182 Mass. 371 | Mass. | 1903
These are two actions of trespass quare clausum fregit, in which the plaintiff in one action sues the plaintiff in the other. The case was sent to an auditor; he made two reports which were put in evidence; Mrs. Percival had a verdict in each action; and the cases are here on exceptions taken by Chase.
Chase and Mrs. Percival owned adjoining lots on Second Street in New Bedford. Chase bought his lot in 1887, and Mrs. Percival bought hers in 1894. Mrs. Percival’s lot is south of Chase’s lot. There was an old house on Chase’s lot when he bought it in 1887; this he tore down, and in its place put up a store fronting on Second Street, with a tenement over it; he also built a driveway running under the tenement close to the house on the Percival lot, to a new barn in the rear of his lot. There was evidence before the auditor that at the time when the store, tenement and barn were built, there was not quite enough room for the whole driveway on the Chase lot, and that Chase went to Thornton, who was the owner of the Percival lot at that time, and obtained permission to encroach somewhat on that lot in constructing the side of the driveway next the Percival lot. The level of the rear half of the Chase lot is higher than that of the Percival lot, and the wall between the two was a retaining wall. In constructing the driveway, the old retaining wall between the two lots was moved over on to the Percival lot to support Chase’s new driveway to his new barn in the rear of his lot. It was also in evidence before the auditor that after Mrs. Percival bought her lot she made a demand on Chase to move the wall northward to the line where it formerly stood; that Chase did move the wall back, but not to the line of the original wall; and thereupon, in November, 1897, Mrs. Percival tore down the wall erected by Chase when he moved it back, and as a result Chase’s driveway caved in and was injured. This is the trespass complained of by Chase. The trespass complained of by Mrs. Percival was for maintaining this wall after notice from her to remove it.
The auditor found that a line had been established by adverse possession two and twelve one-hundredths feet north of the line set forth in the deeds, and “ largely by reason of there having been an embankment wall substantially in this line for nearly
Chase denied at the trial that the wall had ever been moved by him or any one else, and offered evidence tending to show that the wall had stood for more than twenty years where it was when torn down by Mrs. Percival. There was also evidence that Chase from 1887 to the time when the wall was torn down was in possession, claiming title in the land up to and including the stone wall. It was admitted by Mrs. Percival at the trial that the boundary line as Chase claimed it was the true deed line between the properties established by all the ancient and modern deeds. It was agreed that the place to which Mrs. Percival claimed Chase moved the wall and where the wall was when torn down by her was on Chase’s side of that line, but was south of the place where Mrs. Percival claimed the boundary line to be by virtue of adverse possession as aforesaid.
1. It will be convenient to consider together the first and third rulings requested by Chase, to wit: “1. The deed from Thornton gave Mrs. Percival no title to any part of the land which at the date of her deed was occupied by Chase for a wall or enclosed by a wall, so that she can recover for such encroachment in this action.” “ 3. Mrs. Percival because of the description of the deed to her and to Thornton, her immediate grantor, can claim no boundary line established by any adverse possession during the ownership of Mr. Thornton or Paul Spooner or prior to any title not consummate in 1842.”
We interpret the words “or prior to any title not consummate in 1842,” to mean, “ during the ownership of any person whose title was not consummate in 1842.”
The deed to Thornton was made in 1866, by one John R. Thornton, executor of the will of Paul Spooner, and conveyed “a certain lot of land on Second Street conveyed to Paul Spooner by Gideon Allen, administrator, by deed dated October 29, 1842.”
The action of trespass quare clausum fregit is an action for the violation of the plaintiff’s right of possession, not of her title. A plaintiff who has the title but who was not in possession when the act complained of was done, cannot maintain an action of trespass until he has made an entry. Chit. Pl. (16th Am. ed.) 195. Taylor v. Townsend, 8 Mass. 411, 415. Emerson v. Thompson, 2 Pick. 473, 484. Bigelow v. Jones, 10 Pick. 161, 164. Tyler v. Smith, 8 Met. 599, 604.
The only bearing which Mrs. Percival’s title had on the action brought by her was that if she had title she could maintain the action by showing that she entered and threw down the wall; if she had title, such an entry would have given her the necessary possession to sue for the trespass consisting in the erection of the wall on her land. Chit. PI. (16th Am. ed.) 198. Allen v. Thayer, 17 Mass. 299, 302. Blood v. Wood, 1 Met. 528, 533. Silloway v. Brown, 12 Allen, 30, 38. So far as the action brought by Chase is concerned, if Mrs. Percival had the title to the two and one half foot strip, that was a justification of the entry even if that strip up to that time had not been in her possession.
Inasmuch as the judge instructed the jury that the deeds gave Mrs. Percival no title to the strip in question, the plaintiff cannot complain that these two requests for rulings were not given in terms.
2. The second request
In accordance with the first request the jury were instructed that the deed from Thornton to Mrs. Pereival did not cover the two and one half foot strip in question. If it did not, Mrs. Percival’s right to maintain an action depended upon whether she had possession of the strip or not when the act of trespass was committed. If the wall which was standing when Thornton conveyed to Mrs. Pereival was erected by Chase under a license, and if Chase was occupying the land on his side of that wall as a licensee of Thornton, that possession was the possession of Thornton and did not prevent his delivering possession of the strip to Mrs. Pereival. If Mrs. Pereival got no title to the strip, she could not gain a right to maintain this action of trespass quare clausum fregit by a subsequent entry of any kind, and the instruction was rightly refused.
3. The fourth request for instructions
4. The general exception to the instructions given raises no question not raised by the requests refused.
5. Chase has argued on his brief a question which was not raised by the rulings, and that is this : Under the admission of Mrs. Pereival that she has no title to the disputed strip under
The argument of the plaintiff that a title gained by adverse possession can no more be conveyed by paroi than any other title, is correct. But it does not follow from that that if in the description of the premises conveyed by a deed a parcel of land is omitted, title to which has been gained by adverse possession, the grantee is without remedy. If in such a case the grantee received possession of the disputed strip from the grantor of the rest of the estate, and the grantee took possession claiming a fee, she would be in as a disseisor. Her right as a disseisor would be good against the holder of the paper title because his title in such a case is barred by continuous adverse possession for twenty. years. Wishart v. McKnight, 178 Mass. 356. And the title as disseisor in possession is good as against the rest of the world, excepting only her grantor who had a title by adverse possession which he did not convey to her. Wishart v. McKnight, 178 Mass. 356, 362. Slater v. Rawson, 6 Met. 439. Hubbard v. Little, 9 Cush. 475. Currier v. Gale, 9 Allen, 522. Pollock & Wright, Possession, 95-98. Such a disseisor has a title good against the owner of the true title which is barred by the statute, and he has a title good against the rest of the world, except his grantor who has a title by adverse possession, because he is in possession and on that ground has a good title against persons subsequently taking possession from him.
Had Chase raised the question which he now seeks to argue, the question should have been left to the jury whether Mrs. Percival had taken possession of the two and one half foot strip claiming it to be hers before the acts of trespass were committed. The evidence before us does not disclose the facts which would be material on that point, as is to be expected when the case was not tried on that question. It is plain that Chase’s contention that Mrs. Percival’s entry was coextensive only with the deed to her is not correct. The house was a foot or more over the deed line; she at least took possession of the portion of the disputed strip covered by the house even if it was not covered by the
The case at bar was tried on the admission “ that the boundary line as Chase claimed it was the true deed line between the properties established by all the ancient and modern deeds.” It is not necessary to decide whether that admission should have been made.
The title to Mrs. Percival’s lot was as follows: By deeds from Bourne to Barney, 1810; from Barney’s administrator to Spooner, 1842; from Spooner’s executor to Thornton, 1866; and from Thornton to Mrs. Percival, 1894.
The title to Chase’s lot was as follows: Jenney to Nathaniel Hathaway, 1803; Hathaway to Johnson, 1806; Johnson to Williams, 1819; Heirs of Williams to Chase, 1887.
The deed from Bourne to Barney in 1810 described the land as “ bounding ... on the north by land formerly of Nathaniel Hathaway.” The same description is found in the deed to Spooner in 1842. The deed from Spooner’s executor to Thornton is “ a certain lot of land on Second Street conveyed to Paul Spooner by Gideon Allen, administrator, by deed dated October 29, 1842,” and the description in the deed to Mrs. Percival is in substance the same.
Had the land conveyed been described in each case as bounded on the north by the division line between the granted premises and the lot next north of it formerly of Nathaniel Hathaway, even though it was also bounded by measurements, it is plain that the deed line would change on a new line being established by adverse possession.
A monument governs measurements, and the land of an ad
It is not necessary now to decide whether that principle does not apply directly to the first two and by reference to the last two deeds in Mrs. Percival’s chain of title. It is certainly true that a court in construing a deed or succession of deeds in a chain of title, where a new division line has become established by adverse user, will adopt a liberal construction to avoid holding that title to the land covered by the adverse user has become separated from the title to the original lot.
Exceptions overruled.
The second request above referred to was as follows: “ If prior to the time Mrs. Percival bought and came into possession of her property Mr. Chase had erected a wall on the property then owned by Thornton, and upon her complaint tore it down and built a new wall nearer the boundary, but still enclosing or covering a part of the land, yet, if the jury are not satisfied that she subsequently entered upon that part of the land so enclosed or covered by the new wall, and took open possession and exercised thereon acts of ownership, she cannot recover.”
The fourth request above referred to was as follows: “ That if the jury-find the true deed line went through the wall wherever the same was situated, they must find for the plaintiff Chase in the case of Chase v. Pereival, and if the jury find that the wall has not been moved for more than twenty years prior to its taking down by Mrs. Pereival, and was used during that time as a retaining wall for the land now owned by Chase, then they must find for the plaintiff Chase in the case of Chase v. Pereival and for the defendant Chase in Pereival v. Chase.’’