plaintiff any substantial damage; he accordingly found for the defendant and ordered a decree to be entered dismissing the bill.
So far as cases in other jurisdictions are not in harmony with the conclusion here reached, we do not follow them. The cases decided by this court, cited and relied on by the plaintiff, are distinguishable in their facts from those in the case at bar.
Decree dismissing hill affirmed with costs.