Smith v. Hadad

1 Mass. App. Ct. 637 | Mass. App. Ct. | 1973

Hale, C.J.

This is a petition under G. L. c. 185, as amended, to register and confirm title to land. The petitioners have appealed pursuant to G. L. c. 231, § 96, from a decision of the Land Court ordering the registration as applied for, excepting therefrom a strip of land 33 feet wide *638to which both the petitioners and the respondents claim title. In addition to the appeal the petitioners have saved exceptions to an evidentiary ruling and to the denial of their requests for rulings of law. Those are before us on the petitioners’ outline bill of exceptions. Appeals Court Rule 1:22. There was no error.

Title to the strip determines the westerly boundary of the respondents’ lots on Main Street in Reading. The parties’ respective chains of title, for the purposes of this decision, begin with one Martha H. Sanborn, who in 1946 conveyed approximately 14 acres of land, including the strip in question, to one Raymond E. Nichols. The boundaries of the property were described in the deed as follows: “Beginning at the most Southerly comer thereof at the junction of Short Street, and Mill Street; thence the line runs northerly and northwesterly by said Mill Street to land of the Town of Reading; thence the line runs northerly with the wall by said Town’s land to a comer of the wall; thence the line runs westerly with the wall by said Town’s land to the Ipswich River; thence the line runs northeasterly in an irregular line, following the old course of said river to Main Street; thence the line runs southerly by said Main Street, now a state highway to said Short Street; thence the line runs southwesterly by said Short Street to said Mill Street and the point of beginning. . . .”

In May, 1949, Nichols conveyed a portion of the above described premises to the petitioners’ predecessor in title, one Gilbert W. Johnson. The boundaries of the portion so conveyed were identical to those described in the Sanborn-Nichols deed, except for the frontage on Main Street. The Nichols-Johnson deed described that boundary as follows: “ [TJ hence turning and running Southerly by Main Street to a point on Main Street distant eight hundred (800) feet North of the junction of Main and Short Streets; thence turning at a right angle to said Main Street and running Westerly one hundred seventy-five (175) feet; thence turning and running Southerly and parallel to Main Street and distant one hundred seventy-five (175) feet therefrom,

*639

*640eight hundred (800) feet more or less to said Short Street;1 thence turning and running Southwesterly by Short Street to said Mill Street at the point of beginning . ..” (emphasis supplied). The effect of that description was that Nichols retained title to a parcel of land along the westerly side of Main Street, 175 feet in width and extending 800 feet north of the Short Street intersection. Nichols conveyed that parcel to the respondents’ common predecessor in title in 1959. The parcel was later subdivided.

The petitioners assert that the starting point of the 175 foot westerly measurement found in the deed to the respondents’ predecessor, and in the deeds to the respondents, should be the center line of Main Street, as shown on the accompanying sketch plan. The respondents contend that the measurement should be from the side line of Main Street. The starting point is the crux of the instant dispute. As Main Street is 66 feet wide the effect of the petitioners’ claim would be to shift the westerly boundary of the respondents’ lots 33 feet to the east.2 The petitioners argue that, since it is well settled in this Commonwealth that a conveyance of property bounded by a way ordinarily conveys the fee to the center of the way (Peck v. Denniston, 121 Mass. 17 [1876]; Brassard v. Flynn, 352 Mass. 185, 188-189 [1967]; see G. L. c. 183, §58, inserted by St. 1971, c. 684, § 1), it would be “inconsistent” to hold that boundaries measured from a way are to be determined from the side line thereof.

We fail to see how this case is distinguishable in any material way from that of Dodd v. Witt, 139 Mass. 63 (1885), where the court considered the precise question involved in this case: “A majority of the court is of opinion, that it is a common method of measurement in the country, *641where the boundary is a stream or way, to measure from the bank of the stream or the side of the way; and that there is a reasonable presumption that the measurements were made in this way, unless something appears affirmatively in the deed to show that they began at the centre line of the stream or way” (emphasis supplied). Id. at 65-66. We note that the Dodd case was decided after that of Peck v. Denniston, supra, and that the Dodd case expressly confirmed the Peck rule of construction.

There was evidence in the Dodd case that the parties to the deed in question had subsequently erected monuments in such a manner as to rebut the above stated presumption, so the case was remanded for a new trial. The record here is devoid of any rebuttal evidence; instead, the petitioners attempt to distinguish the Dodd case on the ground that evidence that measurements were actually made must be introduced before the Dodd presumption can be invoked. We find this argument unpersuasive.

Our opinion is that Dodd v. Witt, supra, controls this case. We find nothing “inconsistent” in continuing to follow the Dodd rule of construction.3 Such is the law in this Commonwealth, and it appears to be well understood by conveyancers. To hold otherwise would be to create considerable turmoil and cause substantial financial hardship to many landowners.

The exceptions do not raise any question which has not already been disposed of by the foregoing, and therefore we need not consider them.

Exceptions overruled.

Decision affirmed.

Because Short Street and Main Street intersect at an obtuse angle, that distance is more than 950 feet. Nevertheless, the description was sufficient to preserve Nichols’ title to the retained parcel as far as Short Street. Lemay v. Furtado, 182 Mass. 280 (1902). Murphy v. Mart Realty of Brockton, Inc. 348 Mass. 675, 680 (1965).

The Commonwealth’s rights in Main Street (now Route 28) are by way of easement, rather than in fee.

An analogy to the Dodd rule is the construction adopted in Tobey v. Moore, 130 Mass. 448, 451 (1881): “The restriction against building ‘within eight feet of said streets’ named in the deed has reference to the line of each street as existing at the date of the deed....” See also Attorney Gen. v. Algonquin Club, 153 Mass. 447, 448-449 (1891).

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