Henry and Cloma W. Donnis filed a petition in the Land Court in 1968 to register and confirm their title to a parcel of land in Hatfield, Hampshire County. As abutting landowners, the defendants Michael M. Bruscoe and Dorothy M. Bruscoe were notified by registered mail of the Donnises’ registration petition, G. L. c. 185, § 39 (1984 ed.). The Bruscoes made no objection to the petition and raised no claims with respect to the land sought to be registered. In July, 1970, the Donnises’ title was confirmed and registered. No encumbrances here pertinent were listed on the certificate of title.
In August, 1970, the plaintiffs, Richard R. and Barbara J. Tetrault, purchased a 6.84-acre lot of the registered land from the Donnises, obtaining a transfer certificate of title. A dispute arose subsequently between the Tetraults and the Bruscoes concerning the latter’s use of a roadway across a portion of the Tetraults’ property.
3
The plaintiffs instituted an action in
The Attorney General learned of the Probate Court action after judgment had entered, and attempted to intervene. The motion was denied, whereupon the Commonwealth filed a complaint for declaratory judgment in the Land Court. Richard Tetrault and Michael Bruscoe were named as defendants; Barbara J. Tetrault and Dorothy Bruscoe were later joined as party defendants. The Commonwealth sought: (1) an order prohibiting the assistant recorder of Hampshire County from receiving any document or encumbrance arising out of the Probate Court action purporting to affect the plaintiffs’ certificate of title; (2) a declaration that the Probate Court is without jurisdiction to encumber a registered parcel of land by declaring that an easement by prescription existed prior to registration proceedings; and (3) a declaration that the Land Court has exclusive jurisdiction over registered land such that any document or encumbrance later affecting a registered parcel of land must be approved by the land registration office or its authorized recorders. See G. L. c. 185, §§ 57, 58 (1984 ed.).
Before the Land Court took any action on the merits of the Commonwealth’s suit, the plaintiffs filed a complaint for declaratory judgment in the single justice session of the Supreme Judicial Court seeking substantially similar relief.
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General Laws c. 185, § 1 (a) (1984 ed.), vests in the Land Court original and exclusive jurisdiction of “[cjomplaints for the confirmation and registration and complaints for the confirmation without registration of title to land and easements or rights in land held and possessed in fee simple within the commonwealth, with power to hear and determine all questions arising upon such petitions, and such other questions as may come before it under this chapter.” Section 1
(k)
of the same chapter provides that the Land Court shall have original jurisdiction concurrent with the Supreme Judicial Court and the
The plaintiffs’ original suit against the Bruscoes was not within the exclusive jurisdiction of the Land Court as defined in § 1
(a),
as it was not in the nature of a petition for confirmation or registration of land. Rather, it was a suit to enjoin a trespass, and, as such, was cognizable under general equity principles. See
Lyons
v.
Sharpe,
Upon determination that the plaintiffs’ suit was properly before the Probate Court, it does not follow necessarily that the judge had the power to declare the existence of a prescriptive easement over registered land. The powers in equity of the Probate Court by virtue of G. L. c. 215, § 6, and c. 185, § 1
(k),
to hear a certain class of cases involving registered land
Section 45 states that a judgment for confirmation and registration of a land title “shall not be opened ... by any proceeding at law or in equity.” This section establishes the general inviolability of registered land titles. We interpret it to preclude the Probate Court, in the exercise of its equity jurisdiction, from modifying the substance of a Land Court registration decree. The power to enforce does not include the power to modify.
In so concluding, we recognize that a registered title is not entirely immune from attack. Section 45 explicitly provides that “any person deprived of land, or of any estate or interest therein, by a judgment of registration obtained by fraud [may] file a complaint for review within one year after the entry of judgment, provided no innocent purchaser for value has acquired an interest.” A complaint for review under § 45 is within the exclusive jurisdiction of the Land Court, however, and must be brought there.
McDonnell
v.
Quirk,
Before the Land Court issues a judgment of registration, it first must pass on the validity of asserted encumbrances. See
The probate judge in the instant case exceeded his jurisdiction by issuing a judgment declaring that the Bruscoes have a prescriptive easement over the plaintiff’s registered land. Doubtless, the judge had jurisdiction under G. L. c. 185, § 1
(k),
to grant the injunctive relief requested by the plaintiffs for, had he done so, he merely would have been enforcing the Land Court’s judgment of registration. In the alternative, the judge was free to dismiss the complaint based on traditional equitable considerations. See, e.g.,
Peters
v.
Archambault,
Nevertheless, the judge concluded that the plaintiffs purchased their registered land subject to the defendants’ easement, which he found had ripened prior to the initiation of registration proceedings by the plaintiffs’ predecessor in title. In so doing, the judge cited G. L. c. 185, § 46. He apparently reasoned that a
In order to affect registered land as the servient estate, an easement must appear on the certificate of title. See
Goldstein
v.
Beal,
It is also argued that the plaintiffs hold title to their land subject to the Bruscoes’ easement, and that the judge’s ruling was therefore correct, because, under
Killam
v.
March,
The judge’s finding falls short of that required to bring this case within the purview of
Killam
v.
March, supra,
in at least
The Bruscoes do not contend that the original registration decree was procured by the plaintiffs’ predecessor in title through fraud. Therefore, that decree extinguished the Bruscoes’ easement as against the plaintiffs’ predecessors. The Bruscoes should not be able to revive their interest in the land by the happenstance that a subsequent purchaser of the property had knowledge at some unascertainable time of the easement’s prior existence. “To hold otherwise would be to place a purchaser of Torrens property in a less favorable position than the original holder of the certificate. . . . We know of no case in property law which has held that a grantee has a lesser title than his grantor.”
Moore
v.
Henricksen,
It is not disputed that the Bruscoes received actual notice of the pendency of registration proceedings regarding the land over which they claim an easement. They had an obligation
Accordingly, the case is remanded to the single justice for entry of an order vacating the judgment of the Probate Court, and for entry of a judgment declaring the rights of the parties, consistent with this opinion, in both of the declaratory judgment proceedings pending before him. As to the relief requested by the plaintiffs, the single justice shall remand the case to the probate judge for consideration of the equitable defenses raised (see note 7, supra) with instructions that, if he finds them to be without merit, he is to issue an order enjoining the Bruscoes from entering on the plaintiffs’ land. The single justice shall further direct the probate judge to consider the matter of damages arising from the Bruscoes’ past trespasses and, if appropriate, to award damages to the plaintiffs.
So ordered.
Notes
We gather that from the 1930’s on the Bruscoes and other adjoining landowners had made some use of this roadway for purposes of hauling
The plaintiffs’ first two prayers for relief tracked in identical language the second and third prayers for relief contained in the Commonwealth’s Land Court complaint. In addition, the plaintiffs sought damages from the Assurance Fund. See G. L. c. 185, §§ 99 et seq. (1984 ed.).
The record before us includes the following: the complaints and records of the plaintiffs’ Probate Court action, the Commonwealth’s Land Court suit, and the plaintiffs’ declaratory judgment suit in the Supreme Judicial Court single justice session, an amended statement of agreed facts among all parties except the Bruscoes, and the entire record of the Land Court proceeding with respect to the registration of the land in issue.
Briefs were filed on behalf of the plaintiffs and the Probate Court. The Land Court and the Attorney General submitted a single brief. In addition, the Massachusetts Conveyancers Association and the Abstract Club submitted a brief as amici curiae. The Bruscoes have not filed a brief.
Despite the technical alignment of the parties, there is a commonality of interest between the plaintiffs, the Land Court, and the Attorney General on the one hand, and the Bruscoes and the Probate Court on the other. The amici curiae’s brief argues in favor of the plaintiffs’ position. At oral argument we heard only from the Assistant Attorney General representing the Land Court and the Attorney General, and the Special Assistant Attorney General representing the Probate Court. The plaintiffs and the Bruscoes were content to leave the task of advocacy to their respective allies.
We held in
State Street Bank & Trust Co.
v.
Beale,
We have recognized another mode of attack on the conclusiveness of a Land Court decree. See Killam v. March, supra, where a claim of actual notice by the purchaser of registered land of an asserted interest in the land was recognizable as being litigable exclusively in the Land Court.
The defendants raised loches as an equitable defense to the Probate Court action, as well as the doctrine of de minimus. The judge did not reach these issues.
When, as in the instant case, a probate judge exercising jurisdiction under G. L. c. 185, § 1 (k) and § 1 (o), finds himself faced with what he deems a meritorious challenge to a Land Court registration decree, interposed as a defense to an enforcement action, he may dismiss the complaint or, preferably, ask the Chief Administrative Justice to transfer the case to the Land Court for determination. See Konstantopoulos v. Whately, suprast 129.
General Laws c. 185, § 46 (1984 ed.), provides in pertinent part: “Every plaintiff receiving a certificate of title in pursuance of a judgment of registration, and every subsequent purchaser of registered land taking a certificate of title for value and in good faith, shall hold the same free from all encumbrances except those noted on the certificate, and any of the following encumbrances which may be existing:
“First, Liens, claims or rights arising or existing under the laws or constitution of the United States or the statutes of this commonwealth which are not by law required to appear of record in the registry of deeds in order to be valid against subsequent purchasers or encumbrances of record.”
Even if the plaintiffs were aware, at the time they purchased their property, of the Bruscoes’ use of the roadway, this would not be dispositive. To acquire an easement over the roadway, the Bruscoes would have had to have maintained continuous prescriptive use since at least 1950, twenty years prior to the registration of the land title and to have asserted the claim in the registration proceeding. See G. L. c. 187, § 2 (1984 ed.); G. L. c. 185, § 53 (1984 ed.) (an easement cannot be acquired by prescription in derogation of a registered title). The plaintiffs were not required to assume prescriptive use of such duration based solely on the Bruscoes’ use of the land in 1970, nor were they under any duty to investigate, given that they were purchasers of registered land. Only if the plaintiffs had actual notice at the time of purchase that a prescriptive easement had ripened in the Bruscoes’ favor would Killam apply.
