273 Mass. 1 | Mass. | 1930
This is an action of contract for breach of covenant against encumbrances in a deed from the defendant to the plaintiffs in the usual statutory form of a warranty deed containing no mention of a right of way. The case was referred to an auditor with an agreement that his findings of fact should be final. At the time of his death, one Thomas Buffum was the owner of a tract of land at the corner of two streets in Easthampton, bounding south on School Street and east on Union. After Buffum died in 1897, his devisees conveyed the westerly portion of the tract of land upon which a wooden building and greenhouse then stood to one Morrison. After the description in the granting part of this deed appear the following words: “It is further understood and agreed that the Grantee is to have a right of way to the land hereby conveyed across land of the Grantors referring especially to the lot of vacant land between greenhouse and the brick block . . . .” At the time of this conveyance a brick block covered the greater portion of the easterly half of the tract of land. On the westerly part of the tract at the time of the conveyance a wooden building used as an office was located along the northerly side of School Street and extending twenty feet northerly from that street. The greenhouse connected therewith extending nearly to the westerly line of the premises occupied practically all the space along School
The defendant makes two main contentions. The first is that the absence of words of limitation to heirs and assigns in the description of the right of way in the deed to Morrison limited the right to Morrison’s life and made it personal to him.
In Bronson v. Coffin, 108 Mass. 175, 180, the court in an opinion by Gray, J. said: “Words sounding in covenant only may operate by way of grant of an easement, wherever it is necessary to give them that effect in order to carry out the manifest intention of the parties.” In Hogan v. Barry, 143 Mass. 538, the court said: “There is no doubt that an easement may be created by words sounding in covenant .... If the seeming covenant is for a present enjoyment of a nature recognized by the law as capable of being conveyed and made an easement . . . and if the deed discloses that the covenant is for the benefit of adjoining land conveyed at the same time, the covenant must be construed as a grant . . .”. See also Ladd v. Boston, 151 Mass. 585. In the case at bar the way is of a nature recognized by law as capable of being conveyed as an easement and was evidently intended for the benefit of adjoining land conveyed. The covenant must, therefore, be construed as a grant of an easement, and as the clause conveying it appears in the granting part of the deed, it is controlled by the habendum which created in the grantee a title in fee in the land conveyed and an easement in fee in the right of way. Pratt v. Sanger, 4 Gray, 84, 86. Hogan v. Barry, 143 Mass. 538, 539. Parsons v. New York, New Haven & Hartford Railroad, 216 Mass. 269, 271.
The other contention of the defendant is that the auditor erred in finding that the right of way for the benefit of the adjoining property extended from School Street to the rear of the plaintiffs’ lot. When a right of way is granted but its exact limits are not defined in the deed, the grantee is entitled to a convenient way within the land specified adapted to the convenient use and enjoyment of the land granted for
The auditor described in some detail the location of buildings on the property, both before and after the conveyance, and the uses made of them. The question as to the extent and limits of a reasonable right of way under this grant was largely one of fact. When the terms of the grant are considered in connection with the findings of the auditor we cannot say there was error of law in the conclusion reached by him. The contention of the defendant that as matter of law the way is limited to a right to reach the place where the rear of the office building on the Morrison lot was at the time of the grant cannot be supported. The small building located for four or five years at the northeasterly comer of the space between the two buildings and removed at the request of the defendant did not upon the facts found affect the rights of the owners of the Morrison lot. Quigley v. Baker, 169 Mass. 303, 305. Willets v. Langhaar, 212 Mass. 573, 575. There is nothing in the report to indicate that the auditor was influenced by any irrelevant circumstances in arriving at his conclusions as to the limits of the right of way.
In the refusal of the judge to recommit the report and in the requests for rulings connected therewith which have been argued we find no reversible error.
Exceptions overruled.