324 Mass. 344 | Mass. | 1949
The plaintiff by his bill as originally framed sought an adjudication that he had acquired title by adverse possession to a certain way adjoining his property, and asked that the defendant be enjoined from interfering with his right of possession or occupancy of the way. The case was referred, under the usual rule,
Since December 26, 1946, the defendant and his wife have been the owners of lots 5 and 6 as tenants by the entirety. Title to each lot was derived by mesne conveyances from deeds of Barker respectively to one Lynde in 1899 and to one Belcher in 1905. The deed of lot 5 to Lynde referred to the property as lot 5 on a plan to be filed (presumably the plan mentioned above), and described the easterly boundary as “beginning at southeasterly corner of said lot on laid out way of said plan: thence northerly and westerly 50 feet to corner of lot No. 6 on said plan.” The deed of lot 6 to Belcher, after referring to the plan and describing the property with reference to the plan and the way shown thereon, recited, “with the right and privilege to pass and repass with team or otherwise in the private way lying on the
“It will be observed that three of the above mentioned deeds, namely the deeds to lots 2, 3, and 5, did not specify the nature of the rights, if any, intended to be granted in the unnamed way. However, each of the lots conveyed was bounded by said way and one of the lots, comprising respectively the estates of the plaintiff and the defendant, contained specific words of grant and I have assumed, in making this report, that each of said deeds conveyed at least a right to pass and repass with a team or otherwise over the entire extent of the unnamed way.”
All of the lots shown on exhibit “B,” with an exception presently to be mentioned, were formerly owned by Barker. At all times here material Jericho Road, Turner Road, and Scituate Avenue were public streets. Meadow Road, Otis Road and their connecting way, as shown on exhibit “B,” were never constructed and never had any actual existence or use as streets or ways. The area comprising lots 68 to 85 on exhibit “B” was never improved and consists in part of meadowland and marshland. The southerly boundary of Barker’s property extended westerly from the corner of Turner Road and Jericho Road as shown on exhibit “B.” Barker never owned the unnumbered triangular area which lay between his southerly boundary and Jericho Road.
In 1899 Barker subdivided and offered for sale lots numbered 1 to 6 shown on exhibit “B,” and laid out the thirty-five foot unnamed way shown thereon extending along the entire easterly frontage of the lots. “I find that Barker’s purpose and intention in so doing was to enable people who would buy said lots to acquire a right of way to a public street, and that an easement to Scituate Avenue or Turner Road over some part of Barker’s adjoining land was thereby created.” The master concluded that since Barker owned no land to the south of the way he “probably intended that people would enter and leave lots 1 to 6 by means of the way extended to Scituate Avenue.” In fact such route
Concerning other means of access to public ways the master found that the owners of lots 1 to 6, by reason of a plan filed in the town engineer’s office by Barker in 1911 showing Otis and Meadow roads, had a right of way over these roads (if and when constructed) to reach Scituate Avenue and Jericho Road; that title to this property was in the heirs of Barker; and that while its commercial value was small the cost of connecting even one of the roads with a public way would be substantial.
Since 1946 when he acquired title to lots 5 and 6 the defendant has been going to and from Turner Road over lots 38 and 39, but Thornton, the owner of these lots, has objected to such use. Inasmuch as the area comprising the way in front of lots 1 to 6 consists of sand and would have to be surfaced with gravel or some other material to make it
After having found the foregoing facts, the master then considered the issue of adverse possession and found the following facts: During each year since 1910 the plaintiff used all of the way in front of lots 2, 3, and 4 for the purpose of “mossing.” “Mossing” is a seasonal occupation in that it can only be done from about May to October, or, at most, a little longer. It involves collecting sea moss which is then spread out on beds, so called, of clean sand where, after it has been bleached, treated with salt water and dried, it is baled and sold for commercial purposes. The moss beds are rectangular and run from about fifteen to twenty feet on a side, leaving lanes or paths for the use of the “mossers” in tending their beds. “For several years before 1910 the plaintiff’s father mossed on the same locus,” pursuant to an oral permission granted by Barker. From 1910 until at least 1923 both the plaintiff and his father “mossed” in the area in question, and the plaintiff has continued to “moss” since 1923. During this entire period nothing was done by anyone in the way of surfacing the area. Indeed, to have done so would probably have rendered it unfit for “mossing.” “Until recently, the plaintiff expressed no claim of title in the locus by word of mouth or in writing. He simply used it. On the other hand, no one objected to his doing so. Likewise, during said period neither the plaintiff nor anyone else posted any 'No Trespass’ signs nor were any fences or obstructions erected to keep people off the premises. It is, and always was, physically possible for people to walk from Jericho Road into and along the . . . [way] and from there out into Turner
At about the time the master had prepared his report the plaintiff was allowed to amend his bill alleging that he had acquired a right by prescription to use the way in question for the purpose of drying and making moss, without interference by the defendant. The defendant answered to the amended bill, and an interlocutory decree was entered ordering that the case be recommitted to the master to report on the issues raised by the amendment.
A summary of the master’s findings on these issues is as follows: For more than twenty years, during the winter months when “mossing” was not possible, the plaintiff used the way in front of lots 2, 3, and 4 for the purpose of storing boats, moss tubs, and other equipment. “From the foregoing, I would conclude that said winter use coupled with the mossing activities referred to in my first report was adequate as a matter of law to constitute a continuous user.” In view of the fact that the plaintiff owns lots 2, 3, and 4 and the triangular area north of the parking space and opposite lots 4, 5, and 6, he “owns the fee of the westerly half .of said way in front of lots 2 and 3, the fee of the entire way approximately in front of lot 4, and the fee of the easterly half of the way in front of lot 5 and a part of lot 6. . . . Since an easement is an interest in the land of another, he [the plaintiff] cannot have acquired any prescriptive rights in that part of said way of which he is the owner in fee.” In conclusion the master states, “I believe that the question raised by the plaintiff’s amended bill ... is not whether the plaintiff has himself acquired the right which he claims
After the master’s second report was filed, the plaintiff moved for a recommittal for the purpose of having the master specify the evidence upon which he based his finding “that there had been no disuse of the southerly part of the . . . way for more than the statutory period.” An interlocutory decree was entered denying the motion to recommit, overruling the plaintiff’s exceptions to the reports, and confirming both reports. From this decree the plaintiff did not appeal. Thereafter a final decree was entered dismissing the bill, from which the plaintiff appealed.
There was no error in the denial of the plaintiff’s motion to recommit the second report even if we go so far as to assume, but without deciding, that the point is now open on an appeal only from the final decree. See Arey v. George Associates, Inc. 299 Mass. 130, 132; G. L. (Ter. Ed.) c. 214, § 27. The plaintiff rightly does not argue that he was entitled to a summary of the evidence as of right under the provisions of the second sentence of the second paragraph of Rule 90 of the Superior Court (1932). It is apparent that the requirements of that rule relative to obtaining such a summary were not satisfied. See New England Factors, Inc. v. Genstil, 322 Mass. 36, 44, and cases cited. Whether the report should be recommitted rested, as the plaintiff concedes, in the sound discretion of the judge. Pearson v. Mulloney, 289 Mass. 508, 513. George C. Miller & Co. Inc. v. Beagen, 293 Mass. 54, 57. Buckley v. John, 314 Mass. 719, 725. Minot v. Minot, 319 Mass. 253, 258. There was no abuse of discretion.
The pivotal question in the case is not whether the plaintiff obtained title to the way by adverse possession but whether, irrespective of the question of title, the defendant’s easement was extinguished by adverse use on the part of the plaintiff. Doubtless the plaintiff could have used the way in a manner so inconsistent with the defendant’s easement that it would work an extinguishment of it after the lapse of twenty years. But a use of the land by the servient tenant not irreconcilable with the rights of the dominant tenant is not deemed to be adverse and therefore would not extinguish such rights. Arnold v. Stevens, 24 Pick. 106. Smith v. Langewald, 140 Mass. 205, 207. Butterfield v. Reed, 160 Mass. 361, 369. New England Home for Deaf Mutes v. Leader Filling Stations Corp. 276 Mass. 153,158. Restatement: Property, § 506, comment b. Tiffany, Real Property, (3d ed.) § 827. Here, on the findings of the master,
It follows that the decree dismissing the bill was right. Let the entry be
T , 7 7 Interlocutory decree affirmed.
Final decree affirmed with costs.
See Rule 86 of the Superior Court (1932).
The master in his second report, hereinafter discussed, found that on January 29, 1948, the selectmen of the town of Scituate voted to place a fence on the parking space which, if erected, would block off the route or way along the northerly boundary of the parking space. He made no finding as to whether the town had a right to close the route.